Dulcimer Player Makes Music, Instruments

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Mike Clemmer, Wood-N-Strings Dulcimer Shop, dulcimers, music

If you happen to be meandering around the hills and hollers of East Tennessee near Townsend on a peaceful Saturday evening, you might hear the sweet, whimsical sound of an Appalachian dulcimer floating from the back porch of Mike Clemmer’s shop. And if you follow the tune, you’ll find the inviting little log house nestled in the Nawger Nob Craft Settlement along U.S. Highway 321, where Clemmer and his wife, Connie, will invite you to come have a listen.

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For the Clemmers, it’s just another Saturday night on the Pickin’ Porch at Wood-N-Strings Dulcimer Shop.

 

 

“It’s sort of like being in your grandma’s back yard,” Mike Clemmer explains. “It’s a free concert we have every Saturday at 7 p.m. It’s all original or real old music, and we’ve had several national dulcimer champions perform.”

Mike Clemmer dulcimers

From Hobby to Business

Wood-N-Strings Dulcimer Shop is a dream come true for Clemmer, who quit his job in corporate sales in 1996 and began making and selling handcrafted wooden dulcimers.

“I had never owned a business, and we didn’t have two nickels to rub together,” he recalls. “We started the shop with $50 and two credit cards, and it’s been an amazing ride. God has really taken care of us.”

To date, Clemmer has built more than 3,000 dulcimers, and his instruments are owned by people in every state as well as Germany, England, Norway, Italy and France.

“It’s amazing how people will come to a little town like Townsend, stop by our shop and be so intrigued by the dulcimer,” he says.

Mike Clemmer dulcimers

Hand-Crafted Dulcimers Cater to Customers

Most of Clemmer’s instruments are custom-made, with the customer choosing the wood – walnut, cherry, butternut, sassafras or wormy chestnut – and other details.

“People might like daisies, angels or crosses, and I can cut that hole in it,” he says. “All my carvings and engravings are done by hand.”

One of the “only true American instruments,” an Appalachian dulcimer looks like a fiddle and sounds like a Scottish bagpipe. Its roots lie in instruments such as the German scheitholt and the Norwegian langeleik. European immigrants “used their memories to re-create it in America,” Clemmer explains.

Clemmer built his first dulcimer in 1976 and has been perfecting the craft ever since.

“It’s very easy to play, because there are no wrong notes,” he says. “People who are in their 80s and have never touched an instrument will come into our shop, and I can get them playing a song in 10 minutes. It’s very gratifying – one of those things you learn in five minutes and take the rest of your life to master.”

It takes Clemmer anywhere from two to three weeks to build a single dulcimer, and he usually works on eight or nine instruments at a time. They range in price from $350 to $900.

Mike Clemmer dulcimers

Inventing the Ban-Jammer

He also developed a one-of-a-kind instrument called a Ban-Jammer, which has also been really well received.

“People had been trying to get a banjo sound out of a dulcimer, so I came up with the Ban-Jammer,” he says. “People love them.”

The Ban-Jammer is copyrighted, and now they are owned all over the world. Last year, Clemmer began working on a new instrument called the Tennessee Sweetie – a dulcimer small enough to fit in the overhead bins on airplanes.

“It allows people who travel a lot to bring a dulcimer with them,” he says. “We’ve sold quite a few in the past year.”

All the instruments at Wood-N-Strings Dulcimer Shop are acoustic, and Native American flutes and harps can be found there.

“We try to make it the kind of place we’d like to go on vacation – it’s got a homey feel,” Clemmer explains. “We want visitors to be able to pick up a dulcimer and play.”

And they do – by the thousands.

“I love people, I love music and I love woodwork,” Clemmer says. “It’s like God took all the things I love and put them together.”

Where to Find Dulcimers by Clemmer

Wood-N-Strings Dulcimer Shop is open year-round, and Pickin’ Porch concerts are held from May through October. For more information, visit Clemmer Dulcimer’s website or call 865-448-6647.

4 Comments

  1. Teresa Payne says:

    I Love the Pickin Porch, Mike and Connie Clemmer are two of the nicest people you’d ever want to meet. And Saturday nights there are so entertaining. They have alot of wonderful instruments in their shop to choose from, I love it! And will be back often.

  2. This is not a comment but a question or at least a couple of questions. I want to buy a Dulcimer for my son for Christmas (he’s an adult and has experience playing guitar, saxaphone, clarinet and others so I feel that he should make the choice of which one he wants instead of me). Do you need an appointment to come and see the choices? Also how long does it take from the time he chooses one until it is finished? I am also unsure where Towsend is. We live close to Washburn so we must be close by. I just couldn’t find it on my map. I am so excited about getting one for him and he wil be thrilled as he has talked about one for quite some time now. Looking forward to seeing you . MJ

  3. Deanna Young says:

    I have had so much fun learning to play my Dulcimer. Please email me any tips and to this time I have one broken string and have not been successful with getting it changed out. Enjoyed your video.

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