Talking Traditional Appalachian Music with The Pressley Girls
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- čas přidán 12. 07. 2021
- My daughters, The Pressley Girls, have been performing traditional Appalachian music for most of their lives. Watch this video to learn more about their music and why they believe it's important to continue the tradition of music in Appalachia.
Visit their website here: thepressleygirls.com and subscribe to their CZcams channel here: / @thepressleygirls You can purchase their cd here: www.etsy.com/ThePressleyGirls...
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tipperpressley@gmail.com
Celebrating Appalachia
PO Box 83
Brasstown, NC 28902
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#Appalachia #AppalachianMusic #ThePressleyGirls
Those are my granddaughters! I'm so proud of them, they are remarkable women! I love how they have gone through several instruments before deciding what is for them and they have had complete support of their parents/family!
We love you Miss Cindy 🙂
With all due respect, they are quite the beauties. They get it from their mama.
I’m sure you are proud! Rightly so! The Appalachian folks are good people and this family is no exception. I’m scots Irish and was born down on coastal SC but I feel most at home in the mountains of western NC. Keep up the great videos!!!
Don't you listen to Sammy Jr , Miss Cindy - we all know where their beauty comes from!
Your pride is well justified.
My apologies. I assumed they are all blood related and so n their beauty is in the b lineage.
Beautiful family with old time values. This is what the world needs more of.
That's so true what you say...
we need to go back to performing brit milah
One thing I really appreciate about y’all… you know how lucky you are to have the heritage and to have a love of your heritage!
We are very grateful 🙂 Thank you!
They are just flat out lucky to have each other. To have a sibling to play with is like gold. To have anyone to play with at is extremely lucky. I’m stuck in an Appalachian town with 1500 people and no one plays anything.
@CelebratingAppalachia thank all of you,tell Katie I wish she had a piano, and would love to here her play one,I think the piano is the best when playing gospel songs,even good in other types,jerry lee lewis could play anything on piano,you all play the other instruments very good to,May God bless all of you
@@dmcrisp that's a straight up lie and you know it.
@@jimmywells33 no it isn’t. You don’t even know where highlands,nc is . Open up a map before you talk out of your ass
These young ladies are awesome. Glued to their instruments instead of a cell phone. They articulate their thoughts so concisely.
Keeping our American heritage alive!
It's so refreshing to see Young people that like bluegrass style music.
They know what's up!!!
And it goes deeper than bluegrass, which was invented in the twentieth century. That mountain music was being played and sung the traditional way for many generations before bluegrass musicians got ahold of it and speeded it up and arranged it in that special six-instrument setting.
Bluegrass is much popular than you think!!
@@dontaylor7315 it's called old time usually
@@eliabrahamson7255 Old-time is a term applied to a lot more than the music of any one region. I was referring to Appalachian folk music specifically.
Playing by ear is a gift and talent. Not everyone can do it.
just my opinion, but i think it's the best way. music is meant to be heard. you listen with your ears. playin by ear is natural
And PRAAAAAACTICCCE.... Idont know how to play video games..and I don't care
There is nothing like sibling harmonys together. Very nice
Glad you enjoyed it!
Music is so important in so many cultures. It's great to hear Appalachian music continued on. Your daughters are talented.
Hello Margaret 👋
How are you doing today?
These girls are so talented. Pure talent.
The mother is an excellent moderator and the two young ladies so well spoken and composed. Thanks for sharing your experiences and the beautiful singing and playing.
I think these ladies are amazing and a very important part of American history. please never stop sharing your wonderful heritage
"Blood harmony" - that's exactly the term I thought when the girls started to sing. Voices of a natural kinship born to blend well together.
Here's what I appreciate about this channel. Most people, naturally, interview elders to hear their thoughts and views. You interviewed a younger generation. As she said, "history is now, and in the future". You have given us the gift of their views for them, and their future families, to see and hear. What a unique gift.
I’m from West Virginia and these girls plucked every heart string that a country boy has. I wanna go home.
