
Rhiannon Giddens is ready to meet a major moment of revival in Black music history, with banjo in hand
Rivers are traditionally sites of salvation, as well as play. Last summer, Giddens was making her new album of traditional banjo and fiddle tunes with Justin Robinson, 'What Did the Blackbird Say to the Crow,' and they were recording a few songs at Mill Prong House in Red Springs, N.C. Stepping inside the house, built on a plantation in 1795, Giddens recoiled at the intensity she felt.
'I knew who was working these fields,' she says. 'I knew who was serving in this house — and it was people who looked like me. And then seeing up on the wall, like, a reunion photo of these old white dudes who went to Chapel Hill, at the end of the Civil War, and one of them had my Black family's last name from Mebane [N.C.] ... I was just like: I can't right now. I had to run out to the river.'
In a moment captured by a photographer, she was crouching by the water just before it started to rain, 'and I'm thinking: how many people have come down to this river for respite? How many people in the history of this plantation — turned manor house, turned private property — have come to exactly this spot, distressed over whatever reason?'
Giddens carries the weight of this on her shoulders — of the distress, but also of the joyful culture and music-making of her ancestors — and she extends an open invitation to audiences to share and learn their stories and their culture. She did so at her inaugural Biscuits & Banjos Festival in her native North Carolina, and she's doing it in her current Old-Time Revue tour — which will make a special blockbuster stop at the Hollywood Bowl [on June 18].
The program will feature Giddens playing with Hollywood banjoists Steve Martin and Ed Helms, along with a reunion of the all-female banjo supergroup Our Native Daughters. 'So many banjos,' she says. 'This evening is going to be amazing. I wanted to call it a 'Banjo Jamboree,' but they wouldn't let me,' she laughs, speaking to The Times via Zoom.
Balancing laughter and sorrow seems to come easily to Giddens, 48, who has been on a serious mission to rekindle the legacy of the banjo and string band traditions as authentically Black creations ever since she met fiddle player Joe Thompson in 2004 and became a disciple. She's referred to as an 'elder' in the 'Blackbird' liner notes, which doesn't bother her: 'To an 18-year-old, I am an elder,' she says. 'I'm almost 50, and we are the half generation. We're the point five, because our parents didn't pick this up.'
From the Carolina Chocolate Drops to her solo music, from composing the Pulitzer-winning opera 'Omar' to helming the Silkroad Ensemble, Giddens is at the fore of a movement of Black artists — including Beyoncé, whose country album 'Cowboy Carter' features Giddens on banjo — reclaiming their cultural heritage and making it sing again.
A river (of sorts) played a role in another piece of Black Southern iconography this year — in the climax of 'Sinners.' Giddens was a musical consultant on Ryan Coogler's blockbuster film and contributed her banjo to the song 'Old Corn Liquor' on its soundtrack. She was also meant to appear onscreen in the central juke joint — her Chocolate Drops bandmate, Justin Robinson, does — but she couldn't make it work with her busy schedule. She admittedly hasn't seen the film ('I don't like horror movies, so I actually don't want to see it') but she's still a fan.
'I think what they've opened up with the whole conceit behind it is super important,' Giddens says.
In a way, 'Sinners' is a vampiric, IMAX-sized version of her own project, in that it's about how so much of our popular musical culture was invented by Black folks in the South and co-opted by white performers (whether Elvis, the Rolling Stones or the country and folk music industries) — but also about how music can be a time machine, a way to seance with people up the river of history.
'Beyoncé, 'Sinners,' and then, in its own small way, Biscuits & Banjos is like this little triangle of a cultural movement,' Giddens says, 'which I didn't see coming, and I'm just super grateful. Because it's been a desert. ... We're all toiling in our corners, on our own, and it kind of feels like we're carrying all of this on our own.'
Her Durham festival, which took place in April, drew musical legends — Taj Mahal, Christian McBride, the Legendary Ingramettes — and basically 'most of my favorite people making music right now,' says Giddens. She also judged a biscuit competition and participated in contra dances, which is what got her into this music in the first place.
'People were just really ready,' she says, 'ready to come and feel good, and to celebrate our humanity together.'
For Giddens, the stakes couldn't be higher. She and Robinson learned their tunes and their art directly from Thompson, who died in 2012; they were playing his music together in Ojai recently 'when it just hit me how important it was what we were doing,' she says, 'like how complete the sound was together. I said: 'If one of us gets hit by a bus, this tradition is dead.' '
That's why she wanted to record the tunes they inherited from Thompson, as well as from Etta Baker and other North Carolina string band players — hence the 'Blackbird' album. But she also insists that the only way to truly pass the flame is through playing together in person.
'I know that learning from Joe forms the center of my character as a musician,' she says. 'I learned stuff off of recordings, fine, but I have something to go back to that was a living transmission. And I just think you should have something of that, especially in this day and age.'
Giddens has passed her tradition down to many students in the past 20 years, including her nephew Justin 'Demeanor' Harrington — who plays banjo and the bones, and also raps, and who is traveling with her Old-Time Revue.
