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Inside Appalachia Remembers Fiddler and Radio Personality Joe Dobbs

Joe Dobbs was a fiddler, a radio host, and he owned the Fret and Fiddle music store
Courtesy of Fret and Fiddle
Joe Dobbs was a fiddler, a radio host, and he owned the Fret and Fiddle music store

This week on Inside Appalachia we pay tribute to fiddler Joe Dobbs, who passed away September 21st at the age of 81. For 25 years he hosted a radio show, called Music From the Mountains, on West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Joe Dobbs dedicated his life to giving voice to Appalachian musicians who otherwise might not ever be heard outside of their community.He owned the Fret n Fiddle music store in St. Albans, West Virginia. He helped form the band, The 1937 Flood, which plays traditional West Virginia tunes, as well as rag time, swing, and jug band music.

There are other programs on the radio that feature Appalachian music, at least from time to time, like Mountain Stage with Larry Groce. But Groce says nobody's doing the kind of show Joe Dobbs did, and he hopes someone will.

"I wish somebody would pick up the torch that Joe carried. Maybe some young person," said Groce. "Because it’s very important now, if not more important than ever. It’s got to be someone who has the mission, like Joe did. He had the mission to expose this kind of music and just to have fun with it, in the spirit of old time radio shows where people came in and just played some music."Listen to the one and only Joe Dobbs do what he did best- bringing the stories of musicians to listeners over the airwaves. If you never heard of Dobbs, here's your chance.Joe Dobbs was born in Mississippi and raised in Louisiana. But he got a job selling records for a Nashville company that sent him to West Virginia. In his autobiography, A Country Fiddler, Joe Dobbs recalls loving the mountains and the people of West Virginia. He said they were "my kind of folks". He moved to West Virginia permanently in 1967. Dobbs wrote that "it was the first time I had felt at home. For the first time in my life, when we would take a trip, I experienced the feeling of wanting to be home. I often tell people, 'I wasn’t born in West Virginia, but I got here as soon as I could.'”

Joe Dobbs’ longtime friend, Bobby Taylor, said up until the end of his life Dobbs had a never ending passion for learning new tunes on the fiddle.

 

Copyright 2015 West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Roxy Todd
Roxy Todd is a reporter and co-producer for Inside Appalachia and has been a reporter for West Virginia Public Broadcasting since 2014. Her stories have aired on NPR’s Morning Edition, All Things Considered, and Marketplace. She’s won several awards, including a regional AP Award for best feature radio story, and also two regional Edward R. Murrow awards for Best Use of Sound and Best Writing for her stories about Appalachian food and culture.
Jessica Lilly
Jessica Lilly covers southern West Virginia for West Virginia Public Radio and can be heard weekdays on West Virginia Morning, the station’s daily radio news program and during afternoon newscasts.