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Echoes Across the Smokes: Strings, Stories, and Songs

LIVE EVENT: Thursday, October 30, 2025, at 7:30 pm 

Scenic view of the Smoky Mountains under a cloudy sky.

Image courtesy of ĢƵPhoto Services.

Step into a night of mountain magic with Echoes Across the Smokies: A Night of Strings, Stories, and Songs. Presented by WCU’s Bardo Arts Center and Mountain Heritage Center, this soulful celebration brings the Smokies to life through the spirited tunes of the Junior Appalachian Musicians and Sylva Old Time Jam Band, the captivating stories of Cherokee storyteller Kathi Littlejohn, and the harmonies of the Cherokee Language Repertory Choir. The evening crescendos with the powerful voice of Grammy-nominated artist and east Tennessee native Amythyst Kiah, whose music bridges tradition and modern roots. Let the music, memory, and language of the mountains carry you home.

Run of Show

  • 6:30 - 7:15 pm PRESHOW in the Bardo Arts Center Lobby - Junior Appalachian Musicians of Jackson County and Blue Ridge 
  • 7:00 - 7:30 pm PRESHOW in the Bardo Arts Center Performance Hall - Sylva Old Time Jam Band 
  • Show begins at 7:30 pm in the Bardo Arts Center Performance Hall - Kathi Littlejohn and Cherokee Language Repertory Choir with Amythyst Kiah and band ending out the night 

Person with a blurred face standing against an orange background during sunset or sunrise. They are wearing a black jacket over a polka-dotted shirt and adjusting the shirt collar. Plants are visible in the lower right corner.

Image courtesy of Amythyst Kiah. ©Kevin & King.

Produced by Butch Walker (Taylor Swift, Green Day, Weezer) and recorded at his Nashville studio, Amythyst Kiah’s new album Still + Bright explores the vast expanse of her inner world: her deep-rooted affinity for Eastern philosophies and spiritual traditions, a near-mystical connection with the natural world, the life lessons learned in her formative years as a self-described “anime-nerd mall goth.” In dreaming up the backdrop to her revelatory storytelling, Kiah and Walker arrived at a darkly cinematic and exhilarating twist on the rootsy alt-rock of her 2021 breakthrough album Wary + Strange—an LP that landed on Rolling Stone’s list of the 25 Best Country and Americana Albums of 2021 and drew acclaim from major outlets like Pitchfork. With its sonic palette encompassing everything from fuzzed-out guitars and industrial-leaning beats to gilded pedal steel and Kiah’s exquisitely graceful banjo work, Still + Bright fully affirms her as an artist of both daring originality and uncompromising depth.

On Wary + Strange, Kiah offered up a collection of spellbinding songs detailing her experience with grief and trauma and alienation, each illuminating the extraordinary impact of her songwriting. An electrifying showcase for her singular musicality and soul-stirring voice, Kiah’s Rounder Records debut soon found many leading critics hailing her as a formidable new talent, adding to a list of accolades that includes earning a Grammy nomination for her powerhouse anthem “Black Myself.” But when it came time to create her follow-up, the Tennessee-born singer/songwriter felt compelled toward a profound shift in her artistry. “On the last record it felt so cathartic to write about all the pain I was dealing with, but this time the songs came from a place of finding joy in the music,” says Kiah. “In the past I felt so mired down with anxiety that I sometimes held back from what I really wanted to write about; I felt like I needed to play it safe and keep certain thoughts to myself. But now I’m at a point where I’m confident in what I value and love, and because of that I’ve made the album I’ve always wanted to make.”

Although Kiah’s third full-length marks a departure from the anguished emotionality of its predecessor (an album informed by losing her mother to suicide at age 17), Kiah imparts all of Still + Bright with a hypnotic intensity born from boldly stating her convictions. To that end, the LP opens on the stormy grandeur of “Play God and Destroy the World”: an immediately captivating coming-of-age tale featuring guest vocals from Kentucky-bred singer/songwriter S.G. Goodman. With its title taken from a song Kiah penned and performed at a talent show in high school, the hard-charging track dispenses a bit of searing commentary on the hypocrisy she witnessed throughout her childhood—and ultimately speaks to the sense of hope and possibility she discovered in unexpected places (e.g., the humanistic sci-fi of The Matrix). “I grew up in a good neighborhood and had parents with good jobs, but in many respects my family was different,” says Kiah, who was raised in Chattanooga and later moved to Johnson City. “In order to fit in, you had to go to church and have conservative values—and I know that being Black wasn’t doing us any favors either. This song was written for the 15-year-old version of me who suspected that there was a big world out there that allowed for many beliefs and a more connected humanity.”

