
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Nuclear scientist Gary Eller moved to Nampa 17 years ago after a 30-year career at Los Alamos National Laboratory. He grew up in rural West Virginia with a strong music tradition of regional, historic music. Now, a retiree, he began playing bluegrass and oldtime with Idaho musicians. He wanted to learn historic songs from his new home, but no one was playing them.
So he used his skills as a scientist to scour archives, libraries and museums for historic Idaho songs from a time before radio and records came here. Eller has authored 19 books about the songs with recordings. His work is on the shelves of the library of congress and he was awarded the Governor’s Awards in the Arts in 2020.
Arlie Sommer brings the story of the Idaho Songs Project to this episode of the Expressive Idaho Series.
By Boise State Public Radio4.5
102102 ratings
Nuclear scientist Gary Eller moved to Nampa 17 years ago after a 30-year career at Los Alamos National Laboratory. He grew up in rural West Virginia with a strong music tradition of regional, historic music. Now, a retiree, he began playing bluegrass and oldtime with Idaho musicians. He wanted to learn historic songs from his new home, but no one was playing them.
So he used his skills as a scientist to scour archives, libraries and museums for historic Idaho songs from a time before radio and records came here. Eller has authored 19 books about the songs with recordings. His work is on the shelves of the library of congress and he was awarded the Governor’s Awards in the Arts in 2020.
Arlie Sommer brings the story of the Idaho Songs Project to this episode of the Expressive Idaho Series.

91,293 Listeners

43,830 Listeners

38,491 Listeners

43,622 Listeners

38,819 Listeners

9,219 Listeners

4,020 Listeners

8,463 Listeners

12,127 Listeners

6,440 Listeners

4,684 Listeners

16,491 Listeners

10 Listeners

436 Listeners

9 Listeners