Learning Trad

Through our Learning Trad folk and traditional arts education initiatives, Kentucky Old Time Music, Inc. has hosted lectures, classes and workshops; sponsored traditional arts apprenticeships and cultural exchanges in the U.S. and abroad; assisted in the development of regional folk and traditional arts curriculum for schools and cultivated community engagement through place-based folk and traditional arts programs.

Our Programs

“Hillbilly Highway” Reading Series

The “Hillbilly Highway,” also known as the Appalachian migration, holds a significant place in American history. This monumental internal relocation of countless poor and working-class individuals has unfortunately received limited attention from historians. However, delving into the depths of this long-overlooked story brings to light its profound impact on various aspects of American society, like the modern industrial labor movement and the postwar urban crisis, but it also becomes evident that the influence of the Appalachian migration extends to the rise and development of a large aspect of today's working-class. The Hillbilly Highway was a parallel to the better-known Great Migration of African-Americans from the south. Many of these Appalachian migrants went to major industrial centers such as Detroit, Chicago, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, Baltimore, Washington, D.C., Milwaukee, Toledo, and Muncie, Indiana. Many of the Appalachians lived in concentrated enclaves, an example being Uptown, Chicago, which was nicknamed "Hillbilly Heaven" in the 1960s. While most often used in this metaphoric sense, the term is sometimes used to refer to specific stretches of roadway, such as U.S. Route 23, or Interstate 75. The migration was not a finite process, as it continues today and migrants commonly move back to their home states in retirement. The Hillbilly Highway Reading Series is a rural-urban exchange of words, music, and ideas where writers and musicians from Appalachia to Detroit, and other urban centers associated with the “Hillbilly Highway,” engage to explore this mass-migratory event and the complex narratives it involves.

Past Events:

2018 - Hamtramck, MI
Venue: Bank Suey
Readers: Ronni Lundy, Imani Mixon, Rebecca Gayle Howell, Anna Clark, Nandi Comer, & Courtney Balestier
Musicians: Norma Jean Haynes & Brett Ratliff

2020 - Lexington, KY
Venues: The Burl & ArtsPlace
Readers: Silas House, Ada Limon, Jason Howard, Rebecca Gayle Howell, Nandi Comer, Imani Mixon, & Ansil Elkins
Musicians: The Codgers, The Winetree, Giant Rooster Sideshow & The Possum Queens

Community Partners

Appalachian Flatfooting & Clogging Academy

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The Appalachian Flatfooting & Clogging Academy by Carla Gover offers a step-by-step process for beginner and intermediate dancers that teaches tons of steps plus how to combine them to become a smooth and musical dancer.

Whether you’re…

  • A beginner who’s always wanted to learn more about the style but hasn’t had access to the right teacher or community.

  • Someone who knows a bunch of steps but needs some extra support and a proven formula for putting it all together to improvise with fluency.

  • An experienced dancer in another genre who’s always wanted to learn this particular style of dance.

  • A performer or musician who regularly finds yourself in jam sessions and attending festivals where you want to make real “music with your feet” and even showcase your dancing onstage as part of your set.

If you’re someone who loves Appalachian music, dance, and culture, and you’re ready for an accessible, thorough, and FUN course that contains EVERYTHING you need (yes, everything!) to become a great dancer at your own schedule, pace, and location…

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Joan Brannon is the founder and lead facilitator for DrummingWorks and a teaching artist for Kentucky Centers’ ArtsReach and Ky Arts Council. She has been playing percussion instruments for 20 years, founding drumming collectives, Sisters of the Sacred Drum and the Sacred Drum Ensemble. Joan teaches drumming empowerment classes for youth, enrichment circles for women and she facilitates workshops in a variety of settings to bring the power of percussion into community. 

Workshops include…

  • Corporate and Business Team Building -  Improve productivity and communication. Promote wellness and show appreciation.

  • Drum Circles - Facilitated Drum Circles are accessible to all populations and encourage multiple levels of participation (from beginning to experienced)

  • Schools and Youth Groups - Rhythm exploration is a powerful way to inspire and nurture the creative voice.

  • Women -  Beginning West African drumming and meditative flow drumming in small groups. Suitable for women of all ages, backgrounds and abilities.

Joan respects the drum as a sacred instrument that utilizes rhythms for celebration and as a tool for communication, empowerment and community building. Joan has performed and drummed throughout the United States, and throughout Guinea, and West Africa.

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John Ryster builds custom Appalachian violins from his home shop on Hogtown Ridge in Rowan County, Kentucky. He learned how to build instruments from Tommy Case of Georgetown, Kentucky through the Kentucky Arts Council apprenticeship and has been busy building them for folks ever since. Musicians from all over the U.S. are proud owners of John's violins.