When Americana singer-songwriter and former American Idol hopeful EmiSunshine collaborates with kinfolks, she follows a multi-generational lead while utilizing vocal talents first discovered by her grandmother and great grandmother.
Videos by Wide Open Country
The musical family's run in East Tennessee dates back to at least the career of Emi's paternal great grandmother, Wanda White Mathews.
Mathews became a star of live radio in the 1940s and of early television in the 1950s in such groups as Carleton Scruggs and the Home Folks. She appeared on Knoxville radio station WNOX's Tennessee Barn Dance and Mid-Day Merry-Go-Round, as well as Nashville's still-running shows the Grand Ole Opry and the Ernest Tubb Midnight Jamboree. An audio clip of the Home Folks (sometimes styled as "Homefolks") performing gospel standard "Unclouded Day" on the WNOX Barn Dance can be heard via the Berea College sound archives.

Carleton Scruggs and the Home Folks (Courtesy of EmiSunshine)
Additional accolades for Mathews include performing in an opening act for the Rolling Stones' 1965 concert in Knoxville. Yet her run of regional success hit its ceiling because of someone else's dishonesty.
"People had come knocking, Sun Records and a bunch of different things," said Emi's dad, Randall Hamilton, to Wide Open Country. "She had a manager in her group that wanted to keep Grandma there. They would send all this stuff to the manager to give to Grandma to go over, and he'd hide it all from her. Years later, he came, gave her all the things and apologized to her. She had major labels that looked like they wanted to sign her."

Carleton Scruggs and the Home Folks (Courtesy of EmiSunshine)
Mathews' daughter Patsy Hamilton inherited her mother's musical talent, as heard from their shared time in the Perfect Joy Quartet. The gospel group lasted from the late '60s through the '90s, with Randall joining as drummer when he turned 18.
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