Eyes of a Painter

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These soulful singers are preoccupied with West Virginia songs, from the ancient ballads of the Hammons Family in the central highlands to mining laments and songs of resistance in the coal fields. As two people absorbed in the study of oral tradition, they spend time with old-time singers and story tellers living throughout the Appalachian region.

They weave their sweet, tight high mountain harmonies into love ballads and country duets, especially the poignant imagery of Kate Wolf and Laurie Lewis.

The Klines present their music, both as entertainment and social history, with engaging ease and hard-hitting passion. Their memorable style is an amalgamation of primary musical and oral sources representative of places like the Appalachian coal fields and industrial cities of the Mid-West.

Singing to audiences of all ages, the Klines perform in a variety of situations, from classrooms to prisons, from coffee houses and concert halls to porches and picket lines.

The Klines are often joined by Bill Gorby and Bruce Betler. A singer/bass player and stand up comic, Bill Gorby enjoys a great following as “Big Bill Dup” in an eastern Ohio band, Big Bill Dup and the Let Downs. Bruce Betler, a native of the Swiss community of Helvetia, West Virginia, is as likely to break out into a spellbinding yodel as to interject a sweet mandolin break, add a close penetrating vocal harmony, or pull out his fiddle for a lively dance tune.

Become encaptured by their high mountain harmonies and melodic flat picking guitar backup.

Across the Blue Mountains

 

Spider Song

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Couple Preserves Songs and Stories of Southern Maryland from the Washington Post (Washington D.C.)