The Delta String Band
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The Delta String Band

Greenville, Mississippi, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2017

Greenville, Mississippi, United States
Established on Jan, 2017
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"Delta String Band plays in Clarksdale for first time"

Delta String Band members had been coming to Clarksdale for years but never to perform as a group. That all changed on Friday night. The Delta String Band, out of Greenville, performed at the Delta Blues Museum Stage in Clarksdale on Friday night. It was part of the Crossroads Economic Partnership’s Fridays at the Stage event, where a band performs at the Delta Blues Museum Stage every Friday during the month of May.

Double bass player Cody Ruth said that while the Delta String Band was sound checking on Friday, people from France were coming up and taking pictures. “You never know who’s going to see you or hear you, and it’s kind of a surprise,” Ruth said.

Charles Sullivan played the guitar, Will Coppage played the banjo, David Morgan played the mandolin, and Michael Slalton played the guitar. Ruth said he had played individually in Clarksdale prior to Friday night. “I’ve personally played in Clarksdale,” he said. “I’ve played at Red’s (Blues Club). I’ve played at Levon’s.”

Other band members have been to Clarksdale frequently. “We come to the festivals a lot,” Ruth said. “All of us are from Greenville, so we were growing up, driving in, and coming to the festivals.”

Delta String Band members hope to play in Clarksdale many more times and enjoyed being part of Fridays at the Stage. “I always like playing outdoors better,” Ruth said. “I don’t know what it is. It feels a little more freeing, I guess, being outside and playing.”

The Delta String Band will be playing in Cleveland on June 30 and in Hattiesburg in August. More information on the Delta String Band can be found at https://www.williamluskcoppage.com/deltastringband?fbclid=IwAR2S0bBajskZdD5SzIY3Feb4BTNetPnXzV5ahkz4MRxAY5r6tisgIAQ0abQ and https://www.facebook.com/deltastringband/.

The Rustenhaven Band will be playing at the Delta Blues Museum Stage this coming Friday. David Dunavent will be playing on May 26. Both performances will be from 7 to 10 p.m. - Clarkesdale Advocate


"String Theory"

String Theory
May 9, 2024
BY JIM BEAUGEZ



Greenville’s Delta String Band resurrects forgotten old-time Americana and Mississippi fiddle tunes on their debut, Songs of Late Vol. 1

Musicians tend to leave a trail of clues from the songs they play to the music and artists who inspired them. Lyrical turns of phrase or vocal inflections, musical patterns and motifs, and the sounds of the instruments themselves can be traced backward in time, as each generation adds their own signatures along the way.

It’s why once-obscure bands like Big Star and the Velvet Underground, who influenced future chart-toppers R.E.M. and countless others, can find new fans decades after their heydays. The same goes for many Delta blues singers and guitar pickers, who only achieved recognition late in life or posthumously after rock and roll became a cross-cultural phenomenon.

And it’s why Delta String Band, an old-time American music group based in Greenville, wasn’t content to play “Man of Constant Sorrow” or “Rocky Top,” songs even non-bluegrass fans recognize, when the roots of those songs led further back into time and history.


Ruth and Sullivan at the Blue Front Cafe in Bentonia. (Photo: MARK FRYE)
Cody Ruth and Charles Sullivan, the two constants of the Delta String Band’s lineup to date, find a deep well of inspiration in those sepia and tintype tones of yesteryear. And since adding fiddle player Amanda Mayo-Saalwaechter to round out the trio, the mostly forgotten fiddle tunes predating many bluegrass and old-time American music standards have become their latest obsession.

“We’re not so much a bluegrass band— we’re more of an old-time band,” Ruth says. “When we first started, I guess we were on the edge of bluegrass and the whole new-grass movement. But we’re focused on Mississippi songs, playing stuff that’s 100 years old.”

Over the past year, their setlist has transitioned from the songs of John Prine, Johnny Cash and Dolly Parton, as well as more recent Americana bands like Drive-By Truckers, to vintage fare such as “Tupelo Blues,” “Keep My Skillet Good and Greasy,” and “Poor Mary Sitting in the Corner.” And, they’re playing a lot of songs residing in the public domain—their new EP, Songs of Late Vol. 1, released in April, features “Cluck Old Hen,” and “Who Broke the Lock,” a pair of nineteenth-century Appalachian tunes.

“There’s so many fiddle songs, it was getting overwhelming trying to pick what to play,” Ruth says. “Listening to the Soundwagon CD [Give the Fiddler a Dram, 2009], with Jack Magee, and then researching the artists that originally did those songs is what gave me a little bit of focus instead of just learning any old song.”


Ruth, Sullivan and Amanda Mayo-Saalwaechter performing at the Delta Hot Tamale Festival in Greenville 2023. (Photo: FAITH BARNETT)
The music Delta String Band plays is 180 degrees from Nirvana, Tool and the nineties alternative-rock and metal bands Ruth and Sullivan grew up cranking. But the transition from modern music played on electric instruments through massive amplifiers to the traditional sounds of an acoustic guitar, fiddle and viol—a bowed, Revolutionary War-era stringed instrument sized between a cello and an upright bass, which allows Ruth to play bass parts and higher fiddle parts as the gig requires—was gradual. Ruth owned an upright bass as far back as high school, for example, but didn’t apply it to his music for several years.

