Showing posts with label CCPost Magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CCPost Magazine. Show all posts

2/04/2021

Scott Miller - Teaching Traditional Tunes From The Big Sandy Region

Scott Miller has an unabashed love for old-timey tunes written in this region.

“I embrace the heritage of local songs and music. That’s where I’m from,” Miller said.

Both a performing musician and a music educator, Miller chuckles as he remembers his genuine introduction to the world of bluegrass and old-time string band music.

“It was the theme to The Beverly Hillbillies. I don’t know how old I was,” he said, explaining the song sent him in pursuit of fiddle tunes while others his age were listening to the rock band Kiss or tuned in to WKEE radio.

He got his hands on his first guitar, a Harmony, while in 7th Grade and he studied with Herb Rose, who worked at Armco.

“I remember thinking when my mom picked me up from that first lesson, ‘That guy plays guitar and people pay him to do it. I think I want to do that.”

Miller continued guitar studies with Dennis Dobbs, and also put himself to work digging trees at a nursery to earn money for a new guitar. As he entered high school, he paid $850 for a Martin D-28. Joe Dobbs soon introduced him to members of the Appalachian Old Time Fiddlers Association, “and we were always jamming at Vince Jarrell’s house. We had a book called ‘1,000 Fiddle Tunes’ and we started on Page One.”

Around 1981, Miller said he and Jarrell had their first paying gig – a political rally. “I made $50 and at that point I said, Yep. That’s it.”

Miller began teaching others how to play when he was 14, when he also began doing well in various guitar competitions. He eventually earned a scholarship to study music at Morehead State University. Somewhere along the way, he met Dan Kelly “who was pivotal for my career,” he said.

Miller and Kelly (who recently passed away), competed in fiddle contests “from Maryland to Arkansas,” with Miller on guitar and Kelly on fiddle.

“Dan usually won,” he said, noting their success in that scene resulted in them getting their own show at Silver Dollar City (now Dollywood). “Roy Acuff told Dan to move to Nashville.”

Miller wound up in Texas “playing with the best fiddlers in America – people who went on to play with some of the biggest names in country music,” although he remained a guitarist.

“I didn’t play fiddle because I was too old and could never catch up,” he said with a grin.

Miller has worked many non-music jobs (brain-tanning buckskins, tending to plants in shopping malls, , growing tobacco, industrial sales) through the years, although he continued to teach music. He also continued to study, learning old-time banjo from a man in West Virginia. He traded a mandolin for his first hammered dulcimer, an instrument which many now directly associate with him.

“I also began to realize that music from our area is famous around the world,” he said, citing Australian fiddlers who still study the ways of local fiddle legend Ed Haley, who wrote one of Miller’s personal favorite songs called “Catlettsburg”.

“I like to focus on music from the Big Sandy region – Southeast Ohio, Northeast Kentucky and Southern West Virginia,” he said, his passion for the subject readily apparent.

Working with fellow musician Jim Wood, Miller recently released “The Mountain Frontier Trilogy” – a collection which includes gospel and Christmas music.

“When the records hit the stores, the lockdown happened,” he said, adding the CDs remain available online, as well as at Grayson’s Antiques N Uniques at 602 Carol Malone Boulevard.

He also continues to teach music in Ashland, where he offers lesson for acoustic guitar (“But I don’t do electric guitar.”), old-time banjo, hammered dulcimer and fiddle.

“I have openings – especially for fiddle students,” he said, citing his own passion for helping others learn to play.

“I’m a good player, but I’m a really good teacher.”

Music lovers also have a chance to hear Miller and multi-instrumentalist Scott Rucker perform during weekly “Appalachian Music Night” performances at Blazer’s restaurant.

Scott Miller can be reached by telephone at 615.516.2922.

Story & Photos by TIM PRESTON

Carter County Post

1/12/2021

Collier Woodcraft - Quality From Father To Son To Cousin

When the late Arnold Collier opened his custom cabinet and countertop shop in 1980, his son Tony was right by his side.

40 years later, Tony still runs the place with the help of his cousin, Jamie Branham.

“Dad was a carpenter,” Tony said during a recent bout of bad health which temporarily forced him out of his own woodshop, adding his father constructed many homes and buildings, including The Shangri La on Main Street in Grayson, a motel and restaurant he owned and operated with Tony’s mother, Geraldine, for many years.

“I just kind of started with him when he opened the shop,” Tony said. “I started woodwork when I was a kid with hobby tools. I made candleholders and stuff like that.”

Cabinets and countertops, as well as installation, were the first products and services offered at Collier Woodcraft, and remain their primary business to this day.

“The business did good from the start,” Tony said, later adding the small business has “been blessed” with work throughout the summer and fall of 2020.

Collier does not hesitate to praise his daily co-worker and cousin, Jamie Branham, who reported for work at Collier Woodcraft after working at the now closed Farmer’s Hardware.

“He said ‘If you need help, holler at me.’ I needed help, so I hollered at him,” Tony said with a chuckle and a cough.

“”He’s great and I ain’t letting him go.”

While he may not technically qualify as a “third generation” of the Collier family, Tony said Branham “is close enough.” Together, they tackle daily jobs ranging from homes under construction or renovation to the counters and cabinets at the new Grayson Sports Park.

“We work mostly in homes,” Tony said, with the majority of the work “all custom built from scratch.” The shop also offers manufactured cabinetry produced by Kraftmaid, Kitchen Kompact, Vision and Fabuwood.

