by Chris Jackson
Gather Hear West Virginia (2018)
Oct 27: Charles Town
Oct 28: Thomas
Oct 29: Kingwood
Oct 30: Charleston
Nov 1: Parkersburg
Nov 2: Lewisburg
Nov 3: Fayetteville
Nov 4: Princeton
Nov 5: Williamson
Nov 6: Grantsville
Nov 7: Mt Zion
Nov 8: Capon Bridge
For the second Gather Hear tour, I chose West Virginia - a state so geographically close to “elite” coastal cities but often only recognized by its poverty, opioid epidemic, coal mining, and support for Trump.
I couldn’t have imagined beforehand that my experience in West Virginia would be such a moving and positive one. There was the intense love of their land and communities expressed by residents wherever I went. Furthermore, the arts scene was vibrant at every truck stop. I knew beforehand that the Appalachian traditional music scene was strong there. I didn’t expect to hear of entire towns being transformed by the arts: a group of individuals who are using the arts to bring residents out of the woodwork, injecting the town with positive energy, attracting other small businesses, and leading to the town’s economic revival.
Given West Virginia’s history as an extraction state - so much of its resources taken by the rest of the nation, the people taken advantage of - the West Virginians I recognized that Gather Hear was there to give something to them, instead of taking something away.
I was accompanied on tour by theater director Daniel Pettrow (first half) and composer/WV-native Brendon Randall-Myers (second half). I performed A Kind of Mirror, a show that reimagines the classical concert experience, commissioned by Gather Hear and created for this West Virginia tour. Every day of the tour is chronicled in a vlog series - click the town links above.