IBMA’s celebration of the songs of Tom T. Hall and Miss Dixie  

In an IBMA Saturday morning session, a panel of musicians shared memories and melodies of the late Tom T and Dixie Hall, entitled That’s How I Got To Memphis – A Celebration Of The Songs Of Tom T. Hall & Miss Dixie. Sitting on the dais were some of those in bluegrass that knew the songwriters best: Joe Newberry, Johnny and Jeanette Williams, Chris Jones, Rebekah Speer, and Troy Engle. Newberry had to leave early for a banjo workshop, but his vacancy was filled by Darin and Brooke Aldridge.

The mastermind of the songwriter series, Rick Lang, introduced the panelists. “The panel is comprised of singers, songwriters, and performers who were good friends with Tom and Dixie Hall,” he explained at the beginning of the 90 minute session.

Troy Engle served as moderator, starting the conversation and initiating responses from the other panelists.

“Collectively, I don’t think we’ve all been together,” he began. “We could talk three weeks about Tom and Dixie.”

Rebekah Speers shared, “I initially met them when Lizzy and I were invited to sing on the Sisters album. I got a graphic design/engineering job with them.”

Chris Jones noted that his introduction to the powerhouse songwriting couple was gradual. “I did a duet with Tom T on one of their first co-writes, Man on the Side of the Road.”

Jeanette Williams shared her encounter with Dixie. “I met Miss Dixie at IBMA in Louisville in 2000. I asked her, could I purchase a book and get Tom T to sign it for my sister?” A friendship quickly ensued. “She invited us to Fox Hollow (their home and site of their songwriting retreat). They hosted many bands just passing through.”

 Jeanette added, “Dixie was the editor of Music City News, but wasn’t listed because she was a woman.”

Johnny Williams said his relationship with Tom T began when the famed songwriter posed a two-part question. “I hear you’re a songwriter and drive a tractor? You and me are going to cut some grass.”

Williams admitted that he really mowed grass for the Halls. Then Tom T asked him, “Are you ready to do some studio work?” This time Williams helped Hall build on to his existing studio, but he eventually did get to record with him.

Joe Newberry recalled, “I sang at Jeanette Carter’s funeral. After her service, Tom T came up to me and said I like your right hand on the banjo.”

Newberry displayed a great fondness, reading the lyrics from Tom T Hall’s I Love You, Too.

“His lyrics were like talking with an old friend.”

Engle also shared his strong affection for the couple. “They would put you up and feed you. It felt like going to Grandma’s.”

All the panelists agreed, praising Miss Dixie’s cooking, especially her tomato gravy. Engle then played and sang an original tune about the Halls, Fox Hollow Memories, from his latest album.

Jones pointed out, “Tom was a renaissance man, and Dixie, there was so much more there. She came from England. Bill Clifton was her sponsor so she could be a US resident.”

He then sang one of her songs, He’ll Be a Hero in Harlan, about a soldier from Kentucky, noting she always worked teddy bears into her tragic tunes.

Johnny Williams added that Tom T was also an accomplished artist. “I bought him a big box of crayons. Miss Dixie came on stage at Bean Blossom and gave me a portrait that he had drawn with those crayons.”

Johnny, accompanied by his wife, Jeanette, then sang Hall’s song, Can You Hear Me Now?, that was recorded twice by Doyle Lawson.

Sharing humorous tales, Speer reflected on how Tom T Hall chewed Nicoret gum. “He would take it out and leave it right there (she gestured on the microphone) and…forget about it!”

The Aldridges joined the panel and shared their stories.

Darin said, “They’d always send you a little gift. They mailed us a small globe with ‘We’ll always share our little world’ written with it.”

Engle shared that Miss Dixie loved yard sales.

Johnny Williams readily agreed. “Miss Dixie was the boss. Tom T wanted me there one morning at 5:00 a.m. to clean out a building and load it into my truck. He was sweating and working hard. Here came Miss Dixie. He said, ‘Oh, gosh, Johnny, I’m going to play golf,’ and left. She had me unload everything. It took about three hours.”

Darin praised the couple’s affection for one another. “Tom T put Miss Dixie on a pedestal.”

Rebekah shared a common phrase Dixie used. “Working on the Daughters of Bluegrass box set, almost 70 songs, almost killed me. Miss Dixie wrote Let Me Fly Low and Walk Slow. She would never say goodbye. I would say ‘Walk Slow’ and she would say, ‘Fly Low’.”

Speer also described a songwriting table the couple used. “What you brought to the table, stayed at the table,” she affirmed.

Chris Jones went on to share that Dixie was a notorious practical joker. “She got Tom T to lie to a federal agent during her interview to be a US citizen.”

