- The Village Out West: The Lost Tapes of Alan Oakes · 2021
- The Village Out West: The Lost Tapes of Alan Oakes · 2021
- 50 Years: Where Do You Come From? Where Do You Go? · 2009
- Masters of Old-time Country Autoharp · 2006
- Masters of Old-time Country Autoharp · 2006
- Masters of Old-time Country Autoharp · 2006
- Masters of Old-time Country Autoharp · 2006
- Masters of Old-time Country Autoharp · 2006
- Masters of Old-time Country Autoharp · 2006
- Masters of Old-time Country Autoharp · 2006
- Classic Southern Gospel from Smithsonian Folkways · 2005
- Classic Mountain Songs from Smithsonian Folkways · 2002
- Close to Home: Old Time Music from Mike Seeger's Collection, 1952-1967 · 1997
Albums
About Kilby Snow
Appalachian autoharp virtuoso John Kilby Snow was born May 28, 1905, in Grayson County, VA, but his family moved across the border into North Carolina when Snow was still a toddler. A precocious musician, he won the title of Autoharp Champion of North Carolina before he was even six years old. A left-handed player, Snow technically did everything wrong on the autoharp, but his upside-down and backwards approach and his unconventional methods (he would strum with his left hand below the chord bars, for instance) ended up completely reinventing the possibilities of the instrument. Although his repertoire consisted of traditional mountain songs and instrumentals, his so-called "drag note" system and his penchant for modifying his autoharps to his own physical and tonal specifications, not to mention his bluegrass-like velocity, make him arguably the first modern autoharp player. Snow's haunting and beautiful version of "Wind and Rain," an Appalachian variation of the old British murder ballad "Two Sisters," remains the standard against which all other versions of the song are measured. Officially "discovered" by Mike Seeger, Snow recorded a single album for Smithsonian Folkways in the 1960s. Although his recorded output was small, his impact, especially among aficionados of the autoharp, is immense. He died on March 29, 1980. ~ Steve Leggett
- HOMETOWN
- Grayson County, VA, United States
- BORN
- 28 May 1905
- GENRE
- Country