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Flash Flood in Red Bird Valley

Flash Flood in Red Bird Valley Delmas W. Abbott Appalachian Heritage, Volume 3, Number 2, Spring 1975, p. 77 (Article) Published by The University of North Carolina Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/aph.1975.0009 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/442891/summary Access provided at 20 Feb 2020 00:04 GMT from JHU Libraries song as much as anything else that drove an electric guitar, and it's sung slow and Laurel Green away from Clay Ridge. No- sad-like with a country-style quartet sing- body saw her since that night. I expect ing a background refrain. The words are she's waiting tables at some roadstand pretty much the way it happened; of somewhere—somewhere far off where she course, they've been made to rhyme. The can get through the night without hearing whole story is there in that song, and if that tune on the juke box. you care to hear it just go into any moun- You see, a cowboy singer, a right fam- tainside cafe. It's on all the juke boxes, ous one, made a record of that song with William Wiser was born in Cincinnati but his family moved to North Georgia so that he is familiar with the locale of his story. He has lived in New York and http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Appalachian Review University of North Carolina Press

Flash Flood in Red Bird Valley

Appalachian Review , Volume 3 (2) – Jan 8, 2014

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Publisher
University of North Carolina Press
Copyright
Copyright © Berea College
ISSN
2692-9244
eISSN
2692-9287

Abstract

Delmas W. Abbott Appalachian Heritage, Volume 3, Number 2, Spring 1975, p. 77 (Article) Published by The University of North Carolina Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/aph.1975.0009 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/442891/summary Access provided at 20 Feb 2020 00:04 GMT from JHU Libraries song as much as anything else that drove an electric guitar, and it's sung slow and Laurel Green away from Clay Ridge. No- sad-like with a country-style quartet sing- body saw her since that night. I expect ing a background refrain. The words are she's waiting tables at some roadstand pretty much the way it happened; of somewhere—somewhere far off where she course, they've been made to rhyme. The can get through the night without hearing whole story is there in that song, and if that tune on the juke box. you care to hear it just go into any moun- You see, a cowboy singer, a right fam- tainside cafe. It's on all the juke boxes, ous one, made a record of that song with William Wiser was born in Cincinnati but his family moved to North Georgia so that he is familiar with the locale of his story. He has lived in New York and

Journal

Appalachian ReviewUniversity of North Carolina Press

Published: Jan 8, 2014

There are no references for this article.