Visitors flock to Galax, Virginia, each summer for the Old Fiddlers’ Convention, a days-long celebration of Appalachian music.
Text and Photo By Duncan Seaman
Each August, the quiet mountain town of Galax, Virginia—tucked into the Blue Ridge Plateau near the North Carolina line—comes alive as the center of Appalachian string band music. In 2026, that tradition will reach a milestone with the 90th Old Fiddlers’ Convention, returning to Felts Park August 3-8.
Founded in 1935 by the Galax Moose Lodge as a small fundraising contest, the convention has grown into the nation’s largest and longest-running gathering devoted to old-time and bluegrass music. Tens of thousands now make the trip each year to a town long known as the “World Capital of Old-Time Mountain Music.”
I attended last year not just to watch the competitions, but to understand what keeps people coming back, generation after generation. The answer was not only on the stage. It was on the streets and in the campground, where jam circles stretched late into the night. Under string lights and drifting campfire smoke, teenagers learned tunes from older players, strangers shared songs, and the music carried easily from one campsite to the next.
The youth contests showed how strong the tradition remains, with young fiddlers playing far beyond their years. Later in the evening, the pace slowed, and the music took on a quieter, almost reverent feel. Nothing about it felt staged. It felt lived in.
I am not a musician, and I am not from these mountains. Still, during that week I felt something steady and enduring—like the hardy Galax plant that gave the town its name. I think you would feel it, too. In Galax, the music is not just performance. It is memory, community, and a way of holding on to roots that still matter.
The story above first appeared in our July/August 2026 issue.
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