During the
industrial period, changes were afoot in African American music. In
the early 20th century, there was a movement from a collaborative
approach to music between blacks and whites, as seen in the stringband
tradition, to a more distinctively African American approach and sound,
as seen in the blues.
In Winston-Salem a vibrant blues scene was emerging. With the boom
of Reynolds Tobacco and other smaller tobacco companies, Winston-Salem
was becoming part of the magnetic field of the tobacco industry that
attracted African American blues men from all over the South, just
as had occurred in the eastern tobacco town of Durham. Southern bluesmen
would follow the harvest, and when farmers brought their tobacco to
sell at auction houses in downtown Winston-Salem, bluesmen such as
Blind Boy Fuller were there, playing on streets such as Old Town Street,
now Trade Street. Farmers had money in their pockets, and for the
bluesmen, there was profit to be made-- from coins tossed into their
hats to getting hired by farmers to play at their houseparties. According
to Winston-Salem blues performer Peter May, these bluesmen had versitile
musical repertoires:

"For whites, blacks…played mostly ragtime, popular
songs of the day. [If] they went to record, their records
would sell to blacks, and they recorded blues." 13

Preston Fulp
Some of these bluesmen who played on the streets of downtown Winston-Salem
were residents of the northwest Piedmont. One such local bluesman
was Preston Fulp.
Fulp, born in Stokes County in 1915, did
not start his musical life as a blues musician. Rooted in a family
string band tradition, Fulp represents an archetype of the transitional
African American secular folk musician who moved from stringband
to blues. Coming from one of the oldest African American families
in the region, Fulp was the great grandson of an African American
woman named Suckie and a white planter and doctor named Fulp.
According to folklorist Bob Carlin's research, African American
banjo players Jospeh and Bill Fulp, grandsons of Suckie and Dr.
Fulp, were born near Walnut Cove shortly after the Civil War. Joseph
played banjo in the down picking or "frailing" style, and Bill played
guitar. The next generation of Fulp family musicians included Preston
and Robert, concentrating on the guitar, and Clifton, playing mostly
banjo. In addition to guitar, Preston Fulp played some fiddle and
banjo and supplemented income earned at local sawmills by playing
at house parties for both blacks and whites.
Fulp's musical horizons began to broaden when he became part of
a pool of street musicians who played for clientele of tobacco warehouses
in Winston-Salem. In Fulp's own words,

"In 1937, I started to go to Winston and play at the tobacco
warehouses and would pass around the hat, and I would get a little
change. Sometimes I would make $100. I would go about once a week." 14

It was in Winston-Salem where Fulp came under the
influence of the blues. He became familiar with recordings of North
Carolina blues giant Blind Blake. He also states that he learned
to play in the key of C from watching Blind Willie McTell. Even
in this new urban environment of African American blues,
however, Fulp also had contact with white hillbilly artists, such
as Matt Simmons from Stokes County, as
well as Ernest Thompson.
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Blind Boy Fuller
Preston Fulp later in life
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