© 2024 WYSO
Our Community. Our Nation. Our World.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Historic audio from the WYSO Archives

Rediscovered Radio Encore: The rich history of Bluegrass in the Miami Valley and at WYSO

The WYSO Archives
Jim and Tom Duffee, along with their brother Dan, performed bluegrass and hosted it on WYSO

October is American Archives Month, and we’re celebrating at WYSO with rediscoveries from our own extensive audio archives. Between the end of World War II and the mid-1960s, about three and a half million people migrated from Appalachia to the urban manufacturing centers of the Midwest. Over 40,000 came to the Dayton area from West Virginia, Tennessee, and especially Eastern Kentucky. They were seeking work at companies like National Cash Register, Frigidaire, and General Motors. And they brought their culture and their music along with them. For our project Rediscovered Radio, Producer Jocelyn Robinson brings us a look at the rich mountain heritage she found in the WYSO archives, preserved through the efforts of three local brothers.

Saturday night has been Bluegrass night at WYSO for over 40 years. In the early 1970s, the station’s music programming was all-volunteer, and anyone with the interest and a third class license could have a show on the air. Tom Duffe was one of those volunteers. He was joined in studio by his older brothers Dan and Jim. Tom was still in high school back then, and Jim was a student at Antioch College when the three took their passion for folk and old time music to the airwaves.

Tom Duffee Live
Tom Duffee performing live at the Van and Addie Kidwell 51st Wedding Celebration

"We invited people to give us a call and request, and they started requesting more and more bluegrass," says Dan Duffee. "We had been playing some Stanley Brothers, some Flatt & Scruggs, some Bill Monroe, and we started getting a lot of requests. They loved what we were doing, and they started coming up to the radio station, and inviting us to their homes, and it was a great time; it was just a great time."

The Hotmud Family Live
The Hotmud Family on WYSO

Credit from the WYSO Archices

"Dayton had been a hotbed of bluegrass with Red Allen, the Osborne Brothers, Frank Wakefield; these are big names in the bluegrass arena," says Tom Duffee. "But with big names, there’s also this thrust in country and bluegrass music is that it’s music made by regular folks, regular people."

Not only did the Duffee Brothers spin the records requested, but they performed the music themselves, along with local amateurs and professional bands, like the Hotmud Family. WYSO’s Archive has hours of bluegrass recordings, many made at the country music jamborees that started at Dayton’s Living Arts Center on Linden Avenue, back in 1974. These concerts aired live every Wednesday night for years, and featured many of those regular folks.

"One of my favorites was Bill Lowe, who worked at GM, spent a career there, retired from there, one of the best vocalists in bluegrass music, if you ask me," says Tom Duffee.

Bill Lowe
Bill Lowe singing White Dove with Suzanne Edmundson of Hotmud on backup vocals.

The friendships and fellowship of that era formed an enduring legacy. Tom Duffee’s own band, The Corndrinkers emerged during this heady time, and it includes his wife Linda Scutt. They’re still making music together nearly four decades later.

The Corndrinkers
The Corndrinkers live at WYSO in 1979

"To be reminded of the astonishing performances that we captured, now can we admit that some of them are out of tune? Yes! But still, the spirit is striking and remarkable and still worth listening to," says Tom Duffee.

Give a listen to bluegrass on WYSO…and be sure to call in with your request.

Rediscovered Radio is a project of the Eichelberger Center for Community Voices at WYSO.

Jocelyn Robinson is a Yellow Springs, Ohio-based educator, media producer, and radio preservationist. As an educator, Robinson has taught transdisciplinary literature courses incorporating critical cultural theory and her scholarship in self-definition and identity. She also teaches community-based and college-level classes in digital storytelling and narrative journalism.
Related Content