This will be Giddens' first time at the Bowl; likewise for Amythyst Kiah, a banjo player from Johnson City, Tenn., and one of Our Native Daughters. That project began in 2019 as a one-off album recorded in a small Louisiana studio, of songs inspired by the transatlantic slave trade and the suffering and often unheard voices of Black women.
'Music has a way of disarming,' says Kiah, 'so it allows for people to be able to engage with the subject matter in an easier way than just talking about it.'
The fierce foursome — which also includes Allison Russell and Leyla McCalla — toured with their songs before the pandemic, and later brought their banjos to Carnegie Hall in 2022. 'Now we're playing in a stadium,' says Kiah, 'which is insane.'
The star-studded Bowl show is 'not what I usually do,' says Giddens. 'It's stepping out a little bit for me, not to mention the size of the place, which is kind of freaking me out.'
But really it's just another river — or rather, the same river Giddens has been inviting folks to join her at for the last 20 years.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Chicago Tribune
5 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
‘Washington Black' review: Escaping enslavement becomes a rip-roaring adventure
What does 'somewhere safe' mean when a bounty hunter is on your trail? In the Hulu adventure series 'Washington Black,' that location has been Halifax, Nova Scotia — at least temporarily — for the title character who, as a boy, escaped enslavement on a sugar plantation in early 19th century Barbados. Now a young adult (Ernest Kingsley Jr.), he goes by Jack Crawford to evade detection. Wash, as he was known in a former life, has been living for an indeterminate period of time as a free man in Halifax among other free Black people, including the warmly protective Medwin (Sterling K. Brown, also a producer here), who affectionately calls Wash 'island boy' and says things like 'Are we dreamin' or are we drinkin'?' before clinking glasses, and then: 'If the white folks don't kill ya, this'll definitely do the job,' he says of whatever they're swilling. He is also not afraid to get his hands dirty. This is good news for Wash, since that aforementioned bounty hunter means business. An accomplished artist and scientist who dreams of building a flying machine, Wash's interests and prodigious talents are conspicuous enough that his attempts to disappear haven't fully succeeded, forcing him into hiding. There's also the beautiful young blonde woman Wash spotted days earlier at the docks. As she disembarked from a ship, he stared, both enraptured but also clocking that she's biracial, something the white population of Halifax has failed to grasp. That's how her (white) father wants it, but she has no intention of living a lie or denying the memory of her deceased mother. Her insistence is why they left London to start over in Halifax, as her father keeps reminding her: 'You are a child of England, a child of empire, and that is the skin you must inhabit for us both.' The tenuousness of her and Wash's circumstances complicates the sweetness of their tentative romance. They have both been living double lives and have a unique understanding of one another as a result. That's the 1837 narrative. The other begins eight years earlier in Barbados, and it is Wash's origin story told in flashback. A repellent plantation owner rides out to the sugarcane fields to ward off any thoughts of suicide as a means of escape from their living nightmare: 'Killing yourself is a crime against me as surely as if you stole my horse and slit his throat.' This cruel man has a brother, whose arrival changes the course of Wash's life. A high-spirited inventor and abolitionist named Titch (Tom Ellis), he recognizes the child's curiosity and talent and takes the preteen (played by Eddie Karanja) under his wing. Soon enough, the pair are fleeing the sugarcane fields and Titch's nasty family dysfunction in a blimp-shaped 'cloutcutter' of the man's own devising. They don't get far before crashing into the masts of a pirate ship, and so Wash's journey — a grand, Jules Verne-esque tale both thrilling and fought with danger — begins. Based on the 2018 novel of the same name by Esi Edugyan, the eight-episode series is adapted by show creator Selwyn Seyfu Hinds and has a throwback quality to it, with a sweeping orchestral score that sets the tone. Wash's story can be deeply harrowing in parts (Nat Turner, played by Jamie Hector, makes a brief appearance and he is deadly serious about how precarious everyone's safety is), but it is also filled with dreamy and audacious escapades that see Wash deep sea diving and becoming mesmerized by the vast unknowableness of ocean life under the water. Is a novel, which engages the imagination differently than a screen adaptation, better equipped to toggle between these competing tones? Perhaps. More pressing, for me, was the question of who Wash is, in terms of his personality. As written and performed, we don't get much sense of what his own particular internal monologue might be, and this becomes underscored in any scene he shares with Brown's Medwin, who is such a clearly defined presence by comparison. Brown's an actor working on a different level than most, and he's very effective in his few appearances. I wish the show had outlined a bit more about the lives of Black people in Fairfax. They are free but vulnerable, and that nuance comes through most clearly when Medwin walks into a watering hole patronized by white men. The place goes quiet and he takes a seat at the bar. The man next to him says, 'I wouldn't expect your kind to be welcome in a place like this,' to which Medwin replies evenly: 'No, not usually. But most of the boys in here still need me and mine to make life easier for 'em down on the docks, so' — he takes a short but meaningful pause — 'we agree to disagree.' 'Washington Black' — 2.5 stars (out of 4) Where to watch: Hulu


