Featured Old Timer        appalachianmusic.net

Updated  Wednesday, February 13, 2008 11:40 AM est                                          Your online source for old time music news

 

Slim Bryant Slim Bryant, Country Music Legend and Local TV Pioneer  Featured on WQED's OnQ 
Thursday Dec 13, 2007, at 7:30 p.m.

Slim Bryant is a country guitarist and songwriter with a performance career stretching back over 75 years. At age 99, he is known by many Pittsburghers for having performed on the first television program to air in this city, a musical variety show broadcast live on WDTV (later to become KDKA TV) from the Syria Mosque in Oakland in 1949. 

Thomas Hoyt "Slim" Bryant was born in Atlanta, Georgia, on December 7, 1908. His father was an electrician who played old-time fiddle, and his mother was an amateur poet who sang, played guitar and piano. Slim's music career took off in 1931 when he joined up with Clayton McMichen and the band that would soon become The Georgia Wildcats. Bryant and his band came to Pittsburgh's KDKA radio in August, 1940 and played on "The Farm Show'' every morning until 1959. The group harmonized, sometimes crooned and could play styles from ballads to polkas to novelties. "We played, gave news and market reports for the farmers,'' he explained. It was a time when the radio and record industry were young, and automobiles were making it possible for itinerant musicians to tour like never before. They were part of the first generation of country music "professionals" who could earn a living in the recording and performing business.

Bryant is also best known for his recording days with the legendary country singer Jimmie Rodgers, who died in 1933. Rodgers recorded Bryant's song "Mother, the Queen of My Heart," on Oct. 21, 1932 with Bryant accompanying him on guitar. The song has since been done by singers ranging from George Gobel to Merle Haggard. In addition to the Georgia Wildcats and Jimmie Rodgers, Bryant has performed with The Skillet Lickers, Gene Autry, Eddy Arnold, Tex Ritter, Les Paul, Joe Negri, Burl Ives, Rosemary Clooney and Snooky Lanson, many of them he still counts as friends.

Slim Bryant and his WildcatsSlim Bryant has written about 200 songs, including country western standards, as well as jingles for ad agencies. With his Wildcats he recorded hundreds of songs for a variety of labels, more than 180 of them at NBC in New York. A CD recording featuring Slim's music was released in the Spring of  2007. The CD contains 31 songs that were recorded more than a half-century ago. Slim wrote music and or words for a number of them, among the tunes are these titles: "Thunderstorm" "Penny Ante Polka" and "My Saddle, My Bronco and You.''

When the music business slowed in the early 1960's Slim and his wife Mary Jane opened a card shop and a basement studio on Potomac Avenue in Dormont. Mrs. Bryant died of a neurological disease in 1987. Slim currently resides in Dormont. 

Rick Sebak profiles Slim Bryant in a special report for OnQ viewers Thursday Dec 13, 2007, at 7:30 p.m.

Follow these links for more about the life of Hoyt "Slim" Bryant:

WQED Multimedia TV OnQ

Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, May 19, 2007 
Vintage country recordings released on CD

Pittsburgh Post Gazette, May 10, 2007
Slim Bryant, 98, returning to country music with CD

Pittsburgh Magazine December 2006
Our Own Country Music Legend Turns 98 This Month

Pittsburgh Post Gazette, August 11, 2002
A Life in tune The real Slim's heyday
(This site has some audio clips of Slim's songs, and interview)

The Old Time Herald Vol. 8, No. 5 
The Varied Musical Career of Slim Bryant—93 Years Young

Thomas Hoyt Slim Bryant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

Clayton McMichen and his Georgia Wildcats on their first visit to KDKA in 1931.
From left: Pat Berryman, Clayton McMichen, Johnny Barfield and Slim Bryant.


MAKER OF FINE VIOLINS

Clifford Hardesty,-- Fiddle Maker

I want to once again thank The Ohio Arts Council and everyone involved for allowing grants that help me pass on the tradition of building the violin. Among them are my grandson, Jeremy Timmons, and most recently William Arnold from West Lafayette, Ohio. I have taken two years' vacation from applying for any grants for other reasons. ..I just felt that I could not do enough to support the grant. While writing this, I am pleased to have been asked to take a part in MUSIC AT HAND, to be held in downtown Dayton, June 15-17, 2001. I also want to thank Cityfolk, Tim Lloyd, Judy Sacks, and anyone who is involved with this year's celebration.       Clifford Hardesty, - Fiddle Maker

