A! Magazine for the Arts

Long Journey Home Festival is held

August 29, 2023

Just about as far northeast in Tennessee as you can get, you’ll find a county that is half Cherokee National Forest and half Watauga Lake, where people still get together and play music on their front porches. Nestled within those hills, lies Mountain City, and each year a celebration takes place honoring the iconic old-time mountain music style that shaped country music as we know it. The three-day festival spans Labor Day Weekend Sept. 1-3.

This year’s Long Journey Home festival events include:

• Buskin’ on Main, a showcase of local and regional acoustic talent playing up and down Main Street on the evening of Friday, Sept. 1.

• The unveiling of Acres of Stories and Songs, a new mural honoring Clint Howard Saturday, Sept. 2.

• The Musical Heritage Homecoming Tour showcasing authentic old-time music played on the front porches of the iconic musicians who shaped early country music by musicians who carry on the legacy of true mountain music, Sept. 2.

• A traditional Sunday Singin’ at Heritage Hall Theater featuring authentic old time gospel music, Sept. 3.

The fun begins Friday evening with Buskin’ on Main Street. This event brings the small town to life with music, friends and plenty of good eating. The Long Journey Home Art Show and Quilt Show is always a big hit at Johnson County Center for the Arts.

Saturday, Sept. 2, the Musical Heritage Homecoming Tour begins with the unveiling of a new mural, Acres of Stories and Songs on the Mural Mile in downtown Mountain City. Next up is a visit to the Clarence “Tom” Ashley homeplace with Kenny Price and Jerry Moses performing Ashley’s iconic clawhammer banjo tunes on his front porch. Up the road, Jack Proffitt and Friends perform the music of Clint Howard at the farm where Doc Watson’s first album was recorded.

Saturday’s tour concludes at the Fred Price Homeplace, nestled high in the mountains, but the evening holds even more entertainment with the return of the Mountain City Fiddler’s Convention to Heritage Hall. Tour maps may be picked up at the Center for the Arts and other local businesses. The Musical Heritage Mural Mile and Long Journey Home were made possible in part though funding from East Tennessee Foundation, Johnson County Community Foundation and Tennessee Arts Commission as well as the generosity of community members.

To learn more, visit www.longjourneyhome.net.

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