Kamis, 31 Mei 2012

Chagas: Is tropical disease really the new AIDS?

Chagas: Is tropical disease really the new AIDS?

Chagas, a tropical disease spread by insects, is causing some fresh concern following an editorialâ€"published earlier this week in a medical journalâ€"that called it "the new AIDS of the Americas."

More than 8 million people have been infected by Chagas, most of them in Latin and Central America. But more than 300,000 live in the United States.

The editorial, published by the Public Library of Science's Neglected Tropical Diseases, said the spread of the disease is reminiscent of the early years of HIV.

"There are a number of striking similarities between people living with Chagas disease and people living with HIV/AIDS," the authors wrote, "particularly for those with HIV/AIDS who contracted the disease in the first two decades of the HIV/AIDS epidemic."

[Related: U.S. relief program prevented 741,000 HIV/AIDS deaths in Africa]

Both diseases disproportionately affect people living in poverty, both are chronic conditions requiring prolonged, expensive treatment, and as with patients in the first two decades of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, "most patients with Chagas disease do not have access to health care facilities."

Unlike HIV, Chagas is not a sexually-transmitted disease: it's "caused by parasites transmitted to humans by blood-sucking insects," as the New York Times put it.

"It likes to bite you on the face," CNN reported. "It's called the kissing bug. When it ingests your blood, it excretes the parasite at the same time. When you wake up and scratch the itch, the parasite moves into the wound and you're infected."

"Gaaah," Cassie Murdoch wrote on Jezebel.com, summing up the sentiment of everyone who read the journal's report.

[Related: Coming soon--an over-the-counter HIV test]

Chagas, also known as American trypanosomiasis, kills about 20,000 people per year, the journal said.

And while just 20 percent of those infected with Chagas develop a life-threatening form of the disease, Chagas is "hard or impossible to cure," the Times reports:

The disease can be transmitted from mother to child or by blood transfusion. About a quarter of its victims eventually will develop enlarged hearts or intestines, which can fail or burst, causing sudden death. Treatment involves harsh drugs taken for up to three months and works only if the disease is caught early.

"The problem is once the heart symptoms start, which is the most dreaded complicationâ€"the Chagas cardiomyopathyâ€"the medicines no longer work very well," Dr. Peter Hotez, a researcher at Baylor College of Medicine and one of the editorial's authors, told CNN. "Problem No. 2: the medicines are extremely toxic."

And 11 percent of pregnant women in Latin America are infected with Chagas, the journal said.

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Chagas Disease FAQ

Chagas Disease FAQ

Chagas Disease FAQ

doctor examining patient

May 31, 2012 -- Chagas disease is being called the new "AIDS of the Americas."

The shocking comparison has put this neglected tropical disease in headlines around the world.

Who's at risk? Is Chagas really as bad as AIDS? Here's WebMD's Chagas disease FAQ.

What Is Chagas Disease? What Causes Chagas Disease?

Chagas disease is caused by a parasite called Trypanosoma cruzi. The parasites multiply within cells of the body. Infected cells burst, releasing parasites into the bloodstream.

Chagas disease was first recognized in the modern era by Brazilian doctor Carlos Chagas in 1909. But the disease has been around for 9,000 years. Chagas parasites have been found in the remains of mummies from the ancient Chinchorro culture of South America.

There are two phases of Chagas disease: the acute phase and the chronic phase.

The acute phase of Chagas disease lasts for several weeks or months after infection. It often goes unnoticed, as symptoms may be mild. Acute Chagas disease is only very rarely fatal. Most at risk are young children or people with weakened immune systems.

The chronic phase of Chagas disease is more serious. When the parasite is not eliminated, the infection may remain silent -- without symptoms -- for decades. Chronic-phase symptoms appear in about a third of patients. They can be devastating.

The most common complication of chronic Chagas disease is a heart condition called chronic Chagas cardiopathy. These complications include enlarged heart, heart failure, severely altered heart rhythm, and heart attack.

Some patients with chronic Chagas disease get intestinal complications. These may include enlarged esophagus (causing difficulty swallowing) or enlarged colon (causing difficulty passing stool).

How Is Chagas Disease Spread?

There are several ways Chagas disease is spread.

The most common way is through the bite of a family of blood-sucking insects called triatomes. They're better known as kissing bugs, assassin bugs, cone-nosed bugs, and reduviid bugs.

While most cases of Chagas disease are in Central and South America, 11 different species of the bugs live in the Southern U.S. They may be found as far north as Pennsylvania in the East and Northern California in the West.

Inside houses, the most common places to find the bugs are near pet resting areas (a good reason not to sleep with your pets), in areas infested by rodents, and in or around beds (particularly under mattresses or bedside tables).

These bugs usually come out at night. They feed on the blood of humans and other mammals, birds, and reptiles. The bugs are attracted to the lips -- hence the nickname "kissing bug" -- although bites may occur on other parts of the body.

The bug bite itself doesn't spread Chagas parasites. But while feeding, bug droppings are left near the wound. When these droppings get into the wound or mucous membranes (as when a person touches the droppings and then rubs his or her eye), the parasites enter the body.

Chagas Disease Labeled 'New AIDS Of The Americas' As 'Kissing Bug' Spreads Deadly Virus

Chagas Disease Labeled 'New AIDS Of The Americas' As 'Kissing Bug' Spreads Deadly Virus

Chagas disease, at its worst, causes an enlarged heart and intestines that can burst suddenly and cause death. It is treatable in its early stages, although it is largely asymptomatic during that period, and can go undetected for years before finally damaging the heart, intestines and esophagus.

The AIDS analogy, though alarming, is apropos. Both infect mostly the poverty-stricken masses that cannot afford diagnosis or treatment. Both are chronic conditions with limited access to treatment options, especially where they are most prevalent.

The disease resides in the belly of the triatoma bug, a long-snouted insect that drops down from thatched roofs and wall crevices onto sleeping victims. The blood-sucking bug prefers to dig in at the corners of a person's mouth, hence its nickname "the kissing bug." While it feeds, it also unloads previously digested food, which also carries Chagas disease. When victims awake, they typically rub the spot of the bite, shoving the diseased feces into the open would and leading to infection.

Untested blood used in transfusions can also lead to infections. The kissing bug lives in tropical climates and most of its victims are in poverty-stricken regions with limited access to medical care.

Many of the infected are migrating from their home regions to richer locales, bringing the disease with them. This becomes a problem when women unknowingly infected with Chagas give birth, as the disease can be spread from mother to child, or when someone donates blood, all in a region where doctors are unfamiliar with the disease. 

Chagas Disease: Poverty, Immigration, and the 'New HIV/AIDS'

Chagas Disease: Poverty, Immigration, and the 'New HIV/AIDS'

What if a deadly epidemic was burgeoning and almost nobody noticed?

In the latest issue of PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, a distinguished group of virologists, epidemiologists and infectious-disease specialists say that’s not a hypothetical question. They argue that Chagas disease, a parasitic infection transmitted by blood-sucking insects, has become so widespread and serious â€" while remaining largely unrecognized â€" that it deserves to be considered a public health emergency. Extending the metaphor, they liken Chagas’ stealth spread to the early days of AIDS:

Both diseases are health disparities, disproportionately affecting people living in poverty. Both are chronic conditions requiring prolonged treatment courses…  As with patients in the first two decades of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, most patients with Chagas disease do not have access to health care facilities. Both diseases are also highly stigmatizing, a feature that for Chagas disease further complicates access to … essential medicines, as well as access to serodiagnosis and medical counseling.

That sounds like rhetoric â€" after all, what disease expert doesn’t think his or her disease is vitally important â€" but the numbers the experts bring to the argument are stunning. Overall, there are believed to be 10 million people living with Chagas infection; most of them are in Central and South America, but there are an estimated 1 million in the United States. Up to one-third of those infected, 3 million, are at risk of Chagas’ worst complications, enlarged heart and heart failure. And wherever blood donations are not tested for the protozoan, the blood supply â€" as well as organ transplants â€" are at risk.

Chagas transmission is squick-making. The disease originates with the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi, harbored in the guts of long-beaked Triatoma bugs such as the one above. The insects live in wall crevices and thatched roofs; at night, they crawl out and drop onto people sleeping below. They prefer to bite at the lip margin, which earned them the name “kissing bugs.” After they ingest blood, they defecate, pooping out copies of the parasite at the same time. The person wakes up, feels the itch where they were bitten, scratches or rubs the bite, and rubs the parasite-containing feces into the wound. Voila, Chagas infection.

The bugs that transmit Chagas are tropical, and the poor housing conditions that allow them access to victims are pretty much limited to poverty. Combine those two, and you’d think that Chagas’ home range would be fairly limited. But immigration has brought people who are unknowingly infected with Chagas into areas where doctors are unfamiliar with the disease. A separate editorial on Chagas, published last year in the same journal, notes:

Immigration from endemic regions is widespread; for example, there are Brazilian immigrants in Portugal and Bolivian immigrants in Spain, and currently, there are an estimated 100,000 or more Latin American immigrants living in France… Chagasic heart disease has been reported in Brazilian immigrants of Japanese origin in Japan, and the seroprevalence of Chagas disease among Bolivian women in Barcelona has been determined to be 3.4 percent.