Jeanette Williams recalled a movie that the couple wrote and filmed, Who Shot Lester Monroe?

“Chris was the TV news reporter. We all had roles.”

Jones stated that Tom T was a philosopher. “He had a unique view of so many things. He said, ‘anything that can be managed is already being managed in the music business’.”

Engle agreed. “He was a genius. He just wanted to garden and play golf. Tom T would sing, ‘Don’t do anything you don’t want to do.’ They both made a whole life of doing just that.”

The session closed with all the panelists singing Tom T’s beloved gospel song, Me and Jesus. Attendees joined in and sang along.

Mama What Does Heaven Look Like There from Troy Engle

Troy Engle’s has been a familiar face in the bluegrass world for quite some time. The singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and bandleader grew up in southern Pennsylvania, where his love for the music first took root. But he moved to Nashville to try his hand in the business once he became skillful enough to pick and sing with the best of them.

For more than a decade he toured with top bluegrass and country acts like Larry Sparks, Patty Loveless, Buddy Jewell, The Isaacs, and Eric Church, and served as a sideman with numerous grassers who needed a fill-in for the road or the studio. Engle also befriended Tom T and Dixie Hall, and spent a good bit of time writing with them over his 12 years in Nashville.

Now back home in Pennsylvania, Troy is picking and singing with his own band, Southern Skies, and is about to release a new album containing a dozen songs that he wrote with the Halls, called Fox Hollow Memories.

A debut single is available now, a tender ballad called Mama What Does Heaven Look Like There. There’s sadness in the song, but the lyrics convey the hope of eternal life in the form of a request to a mother passed on for a report from the other side. Troy sings the lead, with backup vocals provided by The Isaacs.

You can hear a sample in this video snippet.

The single is available now wherever you stream or download music online, and Troy is offering a free download to anyone who signs up for his email list.

Radio programmers can get the track via AirPlay Direct.

Fox Hollow Memories is set for wide release on May 22.

Dixie and Tom T. Hall to Bluegrass Hall of Fame

The Bill Monroe Bluegrass Hall of Fame at Bean Blossom has announced that their 2018 inductees will be bluegrass songwriters Tom T. Hall and Dixie Hall. An award ceremony will be held on September 22 during the 44th Annual Hall of Fame and Uncle Pen Bluegrass Festival at the Bill Monroe Music Park in Bean Blossom, IN.

Outside of the bluegrass world, people think of Tom T. Hall as a country singer. He found great success in that field, both as a vocalist and a songwriter, but he retained his love for bluegrass throughout it all. As a young man, he wrote songs for Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs, while his future wife, Miss Dixie, was writing them with Maybelle Carter. Once they married in 1968, the two Halls wrote together until she passed in 2015.

They dedicated their energy to bluegrass for the past couple decades, even forming a publishing company and a record label which they ran from their home outside of Nashville. They actively promoted bluegrass artists who had recorded their songs, and it was rare to find any bluegrass chart that didn’t contain at least one of their compositions. In an act of particular generosity to the bluegrass world, the Halls have donated the royalties from their songs to the IBMA upon Tom’s ultimate passing.

Anyone who has met T. and Miss Dixie knows the depth of their love and appreciation for bluegrass. While Dixie was alive, there was usually a picker living in their guest house when they were between homes – or jobs – and they were always happy to help out any grassers who were down on their luck. It wasn’t just the music to which they opened their hearts, it was the people as well.

Of course Tom had released a number bluegrass songs and records during his singing career, which did a lot to popularize the music. On top of his albums, The Magnificent Music Machine, The Storyteller and the Banjo Man, and Tom T. Sings Miss Dixie, it was his release of Fox On The Run in 1976 that placed the song within the canon for most mainstream listeners.

There  can be no doubt but that Tom T. and Dixie Hall are deserving of this recognition by The Bill Monroe Bluegrass Hall of Fame. Their contributions to our music will long outlast their 50 years writing, recording, and promoting it.

Tickets for the Hall of Fame festival can be purchased online.

Tom T. and Dixie Hall estate sale this weekend

On Saturday, October 22, Northgate Gallery in Brentwood, TN will host a living estate sale for the collected property of Tom T. and Dixie Hall.

Since Miss Dixie’s passing in 2015, Tom T. has been downsizing and simplifying his life, and is parting with most of the furnishings with which Dixie so lovingly decorated their home over the years. This auction will involve the sale of her many, glorious pieces of French antique furniture, rugs and floor coverings, paintings, jewelry, glassware, and other home decor items.

Also offered will be articles from Tom T.’s personal collection of memorabilia, including musical instruments, knives, belt buckles, statuary, and photographs.

