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An Appalachian Summer Finale Fireworks Concert
featuring

The Charlie Daniels Band

Saturday, July 26 at 7:30 p.m.
(gates open at 6:30 p.m.)
Holmes Center (*NEW LOCATION)
Appalachian State University

Fireworks display immediately after the concert

Sponsored by Blue Ridge Electric
Membership Corporation

When you hear a classic Charlie Daniels Band performance like "The Devil Went Down to Georgia," you hear music that knows no clear genre. Is it a folk tale? A southern boogie? A country fiddle tune? An electric rock anthem? The answer is "yes" to all of that and more. And the same goes for "In America," "Uneasy Rider," "The South 's Gonna Do It," "Long Haired Country Boy," "Still in Saigon," "The Legend of Wooley Swamp" and the rest of a catalog that spans more than 35 years of record making and represents more than 18 million in sales. For decades, Charlie Daniels has steadfastly refused to label his music as anything other than "CDB music," music that is now sung around the fire at 4-H Club and scout camps, helped elect an American President, and been popularized on a variety of radio formats.

Charlie Daniels was raised in Wilmington, North Carolina, on a musical diet that included Pentecostal gospel, local bluegrass bands, rhythm & blues and country music.

His resume includes recording sessions with artists as diverse as Bob Dylan, Flatt & Scruggs, Pete Seeger, Mark O'Connor, Leonard Cohen, Ringo Starr and Johnny Cash. His songs have been recorded by Elvis Presley and Tammy Wynette. Daniels was also been documented by ABC’s 20/20 and, in 1985, he published a collection of short stories, The Devil Went Down to Georgia, peppered with the same kind of characters and tall tales as his songs.

It hasn't been so much a style of music, but more the values consistently reflected in several styles, that has connected Charlie Daniels with millions of fans. With an unerring instinct for the universal ties that bind people together and an equal abhorrence for the intolerance and fear that do the opposite, Charlie Daniels has kept the specifics of his cultural heritage as the soul of the CDB music that has impacted lives of everyday people everywhere.

"Few individuals have symbolized the South in popular culture as directly and indelibly as Charlie Daniels." -- Encyclopedia of Southern Culture

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