The issue with Chagas isn’t only that its primary victims represent an undetected public health and healthcare burden; when they do not know they are infected, they can  become a source of infection as well. The protozoan can pass from mother to child during pregnancy, causing congenital Chagas; and when infected people donate blood or become organ donors, the protozoan hitches a ride. The earliest cases of Chagas in New York City, back in the 1980s, were transmitted by transfusion. There’s been an FDA-approved test for Chagas in donated blood for just two years. The latest map from AABB (formerly the American Association of Blood Banks), showing where positive donations have been identified, vividly demonstrates how the disease has spread.

 As I type that I can almost feel the default anti-immigrant response: “They” pose a risk to us, so if we only kept “them” on the other side of our borders, we’d be safe. The problem, of course, is that diseases and their vectors have no concept of borders â€" and thanks in part to climate change, there is now a competent Chagas vector on our side of the border, in Texas. A third paper, published two years ago in PLoS NTD, argues that Chagas is now endemic in Texas, traveling from Triatoma species through dogs and into people â€" and is going undetected because blood-donation screening is not mandatory in the state and physicians are not required to report the disease’s occurrence to health authorities. (Chagas in fact is only reportable in a handful of states.) Here’s that group’s map of relative risk of Chagas in Texas; the higher-risk areas cover about a third of the state and include Houston, San Antonio and Dallas-Fort Worth.

So, solutions? This may be yet another public-health story that turns into a plea for more money and more research. The authors of the new editorial argue that tackling Chagas requires both finding new drugs and achieving a vaccine. But the first step in addressing a burgeoning epidemic is recognizing that it exists, and these papers might at least ring that warning bell.

 Cites:

Image: Triatoma infestans, PHIL, CDC

Chagas disease: The ‘new HIV/AIDS of the Americas’?

Chagas disease: The ‘new HIV/AIDS of the Americas’?

Chagas disease is caused by a parasite known as a trypanosome. The parasite is carried by the “kissing bug” which has been described as a cockroach with a long proboscis (snout) that allows it to feed on blood.Chagas disease is caused by a parasite known as a trypanosome. The parasite is carried by the “kissing bug” which has been described as a cockroach with a long proboscis (snout) that allows it to feed on blood.

Chagas disease is caused by a parasite known as a trypanosome. The parasite is carried by the “kissing bug” which has been described as a cockroach with a long proboscis (snout) that allows it to feed on blood.

CDC/ Donated By the World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland

Chagas disease, which is caused by parasites transmitted to humans by a tiny insect called the “kissing bug”, is “the New HIV/AIDS of the Americas”, according to a leading expert in tropical diseases.

In an editorial in the PloS Neglected Tropical Diseases journal, Dr. Peter Hotez warns of the serious consequences of the disease which is already widespread amongst the poor and indigenous groups in Latin America and parts of the United States, specifically Texas and the Gulf coast.

The disease â€" named after Carlos Chagas, a Brazilian doctor who first discovered it in the early 20th century â€" is caused by a parasite known as a trypanosome. The parasite is carried by the “kissing bug” which has been described as a cockroach with a long proboscis (snout) that allows it to feed on blood.

But the parasite itself is transmitted through the bug’s feces. When the bug bites someone it also defecates on them and the parasite enters the body, Hotez explained.

The kissing bug is found throughout the poorer regions of the Americas in Brazil, Bolivia, the Amazon regions, Central America, Mexico and southern Texas.

Once infected, it can take up to 10 to 15 years for the damage from the disease to manifest itself.

Reports suggest there are some 10 million cases in the Western hemisphere, predominantly in Latin America.

About 30 per cent of people with Chagas will develop heart disease â€" about 3 million of the 10 million infected with trypanosomes in the Western hemisphere.

Of those 3 million the majority will ultimately die from the disease, Hotez said. Some estimates suggest 20,000 die annually from the disease, he added.

The disease can cause fatal heart disease â€" including cardiomyopathy and arrhythmias â€" as well as damage to the intestines and esophagus.

Treatment for Chagas , officially known as American trypanosomiasis, involves taking the drug Benznidazole for three months.

But the treatment often doesn’t provide any relief and only works if the disease is caught early.

If global action isn’t taken, Hotez fears conditions may be ripe for what he describes as a “perfect storm” for infection and transmission amongst the poor.

Hotez and his co-authors believe there are striking similarities between the people living with Chagas and those living with HIV/AIDS, especially those who contracted the disease in the first 20 years of the epidemic.

Both diseases are chronic and can remain undetected for years, he explains. Transmission can occur through blood transfusions or organ transplants and as well as through mother-to-child during pregnancy just like HIV/AIDS.

The American Red Cross universally tests for Chagas, said Hotez. A spokesman for Canada Blood Services said that it only screens for the disease based on a donor’s ancestry, place of birth or recent travels and if the potential donor has been to a place where Chagas is common.

Both diseases also share a stigma that prevents care. In the case of HIV/AIDS sexual orientation had been a barrier to care. With Chagas, immigration status may prove to be a deterrent to care and prevention, said Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston.

“It occurred to me one day how similar it is now with Chagas to the early years of the AIDS epidemic when they didn’t have good drugs or an understanding of the disease,” said Hotez.

The U.S. Centre for Disease Control estimates there are 300,000 cases in the U.S. But Hotez believes it’s closer to one million cases in the U.S. overall.

There are also cases in Canada, but a much smaller number of people have been exposed to the disease. A 2010 study in Journal Actatropica reports that 3.5 per cent of the 156,960 immigrants to Canada from Latin America in 2006 were infected with Chagas.

“It’s a forgotten disease among forgotten people,” Hotez said. “Can you imagine having 300,000 people in the suburbs with a serious case of heart disease caused by a bug? We wouldn’t tolerate it as a society, but because it’s happening to an indigenous people we’re silent.”

Hotez and his lab are working on developing a prototype vaccine that would be given after exposure to Chagas, like a rabies vaccine.

John Edwards Found Not Guilty of One Charge

John Edwards Found Not Guilty of One Charge

John Edwards Found Not Guilty of One Charge | John Edwards

John Edwards

Gerry Broome/AP

John Edwards embraced his daughter and tearful mother on Thursday after he was found not guilty of one count in his campaign corruption case and the jury failed to reach decisions on five remaining charges.

A mistrial was declared on those outstanding counts, leaving the final chapter in the downfall of the once-rising political star still to be written.

The jury of eight men and four women reached its single decision after deliberating for nine days.

"I know you're probably frustrated to some extent," Judge Catherine C. Eagles told jurors. "You worked hard. You did your job. You can hold your head up."

As the verdict was read in the federal courtroom in Greensboro, N.C., Edwards. 58, smiled, leaned back in his chair and gulped.

After the jury was dismissed, he hugged his daughter Cate Edwards and mother Bobbie Edwards, who broke down in tears.

"It's going to be okay," John told her.

Edwards was charged with illegally using nearly $1 million in unreported campaign contributions to hide his pregnant mistress, Rielle Hunter, during his 2008 bid for the White House.

He was found not guilty on Count 3, concerning a donation to Edwards of hundreds of thousands of dollars by banking heiress Rachel "Bunny" Mellon in 2008 just before Edwards dropped out of the race.

Edwards, a U.S. Senator who was the Democratic vice-presidential nominee under U.S. Sen. John Kerry in 2004, had faced a possible five-year sentence on each of the counts.

Federal prosecutors called 24 witnesses, including several former aides who offered a behind-the-scenes view of Edwards's affair with Hunter and his efforts to hide the relationship from his wife, Elizabeth, who was battling breast cancer and died in 2010.

Edwards's presidential campaign derailed after reports of the affair first surfaced in October of 2007.

But he continued to lie about the affair and allowed another man, former aide, Andrew Young, to claim paternity of Hunter's daughter â€" until January of 2010 when he finally admitted he was the girl's father.

The defense argued that Edwards was a liar and a bad husband but not a criminal, because he did not believe money spent by wealthy friends to hide his mistress could be considered campaign contributions.

• Additional reporting by WENDY GROSSMAN KANTOR

John Edwards acquitted of 1 charge; mistrial declared

John Edwards acquitted of 1 charge; mistrial declared

GREENSBORO, NC (RNN) - A North Carolina jury found former presidential hopeful John Edwards not guilty of one out of six counts in his federal corruption trial Thursday. The judge in the case  declared a mistrial after the jury failed to return a verdict on the remaining five charges.

Edwards was found not guilty of misusing campaign funds donated by wealthy benefactor Rachel "Bunny" Mellon. The former senator was accused of using almost $1 million in campaign contributions to hide his pregnant mistress, Rielle Hunter.

