Matt Evans

Matt Evans plays clawhammer and minstrel banjo, old-time fiddle, flatpick and fingerstyle guitar, mandolin, and the bones. Primarily interested in the music of the Cumberland Plateau and Southern Appalachians, he collects and plays tunes from these regions, and enjoys the opportunity to play and talk about the folk music and traditions he studies. Matt has studied banjo with Dwight Diller and fiddle with Bruce Greene.

Christie Burns

Ask Christie Burns how she started playing the hammered dulcimer, and she’ll tell you it was love at first sight.  The instrument drew her into the world of folk music, and led her to pursue her B.A. in Ethnomusicology at UCLA.  During her senior year abroad in Ireland, Christie founded and directed the Cork Dulcimer Festival, and there began to network with musicians from all over the world.  Christie has taken her music to Sweden, England, Scotland, Belgium, Hungary, Switzerland, and Germany, as well as festivals all over the United States, and has collected music in every place she’s been.  Christie has her M.A. in Folk Studies from Western Kentucky University, and moved to Chattanooga’s Southside in 2007 as part of the ArtsMove artist relocation program.

John Boulware

 

 

John Boulware’s musical heritage stretches back for generations. His great-great-grandfather Will McWatters played fiddle, as did his grandfather Brice Bagley. John was inspired to take up the instrument at the age of twelve, and has since learned a wide variety of styles ranging from Celtic to bluegrass to old time. He performs regularly at regional festivals and contests, and has been a featured soloist twice with the Murfreesboro Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra. John holds a National Beginner Division Country Musician Guitar Championship, 2 consecutive age division titles at the Tennessee State Fiddle Championship, and was the 2006 overall State Fiddle Champion for Tennessee. John currently resides in Chattanooga, TN. He performs and teaches guitar and mandolin in addition to fiddle.

Randy Steele

 

 

Randy Steele is no stranger to the Chattanooga Bluegrass community.  After moving from studying jazz guitar to taking up the 5-string banjo in 2001, he has since been a regular at jam circles and bluegrass festivals around he area.  Steele studied with Doc Cullis and Clyde Blaylock, both local bluegrass legends, then moved on to study and play with more notable musicians from Nashville, namely Todd Parks and Chad Melton from the Jerry Douglas Band.  In 2008 Steele took up residency as the banjo player in the band Slim Pickins and has since gone onto share the stage with bands such as IIIrd Tyme Out, Mountain Heart, Larry Keel and Natural Bridge, and The Sam Bush Band.  In 2009 the band was twice named Chattanooga’s Best Bluegrass Band and Steele was nominated by the Chattanooga Times Free Press as Chattanooga’s Best Bluegrass Instrumentalist.  When not playing the banjo, Steele spends his time working as a captain in the Chattanooga Fire Department.  He has been married for 10 years and enjoys teaching banjo and bluegrass music to friends, students, and to his 2 children.

Ken Doyle

 

 

Ken Doyle plays traditional Irish music on wooden flute and tin whistle. A native of Chattanooga, Ken was raised in a musical family and grew up listening to NPR’s The Thistle & Shamrock on Sunday evenings, beginning his love and fascination with traditional Celtic music. He began playing traditional Irish music on tin whistle after a brief visit to Ireland, however this turned out to be his “gateway drug,” leading him down a dark path of musical addiction leading inexorably to the Irish flute. Ken holds a degree in instrumental music performance from Samford University.  Ken performed throughout the Southeastern US as well as in England, Ireland, France, and Germany, including solo performances at the Paris Conservatory, and the Ludwig-Maximilians Universität in Munich. Ken is currently a member of the traditional Irish band Pay the Reckoning.

Lon Eldridge

Lon Eldridge was raised in the small town of Spring City in East Tennessee. Growing up, he was always surrounded by family members who loved and played music. At age 13, he picked up the guitar for the first time and was never the same. Ever since then he has crafted his music into his own unique blend of blues, with the rawness of the Delta, the intricacies of Piedmont blues, and borrowing from the influence of jazz and ragtime. Now age 25, Lon sings with a powerful, moving voice and plays more than ten different instruments, giving him a musical diversity that will keep you on the edge of your seat. Lon has shared the stage with musical greats such as The Lovell Sisters, Mike Farris, B.B. King, David Crowder Band, Dan Landrum, The Black Crowes, Miss Tess and the Bon Ton Parade, and many more…

 

Chris Casbarro

Chris Casbarro has spent the last fourteen years of his life in the hills of Hiawassee, Georgia, aside from two and a half years studying music in Brevard, North Carolina and a year and a half in Asheville, North Carolina just playing and learning more about old time music.  Growing up in the mountains of North Georgia inspired an interest in learning to play the banjo, fiddle, and guitar, as well as other traditional instruments.  A strong nudge of encouragement and suggestion from his great-grandfather got him started at the age of eight and he’s been obsessed ever since.
Chris has a versatile background in all styles of music ranging from classical to rock and roll, but his love for old-time Appalachian musical styles has remained strong and unwavering.  Chris cites fiddlers such as Ross Brown, Ed Haley, Tommy Jarrell, Emmett Lundy, Manco Sneed, Andrew Baxter, Marcus Martin, Lowe Stokes, Earl Johnson, and Allen Sisson to be among his most powerful influences.  Chris relocated to Chattanooga, TN in November of 2011 in the hopes of being able to teach these styles of fiddling to people with the same passion and zeal for this traditional music.  Chris plays in the Chattanooga band “The Snake Doctors”, a collaboration between himself and Lon Eldridge.
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One Response to Teachers

  1. Marcia Slagle says:

    What a wonderful way to carry on the tradition of playing this mountain music. It will not be lost…

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