The Nest of Singing Birds

The Nest of Singing Birds

Sun, Jun 28, 2026 • 4:00 PM—5:00 PM

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Live Music

Nest of Singing Bird (from left to right): William Ritter, Sheila Kay Adams, Donna Ray Norton.  As we approach the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, BRAHM invites you for an afternoon of songs older than America that have been preserved in the hills and hollers of Madison County, North Carolina.  Join us for a special afternoon of Appalachian ballads with three incredible musicians, singers, and storytellers Sheila Kay Adams, Donna Ray Norton, and William Ritter - together they are the Nest of Singing Birds A “nest of singing birds” was the name English folklorist Cecil Sharp gave to Madison County, North Carolina, when he visited the area in 1916 to collect the ancient ballads that had survived there, being gently passed down knee to knee and warm hand to warm hand. During his visit, he collected over 25 ballads from a woman named Mary Sands. The county is still known for this rich tradition that goes back at least nine generations. The moniker has now been adopted by a cooperative of singers in the region that are keeping this art form alive. Centering around Sheila Kay Adams, the matriarch of the traditional music community in Western North Carolina, the group is led by her second cousin Donna Ray Norton, one of the eighth generation of their family to keep these songs of love and loss and the stories that surround them alive. Through activities like Ballad Night at the Old Marshall Jail Hotel and performances at festivals and performing arts centers across the United States and the world, these a cappella songs are shared from the hearts of the singers to an ever-expanding community of people searching for the magic that abides inside this viable living, breathing tradition not yet lost to time and technology. “I found myself for the first time in my life in a community in which singing was as common and almost as universal practice as speaking… So closely, indeed, is the practice of this particular art interwoven with the ordinary avocations of everyday life that singers, unable to recall a song I had asked for, would often make some such remark as, ‘Oh, if only I were driving the cows home I could sing it at once.’ … I would go away in the evening with the feeling that I had never before been in a more musical atmosphere.” - Cecil Sharpe This concert is made possible through a grant from America 250 NC, an initiative by the North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources. About the performers Sheila Kay Adams is a seventh-generation ballad singer, storyteller, and musician from the Sodom Laurel community of Madison County, North Carolina, an area known for its centuries-old tradition of unaccompanied ballad singing rooted in the early Scots-Irish and English settlers. Taught by the elder singers of her mountain community, Sheila has spent her life preserving and sharing this powerful oral tradition. A gifted clawhammer banjo player and award-winning storyteller, Sheila began performing...

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Blowing Rock Art & History Museum

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