Edwards address the media shortly after the verdict was announced, thanking the jurors, his supporters and all five of his children.

"Thank you for the jurors and their incredibly hard work, and their diligence. They took their job very, very seriously," Edwards said. "Thank goodness that we live in a country that has the kind of system we have. This jury is exemplary of what juries are supposed to do."

He named all five children by name: Emma Claire, Jack, Cate, his deceased son, Wade; and Frances Quinn, his child with former mistress Rielle Hunter.

"And then finally, my precious Quinn, whom I love more than any of you could ever imagine," he said. "I am so grateful for Quinn."

Edwards was charged with one count of conspiracy, one count of falsifying campaign statements and four counts of accepting contributions that exceeded legal limits. He faced up to 30 years in prison and $1.5 million in fines.

[Read the full indictment below]

Judge Catherine C. Eagles ordered the jury back into deliberations earlier in the afternoon after jurors emerged to say they had reached a unanimous verdict on Count 3, but had not reached a decision on the other five counts.

Defense attorneys asked Eagles to declare a mistrial on the remaining counts.

The trial came to a conclusion nine days after the jury received the case. Deliberations began May 18 after 17 days of testimony that at times resembled the plot of a soap opera more than a criminal trial.

At once time during deliberations, the jury showed apparently inappropriate behavior by wearing matching clothing, suggesting they were assembling in secret groups.

A key witness in the case was former aide Andrew Young, who admitted to taking money from secret donations meant to hide Hunter and using them to build his own $1.6 million dream home.

Defense attorneys argued Edwards had no knowledge of the mishandling of money and other misdeeds, and he was only guilty of being a horrible husband to his wife, Elizabeth, who was battling cancer at the time of the affair.

Upon his acquittal, Edwards reiterated he felt he had done nothing illegal.

"I wanna make sure that everyone hears from me and from my voice that while I do not believe I did anything illegal and never thought I did anything illegal, I did an awful, awful lot that was wrong," Edwards said after the verdict was announced. "And there is no one else responsible for my sins."

Records and testimony show that wealthy benefactor Rachel "Bunny" Melon donated about $750,000 to the Edwards campaign. Other financing came from Fred Baron, a wealthy Texas lawyer who served as Edwards' campaign finance chairman.

According to evidence in the case, Luxury hotels, $400,000 in cash and a rental mansion in Santa Barbara, CA, (at $20,000 a month) were provided by Baron to help cover up the affair between Edwards and Hunter.

Edwards' defense attorneys argued that the former candidate did not know taking the money was illegal.

There was plenty of inflammatory testimony in the trial, including Young's claim that he feared for his life, worried that Edwards had hired a gunman to kill him; as well as his admission that he claimed Hunter's child as his own to hide Edwards' affair.

Andrew Young's wife, Cheri, testified she knew about the money, but not what it was for. She also said John Edwards convinced the Youngs take the pregnant Hunter into their home.

Neither John Edwards nor Rielle Hunter took the stand during the trial.

A low point in the testimony came when it was revealed that a very distraught Elizabeth Edwards ripped her shirt open on an airplane tarmac after she learned of the 2007 National Enquirer story about the affair.

Harrison Hickman, a Democratic pollster and strategist, testified that her reaction was "volcanic."

Young's book reports â€" and others witnessed - that Elizabeth Edwards ripped open her blouse and yelled, "Look at me!"

Elizabeth Edwards died of breast cancer Dec. 7, 2010.

"I don't think God's through with me," John Edwards said Thursday. "What I'm hopeful about, all those kids that I've seen in the poorest parts of this country, and the poorest parts of this world, that I can still help them."

Copyright 2012 Raycom News Network. All rights reserved.

John Edwards' campaign funds fraud case ends in mistrial

John Edwards' campaign funds fraud case ends in mistrial

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GREENSBORO, N.C. â€" John Edwards’ campaign finance fraud case ended in a mistrial Thursday when jurors acquitted him on one charge and deadlocked on the other five, unable to decide whether he used money from two wealthy donors to hide his pregnant mistress while he ran for president and his wife was dying of cancer.

The monthlong trial exposed a sordid sex scandal, but prosecutors couldn’t convince jurors the candidate masterminded a cover-up using about $1 million, and ultimately, jurors decided tawdry didn’t necessarily mean criminal.

“While I do not believe I did anything illegal, or ever thought I was doing anything illegal, I did an awful, awful lot that was wrong and there is no one else responsible for my sins,” Edwards said on the courthouse steps.

The jury’s d ecision came on a confusing day. The judge initially called jurors in to read a verdict on all six counts, before learning that they had only agreed to one. About an hour later, the jury sent the note to the judge saying it had exhausted its discussions.
It was not immediately clear whether prosecutors would retry Edwards on the other counts.

When the not guilty verdict was read, Edwards choked up, put a single finger to his lip and took a moment to compose himself. He turned to his daughter, Cate, in the first row and smiled.

When the judge declared the mistrial and discharged the jury, Edwards hugged his daughter, his parents and his attorneys. Later, he thanked the jury and his family, even choking up when talking about the daughter he had with his mistress Rielle Hunter. He called Francis Quinn Hunter precious “whom I love, more than any of you can ever imagine and I am so close to and so, so grateful for. I am grateful for all of my children .”
Then he started talking about his future.

“I don’t think God’s through with me. I really believe he thinks there’s still some good things I can do and whatever happens with this legal stuff going forward, what I’m hopeful about is all those kids that I’ve seen, you know in the poorest parts of this country and some of the poorest parts in the world that I can help them,” he said.

The jury reached a verdict on count three, which involved to $375,000 given by elderly heiress Rachel “Bunny” Mellon in 2008. The other counts dealt with $350,000 Mellon gave in 2007, money from wealthy Texas attorney Fred Baron, filing a false campaign finance report and conspiracy.

Mistrial for John Edwards

Mistrial for John Edwards

There was a very specific purpose to this. Hillary Clinton would be the overwhelming front-runner for the 2008 nomination, everyone knew, the favorite of many of the big donors and pragmatic establishment types that Edwards had cultivated in ’04. The only room would be to Hillary’s left, where grass-roots Democratic voters and activists remained infuriated by the role their party’s national leaders had played in authorizing the war. This was the turf Edwards would seek out.

And for a while, it worked. Through 2005 and the first half of 2006, Edwards’ support in national Democratic polls slowly ticked up, until he was running second to Hillary among likely ’08 candidates. Meanwhile, Kerry, who very much wanted to run again, also tried reinventing himself as more blunt, unrestrained ideologue, but to little effect; his support steadily dropped into the single digits. And Dean took on the chairmanship of the Democratic National Committee, effectively removing himself from the ’08 mix. The chief threat to Edwards’ strategy, it seemed, was Al Gore, whose grass-roots popularity was soaring with the acclaimed release of “An Inconvenient Truth.” But Gore was an unlikely and reluctant prospect. As the summer of 2006 wore on, a very real path to victory emerged for Edwards: Defeat Clinton in Iowa’s activist-dominated caucuses, survive New Hampshire, then win again in Nevada with union support, and finish Clinton off in South Carolina, Edwards’ native state.

Who knows what would have happened if at this same moment Barack Obama, then less than two years removed from the Illinois state Legislature, hadn’t set out to help a few of his party’s candidates in the ’06 midterms and been overwhelmed by the size of the crowds that greeted him? Dur ing his first year in the Senate, Obama hadn’t seriously considered a presidential run; in fact, he’d ruled it out over and over. And the press and political observers had no reason to doubt him: He hadn’t done anything yet, barely had any experience on the national stage, and was famous only because of one speech. Obviously, he would wait until 2016 or some future date to run for president.

By December, it was clear Obama was running, and that was basically it for Edwards, whose dreams of cornering the grass-roots, anti-Hillary market were ruined. Now it was a Hillary-Obama race, with Edwards relegated to a supporting role. But he still had enough support to press on, even after the March 2007 news that his wife’s cancer had returned and was now terminal. He’d need one of the front-runners to stumble â€" and he finally saw his chance in the first week of January 2008.

Just weeks earlier, the first report of Edwards’ affair with Rielle Hunter (and th e child they had conceived) had emerged, but in the National Enquirer only; no mainstream outlet would touch them. Even if Edwards’ story seemed a little fishy, everyone gave him the benefit of the doubt over a trashy tabloid, and the campaign proceeded as if nothing had happened. Thus, when the Iowa caucuses were held on Jan. 3, Edwards was able to finish a surprising second â€" eight points behind Obama but slightly ahead of Clinton. Suddenly, Hillary the Inevitable was on the ropes. Her poll numbers nationally and in New Hampshire, which would vote five days later, crashed overnight, while Obama’s surged. Edwards saw his opening: If Hillary suffered a bad loss in New Hampshire, she might be forced out (or at least marginalized). Then it would be an Obama-Edwards race, and the battleground would shift to the South. He could win a one-on-one race with Obama there, or so he and his team figured.

