- Source: Ralph Stanley Museum
The Ralph Stanley Museum is a monument to Ralph Edmond Stanley, an American bluegrass musician known for his distinctive singing and banjo playing.
History and description
The museum opened in October 2004, in Clintwood, Virginia (close to McClure, Virginia, where Stanley was born). The Museum is housed in the Chase House, which has been an historic landmark in Dickenson County since its construction in 1903. It is also accompanied by a Traditional Mountain Music Center, also known as the Dickenson County Community Center, where private parties and meetings can be held.
The museum is one of the venues of Crooked Road, Virginia, on Virginia's Heritage Music Trail, which is designed to generate tourism and economic development in the Appalachian region of Southwestern Virginia by focusing on the region's unique musical heritage. The vision for the museum and music center is to preserve and promote mountain and Bluegrass music with workshops, seminars, and conventions.
The museum is decorated to look more subjective, including the front desk which looks like an oversized banjo. The museum describes many of Stanley's travels and contains some of his older possessions, including instruments and journals.
See also
List of music museums
References
External links
Official website
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Rebel Records (Amerika)
- Kleopatra
- Museum Sejarah Komputer
- Museum Seni Modern
- Friedrich Nietzsche
- Mayapan
- Penis Napoleon
- Automotive Hall of Fame
- Adolf Hitler
- Suku Jawa
- Ralph Stanley Museum
- Ralph Stanley
- The Stanley Brothers
- Dickenson County, Virginia
- Haysi, Virginia
- Clintwood, Virginia
- O Brother, Where Art Thou? (soundtrack)
- Conclave (film)
- Crooked Road (Virginia)
- List of music museums