   I was born in Coshocton County, Ohio, in the year 1921. My father, John Hardesty, was a coal miner, farmer and blacksmith; if he had to have something, and he could make it, he did just that. My father was also a pretty good carpenter, and could work with wood. I believe that is where I may have learned a lot of what it takes to have learned to build the violin. I grew up on the old farm of 87 acres, where I helped work and raise most of our living from the ground. I might add that I always seemed to be in my Dad's way when he was doing a job; I always wanted to be a part of it, learning what it takes to work with one's hands.
   I was one of five brothers and four sisters, most of whom grew up on the same old farm. My mother, whose name was Florence, kept care of the house and helped in the fields and garden, milking the cows and, of course, doing most of the cooking to feed all who lived in the Hardesty house. I remember part of the time around our house there were sixteen people around our kitchen table (some table) and we all had plenty to eat.
   My first six years of school were spent in a one-room schoolhouse called The Powell's School. I was then sent to Fresno, Ohio, where I attended The White Eyes Rural Grade and High School. Here I went through the twelfth grade and graduated in 1940 in a class of 13: eight girls and five boys. There are still at this date 12 of us remaining - quite an honor. From this graduating class, there were farmers, railroaders, grocery store operators, preachers, housewives, and, of course, last but not least, a fiddle player and violin maker.
   I learned to play the fiddle in 1931 on my older brother's fiddle. The first tune that I played was Red River Valley, after grasping that, I learned two others: Coming 'Round The Mountain and Can I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight, Mister?
   After graduating from High School, I did a lot of work helping to operate the old farm for my father before he passed away in 1942.1 lived on with my mother until later, when she sold the farm to one of my older brothers. My first job for myself was hauling coal, lime, and anything else that I possibly could in my 1939 Chevrolet truck. After that, I went into the gasoline hauling business, driving a tank wagon hauling gasoline and fuel until 1961. I then leased a Service Station in West Lafayette, Ohio, which I ran until 1974. After selling out, myself, my wife, Lela, and my two daughters, Mary and Cindy, moved onto a half acre of ground near West Lafayette, Ohio, where we lived until fall of 1999, when Lela and I moved to Canal Lewisville, Ohio, near Roscoe Village and Coshocton, Ohio. I have set up a new violin shop within my garage on the back of our house, which is located at 106 Jackson Street, Coshocton, Ohio.

   In 1973, I made my first fiddle, and to date I have completed 142 fiddles, including three violas. I might add that I am a self-taught violin maker as well as a fiddle player. In 1973, I purchased the book How To Build Your Own Violin, by Leroy Geiger, one of the last in print. From this book, I read and followed instructions on how I could build my first violin. Most of my fiddles are made of Curly Maple for the back, side bouts and neck; the top, or sound board, is made of spruce or cedar. I have used native maple as well as European wood, which I purchased from supply houses.

   I believe I have already said enough about my life and making the violin, so I will make this my conclusion, and make my next report on some of my affiliations and exposures. My affiliations are the F. & A. M. of Ohio; Plainfield Lodge #224; Life Member American Legion of Ohio Post #466 West Lafayette, Ohio; Amvets Post 36, Coshocton, Ohio; retired Member of A. F. of Musicians, Local No. 404, Dover, Ohio; and Member Loyal Order of Moose Lodge 1337, Newcomerstown, Ohio.

   I helped on the following recordings: Touch of Grass, produced by Len Shryock, Canton, Ohio; Seems Like Romance To Me, Traditional Fiddle Tunes From Ohio, which was made possible by grants from The Ohio Arts Council/Ohio Humanities Council Joint Program and The National Endowment for The Arts, project direction and field recording by Howard Sacks and Jeff Gohring. My own cassette recording, Clifford Hardesty: Ohio's Master Fiddler (Volume 1.) is available from the address below. I was also a part of The White Eyes Township Music Club, and Traditional Music In Southeastern Ohio, produced by the National Endowment For The Arts, project director David Taylor. The many demonstrations of my craft include Festival Of American Folklife at Washington, D. C. in 1988; Gambier Folk Festival at Gambier, Ohio; Old Worthington Folklife, Worthington, Ohio; Kent State Folk Festival; National Folk Festival, Akron, Ohio; National Folk Festival, Dayton, Ohio; City Folk Festival, Dayton, Ohio; Hale Farm and Village; and Cuyahoga Valley Folk Festival, to mention a few.

Thank you for your time.

Clifford Hardesty
106 Jackson Street
Coshocton, Ohio 43812
Phone: 1-740-622-1007