For the five days between Iowa and New Hampshire, Edwards did everythi ng he could to bury Clinton, attacking her as a protector of the status quo, without laying a glove on Obama. It seemed to be working. Hillary’s numbers kept falling. There was talk that Edwards, whose message and personality had never been a good fit for the Granite State, might edge her out for second place. Then came the debate, the Saturday night before the primary. To any fair-minded viewer, it looked like exactly what it was: Edwards and Obama â€" the two men in the race â€" ganging up on Hillary. The reviews were harsh. It was just too much. No one can be sure exactly why Hillary was able to reverse her polling slide and prevail in New Hampshire three days later, but it’s hardly unreasonable to suggest that voters â€" particularly female voters â€" felt she was being treated too harshly by her opponents and the media and rallied around her, not wanting to see h er campaign end so soon.

Whatever the explanation, Clinton’s surprise triumph slammed the door on Edwards’ nomination chances. It was still a Hillary-Obama race and Edwards was still an afterthought. By the end of the month, he was out of the race, and Democrats were safe. Obama went on to win the nomination and the presidency, but there’s little doubt that Hillary would have been just as successful against John McCain. 

But Edwards, as we all found out a few months later, would have been a complete and total disaster. And things didn’t have to work out quite so neatly for Democrats. If Obama, truly a once-in-a-generation political phenomenon, hadn’t emerged, Edwards probably would have gotten his one-on-one race with Hillary â€" a race he could have won. And if Hillary hadn’t engineered that miraculous New Hampshire victory â€" a result that still baffles political observers â€" he still might have found a way to win the nomination. For Democrats, h e could easily have ruined everything.

Rabu, 30 Mei 2012

Movie trailer of the day: 'Les Miserables'

Movie trailer of the day: 'Les Miserables'

The big-screen adaptation of the Tony-winning musical "Les Miserables" has been filming in England this spring, and is slated for a Christmas release later this year. Today, we get a first peek at the production with a trailer featuring Anne Hathaway singing "I Dreamed A Dream," interspersed with scenes from the epic story, which is based on a landmark book by French author Victor Hugo. The film stars Australian actors Hugh Jackman and Russell Crowe, with featured performances by Hathaway, Amanda Seyfried, and -- tantalizingly -- Helena Bonham Carter and Sacha Baron Cohen as villainous tavern owners.

The trailer features quick-take shots of some of "Les Miz's" signature moments, including the pivotal barricade scene. Hathaway's singing sounds raw and powerful, which should be no surprise to people who caught her singing with Jackman on the Oscars three years ago. Look for more trailers later this summer and fall focused on the dramatic duel between Jackman and Crowe, who play the key characters in the musical.

-- Grant Butler

'Les Miserables' Teaser Trailer: Anne Hathaway Sings 'I Dreamed a Dream' (Video)

'Les Miserables' Teaser Trailer: Anne Hathaway Sings 'I Dreamed a Dream' (Video)

The first teaser trailer for Tom Hooper’s Les Miserables has hit the web, presenting a haunting rendition of one of the most famous songs from the musical, “I Dreamed a Dream,” sung by Anne Hathaway.

CinemaCon 2012: Universal Offers First Glimpse of 'Les Miserables,' 'Oblivion'Hugh Jackman Reveals 'Les Misérables' Jean Valjean Look (Photo)

Hathaway plays Fantine in Universal Pictures' and Working Title Films' upcoming film adaptation. In the new trailer, her quiet yet powerful voice runs throughout the trailer, which features images of the French countryside, the poverty and hopelessness of life there, and also a better look at Hugh Jackman as Jean Valjean.

PHOTOS: Anne Hathaway's Style Evolution

The brief trailer also features Amanda Seyfried as Cosette, Russell Crowe as Javert and Eddie Redmayne as Marius.

The all-star cast also includes Sacha Baron Cohen and Helena Bonham Carter.

The musical, based on Victor Hugo's classic novel, follows paroled prisoner Jean Valjean (Jackman) who takes in Fantine’s (Hathaway) illegitimate daughter Cosette (Seyfried) and raises her. At the same time, his freedom is threatened by Inspector Javert (Crowe), who is determined to send Valjean back to prison.

While musicals made into movies can sometimes go terribly wrong, this first trailer for Hooper’s project promises that Les Miserables will be an emotional drama of epic proportions, and it’s easy to get swept up in these emotions with Hathaway’s evocative version of the classic song ringing in your ears.

Les Miserables is set to open in theaters on Dec. 14.

Watch the full teaser trailer below.

Trailer: Les Miserables

Trailer: Les Miserables

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'Les Miserables' with Hugh Jackman, Anne Hathaway debuts trailer

'Les Miserables' with Hugh Jackman, Anne Hathaway debuts trailer

The poor souls of "Les Misérables" belt out songs of poverty and despair. In melodious voices, they dream a dream of a better life and happier days. But perhaps what they're really dreaming about is Oscar night.

Starring Hugh Jackman and Russell Crowe, the new movie version of the hit stage musical is scheduled to open in December for maximum awards impact. For the past few months, the folks at Universal have been stoking public interest in the prestige project by releasing a steady stream of on-set photographs. Jackman, who plays Jean Valjean, has tweeted from the production.

On Wednesday, the first trailer for "Les Misérables" was released online. Anne Hathaway, who plays the forlorn prostitute Fantine, sings "I Dreamed a Dream." (Some may wonder why the producers didn't cast Susan Boyle instead.) We catch glimpses of Jackman, Crowe as Inspector Javert, Amanda Seyfried as Cosette and Eddie Redmayne as Marius.

"Les Misérables," based on the Victor Hugo novel, opened on Broadway in 1987 and closed in 2003 after more than 6,600 performances. (Will the musical's cult following translate to big box office? Or will the movie go the way of recent screen musicals like"Nine"and "The Phantom of the Opera"?)

The musical continues to tour the country, having recently played at the Ahmanson. The tour will open at the Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Costa Mesa in June.

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'Les Miserables' Trailer: Five Key Scenes

'Les Miserables' Trailer: Five Key Scenes

For his adaptation of the mega-musical "Les Misérables," Tom Hooper has taken a much different approach to bringing a stage work to the big screen. The Academy Award-winning director behind "The King's Speech" allowed his actors to look poor, tired and dirty. Plus, they all recorder their vocals live on set.

The first trailer for "Les Misérables" debuted online Wednesday (May 30), giving us a fuller look at what to expect. Naturally, Anne Hathaway has been the big talking point coming out of the clip. And while the actress sports a rougher look in Hooper's flick, fans will get to see her as Selina Kyle (a.k.a. Catwoman) when exclusive footage from "The Dark Knight Rises" debuts at the MTV Movie Awards this Sunday, June 3, at 9 p.m. ET on MTV.

For now, read on as we break down five key scenes from the musical:

Hugh Jackman's Transformation
The first image we ever saw from Hooper's adaptation of the hit musical showed Jackson, looking much rougher than we're used to seeing him. The photo â€" and much of the footage from this first trailer â€" comes from the first part of the film, where Jackman's character, Jean Valjean has just been released from prison after 14 years. The look is much different from the cleaned-up Jackman we'll see later in the film, but the rough design proves that Hooper is going further than a little dirt on the cheeks to bring a real-life feel to pre-revolution France.

"I Dreamed a Dream"
Hathaway's stripped-down version of "I Dreamed a Dream" is both surprising and effective. Most performers belt the sorrowful tune, but for Hooper's take, the actors recorded their vocals live on set, so Hathaway's quieter, sadder version makes sense logistically. The toned-down version proves much more cinematic, simpler and more tragic in a way. Bloggers at this year's CinemaCon threw it immediately into the running for an Academy Award after only seeing a short clip. If the trailer is any evidence, they may not have been far off.

The Barricade
One of the most iconic images from the musical, the barricade, makes a prominent appearance in the trailer. It's one of the many images the trailer cuts to as Hathaway sings "I Dream a Dream." Additionally, the clip provides glimpses of Amanda Seyfried as Cosette, Eddie Redmayne as Marius and Samantha Barks as Eponine.

Hathaway's Hair
In addition to her toned-down vocals, Hathaway's locks will also stir conversation. After losing her job, Hathaway's character, Fantine, sells her hair in order to provide for her daughter. Hathaway really cut her hair for the part.

Crowe as Javert
The other major character in this miserable affair is Russell Crowe as dogged policeman Javert. He spends years searching for Jean Valjean, hoping to throw him back in prison for breaking his parole. In this scene, Javert looks off a bridge off into the distance, perhaps depicting or referencing his own destiny.

Head over to MovieAwards.MTV.com to vote for your favorite flicks now! The 21st annual MTV Movie Awards air live this Sunday, June 3, at 9 p.m. ET.

Doc Watson, Guitar Picking Master, Dies in NC at 89

Doc Watson, Guitar Picking Master, Dies in NC at 89

You could hear the mountains of North Carolina in Doc Watson's music. The rush of a mountain stream, the steady creak of a mule in leather harness plowing rows in topsoil and the echoes of ancient sounds made by a vanishing people were an intrinsic part of the folk musician's powerful, homespun sound.