Boston Globe
6 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Today in History: Apollo 11 returns home from the moon
In 1567, Mary, Queen of Scots, was forced to abdicate her throne to her 1-year-old son James. In 1847, Mormon leader Brigham Young and his followers arrived in the Salt Lake Valley in present-day Utah. In 1866, Tennessee became the first state to be readmitted to the Union after the Civil War. In 1915, the SS Eastland, a passenger ship carrying more than 2,500 people, rolled onto its side while docked at the Clark Street Bridge on the Chicago River. An estimated 844 people died in the disaster. In 1959, during a visit to Moscow, Vice President Richard Nixon engaged in his famous 'Kitchen Debate' with Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev. In 1969, the Apollo 11 astronauts — two of whom had been the first humans to set foot on the moon — splashed down safely in the Pacific. Advertisement In 1974, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled that President Richard Nixon had to turn over subpoenaed White House tape recordings to the Watergate special prosecutor. In 1975, an Apollo spacecraft splashed down in the Pacific, completing a mission that included the first docking with a Soyuz capsule from the Soviet Union. In 2010, a stampede inside a tunnel crowded with techno music fans left 21 people dead and more than 500 injured at the famed Love Parade festival in western Germany. In 2013, a high-speed train crash outside Santiago de Compostela in northwest Spain killed 79 people. Birthdays: Actor Dan Hedaya is 85. Actor Chris Sarandon is 83. Actor Robert Hays is 78. Actor Michael Richards is 76. Actor Lynda Carter is 74. Movie director Gus Van Sant is 73. Country singer Pam Tillis is 68. Basketball Hall of Famer Karl Malone is 62. Retired MLB All-Star Barry Bonds is 61. Actor Kadeem Hardison is 60. Actor-singer Kristin Chenoweth is 57. Actor Laura Leighton is 57. Actor-singer Jennifer Lopez is 56. Director Patty Jenkins is 54. Actor Eric Szmanda is 50. Actor Rose Byrne is 46. Actor Elisabeth Moss is 43. Actor Anna Paquin is 43. Former NHL center Patrice Bergeron is 40. Actor Mara Wilson is 38. TV personality Bindi Irwin is 27.


Axios
6 hours ago
- Axios
New movies and shows this week on Netflix, Hulu and Paramount+
Here's what's new on Netflix, Hulu, Paramount+, Apple TV+ and Prime Video. What we're watching: The highly anticipated sequel to "Happy Gilmore," a new adventure series about a young "Black genius" and a documentary chronicling the history of hip-hop. " Happy Gilmore 2" available Friday on Netflix What's inside: This sequel, almost 30 years in the making, follows the titular character's comeback to the golf course with Ben Stiller, Julie Bowen and Christopher McDonald reprising their roles. What they're saying: "The chaos in golf, [how] the sport is changing, the different factions and different, wild ways you can play golf did inform the decision to make this movie now," director Kyle Newacheck tells Axios. " Washington Black" available now on Hulu State of play: Based on the novel of the same name, this series follows the 19th-century, globe-trotting adventure of an 11-year-old escaped slave and science prodigy. What they're saying: Executive producer Selwyn Seyfu Hinds tells Axios that while the story begins on a plantation, "Washington Black" is not about slavery. "This is a story about a Black genius," Hinds says. "This is a story about a kid who literally flies." " Hip Hop Was Born Here" available now on Paramount+ The intrigue: LL Cool J hosts this series that charts the history and legacy of hip-hop as a genre and cultural movement. Behind the scenes: Guest appearances include Big Daddy Kane, Doug E. Fresh, Jadakiss, Method Man, Rev Run and Roxanne Shanté. " Hitmakers" on Netflix Twelve songwriters and producers come together at high-stakes writing camps to create hits for stars like John Legend, Shaboozey, and Blackpink's Lisa in this new unscripted series. Available now " Trophy Wife: Murder on Safari" on Hulu The three-part docuseries dives into the case of former Pittsburgh dentist Larry Rudolph, convicted of killing his wife on an African hunting trip. Available now " Shiny Happy People: A Teenage Holy War" on Prime Video This chapter in the "Shiny Happy People" series uncovers the stories behind evangelical youth organization Teen Mania — founded by Ron Luce in the 1990s. The docuseries examines the group's disturbing practices and how its shift toward militant rhetoric and political activism created a ripple effect that can still be seen today. Available now " Acapulco" Season 4 on Apple TV+ The fourth and final season of this comedy follows present-day Máximo (played by Eugenio Derbez) as he works to restore Las Colinas before the grand reopening. In 1986, young Máximo (Enrique Arrizon) does whatever it takes to get Las Colinas back on top of the annual ranking of Acapulco's "Best Hotels." Available now " The Hunting Wives" on Netflix Brittany Snow stars in this new series based on the 2021 novel of the same name by May Cobb. Available now " Justice on Trial" on Prime Video Emmy-winning Judge Judy Sheindlin stars in this new series that re-examines landmark criminal cases that have directly shaped the American justice system. Available now " Trainwreck: P.I. Moms" on Netflix