An article about Posey Rorer
       Posey Rorer was born badly club-footed which may well  have influenced him to take up the fiddle as a youngster. Born in the hills of Franklin County, Virginia in 1891, his  crippled feet would not allow him to run and play with his older siblings. Posey's father, W.T. Rorer, played old-time banjo a little and no doubt fired  his son's desire to play string music. Posey made his first fiddle out of a  wooden cigar box and began playing with his cousin and neighbor Bob Moore, an old-time banjo player. The two would often play  dance music in the one- room log cabin where the Rorer Family lived.
Posey Rorer was born badly club-footed which may well  have influenced him to take up the fiddle as a youngster. Born in the hills of Franklin County, Virginia in 1891, his  crippled feet would not allow him to run and play with his older siblings. Posey's father, W.T. Rorer, played old-time banjo a little and no doubt fired  his son's desire to play string music. Posey made his first fiddle out of a  wooden cigar box and began playing with his cousin and neighbor Bob Moore, an old-time banjo player. The two would often play  dance music in the one- room log cabin where the Rorer Family lived.   
During World War I, Posey took a job working as a trapper  in the coal mines of Big Stick, West Virginia. It was there in West Virginia  where he encountered the free-spirited, rambling banjoist Charlie Poole. The  two became brothers-in-law in 1920 when Poole married Posey's older sister, Lou  Emma. In the early 1920's Posey was freed from his club feet by surgery at  Johns Hopkins Hospital. The surgery was paid for with money made from a run of  moonshine whiskey.
Rorer began playing more dances and shows with his  brother-in-law.  Rorer and Poole, along with guitarist Norman Woodlief, went to New York City in 1925 on their own  initiative to try to record. Their recordings, released as "Charlie Poole with  the North Carolina Ramblers", were smash hits.  
Rorer's reputation as a smooth mountain fiddler led other  musicians to seek him out as a back-up fiddler for their recordings. Between  March of 1927 and February of 1928 Posey fiddled his way through six different  recording sessions for Victor, Columbia, Gennett, Paramount, and Brunswick  Record Companies.  Posey accompanied Kelly Harrell, Roy Harvey, Bob Hoke, and of  course Charlie Poole. Early in 1928 Rorer and Poole split. Posey went on to  record with two Stokes County, North Carolina singers: Matt Simmons and Frank  Miller. They recorded for Edison Records in the fall of 1928 as "Posey Rorer  and the North Carolina Ramblers". In the years 1929 and 1930 Posey recorded  with Walter "Kid" Smith for Gennett, Columbia and American Record Companies. The records were issued as by "Smith and Woodlieff", " The Carolina Buddies" and  "The Dixie Ramblers".  
A few weeks after Poole's death, in the spring of 1931,  Rorer entered the recording studios for the last time. Posey along with banjoist Buster Carter and guitarist Preston Young,  cut ten sides for Columbia including the very first recording of "I'll Roll in  My Sweet Baby's Arms". Rorer followed Poole in death five years later, at age  44. He was found dead in the Spray (North Carolina) park where he and Poole  had so often played together in happier times. Rorer left a fine legacy of  traditional fiddle tunes, still revered to this day by fans of old-time music.  
Article copyright Kinney Rorrer, Febuary, 2006
A little bit about the author of the above article
Kinney Rorrer retired in 2006 after 37 years of teaching.Related to Posey Rorer, Kinney was encouraged to play old-time music by his father, Clifford Rorrer, Posey's nephew. Kinney plays old-time banjo in the Charlie Poole style and has written a biography of Poole entitled Ramblin' Blues: The LIfe and Songs of Charlie Poole. The book also contains the lyrics to Poole's recordings. Along with Seth Williamson, Kinney co-hosts a weekly radio program of bluegrass and old-time music called "Back to the Blue Ridge" ( www.wvtf.org ) Kinney can be contacted through his e-mail address ktrorrer at gamewood dot net or by writing to him directly at 301 Carson Jones Road, Danville, Va. 24540 USA
Many thanks to Kinney for writing this article.
      
	  A little bit about the author of the above article
Kinney Rorrer retired in 2006 after 37 years of teaching.Related to Posey Rorer, Kinney was encouraged to play old-time music by his father, Clifford Rorrer, Posey's nephew. Kinney plays old-time banjo in the Charlie Poole style and has written a biography of Poole entitled Ramblin' Blues: The LIfe and Songs of Charlie Poole. The book also contains the lyrics to Poole's recordings. Along with Seth Williamson, Kinney co-hosts a weekly radio program of bluegrass and old-time music called "Back to the Blue Ridge" ( www.wvtf.org ) Kinney can be contacted through his e-mail address ktrorrer at gamewood dot net or by writing to him directly at 301 Carson Jones Road, Danville, Va. 24540 USA
Many thanks to Kinney for writing this article.