It took Watson decades to make a name for himself outside the world of Deep Gap, N.C. Once he did, he ignited the imaginations of countless guitar players who learned the possibilities of the instrument from the humble picker who never quite went out of style. From the folk revival of the 1960s to the Americana movement of the 21st century, Watson remained a constant source of inspiration and a treasured touchstone before his death Tuesday at age 89.

Blind from the age of 1, Watson was left to listen to the world around him and it was as if he heard things differently from others. Though he knew how to play the banjo and harmonica from an early age, he came to favour the guitar. His flat-picking style helped translate the fiddle- and mandolin-dominated music of his forebears for an audience of younger listeners who were open to the tales that had echoed off the mountains for generations, and to the new lead role for the guitar.

"Overall, Doc will be remembered as one of America's greatest folk musicians. I would say he's one of America's greatest musicians," said David Holt, a longtime friend and collaborator who compared Watson to Lead Belly, Bill Monroe, Muddy Waters and Earl Scruggs.

Like those pioneering players, Watson took a regional sound and made it into something larger, a piece of American culture that reverberates for decades after the notes are first played.

"He had a great way of presenting traditional songs and making them accessible to a modern audience," Holt said. "Not just accessible, but truly engaging."

Watson died at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem, where he was hospitalized recently after falling at his home in Deep Gap, 100 miles northwest of Charlotte. He underwent abdominal surgery while in the hospital and had been in critical condition for several days.

Touched and toughened by tragedy several times in life, Watson had proven his mettle repeatedly. Singer Ricky Skaggs called Watson "an old ancient warrior."

"He prepared all of us to carry this on," Skaggs said. "He knew he wouldn't last forever. He did his best to carry the old mountain sounds to this generation."

Watson's simple, unadorned voice conveyed an unexpected amount of emotion, but it was his guitar playing that always amazed ????? and intimidated. Countless guitarists have tried to emulate Watson's renditions of songs such as "Tennessee Stud," ''Shady Grove" and "Deep River Blues."

Mandolin player Sam Bush remembers feeling that way when he first sat down next to "the godfather of all flatpickers" in 1974.

"But Doc puts you at ease about that kind of stuff," Bush said. "I never met a more generous kind of musician. He is more about the musical communication than showing off with hot licks. ... He seems to always know what notes to play. They're always the perfect notes. He helped me learn the space between the notes is as valuable as the ones you play."

Arthel "Doc" Watson was born March 3, 1923, and lost his eyesight when he developed an eye infection that was worsened by a congenital vascular disorder, according to a website for Merlefest, the annual musical gathering named for his late son Merle.

Doc Watson: Guitarist and banjo-player who influenced generations of folk musicians

Doc Watson: Guitarist and banjo-player who influenced generations of folk musicians

Intensely modest, he possessed a warm, clear baritone voice that exuded sincerity and had an engaging, folksy stage presence that would see him punctuating his performances with stories and witty asides. More importantly, he brought integrity and a clean, crisp quality to his playing that endeared him to fans and fellow musicians. As he noted: "When I play a song, be it on the guitar or banjo, I live that song; whether it is a happy song or a sad song. Music, as a whole, expresses many things to me â€" everything from beautiful scenery to the tragedies and joys of life."

He was born Arthel Watson in Deep Gap, North Carolina, in 1923. His father, General Dixon Watson, was a farmer who played the banjo and sang in the local church, while his mother sang mountain ballads as she worked around their cabin. He lost his sight as an infant through an eye infection. The family's collection of 78s proved a catalyst in developing his musical sensibilities: "When I began to noti ce music I was just a little fella. It was everybody from the Skillet Lickers and the original Carter Family to a recording by John Hurt... All kinds of people came up through the years and I listened to all of 'em."

At the age of five he was given his first harmonica, acquiring a new one annually until he was 11, when his father presented him with a home-made banjo, the instrument's head having been sourced from the skin of his grandmother's cat. At 13, and by now attending the Morehead School for the Blind in Raleigh, he borrowed a guitar and taught himself to play the chords for "When the Roses Bloom in Dixieland".

Aware that his son's disability could prove an impediment to prosperity at a time when able-bodied people were barely scratching out a living in the rural South, his father gave him a cross-cut saw so he and his brother could produce lumber for the local tannery. As he recalled: "He made me know that just because I was blind, certainly didn't mean I was helpless." This independent streak led to a fascination with technology that would see him rewiring his own house and assisting family members as they tinkered with their cars. He would later inform audiences that he would doubtless have spent his life as a carpenter, playing music only as a hobby, had he not lost his sight.

He began to perform alongside his brother Linney, drawing upon both the hillbilly boogie of the Delmores and the mountain balladry of the Blue Sky Boys. Appearing on local radio in 1941 he acquired the sobriquet "Doc", a radio announcer having taken a dislike to his given name and opting for something catchier. He absorbed the music of a number of pioneering guitarists and later cited Django Reinhardt and Merle Travis as particular favourites.

In 1951 Watson met the pianist Jack Williams and for the next few years toured North Carolina and Tennessee playing electric guitar in his group, the Country Gentlemen. Although the sets consisted largely of current country hits, western swing and eventually some rockabilly, a demand for square dance tunes led Watson, adapting the fiddle parts, to develop the flat-picking style for which he is renowned. He maintained friendships with older musicians such as Clarence "Tom" Ashley and the fiddler Gaither Carlton â€" who in 1947 had become his father-in-law â€" developing a vast repertoire of mountain blues, ballads and dance numbers.

In 1960 he attended a fiddler's convention at Union Grove, North Carolina and met Bill Monroe's manager, Ralph Rinzler, who was sufficiently impressed to arrange gigs at New York folk clubs such as Gerde's and the Gaslight and, in 1963, the Newport Folk Festival. His set at Newport brought Watson to the forefront of the burgeoning folk revival and led to a record deal with Vanguard. He had recorded a couple of albums with Ashley for the Folkways label, but his tenure at Vanguard, coinciding with a partnership with his guitarist son Me rle, quickly established him as a major force in old-time music.

He recorded prolifically, with a number of his discs, including Then and Now (1973), Two Days in November (1974), the bluegrass-flavoured Riding the Midnight Train (1987), the gospel-orientated On Praying Ground (1991) and Legacy (2002) netting Grammys. Other notable albums included Red Rocking Chair (1981), Down South (1984), Elementary Doctor Watson (1993) and Docabilly (1995). In 1972 he was one of a number of older performers, alongside the likes of Roy Acuff, Earl Scruggs and Mother Maybelle Carter, who joined the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band in their landmark Will the Circle Be Unbroken project. Other collaborations included Strictly Instrumental (1967) with Flatt and Scruggs, and Reflections (1980) with fellow guitar giant Chet Atkins.

His later years were marred by the death in 1985 of his son Merle following a tractor accident, but with support from guitarist Jack Lawrence he continued to perform and in 1988 founded an annual festival, MerleFest, in Wilkesboro, North Carolina. In time his grandson Richard Watson emerged as the ideal musical foil.

He continued to promote the artistic traditions of the Appalachians and in 2003 released a fine CD/DVD, The Three Pickers, with the banjo virtuoso Earl Scruggs and traditional country singer Ricky Skaggs. He also developed the Folk Art Museum in Sugar Grove, North Carolina and continued to host MerleFest. In 1997 he received the National Medal of the Arts from President Clinton and in 2004 was presented with a Lifetime Achievement Grammy.

When asked how he would like to be remembered, his response was characteristic: "I would rather be remembered as a likeable person than for any phase of my picking. Don't misunderstand me; I really appreciate people's love of what I do with the guitar ... But I'd rather people remember me as a decent human being than as a flashy guitar player."

Paul Wadey

< strong>Arthel Lane ("Doc") Watson, musician: born Deep Gap, North Carolina 3 March 1923; married 1947 Rosa Lee Carlton (one daughter, and one son deceased); died Winston-Salem, North Carolina 29 May 2012.

Doc Watson was a giant influence in music worlds

Doc Watson was a giant influence in music worlds

Doc Watson, who died Tuesday at age 89, never had a hit record, and none of his albums ever went gold. This truth, a shame considering his talent, his influence on the guitar and the beauty of his dynamic baritone, should serve as inspiration to any musician interested in the long game, in making music that endures not because of its shock value or its keen marketplace vision but because within its measured tones lies universal truth.

Also reassuring to starving artists should be the notion that the North Carolina-born Watson, who lost his eyesight as a toddler after an infection, didn't record his debut album until 1964, when he was over 40 and had been simmering in North Carolina, perfecting his craft for over three decades. At the time when a bunch of college kids in New York were falling in love with so-called "folk music," bringing a name to the American-born acoustic sounds created in the rural South, Watson had been play ing backup to banjo player Tom "Clarence" Ashley, learning sounds that Ashley, born in 1895, inherited in rural Tennessee.

