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Pressing On : The Roni Stoneman Story

Part of the Music in American Life series
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Roni Stoneman was the youngest daughter of the pioneering country music family and a woman who overcame poverty and abusive husbands to claim the title of "The First Lady of Banjo," a fixture on the Nashville scene, and, as Hee Haw's Ironing Board Lady, a comedienne beloved by millions.

Drawn from more than seventy-five hours of recorded interviews, Pressing On reveals Roni's gifts as a master storyteller.

With characteristic spunk and candor, she describes her "pooristic" ("way beyond 'poverty-stricken'") Appalachian childhood, and how her brother Scott taught her to play the challenging and innovative three-finger banjo picking style developed by Earl Scruggs.

She also warmly recounts Hee Haw-era adventures with Minnie Pearl, Roy Clark, and Buck Owens; her encounters as a musician with country greats like Loretta Lynn, Johnny Cash, June Carter, and Patsy Cline; as well as her personal struggles with shiftless and violent husbands, her relationships with her children, and her musical life after Hee Haw.

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RRP £112.00
Product Details
University of Illinois Press
0252031911 / 9780252031915
Hardback
23/03/2007
United States
English
232 p. : ill.
general Learn More
The tragicomic life story of one of America's best-known country entertainers, told with warmth and honesty by the woman who lived it
The tragicomic life story of one of America's best-known country entertainers, told with warmth and honesty by the woman who lived it AVGH Folk & traditional music, AVRL String instruments, BGFA Autobiography: arts & entertainment