 Ever heard the old phrase strike when the iron is hot? Well, it's never been hotter than now. All this month at Appalachian Wireless, you can get the Samsung GS6 or the GS6 Edge for just one penny when you set up for service. The Galaxy S6, normally $49.99, now just a penny. The Galaxy S6 Edge, normally $99.99, now just a penny. Strike now while supplies last. Better service, bigger savings. Serving you for the last 25 years at Appalachian Wireless. It's time for Mountain Music, presented by Mountain Music Exchange, the heart of music in the mountains. Welcome to another edition of Mountain Music. This week down at Mountain Music Exchange, we've got Prestonburg native Josh Hicks. Take a listen. Features in the summertime, apples in the fall. If I can't have the girl I love, I don't want none at all. Shady Grove, my little love. Shady Grove, I know. Shady Grove, my little love. I'm bound for Shady Grove. Josh can remember having the desire to play guitar from a very young age, and not only was his family a great musical influence on him, but a local entertainer from a local opera house as well. I remember when I was around 12, my father always had a guitar around the house and I always wanted to play. I remember taking curtain rods and playing when I was young, and a gentleman from the Kentucky Opera came around and said that he could teach us any string instrument we wanted in school. So I took my father's guitar out there and never really looked back. I wish I had banjo strings, gold and twine. Every tune I play on it, I wish that girl was mine. Josh says there's nothing that makes him feel the way he does when he's playing. Music's always been a big part of my life. It's always been a big topic of discussion at the house with my parents, my family. A lot of them was musically inclined. I just feel comfortable when I have a guitar in my hand. I always have music changes the way I feel. Music is just a big part of my life, I guess you could say. There's a reason a 300-year-old folk song never dies. People like Josh and others keep them alive by continuing to play them and pass them on to the next generation. Old folk song called Shady Grove. I found it, Jerry Garcia, which is a great influence of mine. He did a lot of bluegrass and folk music and he had an album in the 90s with David Grisman and they did a version of it and it always stuck out to him for some reason. They did a whole album of nothing but 1700, 1800 folk songs and it always really stuck out to him for some reason.