Lena Hughes
40 top tracks
Lena Hughes
40 top tracks
Albums

Queen of the Flat Top Guitar
Lena Hughes

Rural Parlor Guitar - Recordings From 1967-1971
Lena Hughes

Banjo Classics from the Vaults of County Records & Old Blue Records
Lena Hughes

Rural Parlor Guitar
Lena Hughes

Queen of the Flat Top Guitar (2013, Tompkins Square)
Lena Hughes

That`s My Rabbit, My Dog Caught It-Traditional Southern Instrumental Styles
Lena Hughes

For The Faithful
Lena Hughes

Rural Parlor Guitar: Recordings From 1967-1971
Lena Hughes

That's My Rabbit, My Dog Caught It-Traditional Southern Instrumental Styles
Lena Hughes

Petsongs 43: Hey Open
Lena Hughes

Queen Of The Guitar Pickers And Her Flat Top Guitar
Lena Hughes

Recordings From 1968-1971
Lena Hughes
Biography
A musical "amateur" that best exemplified true artistry, Lena Hughes was born in Grape Grove Township, Missouri, in 1904. Though she never recorded any 78s and only one LP, Hughes was most influential through her steady performances at various fiddler conventions and folk festivals throughout the Ozarks. She was an excellent fiddler, banjoist and guitar picker who retained the largely extinct repertoire of parlor pieces and the variety of specialized tunings that were necessary to play them. <a ...Read more on Last.fm
Read more
A musical "amateur" that best exemplified true artistry, Lena Hughes was born in Grape Grove Township, Missouri, in 1904. Though she never recorded any 78s and only one LP, Hughes was most influential through her steady performances at various fiddler conventions and folk festivals throughout the Ozarks. She was an excellent fiddler, banjoist and guitar picker who retained the largely extinct repertoire of parlor pieces and the variety of specialized tunings that were necessary to play them. She lived most of her life in Ludlow, Missouri and passed away in 1998.
Lena Hughes' repertoire can be divided roughly in half: finger-picked numbers adapted from fiddle tunes and recast parlor guitar pieces gleaned from popular sentimental songs, hymns, and 19th century airs. As a faithful attendee at folk festivals, Hughes was accompanied by her guitar-playing husband, Jake. Her most mesmerizing performances, such as Pearly Dew, Spanish Fandango, and Kentucky Moon Waltz, depend heavily upon the resonance of the open chord as it relates to the picking of the melodic line, primarily on one string. This tonal reliance is most similar to the "celestial octave" that Washington Phillips employs, with similar effect, on his Train Your Child. This ethereal harmonic technique, which seems so natural in Hughes' playing, is the holy grail for most finger-picking guitarists. Her lack of pretense and her mastery of this repertoire is what defines her legendary status. <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Lena+Hughes">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
