If Trouble Don't Kill Me: A Family's Story of Brotherhood, War, and Bluegrass

If Trouble Don't Kill Me: A Family's Story of Brotherhood, War, and Bluegrass

by Ralph Berrier
If Trouble Don't Kill Me: A Family's Story of Brotherhood, War, and Bluegrass

If Trouble Don't Kill Me: A Family's Story of Brotherhood, War, and Bluegrass

by Ralph Berrier

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Overview

Making moonshine, working blue-collar jobs, picking fights in bars, chasing women, and living hardscrabble lives . . .
 
Clayton and Saford Hall were born in the backwoods of Virginia in 1919, in a place known as The Hollow. Incredibly, they became legends in their day, rising from mountain-bred poverty to pickin’ and yodelin’ all over the airwaves of the South in the 1930s and 1940s, opening shows for the Carter Family, Roy Rogers, the Sons of the Pioneers, and even playing the most coveted stage of all: the Grand Ole Opry. They accomplished a lifetime’s worth of achievements in less than five years—and left behind only a few records to document their existence.
 
Fortunately, Ralph Berrier, Jr., the grandson of Clayton Hall and a reporter for the Roanoke Times, brings us their full story for the first time in IF TROUBLE DON'T KILL ME. He documents how the twins’ music spread like wildfire when they moved from The Hollow to Roanoke at age twenty, and how their popularity was inflamed by their onstage zaniness, their roguish offstage shenanigans, and, above all, their ability to play old-time country music.
 
But just as they arrived on the brink of major fame, World War II dashed their dreams.

Berrier follows the Hall twins as they travel overseas, leaving behind their beloved music, and are thrust into the cauldron of a war that reshaped their lives and destinies. Through the brothers’ experiences, the story of World War II unfolds—Saford fought from the shores of North Africa to Sicily and Europe and finally into Germany; Clayton fought the Japanese in the brutal Pacific theater until the savage, final battle on Okinawa. They returned home after the war to find that the world had changed, music had changed . . . and they had, too.
 
IF TROUBLE DON'T KILL ME paints a loving portrait of a vanishing yet exalted southern culture, shows us the devastating consequences of war, and allows us to experience the mountain voices that not only influenced the history of music but that also shaped the landscape of America.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780307463081
Publisher: Crown Publishing Group
Publication date: 08/10/2010
Sold by: Random House
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Ralph Berrier, Jr., is a reporter at the Roanoke Times, for which he has written extensively about Virginia’s musical heritage. His work has been honored by the Scripps Howard Foundation’s National Journalism Awards, the American Association of Sunday and Feature Editors, and the Newspaper Association of America. He is also an avid bluegrass and old-time fiddle player who lives in Roanoke, Virginia, with his wife and daughter.
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