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Cold Mountain

THE REAL COLD MOUNTAIN

The real Cold Mountain is not a town. It is the highest peak in the Shining Rock Wilderness section of Pisgah National Forest, North Carolina. At 6,030 feet it is an awesome sight - especially in the fall - as one travels along the Blue Ridge Parkway southwest of Asheville.

To really appreciate the mountain's grandeur, one must do what Inman did - hike it. Flowers, like gorgeous rhododendron, bloom in season now - replacements for old-growth trees which have been cut down. The State of North Carolina has a live web cam which allows interested people to view the mountain before nightfall. Sometimes it is shrouded in fog; other times it sparkles like an Appalachian gem.

As featured in the movie version of Cold Mountain, people who lived in the area during Civil War times sang hymns in the Shape-Note tradition. First published in The Sacred Harp hymnal in 1844, these four-part songs feature unusual sounds and harmony. Today, often while sitting in a kind of hollow square, men and women still harmonize their voices - without instruments - in the old style. It is most common in America's Southeast, although there are clubs throughout the country, including at universities.

What does Shape-Note singing sound like? Where did it begin? A Georgian named B.F. White originally compiled the hymnal which, in an updated version, is still used today. Examples of Shape-Note singing are available on the Internet, and the Sacred Harp Singers at Liberty Church are featured on the Cold Mountain soundtrack.

Today Cold Mountain doesn't look exactly like it did during the Civil War. Because modern life has caught up with it, the movie was filmed in the Carpathian Mountains of Romania. But who really knows...maybe off the beaten path somewhere one might still encounter a Goat Woman who can once again help a wandering hiker find the way home.