Giri and Uma Peters
  • The Cuckoo
  • Babe it Ain't No Lie
  • Georgia Buck
  • Old Joe
  • Goin' Down this Road Feelin' Bad
  • John Henry
  • Shortnin' Bread
  • Reuben's Train
  • Sittin' on Top of the World
  • The Cuckoo
    Genre: Folk
    MP3 (03:31) [8.03 MB]
  • Babe it Ain't No Lie
    Genre: Folk
    MP3 (02:24) [5.48 MB]
  • Georgia Buck
    Genre: Folk
    MP3 (02:13) [5.09 MB]
  • Old Joe
    Genre: (Choose a Genre)
    MP3 (04:47) [10.95 MB]
  • Goin' Down this Road Feelin' Bad
    Genre: Folk
    MP3 (02:32) [5.8 MB]
  • John Henry
    Genre: Folk
    MP3 (04:16) [9.78 MB]
  • Shortnin' Bread
    Genre: Folk
    MP3 (01:45) [4.01 MB]
  • Reuben's Train
    Genre: Folk
    MP3 (02:50) [6.49 MB]
  • Sittin' on Top of the World
    Genre: Folk
    MP3 (03:06) [7.08 MB]
YOUNG BLUEGRASS SENSATIONS GIRI AND UMA PETERS
 RELEASE ORIGINS, THEIR DEBUT ALBUM, ON MAY 31

Born in Houston, Giri was 4 and Uma a toddler when they moved to Nashville, where their psychologist mother is an associate professor of pediatrics at Vanderbilt University. By then, Giri had already discovered the violin at a Houston Symphony “instrument petting zoo”; he began Suzuki lessons at 5. Uma started at 4. Their paths changed when Giri heard the all-star classical-bluegrass mashup Goat Rodeo. He immediately fell for both mandolin and fiddle, thanks to Chris Thile and Stuart Duncan. He was 8. Uma, then 6, decided she’d rather fiddle, too.

They became a duo in 2015, when their effort to compete in a band category at the Smithville Fiddlers Jamboree in Smithville, Tennessee, seemed doomed because, according to Uma, “No adults wanted to play with us.” 


Their teacher suggested they enter as a pair. Three years later, they won two band categories. That first year, Giri swept every youth competition music category except banjo, which Uma won. They did it again in 2016, and also earned individual wins in 2018 (they had to sit out 2017). They’ve also collected awards at the Old Fiddlers’ Convention in Galax, Tennessee, the John Hartford Memorial Festival in Bean Blossom, Indiana, and the Grand Master Fiddler Championship at Nashville’s Country Music Hall of Fame.

They’ve also performed at World of Bluegrass week in Raleigh, North Carolina, and Folk Alliance International’s International Folk Music Awards in Kansas City, Missouri — and recorded Uma’s tune, “How to Help the World,” with Giddens for FAI’s 2018 festival compilation CD. After inviting them to join her at last summer’s ROMP Festival in Owensboro, Kentucky, Giddens loaned Uma a gourd banjo. The Tennessee Arts Commission’s folklife director saw a video of her playing it, and asked the pair to apply for its traditional arts apprenticeship program. Uma’s eight-month apprenticeship to master artist Giddens wraps in June. 


They met in 2016, when Giddens reached out after learning she was Uma’s inspiration. In the Peters’ kitchen, she taught them “John Henry” as her mentor, fiddler Joe Thompson, taught it to her. But on Origins, as Uma’s still childlike, vibrato-free voice alternates with Giri’s still-deepening tenor, occasionally intersecting in harmony over their intricately plucked instruments, it’s clear there’s no mimicry involved at all. They understand the song — which they researched at the Smithsonian Folkways Archives, no less.

With the droning undertow of their low notes carrying the song’s weight as their vocals lift it aloft, it’s equally clear they understand the importance of those musical traditions flowing through them. 


Folkways archivist Greg Adams also encouraged the siblings to delve into the music’s origins, and to share what they’ve learned, including how racial factors caused Appalachian and bluegrass “hillbilly” music to become the province of white players, and blues and jazz — and the R&B and soul they begat — the “race music” of once-enslaved blacks, even though banjos originally were made and played by black people.



Giri says he hopes the album will inspire listeners to do their own research.

“I want to keep the history alive, and I never want people to forget where it came from,” he explains, adding that music should unite people, not separate them. He also notes another important function: giving people a voice to protest injustice or fight oppression, and a means to experience joy even while enduring those travails.

Enlightenment was the motivation behind his song, “Old Joe.” Giri explains, “I wrote about an imaginary slave named old Joe because most people don’t know that the history of this music is so intertwined with slavery, and slaves from Africa contributed significantly to the origins of American music.”


When Uma wrote “How to Help the World,” she was thinking about how difficult it was for a young girl to figure out how she might make a difference. 



It’s safe to say these two are already making a difference. They’re an inspiring pair, deeply motivated and talented, with their heads and their hearts well positioned to embrace the musical careers they’re already discussing. As long as they keep doing what they’re doing, American roots music’s past — and future — are in good hands.


< Go Back
7
  • Members:
    Giri Peters, Uma Peters
  • Sounds Like:
  • Influences:
    Rhiannon Giddens, Abigail Washburn, Ben Hunter, Joe Seamons, Phil Wiggins, Elizabeth Cotten
  • AirPlay Direct Member Since:
    03/02/16
  • Profile Last Updated:
    08/15/23 09:44:36

"Radio Creds" are votes awarded to artists by radio programmers who have downloaded their music and have been impressed with the artist's professionalism and the audience's response to the new music. Creds help artists advance through the AirPlay Direct community.


Only radio accounts may add a Radio Cred. One week after the track has been downloaded the radio account member will receive an email requesting a Cred for each artist they've downloaded.