Unlike the more guttural, raw folk stuff created by players like Ashley, Bascom Lamar Lunsford and Dock Boggs, Watson at his best was a sunnier presence, less a conduit to the "old weird America," as Greil Marcus famously described the raw American folk music of the 1920s and '30s, than the "old resilient America."

Watson, like Pete Seeger and Burl Ives, sang and played in glorious tune, was a stickler for tone, and conveyed his acoustic lines with a driving fluidity. Listening to his early sides recorded for Vanguard, his work on the seminal celebration of old-time music, the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band's "Will the Circle be Unbroken," and the music created during his decades on Flying Fish Records, you can hear the work of a master whose style, though refined, was never academic. He never misses a stroke or a strike, singing melodic runs with his voice that move in glorious counterpoint to the notes springing from his guitar.

You can spot his picking style by its grace: It's as though his loss of eyesight had not only sharpened his hearing, but filled with light the conduit that connected his brain to his fingertips. What he imagined, he played.

Music was the heirloom that Watson, born Arthel Lane Watson in 1923, inherited from his fat her, named General Watson, himself a banjo player who taught his son a love and enthusiasm for stringed instruments. General was so fixed on his son's talent that, after he was confident of the younger Watson's skills, he built his son a fretless banjo from scratch.

General also bought the family a 78 player when the technology was fresh, and Doc heard firsthand the music, new at the time, that collectors and archivists still covet nearly a century later. On the family farm in rural North Carolina, a little island of desegregation allowed blues songs to mix alongside cowboy yodelers and gospel choirs. By his late teens, he was playing square dances at the local American Legion Hall and figuring out how to play fiddle lines on guitar. These adaptations became the substance of a style that drew on bluegrass "flatpicking" guitar technique.

Like Mississippi John Hurt, another veteran player who achieved greater fame after Bob Dylan and the success of the Newport Folk Festival had opened the gates for workingman blues, Watson had a voice that shined with optimism even when he was delivering bad news. His version of "Worried Man's Blues," for example, bounces along despite its message, the subtext being that the condition will pass with a new day.

And in Watson's hands, "Whiskey Before Breakfast" is one of the happiest, most wonderful guitar instrumentals you'll ever hear, a jaunt that seems to celebrate, not bemoan, a sip of rye before the morning coffee, as if he's frolicking toward the bottle.

Never going gold, or having a single artistic "peak," affords one the opportunity to continually climb upward without concern for looking back. Watson made astounding, timeless music into his 70s, and hit peak after peak. His 1980 collaboration with fellow guitarist Chet Atkins saw the guitarists trade licks side by side, and a few years later he joined Ricky Skaggs and Earl Scruggs for a PBS documentary called "Three Pickers."

And though Watson was better known as an interpreter than a songwriter, Robert Plant and Alison Krauss reminded the world of his prowess when they covered one of his best-known songs on the Grammy-winning "Raising Sand" in 2007. Amid other classics, the pair recorded Watson and his wife Rosa Lee's song "Your Long Journey," about the approach of death. The album went platinum many times over and offered yet another opportunity to appreciate an artist whose work will, like the songs he interpreted, endure for generations to come.

rroberts@tribune.com

Doc Watson: Bluegrass picker elevated guitar

Doc Watson: Bluegrass picker elevated guitar

RALEIGH, N.C. -- Doc Watson, the blind Grammy-winning folk musician whose mountain-rooted sound and lightning-fast style of flatpicking influenced guitarists around the world, died Tuesday in North Carolina, a hospital spokeswoman and his manager said. He was 89.

Watson died at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem, where he was hospitalized after falling at his home in Deep Gap, in the Blue Ridge Mountains. He underwent abdominal surgery and had been in critical condition for several days.

Arthel (Doc) Watson's mastery of flatpicking helped make the case for the guitar as a lead instrument in the 1950s and 1960s, when it was often considered a backup for the mandolin, fiddle or banjo.

"An old ancient warrior has gone home," country and bluegrass singer Ricky Skaggs said Tuesday. "He did his best to carry the old mountain sounds to this generation."

Doc Watson was born March 3, 1923, in Deep Gap, about 100 miles northwest of Charlot te. He lost his eyesight by age 1, when he developed an eye infection that was worsened by a congenital vascular disorder.

Seven of his albums won Grammys; his eighth Grammy was a lifetime achievement award in 2004. He received the National Medal of the Arts from President Bill Clinton in 1997.

"There may not be a serious, committed baby boomer alive who didn't, at some point in his or her youth, try to spend a few minutes at least trying to learn to pick a guitar like Doc Watson," Clinton said at the time.

In 2011, a life-size statue of Watson was dedicated in Boone, N.C., at the spot where Watson had played decades earlier for tips to support his family.

Folk musician Doc Watson dies in N.C. hospital at 89

Folk musician Doc Watson dies in N.C. hospital at 89

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. â€" Doc Watson, the Grammy-award winning folk musician whose lightning-fast style of flatpicking influenced guitarists around the world for more than a half-century, died Tuesday at a hospital in Winston-Salem, according to a hospital spokeswoman and his manager. He was 89.

Watson, who was blind from age 1, recently had abdominal surgery that resulted in his hospitalization.

Arthel “Doc” Watson’s mastery of flatpicking helped make the case for the guitar as a lead instrument in the 1950s and 1960s, when it was often considered a backup for the mandolin, fiddle or banjo. His fast playing could intimidate other musicians, even his own grandson, who performed with him.

Richard Watson said in a 2000 interview with The Associated Press that his grandfather’s playing had a humbling effect on other musicians. The ever-humble Doc Watson found it hard to believe.

“Everybody that’s picked with you says you intimidate them, and that includes some of the best,” Richard Watson told him.

Doc Watson was born March 3, 1923 in what is now Deep Gap, N.C., in the Blue Ridge Mountains. He lost his eyesight by the age of 1 when he developed an eye infection that was worsened by a congenital vascular disorder, according to a website for Merlefest, the annual musical gathering named for his late son Merle.

He came from a musical family â€" his father was active in the church choir and played banjo and his mother sang secular and religious songs, according to a statement from Folklore Productions, his management company since 1964.

Doc Watson’s father gave him a harmonica as a young child, and by 5 he was playing the banjo, according to the Merlefest website. He learned a few guitar chords while attending the North Carolina Morehead School for the Blind in Raleigh, and his fathe r helped him buy a Stella guitar for $12.

“My real interest in music was the old 78 records and the sound of the music,” Doc Watson is quoted as saying on the website. “I loved it and began to realize that one of the main sounds on those old records I loved was the guitar.”

Doc Watson got his musical start in 1953, playing electric lead guitar in a country-and-western swing band. His road to fame began in 1960 when Ralph Rinzler, a musician who also managed Bill Monroe, discovered Watson in North Carolina. That led Watson to the Newport Folk Festival in 1963 and his first recording contract a year later. He went on to record 60 albums. Continued...

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Doc Watson’s Legacy: What You Should Know About the Folk Legend

Doc Watson’s Legacy: What You Should Know About the Folk Legend

Image: Doc Watson poses backstage at McCabe's Guitar Shop in Santa Monica, California, in 1986.

Doc Watson, the pioneering folk musician who elevated and shaped guitar playing in America across genres and generations, died Tuesday in North Carolina at the age of 89. In a statement, Watson’s manager said that he passed away in the same hospital where he underwent abdominal surgery last week.

Born of the mountains, Watson grew up in Deep Gap, North Carolina. Blind since the age of one, Watson’s interest in music began at age 11, when his father brought him a banjo he’d made from the skin of a dead cat. He later saved money cutting trees on his family’s farm and bought a mail-order guitar; when he lacked funds to buy additional instruments, he’d improviseâ€"learning to play fiddle parts on his guitar, NPR reports.

His inventiveness eventually became his legacy. Watson’s professional career took off in the early 1960s, when folk music saw a revival. His flat-picking style became his signature, and he inspired generations of bluegrass and country artists with his spitfire handling of complex melodies normally reserved for fiddles and banjos. Watson was the musician’s musician.

(Read: All-TIME 100 Songs)

“He is single-handedly responsible for the extraordinary increase in acoustic flat-picking and fingerpicking guitar performance,” Smithsonian folklorist Ralph Rinzer, who discovered Watson in 1960, said. “His flat-picking style has no precedent in earlier country music history.

Watson recorded over 50 albums, many with his late son Merle, and has been celebrated many times over: he received the National Medal of Arts in 1997, was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Honor in Kentucky in 2000, and won eight Grammy awards (including a Lifetime Achievement award in 2004).

Below are a few of his most enduring and influential recordings:

Filmed in the ’60s, Watson’s mastery is seen up close as he performs “Deep River Blues.”

Watson demonstrates how to turn the traditional fiddle tune “Black Mountain Rag” into a dizzying, masterful work on the guitar.