Collier, a member of the East Carter High School Class of 1975, is also a private pilot who owns a Piper Cherokee and a “powered parachute,” as well as a musician and instrument maker who has built guitars, fiddles, dulcimers, banjos and a mandolin.

“I probably enjoyed building banjos the most,” he said, citing the banjo as his own favorite instrument to play.

Contact Collier Woodcraft by telephone at 606.316.1634 or 606.475.0575

Story and Photos by TIM PRESTON

11/13/2020

CCpost Magazine: Donald "Doc" Gibson: 25 Years at All Creatures Veterinary Care - (With Extended Photo Gallery)

Donald “Doc” Gibson and the team at All Creatures Veterinary Care recently celebrated a true small-business milestone – 25 years of service and care for Carter County’s and the Tri-State’s pets and farm animals alike.

“I went all in on Grayson,” Gibson said during a break between patients, recalling his first visit to what was then Gross Veterinary Clinic to meet with Dr. Gross’ widow, Viola, and one of his sons to make a deal on the then-idle veterinary clinic.

“We agreed on a price. I borrowed the money and, Wow, 25 years later …” he said.

From ‘the middle of nowhere’

Born and raised in southeast Kentucky on Knott County’s Carr Creek (near Alice Lloyd College), Gibson grew up on the family farm and was the son of a coal miner.

“I’m from down in the mountains in the middle of nowhere on a farm. My dad became a coal miner and he wanted us boys to do something with ourselves besides coal mines. He loved underground mining but he had lung and safety concerns,” Gibson said.

The Gibson farm’s livestock ranged from cows and chickens and pigs to horses and mules, used for plowing and logging jobs. As on any farm, animal injuries and illness sometimes required the help of a local animal doctor.

“I was always intrigued by the local vet,” Gibson said, explaining the man was “grandfathered in” as a veterinarian, and educated only by experience.

“It seemed like a fun thing to do,” he said.

As a young boy, Gibson decided he was going to college when he was old enough, although he admits veterinary school was not his first career choice.

“My initial love was auto mechanics. But, when I found out there was no college required to be an auto mechanic, something clicked and I said, ‘Alright. I’m going to be a veterinarian.’ I wanted to be one of the first in my family to go to college. Myself and my cousin were the first two.”

He first attended Morehead State University and was accepted at Auburn University upon his first application.

Starting Up

“I remember our first client on July 4, 1995. Bob Caummisar had a puppy that was having siezures. We fixed that puppy and he lived happily ever after!”

Gibson said he was blessed to find community support in Grayson, and that “Jack Strother and Commercial Bank of Grayson stood by me from the beginning,” in addition to his own father and family members.

He recalled meeting a group of local farmers for the first time.

“They told me I had big shoes to fill following Doc Gross,” he said, smiling at the memory.

“I think Doc Gross was looking down on me. We joked about his ghost being there when unusual things happened at the old clinic.”

Many Changes

The fundamentals of animal medicine have remained, although the technology and techniques involved have changed tremendously.

“The technology from then to now is almost daylight to dark,” Gibson said.

“For example, Dr. Gross had a Polaroid X-Ray machine with imaging in reverse – so, bone was black on the film. I used it for many years. Now it’s all digital and it takes six seconds. With the Polaroid, you snapped the shot, then pulled the exposed film and several minutes later you got a reverse-image picture.”

Credit Where Due

“Our goal is to provide the best care and do what’s right by that animal. You can’t always meet, but sometimes you can exceed expectations,” Gibson said, citing the importance of the people who work at All Creatures Veterinary Care.

“I owe a lot to my staff, from the beginning to the ones working today and the ones working for me in the future,” smiling, he added “They do the dirty work, so to speak.”

All Creatures (Almost)

Dogs and cats make up the bulk of the All Creatures Veterinary Care files, although Gibson and team often work with unexpected species. The business name is a nod to James Herriott’s book “All Creatures Great And Small,” Gibson noted.

Pet rats, primates, “birds of all kinds (including an owl), a baby elephant, a giant tortoise, and an egg bound spotted Gecko (“I had to hit the books and go online for that.”) are among the clinic’s more unusual patients.

“It was goats this morning and it will be horses this afternoon,” he said, explaining he was working with 4-H kids that day.

“I won’t see unscented skunks or venomous snakes, but anything else we’ll pretty much see.”

Family, Fun and Flight

Gibson and wife, Cindy, who have four dogs (three Golden Retrievers and a Chocolate Lab); two cats; a Clydesdale horse and a miniature pony as their own pets, share a passion for flying. Gibson has been a licensed private pilot for more than two years and is now finishing up work to obtain his instrument rating.

When opportunity allows, they enjoy flights to the Florida Keys, where they were married. Florida also provides Gibson a chance to work with a non-profit sea turtle rescue organization – including two invitations to help release turtles last year.

“I also have two grandkids I want to spend more time with,” Gibson said, adding the family also enjoys time on Grayson Lake, which he called “a gem in our backyard.”

Looking Ahead

“With this pandemic, you just don’t know … We have stepped back and changed the way we do business,” Gibson said, explaining staff members have voted to continue with curbside service for safety reasons.

“Who knows where this is going to go or what is going to happen?”

“I want to continue doing community work,” the longstanding member of the Carter County Fair Board said.

“I’m happy with my decision to become a vet,” he said, grinning before he added “I wasn’t good enough to make it at any sport!”

For more information about All Creatures Veterinary Care, located at 406 East Main Street, Grayson Kentucky, call (606) 474-5146 or visit

http://www.acvcgrayson.com/

Story by TIM PRESTON

Photos by CINDY GIBSON

Carter County Post