Abby the Spoon Lady
Abby Roach, known by her stage name Abby The Spoon Lady, is an American musician, former radio personality, and free speech activist. Her music focuses on the American roots genre.
History
Abby first started street performing and busking as a means to make money traveling across the United States, primarily hopping freight trains. She taught herself to play the spoons and traveled all over the United States by hitchhiking and railroad. She states that landing in Asheville, North Carolina, was completely an accident and that she took the wrong train. She also hosted storytelling events, where she discusses the lifestyle of the American hobo. She spent a good amount of her time traveling recording the stories, interviews and songs of other American travelers.Abby is an advocate for street performance and free speech. In 2014, she was instrumental in developing a group called the Asheville Buskers Collective which advocates for street performance within the city of Asheville, North Carolina. She also recorded buskers through a local Asheville program called Busker Broadcast, which included interviews and songs of travelers passing through Asheville. She has four children, two of whom she put up for adoption. Their names are Alex, Charlotte, Samuel, and Penelope
In 2012, she was filmed in the horror film Jug Face playing spoons, and in 2015 she was filmed for Buskin' Blues, a documentary about the street performance scene in Asheville.
In 2019, Abby made the decision to leave the area and return to her native Kansas. She cited the transformation of Asheville into a high-end tourist attraction, as the primary motivating factor:
"Since the tourism boom, the majority of our street performers are making half as much as before the tourism boom," she said.
Roach said the final straw came when city leaders approved a measure to turn the historic Flatiron Building, a favorite location for street performers, into a high-end hotel.
"Responsible tourism needs to happen, making sure the locals are taken care of. If you have a giant room full of people begging you not to approve a hotel, then you don't approve it," Roach said, adding the Asheville she knew and loved no longer exists.
"There's been a good amount of street performers who have wanted to create an Asheville home base and couldn't because they could never find anywhere to live. So, it's stopping the flow of new art coming in."
Roach said, while she will always have a connection to Asheville, she will head back to Wichita, Kansas, where she can pursue her creative passions.