Downtown Asheville Skyline | Photo: Andre Daugherty

Step Into 100 Years of Asheville’s Sound

One hundred years ago, Asheville changed the course of American music. Now, the mountains that shaped those sounds are calling you back.
Downtown Asheville | Photo taken 5-3-25

Where America First Heard Appalachia

The Historic 1925 Asheville Sessions

In August 1925, a portable recording studio took over a suite in the brand‑new George Vanderbilt Hotel in downtown Asheville. For ten days, legendary producer Ralph Peer invited fiddlers, banjo players, singers, and dance bands from across the region to step up to the acoustic recording horn and cut their songs directly to wax.

The result? The first commercial recordings ever made in Appalachia—an on‑location experiment that captured the region’s ballads, fiddle tunes, gospel, blues, and vaudeville inside a single hotel room. If the 1927 Bristol Sessions that came two years later are remembered as the “Big Bang of Country Music,” the Asheville Sessions lit the fuse. They proved the mountains were full of music the world needed to hear, and they set the stage for the explosion of American roots music that followed.

This year, Asheville is celebrating a century of music history with something truly special:

  • The release of remastered recordings from the original 1925 Asheville Sessions, available on CD and vinyl August 25, 2025.
  • A four-day weekend of concerts and community celebrations across the city, November 6–9, 2025.
  • A launch of reimagined recordings by some of today’s biggest artists, bringing those century-old songs into the modern era, to follow in 2026.
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Plan Your Trip This Fall

Be here when history echoes through the mountains again. Fall in Asheville is a season all its own. Crisp mountain air, vibrant foliage, and a soundtrack that can only be found here. Extend your stay to hike, savor, and explore while you’re here for the Asheville Sessions.