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Jim Clark

Jim Clark: Writer/Musician

About Me

Born in Byrdstown, Tennessee, midway between Music City and the Smoky Mountains, Jim Clark grew up on a farm on the Cumberland Plateau surrounded by music, from the unadorned a capella harmonies of the Church of Christ, to the old-time country of his father's guitar and mandolin playing. Majoring in English at Vanderbilt University, he was much influenced by the legacy of the Fugitives and Agrarians - poets such as Robert Penn Warren, John Crowe Ransom, and Allen Tate, noted for their focus on the connection between literature and the land and their scathing critique of the modern industrial mindset. He continued his education at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, where he received an M.F.A. in creative writing, and the University of Denver, where he received his Ph.D. in modern literature and creative writing. Pursuing a balance between the creative and the scholarly, Clark has published two books of poems, Dancing on Canaans Ruins and Handiwork; written a play, The Girl with the Faraway Eye, staged at the Portland Actors Conservatory Theatre, Portland, Oregon; edited Fable in the Blood: The Selected Poems of Byron Herbert Reece; and served as an editor of such literary journals as The Denver Quarterly, The Greensboro Review, and The Vanderbilt Poetry Review. His most recent book is Notions: A Jim Clark Miscellany. Much in demand as a reader of his own work and a workshop leader, Clark nevertheless felt something was missing in his professional life. So, in 1995, he began combining his talents as a singer and musician with his abilities as a writer and an interpreter of his own work, resulting in a unique multi-disciplinary performance of poetry and stories rooted in the Appalachian foothills of his birth and complementary old-time mountain music played on the guitar, banjo, mountain dulcimer, and autoharp. This cross-fertilization of genres culminated in his recording a CD, Buried Land, featuring poems and music, much of it related to the flooding of his parents' family farms in the 1940s by the TVA Dale Hollow Dam project. Clark is currently the Elizabeth H. Jordan Professor of Southern Literature and Writer-in-Residence at Barton College, in Wilson, North Carolina, where he is Director of The Barton College Creative Writing Symposium and an editor of the literary journal Crucible. He is also a member of the band The Near Myths: http://www.myspace.com/nearmyths

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 5/17/2006
Band Website: home.nc.rr.com/clarkja
Band Members: Jim Clark: Vocals, 6 & 12-string guitar, banjo, mountain dulcimer, autoharp, bass, mandolin, harmonica, pennywhistle
Influences: The Band, James Agee, Jerry Garcia, Harry Smith, Alan Lomax, Ken Burns, Walker Evans, Wendell Berry, John Hartford, Betty Smith, Jean Ritchie, Bascom Lamar Lunsford, John Jacob Niles, Townes Van Zandt, Eudora Welty, Fred Chappell, Doc Watson, Gamble Rogers, Edgar Lee Masters, Sherwood Anderson, Greil Marcus, Donald Davidson, Byron Herbert Reece
Sounds Like: John Hartford? Garrison Keillor?
Record Label: Eternal Delight Productions
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

My new book

..> ..> ..>..> After several years of wandering in the not unpleasant wilderness of music, bands, and folk and rock CD releases, Jim Clark returns to the printed page with this kaleidoscopic Rube ...
Posted by Jim Clark on Mon, 23 Jul 2007 06:24:00 PST

One Night Late

Tongue-tied, with Sore Fingertips, and Little to Show     First things first, a song that you have to explicate is probably not such a good song. And secondly, in terms of song structure it...
Posted by Jim Clark on Sat, 30 Dec 2006 01:20:00 PST