All items up for auction can be previewed on Friday from 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. at the gallery on Mallory Lane in Brentwood. The auction will begin on Saturday at 11:00 a.m.

Friends of the Halls will surely recognize many of the pieces detailed in the catalog, and also available in a printable format with estimated sales prices. An absentee bid form can be downloaded from the Northgate Gallery web site.

This is a rare opportunity to obtain pieces from the home of two of country and bluegrass music’s most influential songwriters, and among the most generous people ever to offer support to the bluegrass community.

More details can be found online.

Hall exhibit opens at IBMM

The International Bluegrass Music Museum in Owensboro, KY has opened their special Tom T. and Dixie Hall exhibit, which will remain open at the museum through June of 2017.

It includes artifacts from the private collection of Tom T. and his late wife, Dixie Hall, as well as items donated by others for the sake of this exhibition. Visitors can learn a good bit about the life of this reclusive couple, long beloved by both the country and bluegrass communities for their kindness and generosity to musicians and songwriters.

A photographer from the Owensboro Messenger-Inquirer stopped in for the official opening a few weeks back, and captured a number of images from the exhibit. The article they ran is only available to subscribers, and the museum has shared several of the photos for our readers to enjoy.

They include Miss Dixie’s fancy boots pictured above, and this image of Museum Executive Director Chris Joslin with Tom T.’s iconic black guitar, made for him by the Ovation Guitar Company. It was the first black guitar they had built, and they did so custom for Tom. He played that guitar for many years on stages all over the world, and has graciously loaned it to the Museum for the year.

They also have the hilarious, hand-painted banner that Miss Dixie displayed at World of Bluegrass and other festivals for a few years which featured her artistic likenesses of their many Blue Circle Records artists. Many a bluegrass singer was glad to see that one put away, now back on exhibit in Owensboro.

All of these, and much more, from the life of these two luminaries in the bluegrass world are available for browsing at the International Bluegrass Music Museum, open Tuesday-Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., and Sundays from 1:00 to 4:00 p.m.

Remembering Miss Dixie on Song of the Mountains

This past weekend in Marion, VA, a special edition of the PBS program, Song of the Mountains was recorded at The Lincoln Theatre. Its theme was Remembering Miss Dixie, and all the artists on the program performed songs written by Dixie and Tom T Hall.

Included were sets from Heather Berry & Tony Mabe, The Ridge Runners, The Larry Stephenson Band, and Chris Jones & the Night Drivers. These were all special friends of Miss Dixie, whose passing in 2015 left a large hole in the hearts of the bluegrass music community.

Also featured was a special tribute from three ladies who had worked closely with Miss Dixie during the later years of her life, calling themselves the Dixie Trio. They are Nancy Cardwell, former Executive Director of the IBMA, Annette Kelley, Business Manager for Tom T. and Dixie Hall at Fox Hollow, and Melissa Lawrence Buck, graphic designer and personal assistant to the Halls. All three grew up singing bluegrass music in their family bands, and serve on the Remembering Miss Dixie Committee who are involved in Dixie Hall’s charitable giving towards helping young musicians fulfill their bluegrass dreams.

Cardwell said that their group started when she brought her dad’s old guitar out to the office where Annette and Melissa were working on the Hall’s property one day, and the three of them got to singing, swapping out parts and just having a grand old time.

“Tom T. was taking a cat nap down the hall with a movie on TV, and heard us singing, which he thought was part of the soundtrack of the movie that was on. When he figured out that it was coming from inside the house, he tracked us down and said that we absolutely should be involved in the upcoming Song of the Mountains tribute show.

He was very instrumental in putting this show together, and in suggesting who should sing which songs on the program.

We were all honored to be there; we did it for Miss Dixie and her memory.”

Nancy said that they did one song of the Halls’ that has never yet been recorded, or even performed publicly before.

Each of the artists on the show also took part in an interview session on stage, sharing their own remembrances of Miss Dixie. It’s expected that at least two episodes of Song of the Mountains next season will be dedicated to this special event.

The performances captured on May 7 won’t air until next season on television, but thanks to David Johnson, we have this gallery of images from Saturday night’s show.

Dixie & Tom T. Hall: A Homegrown Love Story

The International Bluegrass Music Museum is hard at work preparing a new exhibit that traces the lives of legendary country and bluegrass songwriters, Tom T. and Dixie Hall.

Tom T. had a successful career as a country singer as well, while Miss Dixie was more comfortable working in the background where she wrote songs and organized events and fundraisers for her many philanthropic efforts. Until her passing last year following a long illness, the two were ardent supporters of bluegrass and bluegrass musicians in every imaginable way, including donating all their songwriting royalties following their deaths to the International Bluegrass Music Association, of which they were avid backers.