On songs like “S P A C E,” Kiah turns inward and ponders her search for peace of mind in times of maddening uncertainty. “As someone whose identity is tied up in being a touring musician, the pandemic created a lot of anxiety where I started questioning who I was if I wasn’t out on the road,” says Kiah. “There were moments when I dealt with that by scrolling through Instagram, but over time I started to treasure the quiet. Meditation became an important part of my life, and I eventually wrote ‘S P A C E’ about learning to be more present.” Partly written on banjo, “S P A C E” unfolds as a soulful outpouring laced with lush mandolin lines, lovely fiddle melodies, and a powerfully soaring vocal performance from Kiah. “One of my main goals for this album was to show a new side of myself as a singer,” she notes. “I’ve always loved really strong, gospel-style vocals, and I put a lot of work into increasing my range for this record.”

Another track spotlighting the stunning force of her voice, “Empire of Love” presents what Kiah refers to as “my personal theme song”: an impassioned statement of devotion to her journey as a spiritual seeker, gorgeously wrought in brooding guitar riffs and fiercely delivered poetry (“My religion is none at all/I build my own cathedrals and let them fall…I pledge allegiance to my soul/I’ll follow where she needs to go/I’m a pilgrim for the empire of love”). Inspired by her ever-deepening connection to the Appalachian landscape—and by her interest in Western humanities and Eastern religions—“Empire of Love” finds Kiah constructing her own belief system firmly rooted in compassion and curiosity. “I believe in carving a path in life that honors my own experiences in the context of the wider world,” says Kiah, who co-wrote “Empire of Love” with Sean McConnell. “As a seeker in the mountains, my sense of spiritual connection stems from nature, which is connected to all of the cosmos. And there is no religious or social dogma that can change that.”

All throughout Still + Bright, Kiah reveals her rare ability to spin her fascinations into songs uncovering essential truths about human nature. On “I Will Not Go Down,” for instance, she looks back on a barbaric moment in history and unleashes a furiously stomping folk epic, featuring background vocals and nimble guitar work from bluegrass phenomenon Billy Strings. “I read about the Crusades in high school, and I was disgusted at the prospect of coercing people into spilling an unimaginable amount of blood and brainwashing them into believing they were serving their god—when in fact they were simply doing the bidding of warmongers,” says Kiah. “I wrote the chorus in my high school journal, and it became a song about people-pleasing to a fault, then reclaiming your autonomy and finding a balance between serving yourself and serving others.” Meanwhile, on “Silk and Petals,” Ellen Angelico’s feverish guitar tones merge with strangely euphoric grooves in a gothic love song sparked from Kiah’s viewing of the supernatural horror-drama of The Haunting of Bly Manor. “‘Silk and Petals’ was inspired by the story of the Lady in the Lake, the ghost of a woman named Viola Lloyd,” Kiah explains. “After falling ill with tuberculosis, Viola leaves her chest of her finest clothes and jewelry to her daughter, then becomes violent as she witnesses the affection between her husband Arthur and her sister Perdita. While Arthur is away on business, Perdita smothers Viola in her sleep, only to later be strangled to death by Viola’s ghost. The Lady in the Lake then wanders the hallways for centuries searching for her daughter, killing anyone who moves into the house along the way. I wrote ‘Silk and Petals’ thinking about the idea of ghosts being unable to leave this realm because they’re hanging onto something they’ve lost, and the song came from being so intrigued by that very intimate intermingling of love and death.”

For Kiah, the making of Still + Bright involved a careful transformation of the songwriting process she adopted after composing her first song on a Fender acoustic at age 13. The latest turn in a dynamic career that’s included joining Our Native Daughters (an all-women-of-color supergroup also featuring Rhiannon Giddens, Leyla McCalla, and Allison Russell), the album marks her first time opening up her approach and working with co-writers, including punk legend Tim Armstrong, Sadler Vaden (a guitarist/vocalist for Jason Isbell’s 400 Unit), former Pentatonix member Avi Kaplan, and Sean McConnell (a singer/songwriter who’s also written with Brittney Spencer and Bethany Cosentino). “In a way I almost felt like I had to relearn how to write songs, because the experience had changed so much for me after taking better care of my mental and physical wellbeing over the past few years,” she says. “It felt completely different to write from a place of fulfillment and wanting to have fun with what I was creating.”

While Still + Bright undoubtedly finds Kiah pushing into new emotional and musical terrain, the album also makes for a vital new addition to a body of work largely dedicated to exploring the struggle and joy of true self-discovery. “With all of my music, I’d love to leave people with the feeling that it’s okay to go off the beaten path and to structure your life in a way that feels right to you,” says Kiah. “And just like with the last record, I hope that these songs can help people out if they’re going through a difficult time. That’s what I always hope for more than anything: for my music to continue to be a part of the healing process for anyone who might need it.”  

 

Person with short gray hair wearing a blue shirt, standing outdoors with greenery and flowers in the background.

Image courtesy of Kathi Littlejohn.