In the clip above, Watson performs “Tennessee Stud,” which would later serve as the title for his 2003 album.

Watson teamed up with legendary banjo artist Earl Scruggs and folk singer and mandolinist Ricky Scaggs for a special concert for public television called The Three Pickers. Above, they perform the country gospel hit “Rollin’ in My Sweet Baby’s Arms.” The entirety of the concert has been uploaded to YouTube.

More: Everything You Need to Know About Earl Scruggs

Doc Watson, Folk Guitar Icon, Dies at 89

Doc Watson, Folk Guitar Icon, Dies at 89

Doc Watson, the Grammy Award-winning folk musician whose lightning-fast style of flatpicking influenced guitarists around the world for more than a half-century, died Tuesday at a hospital in Winston-Salem, according to a hospital spokeswoman and his manager. He was 89.

Grammy Winner Doc Watson Remains in Critical ConditionFolk Musician Doc Watson Still in Critical Condition•Obituaries

Watson, who was blind from age 1, recently had abdominal surgery that resulted in his hospitalization.

Arthel "Doc" Watson's mastery of flatpicking helped make the case for the guitar as a lead instrument in the 1950s and '60s, when it was often considered a backup for the mandolin, fiddle or banjo. His fast playing could intimidate other musicians, even his own grandson, who performed with him.

Richard Watson said in a 2000 interview with The Associated Press that his grandfather's playing had a humbling effect on other musicians. The ever-humble Doc Watson found it hard to believe.

"Everybody that's picked with you says you intimidate them, and that includes some of the best," Richard Watson told him.

Doc Watson was born March 3, 1923, in what is now Deep Gap, N.C., in the Blue Ridge Mountains. He lost his eyesight by the age of 1 when he developed an eye infection that was worsened by a congenital vascular disorder, according to a website for Merlefest, the annual musical gathering named for his late son Merle.

He came from a musical family -- his father was active in the church choir and played banjo and his mother sang secular and religious songs, according to a statement from Folklore Productions, his management company since 1964.

Doc Watson's father gave him a harmonica as a young child, and by 5 he was playing the banjo, according to the Merlefest website. He learned a few guitar chords while attending the North Carolina Morehead School for the Blind in Raleigh, and his father helped him buy a Stella guitar for $12.

"My real interest in music was the old 78 records and the sound of the music," Doc Watson is quoted as saying on the website. "I loved it and began to realize that one of the main sounds on those old records I loved was the guitar."

Doc Watson got his musical start in 1953, playing electric lead guitar in a country-and-western swing band. His road to fame began in 1960 when Ralph Rinzler, a musician who also managed Bill Monroe, discovered Watson in North Carolina. That led Watson to the Newport Folk Festival in 1963 and his first recording contract a year later. He went on to record 60 albums.
 
According to the Encyclopedia of Country Music, Watson took his nickname at age 19 when someone couldn't pronounce his name and a girl in the audience shouted "Call him Doc!"

Seven of his albums won Grammy awards; his eighth Grammy was a lifetime achievement award in 2004.

"Doc Watson was known for his masterful skills as a musician and his beautiful, emotion-filled voice," Recording Academy president Neil Portnow said Tuesday. "He toured the country with various acts and family members for nearly six decades bringing Americana music to fans everywhere, and he is highly regarded as a major influence on today’s country and folk artists."

He also received the National Medal of the Arts from President Bill Clinton in 1997.

"There may not be a serious, committed baby boomer alive who didn't at some point in his or her youth try to spend a few minutes at least trying to learn to pick a guitar like Doc Watson," Clinton said at the time.

Folklore described Watson as "a powerful singer and a tremendously influential picker who virtually invented the art of playing mountain fiddle tunes on the flattop guitar."

Doc Watson's son Merle began recording and touring with him in 1964. But Merle Watson died at age 36 in a 1985 tractor accident, sending his father into deep grief and making him consider retirement. Instead, he kept playing and started Merlefest, an annual musical event in Wilkesboro, N.C., that raises money for a community college there and celebrates "traditional plus" music.

"When Merle and I started out we called our music 'traditional plus,' meaning the traditional music of the Appalachian region plus whatever other styles we were in the mood to play," Doc Watson is quoted as saying on the festival's website. "Since the beginning, the people of the college and I have agreed that the music of MerleFest is 'traditional plus.'"

Doc Watson has said that when Merle died, he lost the best friend he would ever have.

He also relied on his wife, Rosa Lee, whom he married in 1947.

"She saw what little good there was in me, and there was little," Watson told the AP in 2000. "I'm awful glad she cared about me, and I'm awful glad she married me."

In a PBS NewsHour interview before a January appearance in Arlington, Va., Watson recalled his father teaching him how to play harmonica to a tune his parents had sung in church, as well as his first bus trip to New York City. Telling the stories in a folksy manner, he broke into a quiet laugh at various points. He said he still enjoyed touring.

"I love music and love a good audience and still have to make a living," Watson said. "Why would I quit?"

Musician Sam Bush, who has performed at every Merlefest, began touring with Doc and Merle Watson in 1974, occasionally substituting for Merle when he couldn't travel.

"I would sit next to Doc, and I would be influenced by his incredible timing and taste," Bush said after Watson's recent surgery. "He seems to always know what notes to play. They're always the perfect notes. He helped me learn the space between the notes (are) as valuable as the ones you play."

Bush said he was also intimidated when he began playing with the man he calls "the godfather of all flatpickers."

"But Doc puts you at ease about that kind of stuff," Bush said. "I never met a more generous kind of musician. He is more about the musical communication than showing off with hot licks."

His blindness didn't hold him back musically or at home.

Joe Newberry, a musician and spokesman for the N.C. Department of Cultural Resources, remembered once when his wife called the Watson home. Rosa Lee Watson said her husband was on the roof, replacing shingles. His daughter Nancy Watson said her father built the family's utility shed.

Guitarist Pete Huttlinger of Nashville, Tenn., said Doc Watson made every song his own, regardless of its age. 'He's one of those lucky guys," said Huttlinger, who studied Watson's methods when he first picked up a guitar. "When he plays something, he puts his stamp on it - it's Doc Watson."

He changed folk music forever by adapting fiddle tunes to guitar at amazing tempos, Huttlinger said. "And people all over the place were trying to figure out how to do this," he said. "But Doc, he set the bar for everyone. He said, 'This is how it goes.' And people have been trying for years to match that.

"He took it (the guitar) out of the background and brought it upfront as a melody instrument. We're no longer at the back of the class. He gave the front to us."

Wayne Martin, executive director of the North Carolina Arts Council, said recently that Watson took southern Appalachian forms of music such as balladry, old-time string music and bluegrass, and made them accessible.

"He takes old music and puts his own creativity on it," Martin said. "It retained its core, yet it felt relevant to people today."

Said Bush: "I don't think anyone personifies what we call Americana more than Doc Watson."

In 2011, a life-size statue of Watson was dedicated in Boone, N.C., at the spot where Watson had played decades earlier for tips to support his family, according to the Folklore statement. At Watson's request the inscription read, "Just One of the People."

Doc Watson as a music historian

Doc Watson as a music historian

Doc Watson’s legacy will grow after his passing, since he touched generations of music lovers with his retelling of traditional songs rooted deep in American history.

DocW_Sculpture_Boone

Watson sculpture in Boone, N.C.

Watson died Tuesday at the age of 89 in North Carolina after a brief illness.

But Watson’s story isn’t in his passing, it is in what he left behind culturally as an oral historian of songs that told rural America’s story.

Watson’s repertoire included a lot of bluegrass, country, and folk standards, including a few classics that Watson restored from dusty old records.

After touring the country for more than four decades, Watson influenced several generations of musicians with his guitar-playing style.

He often played to healthy-sized audiences at colleges and smaller venues, and at folk festivals (including his own family’s festival in North Carolina).

Audiences left his shows not only with the joy of being entertained, but also with a brief music history lesson.

To understand Watson’s influence, you need to understand his own history.

Watson was born in 1923, grew up in rural North Carolina and was blind since the age of one.

He went to school, got married, had two children, and played music locally in rockabilly and country swing bands in the 1950s.

Musicologist Ralph Rinzler was in Watson’s part of North Carolina in 1960 looking for Clarence “Tom” Ashley, a regional music star from the 1920s and 1930s he was hoping to record.

Rinzler found Ashley and Ashley arranged for Watson to accompany himâ€"on electric guitar.

Rinzler asked Watson to play acoustic guitar and Watson balked, because he didn’t have one.

A day later, Rinzler returned, and Watson had borrowed an acoustic guitar, and he was accompanying Ashley.

When Rinzler passed a banjo to Watson, he picked out a version of “Tom Dooley” that Rinzler had never heard.

Watson told Rinzler it was his family’s version, and that many of the “lost” songs that Rinzler talked about from the region were still played widely in North Carolina and Tennessee.

Watson took the advice of Rinzler and others, switched to folk music, and listened to old records to expand his repertoire, to add to the songs he heard growing up.