Set to open in June, and titled Dixie and Tom T. Hall: A Homegrown Love Story, the exhibit features a wide range of photos and memorabilia donated or on loan from the Hall estate.

Museum curator Teresa Westfall offers a brief preview…

“Dixie and Tom T. Hall: A Homegrown Love Story goes beyond the songs of Tom T. and Miss Dixie Hall to sing the story of their life and love for each other. From Dixie’s beginnings in England and Tom’s in Appalachia, we follow their adventure through rodeos, record labels, and festival romps. This homegrown love story will give you an intimate view of their lives and how their stories became the songs we know and love.

Any fan of music, songwriting, romance, or a just a good story will find something to love.”

…along with a video teaser:

 

A definite opening date for the Hall exhibit has yet to be announced, but IBMM plans to launch with a party at the Museum in Owensboro, KY with Tom T. in attendance.

Look for further details to be posted on the Museum web site as we get closer to summertime.

Dixie Hall to be honored at Louise Scruggs Memorial Forum

The Louise Scruggs Memorial Forum, an annual event remembering the contributions that Louise made to the business side of bluegrass and country music, will this year honor the late Dixie Hall for her work as a songwriter, publisher, journalist, label head and philanthropist during her life.

The Forum will be held on November 18 in the Ford Theater at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville. There is no cost to attend, but reservations will be required.

Following a reception in the theater lobby at 5:30 p.m., the Forum will begin at 6:30. It will consist of a multi-media presentation narrated by the renowned Nashville music journalist, Peter Cooper, now Editor at the Museum, set to to include never-before-seen photos and videos from Miss Dixie’s life and career. This will be followed by a roundtable discussion, featuring Rita Forrester (granddaughter of A.P. and Sara Carter) from the Carter Family Fold in Hiltons, VA; award-winning producer and songwriter Carl Jackson; and former executive director of the International Bluegrass Music Association Nancy Cardwell, who serves on the Remembering Miss Dixie Committee.

To close out the proceedings, Chris Jones, Sierra Hull, Heather Berry Mabe and other special guests will perform several of Miss Dixie’s songs.

The event is sponsored by the Gibson Foundation, who is covering the costs associated with the Forum.

To obtain reservations, contact the museum by email or by phone at (615) 416-2081. Approximately 200 seats will be available.

Remembering Miss Dixie Committee makes 2015 grants

The recently-formed Remembering Miss Dixie Committee, created as a component of the late Dixie Hall’s wishes, has announced grants to five organizations this month. In addition to her notoriety as a songwriter – and wife and partner to Tom T. Hall – Miss Dixie is remembered for her philanthropy, something she wanted to continue after her passing.

Chosen this month to receive grants from funds set aside in Miss Dixie’s will are:

  • Youth Scholarships to the Steve Kaufman Guitar and Mandolin Workshops
  • Youth Bluegrass Boot Camp at the Bill Monroe Music Park
  • Kentucky Center for Traditional Music at Morehead State University
  • Bluegrass, Old Time and Country Music Studies Program at East Tennessee State University
  • Gideon Bibles International

The Halls have been long time supporters of educational efforts for young musicians in bluegrass, so ongoing support in Miss Dixie’s name for these university and festival-based programs is no surprise. The donation to Gideon of 100 hotel Bibles is in honor of her close friend and fellow songwriter, Billy Smith, who serves as a regional director for The Gideons.

In noting these grants, Annette Kelley, treasurer of the Remembering Miss Dixie Committee, says…

“Miss Dixie was known in the bluegrass music community for her kind heart and generous spirit. We are so pleased to be able to honor her wishes and just continue to extend a helping hand to young people pursuing their Bluegrass dreams, in Miss Dixie’s memory.”

The Committee will neither solicit nor accept any monies for these efforts. They are fully-funded by a provision in Miss Dixie’s will.

Miss Dixie’s Star Shuttle at Bean Blossom

Our article on October 7 about the establishment of the Remembering Miss Dixie Committee in Nashville prompted the folks at the Bill Monroe Museum at Bean Blossom to share a photo of the gift that Dixie Hall left to them when she passed in January.

It’s a 4-wheel electric cart which she had used to get around when she visited the park for the various bluegrass festivals each year. Ken Hydinger at Bean Blossom tells us that they use it to ferry performers to and from the stage with their instruments.

There is a display on Miss Dixie and her history in bluegrass at the museum. They are one of many bluegrass institutions who have known this celebrated bluegrass songwriter’s generosity, both before and after her death.

These days, everyone at the Bill Monroe Music Park & Campground are busily preparing for their big 50th Annual Bill Monroe Memorial Bean Blossom Bluegrass Festival in June of next year. That’s an anniversary that all of us in bluegrass can be proud to celebrate.

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