Someone on fb shared this writing from Ralph and it seems appropriate to include it here:
updated by @robin-thompson: 12/31/20 03:06:14PM
Someone on fb shared this writing from Ralph and it seems appropriate to include it here:
Ralph Lee Smith has given the mountain dulcimer world so much! Like Ken H, I would like to have met both Jean Ritchie and Ralph yet both have now joined the ancestors.
Ralph contributed much to our understanding of dulcimers, where they came from, and how they evolved. For anyone interested in solid scholarship his books are worth reading. I met him once. He was a kind person who was generous in sharing his collection of instruments as well as his knowledge.
R.I.P. Ralph.
My greatest regrets as a dulcimer person are that I never had the chance to meet and know Ralph and Jean Ritchie.
I feel fortunate to have met Ralph Lee Smith several times, most notably at Dulcimer U at Western Carolina University. What a kind, knowledgeable man! He was able to impart his knowledge about the mountain dulcimer in a way that communicated how pleased he was to answer your question or help you understand something better. He was never arrogant about what he knew--or how much, He just enjoyed sharing what he knew with others--and we were all richly blessed. Rest in peace, dear man.
We all knew this day was coming, but we didn't know WHEN. It's still very sad for us who knew Ralph, and sad for the dulcimer world at large. He left a great quantity of scholarly work behind, which will instruct and entertain musicians and luthiers for many years. Rest in peace, dear friend.
Thank you Ken. It's a deep loss for the dulcimer world. Ralph Lee Smith has given us all so much.
Sad news indeed. Ralph's knowledge of the evolution of the dulcimer far surpassed that of any else living or dead. We will be forever in his debt for his publications on dulcimer history.
It is with a great deal of sadness that I share the news that Ralph Lee Smith died this morning, December 30, 2020, at his home in Virginia. He was 93 years old. I will share more when I have collected myself. R.I.P. Ralph.
Ken
"The dulcimer sings a sweet song."