So in his late 30s, Watson started a career as a nationally known traditional musician.

His career took off after an appearance at the Newport Folk Festival and a guest role on the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band’s “Will The Circle Be Unbroken?” album.

Watson toured with his son Merle until Merle’s death in 1985, and he also benefited from the release of his record catalog digitally.

He resumed touring after his son’s death, and Watson also made high-profile appearances with the biggest names in his field.

A typical Watson concert would include a few standards that he arranged for his guitar style, some gospel songs, a few folk standards, early country classics from Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter Family, and a few old, obscure songs.

For example, Watson played “The White House Blues,” a song from the 1920s that recounted the assassination of President William McKinley. Or he would play a version of “The House Of The Rising Sun.”

He also played songs that were originally recorded by country legend Merle Travis (who Watson named his son after) Travis heard his songs growing up in Kentucky’s coal region in the depression.

Watson’s son, Merle, added songs from Mississippi John Hurt, another “lost” artist discovered during the 1960s folk revival.

Watson actually thrived after the folk movement faded out in the late 1960s.

He had built up repeat audiences using history as the backdrop for his performances, and he toured widely (and recorded often) with his son, and usually a third musician.

Recently, Watson had been performing with his grandson on guitar, but he scaled back his live shows in the past few years.

Watson was also involved in “MerleFest,” an annual music festival and musicians’ camp in North Carolina named for his son.

But perhaps Watson’s greatest legacy was his chance to preserve the musical heritage of his region.

Watson’s shows, like those of musical storytellers from Pete Seeger to Bruce Springsteen, had a sense of purpose, bolstered by Watson setting up songs with a few stories about people long forgotten, until they were remembered in song.

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Also Read

Doc Watson Dies at 89

Doc Watson Dies at 89

Doc Watson Dies at 89

Folk music has lost a legend with the Tuesday passing of Doc Watson.

The guitarist died at the Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem, NC at the age of 89, the Associated Press reports. Watson was hospitalized after falling in his home, and had been in critical condition following abdominal surgery.

PHOTOS: Stars in concert

The musician--who helped revolutionize the guitar's role in bluegrass and country music with his unique flat-picking style--had been blind since the age of 1 after developing an eye infection that was further complicated by a preexisting vascular condition. Though he learned to play both the harmonica and the banjo as a boy, his real passion lay with the guitar.

Watson, who made a home for himself in Deep Gap, NC, went on to win eight Grammys in his lifetime.

PHOTOS: Stars we've lost

In 2011, music fans dedicated a life-size statue of Watson in Boone, NC; Watson requested the statue read "Just One of the People."

"Just as a good ol' down-to-earth boy that didn't think he was perfect and that loved music," Watson said at the time of how he'd like to be remembered. "And I'd like to leave quite a few friends behind and I hope I will. Other than that, I don't want nobody putting me on a pedestal when I leave here. I'm just one of the people . . . just me."

This article originally appeared on Usmagazine.com: Doc Watson Dies at 89

Musicians honor Doc Watson's influence

Musicians honor Doc Watson's influence

You could hear the mountains of North Carolina in Doc Watson's music. The rush of a mountain stream, the steady creak of a mule in leather harness plowing rows in topsoil and the echoes of ancient sounds made by a vanishing people were an intrinsic part of the folk musician's powerful, homespun sound.

It took Watson decades to make a name for himself outside the world of Deep Gap, N.C. Once he did, he ignited the imaginations of countless guitar players who learned the possibilities of the instrument from the humble picker who never quite went out of style. From the folk revival of the 1960s to the Americana movement of the 21st century, Watson remained a constant source of inspiration and a treasured touchstone before his death Tuesday at age 89.

Blind from the age of 1, Watson was left to listen to the world around him and it was as if h e heard things differently from others. Though he knew how to play the banjo and harmonica from an early age, he came to favor the guitar. His flat-picking style helped translate the fiddle- and mandolin-dominated music of his forebears for an audience of younger listeners who were open to the tales that had echoed off the mountains for generations, and to the new lead role for the guitar. Slideshow     Obit Doc Watson Doc Watson (1923-2012)

"Overall, Doc will be remembered as one of America's greatest folk musicians. I would say he's one of America's greatest musicians," said David Holt, a longtime friend and collaborator who compared Watson to Lead Belly, Bill Monroe, Muddy Waters and Earl Scruggs.

Like those pioneering players, Watson took a regional sound and made it into something larger, a piece of American culture that reverberates for decades after the notes are first played.

"He had a great way of presenting traditional songs and making them accessible to a modern audience," Holt said. "Not just accessible, but truly engaging."

Watson died at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem, where he was hospitalized recently after falling at his home in Deep Gap, 100 miles northwest of Charlotte. He underwent abdominal surgery while in the hospital and had been in critical condition for several days.

Touched and toughened by tragedy several times in life, Watson had proven his mettle repeatedly. Singer Ricky Skaggs called Watson "an old ancient warrior."

"He prepared all of us to carry this on," Skaggs said. "He knew he wouldn't last forever. He did his best to carry the old mountain sounds to this generation."

Watson's simple, unadorned voice conveyed an unexpected amount of emotion, but it was his guitar playing that always amazed â€" and intimidated. Countless guitarists have tried to emulate Watson's renditions of songs such as "Tennessee Stud," ''Shady Grove" and "Deep River Blues."

Mandolin player Sam Bush remembers feeling that way when he first sat down next to "the godfather of all flatpickers" in 1974.

"But Doc puts you at ease about that kind of stuff," Bush said. "I never met a more generous kind of musician. He is more about the musical communication than showing off with hot licks. ... He seems to always know what notes to play. They're always the perfect notes. He helped me learn the sp ace between the notes is as valuable as the ones you play."

Arthel "Doc" Watson was born March 3, 1923, and lost his eyesight when he developed an eye infection that was worsened by a congenital vascular disorder, according to a website for Merlefest, the annual musical gathering named for his late son Merle.

He came from a musical family. His father was active in the church choir and played banjo and his mother sang secular and religious songs, according to a statement from Folklore Productions, his management company since 1964.

Watson learned a few guitar chords while attending the North Carolina Morehead School for the Blind in Raleigh, and his father helped him buy a Stella guitar for $12.

"My real interest in music was the old 78 records and the sound of the music," Doc Watson is quoted as saying on the website. "I loved it and began to realize that one of the main sounds on those old records I loved was the guitar."

The wavy-haired Watson got his musical start in 1953, playing electric lead guitar in a country-and-western swing band. His road to fame began in 1960 when Ralph Rinzler, a musician who also managed Bill Monroe, discovered Watson in North Carolina. That led Watson to the Newport Folk Festival in 1963 and his first recording contract a year later. He went on to record 60 albums, and wowed fans ranging from '60s hippies to those who loved traditional country and folk music.

Seven of his albums won Grammy awards; his eighth Grammy was a lifetime achievement award in 2004. He also received the National Medal of the Arts from President Bill Clinton in 1997.

Guitarist Pete Huttlinger of Nashville, Tenn., said Watson made every song his own, regardless of its age.

"He's one of those lucky guys," said Huttlinger, who studied Watson's methods when he first picked up a guitar. "When he plays something, he puts his stamp on it â€" it's Doc Watson."

Merle began recording and touring w ith him in 1964. But Merle Watson died at age 36 in a 1985 tractor accident, sending his father into deep grief and making him consider retirement. Instead, he kept playing and started Merlefest, an annual musical event in Wilkesboro, N.C., that raises money for a community college there and celebrates "traditional plus" music.

"When Merle and I started out we called our music 'traditional plus,' meaning the traditional music of the Appalachian region plus whatever other styles we were in the mood to play," Doc Watson is quoted as saying on the festival's website. "Since the beginning, the people of the college and I have agreed that the music of MerleFest is 'traditional plus.'"

Watson never let his blindness hold him back musically or at home. He rose from playing for tips to starring at Carnegie Hall.

And he was just as proficient at home. Joe Newberry, a musician and spokesman for the North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources, remembered once when his wife called the Watson home. Rosa Lee Watson, Watson's wife since 1947, said her husband was on the roof, replacing shingles. His daughter Nancy Watson said her father built the family's utility shed.

It's that same kind of self-sufficiency that once led him to refuse his government disability check.

"He basically started making enough money performing â€" couple of hundred dollars a week," Holt said. "So he went to the services for the blind and said he was making enough money to support his family and they should take what they were giving him and give it to somebody who needed it more."

In 2011, a life-size statue of Watson was dedicated in Boone, N.C. At Watson's request the inscription read, "Just One of the People," echoing a statement he'd once made to Holt about how he'd like to be remembered.

"Just as a good ol' down-to-earth boy that didn't think he was perfect and that loved music," Watson said. "And I'd like to leave quite a few frien ds behind and I hope I will. Other than that, I don't want nobody putting me on a pedestal when I leave here. I'm just one of the people ... just me."

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