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List of Appalachian dulcimer players: Difference between revisions

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* Alaskan black metal band [[Bound by Entrails]] used an Appalachian Dulcimer for the intro and outro on the album [[For Valhall's Sorrow]].
* Alaskan black metal band [[Bound by Entrails]] used an Appalachian Dulcimer for the intro and outro on the album [[For Valhall's Sorrow]].
* [[Nigel Pennick]], writer, and artist plays traditional music on mountain dulcimers in various tunings with The Traditional Music of Cambridgeshire Collective.
* [[Nigel Pennick]], writer, and artist plays traditional music on mountain dulcimers in various tunings with The Traditional Music of Cambridgeshire Collective.
* [[Cyndi Lauper]]


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Revision as of 23:38, 22 September 2009

Prominent mountain dulcimer players

Well-known musicians who play (or played) the Appalachian dulcimer as a primary instrument include:

  • Jean Ritchie
  • Nashville-based David Schnaufer, who recorded with The Judds, Kathy Mattea, Johnny Cash, and Mark O'Connor. Schnaufer was a historian of the instrument and the world's first and only dulcimer professor; he served as Adjunct Associate Professor of Dulcimer at Vanderbilt University's Blair School of Music from 1995 to his death in 2006.
  • Stephen Seifert of Nashville, recognized as one of the most versatile and talented contemporary dulcimer players. A popular presence at American folk music festivals, Seifert also routinely performs with classical symphonies around the United States.
  • Lorraine Lee Hammond, one of the most accomplished contemporary mountain dulcimer players. See "Exultation of Dulcimers" (with Roger Nicholson, whose music she helped introduce to the United States).
  • Singer-songwriter Bing Futch, a popular performer and dulcimer instructor. Futch has used electric mountain dulcimer as the main instrument in his band Mohave since 1999.
  • Guitarist John Pearse, an early British enthusiast of the mountain dulcimer. Pearse was one of the first to introduce the dulcimer to English folk clubs in the 1960s.
  • Roger Nicholson, who made a seminal album called "Nonesuch for Dulcimer" with English guitarist & singer Robert Johnson in 1974.
  • Margaret MacArthur, the folk music historian, musician and dulcimer instructor, who introduced the mountain dulcimer to many folk musicians in the 1960s.
  • Jen Clark, pioneer of dulcimer in Scottish traditional and contemporary music. Toured extensively and recorded Stand Easy as a member of the Battlefield Band in 1979.

Big-name musicians who have recorded with a mountain dulcimer

  • Joni Mitchell, who played a dulcimer on the 1971 album Blue, and included a dulcimer set in many of her live performances. She is credited with popularizing the instrument outside of US folk music circles in the 1970s.
  • Many British folk-rock groups of the late 1960s and early 1970s featured the mountain dulcimer, including:

Other musicians