HomeLife StyleRhiannon Giddens Reflects on...

Rhiannon Giddens Reflects on Biscuits and Banjos Festival

Not long ago, Rhiannon Giddens knew every Black string musician. The dedicated few were largely collaborators and colleagues, many of whom met a generation ago at the landmark Black Banjo Gathering in Boone, N.C.

Giddens, the folk musician and recipient of all the accolades (Grammys, a Pulitzer, a MacArthur), no longer knows everyone who followed her path. That expansion, she figured, was reason to celebrate.

She did so the last weekend of April at her inaugural Biscuits & Banjos Festival in Durham, N.C., a jamboree featuring twangy banjos, groovy basses, clickety bones and, yes, the devouring of many flaky, buttery biscuits.

The festival culminated in a reunion by the Carolina Chocolate Drops, the Black string band led by Giddens, Dom Flemons and Justin Robinson. The group met at the Boone gathering, taking apprenticeship under the old-time fiddle player Joe Thompson.

The Grammy-winning band resuscitated styles like Piedmont string music, presenting them to a broader audience.

“It was just time to come back together and to say, ‘Hey, we did a thing,’” Giddens said. “Let’s celebrate being a part of a chain, because when we came out, there was a lot of weight on us.”

She added: “Now we’re a link in the chain. We’re not the end of the chain.”

The idea for the festival’s titular pairing came during the pandemic. Giddens was locked down at home in Ireland, where she has lived since 2018. She did not have easy access to comfort food like when she made her routine trips back to the United States. She studied cooking, watching series like “High on the Hog.”

“That was so instrumental in breaking open the idea of what soul food is and what Southern food is, and how integral the African American experience is to it,” Giddens said. “It felt very similar to the work that I was doing with the banjo and country music and old-time music — this idea of culture being expressed through something that people do every day.”

Several local restaurants submitted entries for the festival’s golden biscuit award. Melanie Wilkerson, the executive chef at the Counting House Restaurant, won with her “angel” biscuit, consisting of a yeast and brioche base.

She learned how to make them from her grandmother.

“Biscuits are understated, but understood depending on where you come from,” said Wilkerson, a Durham native.

The festival’s lineup was cross-generational. The influential blues singer Taj Mahal, an octogenarian, performed with Leyla McCalla, a former cellist for the Chocolate Drops.

“It’s nice to see the children of blues,” Mahal said.

“It’s nice to be called a child still,” answered McCalla, who’s 39.

“When you get to be this age, 65 or 70 is a child,” Mahal retorted.

The bassist Christian McBride performed with the North Carolina Central University Jazz Ensemble 1.

“For the lineup to be so melanated, it feels groundbreaking,” said Lillian Werbin, the co-owner of Lansing’s Elderly Instruments, who traveled to Durham with her staff and about 20 banjos for sale. “She’s saying that she’s the middle of the link, but this is a starting point. This is like the beginning of what could be even bigger and more established and it can go for generations.”

“I’ve never seen that many Black people on the stage together playing this music, and it’s just really exciting to see this music, the resurgence, the renewal, the rebirth of it,” said Dr. Angela M. Wellman, the founder of the Oakland Public Conservatory of Music in California, after she finished watching the reunion concert.

Giddens has gone on to other projects post-Chocolate Drops. In just the past year or so, she was featured on Beyoncé’s “Texas Hold ’Em,” the lead single from “Cowboy Carter,” and on the soundtrack to Ryan Coogler’s movie “Sinners.” She recently moved her show away from the Kennedy Center in May because of the new administration’s upheaval.

“I feel like the most important thing to get out of that is that we need to support each other as long as you think about what you’re doing and you have an intentionality,” she said.

Giddens was omnipresent throughout the weekend. She was a judge in the biscuit competition. She played banjo during a Friday night square dance, packed with people with wide smiles, before hopping off the stage, barefoot, to participate in the line dance.

“This is the idea of cultural renaissance,” Giddens said. “This is cultural excavation. It just happens some people are doing it with music. Some people with food. Some people are doing it in literature. It’s a way so that we could all kind of draw strength from each other.”

Source link

- A word from our sponsors -

spot_img

Most Popular

More from Author

- A word from our sponsors -

spot_img

Read Now

Grammy Awards announce 2026 nominations with Kendrick Lamar leading. See the list of nominees.

The 68th Grammy Awards nominations are out, with Kendrick Lamar leading with nine nods.Following Lamar, Lady Gaga, Jack Antonoff and Canadian producer and songwriter Cirkut received seven nominations. Bad Bunny, Sabrina Carpenter, Leon Thomas and Canadian audio engineer Serban Ghenea were all nominated...

Lenskart, Groww IPO GMPs Fall Before Listing; Time For Investors To Reassess Primary Market? | Ipo News

Last Updated:November 08, 2025, 15:55 ISTLenskart and Groww IPOs saw GMPs drop 75 percent post-subscription despite strong oversubscription, highlighting risks of chasing grey market hype over company fundamentals.News18The grey market premium (GMP) of two heavyweight initial public offerings (IPOs) of recent times — Lenskart Solutions and Groww...

With presidents and royalty in attendance, Egypt unveils $1bn cultural ‘GEM’

Prime ministers, presidents and royalty descended on Cairo on Saturday to attend the spectacle-laden inauguration of a sprawling new...

James Watson, co-discoverer of the shape of DNA and Nobel Prize winner, dies at 97

James D. Watson, whose co-discovery of the twisted-ladder structure of DNA in 1953 helped light the long fuse on a revolution in medicine, crimefighting, genealogy and ethics, has died, according to his former research lab. He was 97.The breakthrough — made when the...

Alex Cooper apologizes to Taylor Swift for bizarre admission

Alex Cooper is not holding back when it comes to her love for Taylor Swift.As per a new report...

‘Unsubstantiated Rumours’: RBI Dismisses Reports Of Selling 35 Tonnes Of Gold | Economy News

New Delhi: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Friday denied social media claims that it sold 35 tonnes of gold from its reserves, calling them "unsubstantiated rumours". In a post shared by the PIB Fact Check Unit on X, the central bank clarified that no such...

Wind Speed Shocker: Dust Devils Show Mars Is Much Stormier | World News

Studying winds on Mars is very difficult. On Earth, we can easily use weather balloons or satellite tools to measure wind directly. But on Mars, there are very few places where scientists can put instruments — and the air on Mars is extremely thin. Because of this,...

Government says ‘fairer’ motoring tax system is needed amid pay-per-mile report

Your support helps us to tell the storyFrom reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines...

Hamza Ali Abbasi gets real about adultery

Hamza Ali Abbasi. Photo: file ...