The son of a school teacher, Lunsford began collecting songs shortly after graduating from college at the turn of the 20th century. Traveling on horseback, he worked a variety of jobs including selling fruit trees, working as an attorney, and serving a short stint with the FBI. Claiming to have "spent nights in more homes from Harpers Ferry, North Carolina to Iron Mountain, Alabama than God," Lunsford spent most of his time collecting folk songs. Dressed in a white starched shirt and black bow tie, he railed against the stereotyping of the "hillbillies" and used music and dance as a way to draw attention to the strengths and value of the Southern mountain culture.
"The Minstrel of the Appalachians," Lunsford helped to spread the Southern style of buck dancing, an energetic technique of rhythmically accompanying a tune with one's feet that fused Scottish, Irish, African-American, and Cherokee dancing. Beginning with dance competitions in North Carolina, often at his home where he installed a special dancefloor, Lunsford helped to turn buck dancing into a national fad. A turning point came in 1928 when he was hired to organize a folk music and dance show at the Rhododendron Festival in Asheville, North Carolina. The show attracted more than 5,000 people and became an annual event, becoming one of the first folk festivals in the United States.
Although he was criticized for excluding songs of politics, labor strife, Black culture, and bawdy material, Lunsford's efforts were essential to the preservation of the culture of "the true Southern mountaineers" and served as an inspiration for everyone from Mike and Pete Seeger to Bob Dylan and Joan Baez. While most of his attention was focused on collecting the songs and dances of others, Lunsford toured the world performing and lecturing. ~ Craig Harris, Rovi