Dena Jennings

Affrolachian Musician & Culture Bearer

Affrolachian

Nasons, VA

“Being a Taproot artist means sharing our expression of Affrolachian culture with a wider audience. By sharing ourselves and the art that shapes us, we have a chance to see one another more clearly— even those with whom we may not agree.”

Dena Jennings

Photo by Dena Jennings

A commissioned Phin Pia with resonator

Photo by Gary Rose

Instruments on display at “Cliff Top” Music Festival

Two gourd banjos and a gourd ukulele

of 6

Appalachian and Bengali gourd instruments

Dena Jennings, D.O. is a luthier, musician, writer, conflict transformation facilitator, Virginia Master Naturalist, and an Internal Medicine physician with certification in Ayurvedic practice. In addition to over 30 years of medical practice, she completed a 4-year apprenticeship with a sculptor and luthier in Ontario, Canada where she learned to design and built the gourd instruments of cultures around the world including the gourd banjo which is a part of her Affrolachian roots. In 2013 Dr. Jennings married her best friend Donald Jennings and moved to their organic herb farm and meditation center in Nasons, VA which they lovingly call the Farmashramonastery. There, she practices medicine and counseling, hosts contemplative retreats, hikes, and meditation, harvests herbs for the on-site apothecary, builds instruments, and raises chickens. She also performs across the country demonstrating her gourd instruments as they are used in her Appalachian and Bengali heritage. In June 2025, she will be received into the international Anglican-affiliated religious order Daughters of the King which was established in New York City in 1885.

What does the Taproot Fellowship mean to you and how will it affect your practice?

Being a Taproot artist means sharing our expression of Affrolachian culture with a wider audience. It affords an opportunity for cultural exchange with communities beyond those reached on my own. By sharing ourselves and the art that shapes us, we have a chance to see one another more clearly— even those with whom we may not agree.

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Alejandro López Portrait taken by Beverly R. Singer

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