I'm from WVa, too. Sometimes I get the urge to go back where I can hear this music, attend a wooden church, and bring a covered dish to a family gathering.
My wife retired last year after teaching music for over 35 years. She taught elementary, middle school, high school and college students. I am so proud of her for sharing her talents and her enthusiasm with so many for so long. Her goal has always been to lead students toward discovering their own musicality. You girls inspire others in your own way. Please keep playing and showing others the joy that can be had.
I'm glad your wife taught so many!! Thank you Brad 🙂
I drill holes in the ground for a living and songs like this makes those hrs fly bye..thank yall very much..great music
You play music too?
@@JKlasen If referring to me I play slop fiddle a bit
@@BoomerBoomer-my8ji good for you! That's what I'm talking about. And I bet those holes you did are important. Just remember the first rule of holes: if you are in one, stop digging.
❤ You have done a Beautiful job raising your daughters! Impressed !!! ❤
Thank you 🙂
Mighty fine music playin'. Great to see the younger generation there, carry on old time traditions.
Beautiful harmony. It doesn't get any better. Don't ever stop singing.
Thanks for the memories of growing up in WV. 😘
You're certainly blessed Tipper to have such pretty and talented girls.
I am Ron-thank you 🙂
In The Garden would have to be the song.
My grandmother's favorite hymn.
She requested her cousin sing this at her funeral.
I was doing fine until he stood in the doorway, leaning against the jamb, hands in pockets, and started singing.
Thank you for the fond memory.
I remember hiking up there way back in the 70s. good memories.
I'm so glad to hear these young folks are playing this kind of music. Very talented young ladies.
Them singing together is just beautiful. I hope this is the music I hear in my deathbed, the last sound I ever hear.
This is absolutely beautiful. Thank you to EVERYONE working to preserve traditional world music before it disappears.
I am from California and I want to thank you so much for sharing. Your voices are being heard across the land. Bless y’all.
I was raised by my grandma. She was raised in the Martin Branch holler and around Caney. I can still hear her singing that song. I started playing at 7 years old. learned to sing, as well as play guitar and mandolin, sitting on a front porch much like the one ya'll are sitting on. All of the family would come and we'd have a big dinner, then sit out on the porch playing music well into the night.
Keep old timey music alive girls!! I love it since I was a girl- it speaks to the heart❤️ A beautiful Appalachian tradition ❤️
Thank you Tipper for a wonderful video sharing your beautiful and talented daughters.
Glad you enjoyed it 🙂
I know your so proud...you and your husband raised 2 fine young ladies. They sing and play beautifully.
Great music. Duet was wonderful. They both are so sweet and real. I miss the old school Appalachian values and temperment these young women are preserving. You dont see it much anymore. And I have to mention that all of these traits start at home and come from their parents. Really nice to hear the fiddle being played along with the guitar at the end. Thank you for making me smile 🇼🇸👍🎶🎼🎻🎸
These ladies are so Bless they can play beautiful music. ❤❤❤
Your girls are sure talented. Enjoyed that pretty song. May God Bless your family
Y'all made me cry when you started playing.
There is hope for our future. Such talent, Such pride of Appalachian culture. Much love from Northern California 💚.
Your girls have a certain ring to their voices that make even their speaking voices sound musical. Your whole family is beautiful inside and out and I suspect it has to do with your faith in God. You prove "blessed are the poor" to be true, not necessarily financially poor, but humble, tied to the earth, family oriented and rejoicing in simple pleasures like music and rock hunting. Thank you for sharing what you do with us.
So kind of you-thank you!!
Lovely singing from your N. Carolina girls! Bring yourselves accross the Atlantic to where your people came from and share the music!
Just for your channel! Amazing! Thank you for sharing about your history. I was born & raised and still live in Texas. I'm a 72 yr old Grammy. Your girls are just amazing. Beautiful voices.
Should be just found your channel.