Kathi Littlejohn, an enrolled citizen of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, has been telling Cherokee stories for more than 40 years at events, festivals, and schools. She has been leading Cherokee history tours for five years to historically and culturally significant places in Western North Carolina. She has produced four CDs of Cherokee stories: ‘Cherokee Legends,’ Volume I, II, and III and ‘Cherokee Stories of the Supernatural,’ available at select gift shops. She also completed a series of YouTube videos named “Cherokee History and Stories, “What Happened Here?”

“One of my first jobs as a teenager was working at the Oconaluftee Indian Village, which I absolutely loved. I was a tour guide and on bad weather days when it was real slow, it was so much fun for me to sit with the people that were doing the crafts or some of the older guides and listen to stories.” Littlejohn began telling stories as part of a college class assignment on children’s literature. Since then, she has told stories across the region, sharing her knowledge of the stories and the Cherokee’s oral tradition. Littlejohn recently produced a series of videos set in Cherokee and Clay counties, recounting the Cherokee history and legends associated with certain locations. She hopes these episodes will be a resource for anyone seeking to learn about Cherokee history and a way to keep the stories alive.

 

Group of people standing outdoors on a grassy field with trees and hills in the background. Most are wearing matching turquoise t-shirts with a yellow circular design. Some hold woven baskets, and two individuals in traditional attire stand at the back.

Image courtesy of Cherokee Language Repertory Choir.

Founded in the spring of 2023, the Cherokee Language Repertory Choir is a unique musical ensemble dedicated to preserving and revitalizing Cherokee language and cultural traditions through song. Rooted in the rich heritage of shaped note singing, the choir brings a powerful twist to this historic musical form by performing entirely in the Cherokee language.

This innovative approach not only honors a documented tradition of shaped note singing within Cherokee communities but also breathes new life into the language as a living, expressive part of Western North Carolina’s cultural landscape. By blending sacred music with language preservation, the choir offers a meaningful and moving experience that connects past and present.

To learn more about the choir and the broader efforts to support the Cherokee language, visit:

Group of children and teenagers playing musical instruments, including violins, guitars, and a double bass, in an indoor rehearsal space with beige walls and carpeted flooring. Music stands are positioned in front of some players.

Image courtesy of ĢƵPhoto Services. Image taken of Junior Appalachian Musicians.

Located in the heart of Southwestern North Carolina, Jackson County is steeped in the rich traditions of Appalachian music. The region’s musical heritage blends old-time, bluegrass, and gospel styles, often merging into unique sounds like bluegrass gospel. This vibrant musical culture has produced generations of talented musicians, including the legendary Samantha Biddix Bumgarner, the first woman to record “hillbilly” music in 1924, alongside accompanist Eva Smathers Davis of Sylva. Samantha’s father, Has Biddix, was also a respected fiddler. Today, Jackson County continues to be home to acclaimed artists such as The Queen Family, The Fiddlin’ Dills Sisters, Darren Nicholson of Balsam Range, Rye Holler Boys, and the rising bluegrass/gospel band Mountain Faith.

To carry this legacy forward, Jackson County JAM and Blue Ridge JAM offer youth music programs that immerse students in traditional Appalachian music.

  • Jackson County JAM, based at the Jackson County Public Library, serves students ages 8 to 18. Instruction is offered in fiddle, guitar, mandolin, bass, singing, band, and banjolele/ukulele. Students also participate in enrichment sessions exploring dulcimer, hambone, ballads, and more.

  • Blue Ridge JAM serves the southern part of the county, welcoming students from across the Cashiers-Highlands plateau. Hosted at Blue Ridge School in Cashiers, the program offers lessons in fiddle, banjo, guitar, mandolin, bass, and singing for students in grades 3 through 12. In addition to music instruction, students enjoy “Prime Time” sessions featuring Appalachian games, dance, crafts, storytelling, guest speakers, and visiting musicians.


A group of people seated in a circle playing musical instruments, including violins, guitars, and a double bass.

Image courtesy of ĢƵPhoto Services.

The Sylva Old Time Jam Band is a group of local musicians from the Sylva area gathers regularly to play traditional Appalachian string band music, keeping the old-time tunes alive with fiddles, banjos, guitars, and more. Their lively, acoustic sound is the perfect backdrop for a night of food, drinks, and community.

We look forward to seeing you at Echoes Across the Smokies: A Night of Strings, Stories, and Songs, on Thursday, October 30, 2025, at 7:30 pm. Doors will open to the performance 30 min before the show is set to start. A 15-minute intermission will take place between Kathi Littlejohn with Cherokee Language Repertory Choir and Amythyst Kiah. Please note, the ĢƵFine Art Museum and BAC Concessions will be open one hour before this event from 6:30-7:30PM.  The ĢƵFine Art Museum is open for one hour before any ticketed event at Bardo Arts Center.