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]]. |
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* [[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. |
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* [[Cyndi Lauper]] |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:List Of Appalachian Dulcimer Players}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:List Of Appalachian Dulcimer Players}} |
Revision as of 23:38, 22 September 2009
This article may require copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone, or spelling. (July 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:
- Cyndi Lauper plays the mountain dulcimer on A Night to Remember - 1989, Sisters of Avalon - 1996, and The Body Acoustic - 2005
- An Appalachian dulcimer is prominent in the Rolling Stones song "Lady Jane"; it was played by Brian Jones.
Other musicians
- Jeff Buckley played a dulcimer in his song Dream Brother featured on his record Grace released in 1994.
- Vancouver musician Randy Raine-Reusch played the dulcimer on the Aerosmith album Pump (1989), in the track "Dulcimer Stomp;"
- Joe Perry later recorded with a dulcimer on Aerosmith's Get a Grip album (1993).
- The group Little Big Town used the dulcimer on their second album, The Road to Here.
- Rob McMaken of Dromedary plays the dulcimer in gypsy styles.
- Amanda Barrett of The Ditty Bops is also known to play the dulcimer.
- The cello-rock band Rasputina has employed the dulcimer on their albums Frustration Plantation and Oh Perilous World! and the band's lead member Melora Creager has used the dulcimer on her solo album Perplexions, released in late 2006.
- Jerusalem-based multi-instrumentalist Bradley Fish's dulcimer loops on Sony Digital Pictures[1] are popular. Fish became known for using the instrument with an Eastern-influenced style and electronic effects on his 1996 collaboration "The Aquarium Conspiracy" with Sugarcubes/Björk drummer Sigtryggur Baldursson.
- Folk-rocker Butch Ross plays a cut-away mountain dulcimer that he holds like a guitar while standing.
- Singer-songwriter Holly Brook plays the dulcimer on her debut album Like Blood, Like Honey.
- Singer-songwriter Heidi Muller plays the dulcimer on her albums.
- Peter Buck of R.E.M.
- Brooklyn based folk-pop singer Brittain Ashford uses mountain dulcimer.
- Australian musician and busker Lindsay Buckland plays an electric dulcimer suspending it from his neck like a guitar. Filtering the instrument through MIDI circuitry, he makes it produce the sound of saxes and other instruments.
- A dulcimer is played on Nine Inch Nails' album Ghosts I-IV on song "22 Ghosts III" by Alessandro Cortini.
- Patrick Wolf
- Jimmy Page
- David Massengill
- Vivian Campbell of Def Leppard
- Singer-songwriter Una Feral of Orphanspace
- 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.