Leah Song

Leah Song

Leah Song in 2010 in New Orleans.
Background information
Birth name Leah Smith
Born Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Origin New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Genres Folk music
Roots music
Southern soul
World music
Occupation(s) Singer-songwriter
Instruments Vocals, banjo, fiddle, guitar
Years active 2006–present
Labels Independent
Associated acts Rising Appalachia

Leah Song (born Leah Smith) is a singer-songwriter, multi-instrumental musician, storyteller, poet, and activist known her role as front woman in Rising Appalachia, with her sister Chloe Smith, incorporating sultry vocals, rhythm, banjo, guitar, ballads, dance, spoken-word and storytelling into her work. Her music is based in the traditions of Southern soul and international roots music.

Song engages in social activism and is involved with the environment, food justice, human rights and prisons. She has been a speaker at TEDx in Asheville, North Carolina.[1][2]

Early life and education

Leah Smith was born and grew up in Atlanta, Georgia in an artistic family. Her father, Andrew Hunter Smith, was a folk-sculptor and painter.[3][4] Her mother, Jan Smith, was a jazz pianist and folk musician schooled in the traditions of southern Appalachian folk music who played fiddle with the Rosin Sisters.[5]

Her musical education was nurtured by her mother, who ensured that both sisters received classical and jazz piano training for the most of their upbringing. Smith's mother also guided their training in vocals and harmony singing. Banjo, fiddle and guitar came later, after the sisters had left home and moved to Asheville, North Carolina.[6][7]

She graduated from Henry W. Grady High School[8] where she was involved in political activism. Determined to pursue an experiential form of education, at 19 she moved to Mexico, where she became involved with the Zapatista movement.[9] In a 2014 interview, she said of the experience,

I was working with the Zapatista movement and just living in and amongst the communities of southern Mexico that were working with indigenous struggle. When I moved down there I became a student of that community. I lived there for almost a year teaching and learning. I then went on to spend the next 5 years of my life traveling and living abroad in that context. I went from place to place to study and live within a community and truly be a community member. I really tried to be invested in the places I traveled to and learn from them.[9]

Musical career

Rising Appalachia at the FloydFest 2010 in Floyd, Virginia

Song and her sister Chloe decided to record their first album, Leah and Chloe (2006),[10] one afternoon in the basement studio of a friend in downtown Atlanta, Georgia. The album was meant as a gift for family and friends but they received so much support and recognition for it that they decided to officially start a band called Rising Appalachia.

In the early days, the sisters busked, in the French Quarter of New Orleans and elsewhere.[6] They began to find their own natural interpretation of Appalachian music which brought together folk, soul, hip-hop, classical, southern gospel and other styles[11] based on their upbringing on traditional Appalachian string band music, as well as on their exposure to urban music like hip-hop and jazz and the influence of roots music of all kinds which they experienced during their worldwide travels.[3]

Song's spoken-word poetry is a driving influence behind Rising Appalachia’s music.[12] Her background in movement arts has inspired her to cultivate a relationship with the global circus arts and street theater communities.[13]

Activism

Song is involved in the environmental activism of the Appalachian Mountains and Gulf Coast regions. She is also involved with food justice, human rights activism[13] and prison activism.[14] She works with prison programs which cultivate emotional release through the arts around the United States.[13]

Rising Appalachia has sung in support of the Occupy movement.[15]

The Slow Music Movement and the Wider Circles Rail Tour

Song coined the term "Slow Music Movement" while preparing for a TedX talk.[16] During Rising Appalachia's Wider Circles[17] Rail Tour, the band travelled by Amtrak train. Song connected this with the "Slow Music Movement", which she described as exploring the question as to how music can be a public service, [14] saying:

We want to have relationships with the farmers and the food of each region and also to have a relationship with different educational initiatives and non-profits. We have a policy that at each show at least two non-profits are welcome, invited — non-profits or educational initiatives, arts justice projects — to the show to set up tables and let the audiences know, as well as ourselves, what’s going on locally.[18]

Personal life

Song is a global traveller and lives between New Orleans, North Carolina, Cuba, India, Appalachia, and Latin America.

Selected discography

With Rising Appalachia

Independent music videos

Collaborative music videos

Interviews and talks

See also

Notes

References

Further reading

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