Katie and Corie you have been blessed so much with your talents. Keep doing what you do making us happy with your music. I wish I could just listen to you in person. Love you both ❤️❤️❤️❤️.
Beautiful music! Camping in the Appalachian mountains brings great memories. Could listen to their music by a campfire all evening.
My kind of music from two beautiful mountain young ladies. God bless you
In the Garden was one of my Father's favorite hymns. He left us exactly one year ago, today. Thank you for that lovely, soulful rendition. #tearsinmyeyes
Hello
Awesome video Tipper 👍
Beautiful daughters who can play music 👍
Thanks so much 🙂
This brings back the best memories! I learn how to play Violin/fiddle in 1963. Started! It took me about 4 months to get it together. Between the listen, finger movements, and reading & writing music.
Once I got it after 4.5 months it was game on!
Back then Living in “The BRONX”, Kelzmic music. Eastern EU style of music. Around the 8 month mark of playing I was able to do brake in play! Meaning you be playing one song, you have any other song in your head, and when you hit the similar musical notes you switch to that song!
My Uncle came home from his US Army Deployment for thirty days, and when he herd me play he said Petey we are going to visit my friends!
His friends were from Ashley, NC, deep into Country Music! They had a house near Jones Beach. They were all in the same Unit! Eugene says to me Norm my uncle says I play! He showed me his fiddle! Yep! That’s how I got into jamming country music. When I go back to school, our violin teacher said so Pinchas Mendel, that’s my Jewish Name, what did you learn over the brake. Pisss, country music. His wife said Oy Vey, he said show me! I play Kelzmic music, then when I reach the same notes I switch! It was awesome!
We played Bar Mitzvahs, Bat Mitzvahs, Wedding, and other parties! Fun times.
Thank you for sharing your music story 😀
Your daughters are beautiful women with wonderful voices. They play their instruments well.
Thank you 😀
That song gives me chills I can hear my granny in the kitchen singing it with me trying to keep up. Love it
Katie, I agree with you. I learned to read music first. I played saxophone in school. But when I went to West Virginia for a summer, I was asked to jam with some other musicians I couldn't do it because I couldn't play without music. You both are such special people. I'm very grateful for your talent and preserving the old music.
Thank you so much!!
Grizz learning to read music is a powerful tool. Playing by ear helps also. Putting the both together is the best of both worlds.
Reminds me of my childhood in Church. Used to love to hear my mother, aunt, and grandmother singing hymns. I miss those days and that music. New Christian music is amazing, but the old hymns are just special.
Someone has been loving these two priceles musicians since they were babies, and it seems such love is still flowing. Such a priviledge to listen to their memories of sleeping with theirs ears on the floor listening to the music below. Besides their music and voice, there is such a cofidence in their eyes, and in the energy of their attention that is seldom seen among people! Their posture towards life is such a joy to see.
Well Mama, what a good job you've done with those two cuties, and such talent!
I do love old acapella ballads.
These Girls are leading the way. Our southern Way of life is slowly Dying. Please keep up the Music Pass it on to Others./ GOD Bless.
he walks with me was my grandmothers favorite song and i sang it for her at her funeral. you girls have had the best raising possible in the current world of turmoil we live in. i hope you remain as pure as you are and live the life you are destined to in those mountains and make the most of life. you deserve it.
My Daddy passed in 1979 and this bring back sooo many wonderful memories of family and friends coming to our home and playing music and just enjoying being together.
That’s called God-given talent😇. Love hearing the girls play and sing🥰.
Thank Robbie Lynn! The girls both say HELLO 🙂
Enjoyed hearing how the girls started out. They are a sweet treasure ❤❤
Just came across your site...Gracious, I just soak in the loving family feelings y'all have for one another...It's beautiful!