After finishing high school in Greenville, Ruth studied bass and jazz at the University of Southern Mississippi under Dr. Marcos Machado and Larry Panella, and then moved to New Orleans, where he spent evenings playing music around the city. “I’ve played in so many venues in New Orleans,” Ruth says. “I used to play at Siberia every other Thursday with a Klezmer European folk band. I used to play at the Spotted Cat occasionally. I had a residency at the Carousel Lounge in Hotel Monteleone. I mean, I did everything.”


Clockwise from top left: Sullivan, Ruth, Brown, Slayton and Morgan (Photo: EUPHUS RUTH)
His day job—working for a construction crew on renovations of historical buildings—brought him home after a few years, though, when he returned to work on the restoration of The Belmont 1857 mansion in Wayside in 2016.

Sullivan spent a short time in Pennsylvania before returning, too, and never stopped playing music. Back in Greenville, he formed a loud, distorted-guitar-driven duo with his brother on drums, and strummed country and folk songs on his acoustic guitar at open mic nights across the Delta. It wasn’t a huge leap, then, to transition to playing bluegrass and old-time music.

“I got my first guitar for my 14th birthday, and I was really into Kurt Cobain,” Sullivan says. “But I think the core of the country side of it came from being raised listening to classic country music, like Waylon Jennings, Merle Haggard, Willie Nelson—all the outlaw stuff. I was around it constantly, and as I got older, I circled back to that aspect of nostalgia, and I enjoyed it a lot.”


Ruth, David Morgan, Will Coppage and Sullivan performing at Bluegrass Mass, Dockery Farms in 2023. (Photo: FAITH BARNETT)
The group’s origin dates to the 2018 Belmont Bluegrass and Barbecue Festival, which they helped create alongside the late Delta historian Hank Burdine and Camille Collins. In fact, they formed the Delta String Band explicitly to perform there. “It was up to us to come up with enough bluegrass bands, or at least bluegrass-adjacent bands, to make a festival together,” Ruth says. With a month to put it together, they pulled in friends Spike Brown on plectrum banjo, David Morgan on mandolin and Sarah Taylor on lead vocals.

“When I decided to put the band together for the festival, I’d already been playing in a duo with Charles,” Ruth says. “We got everybody together and pulled from everybody—mainly Charles, any songs he knew—and some songs I knew how to sing, some songs Spike knew how to sing. Whatever somebody happened to know, we just threw it in. There wasn’t really a grand plan.”


David Morgan, Ruth, Sullivan and Mayo-Saalawechter at Mighty Roots Music Festival in Stovall in 2023. (Photo: TOP ROVE LIFE PHOTOGRAPHY)
Eventually, as band members and collaborators like Craig Adams, Mike Slaton and Will Coppage came and went, Ruth and Sullivan began to specialize in more obscure numbers, becoming record-crate diggers and chasing song leads down internet rabbit holes as they researched fiddle songs associated with musicians from Mississippi. Ruth also read Harry Bolick’s Mississippi Fiddle Book, which gave him the history of old-time songs, as well as transcriptions so the band could learn them.

“I think it gives us focus but also represents where we’re from,” says Ruth. “We could learn a bunch of Virginia songs, but those aren’t really our songs. I felt it was most appropriate to learn songs that originated close to where we’re from, and then bring those to other places.”

Branching out from the Delta bar and festival circuit, the Delta String Band will play its first Memphis gig this summer, as well as festivals in Louisiana and gigs down to Hattiesburg and over to Arkansas. The band is fielding performance requests at thedeltastringband@gmail.com, and Songs of Late Vol. 1 is available for streaming from Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and other services. - Delta Magazine


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Bio

The Delta String Band is an acoustic band from Greenville, Mississippi, playing music “the old school way.” The group consists of: Charles Sullivan, guitar and vocals; Cody Ruth, bass viol and vocals; and Amanda Mayo-Saalwaechter, Violin. They also occasionally partner up with Delta performers Craig Adams and Mike Slaton. Previous members include Spike Brown on plectrum banjo, Sarah Taylor on lead vocals, David Morgan on mandolin, and Will Coppage on slide guitar and 5 string banjo. The rich, cultural heritage of the Mississippi Delta is known for producing talented musicians, and these players are no exception.

The Delta String Band plays a variety of styles, from old time, celtic, and bluegrass to straight-up country. For their vocal repertoire DSB pulls from the likes of bluegrass great Ralph Stanley, folk master John Prine, pure country kings Johnny Cash and Waylon Jennings, and even genre-fusing groups like the Grateful Dead. When it comes to their instrumentals DSB have been introduced to a large breadth of traditional fiddle songs by the likes of Mississippi fiddlers Jack Magee and Tim Avalon as well as nationally renowned fiddle player Jay Ungar, among many others.  

The band originally formed for the 2018 Belmont Plantation Bluegrass and BBQ Festival and have since made a name for themselves as regulars on the Delta festival circuit.  They have also found a niche as featured performers for organizational events such as the Delta Arts Alliance Night in the Arts and playing southern gospel music for area churches. Even though they are an acoustic act, their playing is passionate and high-energy, perfect for a myriad of places: intimate listening rooms, jubilant church sanctuaries, and even raucous outdoor festivals.

The band continues to develop as the core members hone their craft and, on occasion, find others with whom to share the stage. They are making big strides–creating an online presence, adding to their repertoire, and searching for ways to best serve their music by developing their live sound.

Spurred on by the belief that music is food for the soul, the Delta String band is gearing up for future gigs, recordings, and expanding their network. The determined faces depicted in their band photo call to mind a past that is gritty but true, hardy and hearty. The Delta String Band’s music speaks to this–honoring the heart and soul of the music by playing it in its purest form.

Band Members