Lee and Scott sit down with Jay Clark, and if you're wondering how someone goes from chasing bears in Oklahoma to hosting the best listening room show in Blount County, well, buckle up. This man's got more stories than a Sunday sermon and twice the heart.
Jay's the guy who teaches at Maryville College (yeah, he's got a PhD but insists students call him by his first name), runs an $82.5 million science center project, and somehow finds time to curate the second Tuesday Shindig at TriHop. He's the one telling rowdy crowds to shut up so you can actually hear the music – and somehow everyone loves him for it.
We're talking about growing up in western Kentucky coal country, learning guitar from newspaper clippings, and why the mountains create the culture that makes East Tennessee so special. Jay performs "Seeds of Love" (a tribute to his grandmother Bertie) and "Sunday Afternoon" – the song that made Lee cry the first time he heard it. Fair warning: these aren't your typical feel-good ditties.
Jay's also navigating a divorce after 25 years of marriage, working on new material that's "pretty tough," and planning a gospel album with an A-side for himself and a B-side for his mama. Plus, he drops some serious knowledge about bear behavior, biodiversity, and why the Little River might be one of the most incredible places on the planet.
From house concerts to listening rooms, from coal fields to conservation, Jay Clark represents everything that makes Blount County's music scene authentic. And if you've never been to a TriHop Shindig, this episode will convince you to mark your calendar.
Real stories, real music, real Appalachian heart.