Thank you Gary 🙂
I just drove through West Virginia yesterday for first time in decades. Most beautiful summer drive, even just from the I-70. Went to Church and my local brothers and sisters praised our Lord with lovely Appalachian voices
Oh my favorite one of pressley girls.Tipper you make a wonderful interviewer.top notch.Ilove history of girls beginning with music.its amazing the harmony they have.I had twins boy amd girl.wish they had gone into music.im so proud of you young ladies.How youve let God guide you.And your precious parents.who encouraged you .mostly the God given talent and how your blessing others with it.i love it.please keep it up.love you Tipper i made your buttermilk pie.it is delicious.many thanks❤❤❤
Selena-so glad you enjoyed the video 🙂
A pleasure ladies, thank you so much. Brings back good memories.
BEAUTIFUL GIRLS!! What a true appreciation for keeping the music of their ancestors alive. I watched a Ken Burns documentary on "country" music and this is where it all started. Thank you for sharing😍
We sang, "and tells me I-I'm His Own, and the Love we shared as we lingered there, none other as ever known". Never known the name of the song. All the music was only memories carried to California in 1956, before I was born. oh! Golden Slippers 💖. Thank you for showing me the way Home.
Amen!!!! Mrs.Presley you've done a wonderful job. I could listen to them sing 10,000 yrs. I'd love to hear them sang more hymns
They are SO fun. :D It's so wonderful to hear from their perspectives, the twin dynamic is extra special.
The joy of harmony is that it's greater than the sum of its parts. You sound genuinely at home singing together 🎶
thanks for sharing love the old time's music 🎶 you young ladies sure make beautiful music thank you may God bless you and your family and friends 🙏 stay safe and keep the video and music coming 💞 Hug's 💞
Beautiful music. You ladies are very talented.
I can watch them all day.
I grew up in the 60s-70s....this music has been a family tradition, brings back memories of the great times the family and friends had......from the eastern Appalachian mountains N.B. CANADA.....
Tipper, your girls are beautiful and so talented. I know you are so very proud and should be.
Thank you 🙂
One of my very favorite hymns!!
Thank you ladies and God bless you.
Mrs. Tipper and family… Thank you so much for all you do! I stumbled upon your channels by chance and feel so blessed to have done so. I love all your content. I have so much love for you all. Your stories remind me of times in my childhood and upbringing being at family reunions in Ohio and West Virginia… I am 42 and more of a city boy, but I am an outdoorsman and musician myself and your presentation and content is absolutely wonderful. I certainly don’t have the roots or legacy that you folks have and can reflect upon, but something about what you share feels so great and familiar to watch and listen to. Thank you again. I have so much love for you all, so positive and precious. Mrs Tipper reminds me of my grandmother’s stories, although you are so much younger… Katie is my favorite, so goofy and in touch with the land, working with her hands and such. You can tell what great parents you are, raising people right, so rare nowadays. What a wonderful family! Bless you all!
Thank you for your kind words! We're all so glad you enjoy our videos 🙂
Such bright and talented young ladies! God bless!
"In The Garden" is a song I heard at every Pentecostal funeral I ever attended. They sang it so lovely.
I enjoy that song also even though I'm Roman Catholic and it's not liturgical music.
The girls made it their own with their harmonies.
This makes me think of Alan Lomax, who traveled the country (and then the world) with mobile recording equipment to document traditional music during the fast-changing 20th century. He made thousands and thousands of recordings to document the music before it disappeared forever. Most of his recordings are now kept in the U.S. Library of Congress. I think that he would be overjoyed that there are still people out there like you, that are keeping these traditions alive.
Lovely girls, God bless them and your entire family! They have gifts from the Lord, that will bring joy to many! The Gutbucket Blues Band, Murphy NC!
"Golden Slippers" has a catchy tune to it. It's going to be in my head for a while now.
BRAVO! I'm Jewish but your music is beautiful and amazing, G-D BLESS your family, Shabbat Shalom
Appalachia music to me is a mother and her daughters passing time on the porch, sittin’ and jawin’, sharing their respective perspectives on music/family/tradition, and once in a while playing a song
When I was a child, my aunts and uncles gathered at my grandma’s house and sit outside and sing and play good old mountain music. The other side of my family had Singings after church using the Fa Sol La method. My earliest memory was standing with my Grandma while she held my arm to beat out the time while everyone sang. I always played piano by ear. I learned to read music later in my life and used that in church choir. Hearing things by ear made it easy to know the intervals to sing.
