The Crooked Road is a 253-mile stretch of highway in southwestern
Virginia. This remote area, which is one of the places that gave birth
to American music, has been a musical hotbed for generations. The route
includes the Ralph Stanley Museum, the Carter Family Fold, the
Birthplace of Country Music Alliance Museum, the Blue Ridge Music
Center, the Rex Theater, the Floyd Country Store, and the Blue Ridge
Institute and Museum. Covering the 10 counties through which the road
passes, this guide provides information about the area's musical
attractions as well as opportunities to enjoy local crafts, outdoor
recreation, lodging, and dining. Music lovers will also have the chance
to take a piece of the Crooked Road home with them, thanks to the pair
of CDs containing 53 examples of the old-time, bluegrass, Piedmont
blues, Anglo-American ballads, and Appalachian gospel music that made
the area famous.
Joe Wilson was a music historian, folklorist, and chairman of the
National Council for the Traditional Arts. Raised in the Blue Ridge
Mountains, he learned ballads from his mother, guitar from his uncle,
and "Jack" tales from a neighbor. He also heard his great-aunt, known to
early radio audiences as "Carolina Sally," play banjo on his back porch.
He has produced 41 large-scale music festivals in 11 states, and was one
of the driving forces behind the creation of the Crooked Road. In 2001
he was awarded a National Heritage Fellowship by the National Endowment
for the Arts.