 It's time for Mountain Music, presented by Mountain Music Exchange, the heart of music in the mountains. Welcome to Mountain Music. We're back down at Mountain Music Exchange this week where we run into the Duet, the local honeys who are just as talented as they are lovely. These ladies may be young, but they have already accomplished something no other female traditional musicians have. We're the first two female graduates from the Moorhead State University Kentucky Center for Traditional Music program with bachelor's degrees in traditional music. We hope, you know, we inspire the younger generation of girls who thought, well, you know, I'd really love to play banjo, but I've never seen any girl do it. You know, we hope that that'll help. The girls say this is a prime time to be an upcoming traditional musician in our region. The old time music community in Kentucky is really welcoming and really great and we have so many master musicians that are still living and so I would say find them, meet them because a lot of them want to play music with you, which I think is really incredible. Everyone knows everyone's business in a small town, but that's not always a bad thing. The song was inspired by a lady that I knew in our community. There was lots of talk, you know, that had her name in it around town and stuff like that. You know, how it is. Small towns, they talk. And the song's just kind of, kind of a funny little story, but it also has a big message in it and that women have to do some things that maybe they're not proud of around here or they'll get talked about, you know, around here, but you still have to do what you have to do to go on living and live your life. So that's kind of the story of Frida and, you know, we're fans of Frida and we encourage Frida. We're not, we're not the nice sayers, you know.