You all blessed my heart like none other the simplicity of it reminded me of when my pop and I used to set around the house and play and sing good memories thank you so much God Bless.
So glad you enjoyed it Bill 🙂
You ladies are incredibly cute and delightful. And I am sure the camera does you no justice. And I am an older man at 59 and imagine how fortunate I would have been to have been born 35 yrs. later in Appalachia and had the luxury of knowing you all! Always a joy and entertaining, please keep it up.
Lol mama’s proud of her girls and pushin’ it 🥰 I can relate.
My favorite Hymn
I feel so blessed that this channel showed up in my video feed. What a beautiful heritage. What beautiful music. I am so thankful I subscribed.
Thank you so much 😀
@@CelebratingAppalachia love ya
Your Daughters give a genuine beauty to the world. That last melody sounds like a song I heard in an old western saloon years ago, very reminiscence....
Naturally sweet lovely young women. So refreshing in 2021. Much love to you and your family.
Reminds me of my childhood. Loved your songs, stay humble
Girls have the best combination of talent and charm. I can really relate to feeling beaten by an instrument. It’s easy to forget even the greats had to struggle through the blood sweat and tears.
So true Thomas-thank you 🙂
Oh...I enjoyed this so much. Those girls make a mother proud. Good job Tipper!
Glad you enjoyed it 🙂
I am 69 yrs old and grew up in a small town (6000) people. We and friend would spend almost the whole summer at the lake. Water ski and swim during the day and after dark we would gather around a campfire and sing songs from the past. My dad played violin (he was classically trained for an orchestra in Dallas. He could also play by ear so he had no problem with what we were singing. He could also play the banjo (not well). Sometime there would be as many as 40 people as other campers would come and join in. These are the most precious memories of my childhood. I am looking forward to singing with them again in heaven.
My childhood is relived through these memories and songs. This is exactly how I grew up. My heart misses it so! Ty for this video. It’s beautiful.
More videos. You all are the best.
So glad you enjoy our videos 🙂
Love to hear the girls play and sing. Thank you
Yep they're yours!! 2 beautiful girls, talented also!!✨
Thank you Curtis!!
🥰. Those lovely, talented Pressley Girls! How proud you must be😊
Lord do I miss not growing up there. Left when I was about 6mo old and raised in the mountains of northern California.
Just Saying, I spent the last year of high school in the northern mountains of California between Crescent city and Medford Oregon
I once met a woman who told me she got a special grant from some organization to learn claw hammer banjo. She said that this particular organization was concerned that claw hammer banjo was a diminishing skill, so they wanted to keep it going.
That is really neat!
I can’t tell you how much I enjoyed this interview with your daughters. Here in north Mississippi there was very little local music but I can remember wanting to play guitar from a very young age. Fast forward sixty years. I always loved Bluegrass and early country music. Our church called a new minister who was a banjo player and he encouraged me to learn how to play rhythm, bluegrass style. I eventually learned basic chords and keys and developed the ability to play by ear so I fully understand what the young ladies were talking about. I have to say that learning to play at sixty years of age was much more difficult than it would have been had I been given the opportunity to learn from an early age. I have three grandsons and I hope that they will take an interest in what I do. They are taking piano and learning to read music but I hope to get them to learn to “play by ear”. You can’t have any fun until you learn to “jam” and you can’t do that if you have to have sheet music. I encourage you girls to work with the youngsters. Don’t let you music die out! Our cultures are different in many ways but I was raised a country boy on a small Mississippi farm in the fifties and I can relate to much of the things you discuss in your videos. I’ll look forward to each new one.
Great music and great tradition I'm from western North Carolina near Great smoky mountains that heritage is my life you got a beautiful family