Durham musician is the subject of a new documentary. How to attend local screening.

Durham-based country music artist Rissi Palmer is the subject of a new PBS American Masters documentary, which hometown folks have a chance to see ahead of its television premiere.

“Rissi Palmer: Still Here” gets a special advanced screening this Wednesday at the Durham County Main Library, with Palmer and the film’s director, Dilsey Davis (also from Durham), on hand for a Q&A.

Palmer, born in a Pittsburgh suburb and mostly raised in Missouri, has lived in Durham with her husband and daughters for a number of years.

She became the first African-American woman to chart a country song in 20 years, when her single “Country Girl” peaked at No. 54 on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart in 2007. She is one of only five African-American women to ever hit the Billboard charts in the history of country music.

She has collaborated with R&B artists Jordin Sparks and Chris Brown, but has said in interviews that she was raised listening to and singing country music.

Palmer also was featured in a 2004 documentary, “Waiting in the Wings: African Americans in Country Music,” which aired on CMT (Country Music Television).

In the new PBS documentary, Davis followed Palmer as she worked on an upcoming album, “all while managing family life and one of the busiest professional years she has had in a decade,” read a news release.

In addition to a recording career, Palmer hosts an Apple Music radio show “Color Me Country,” celebrating other Black, Indigenous and Latinx artists.

For her work elevating the voices of new and old Black country artists, Palmer was named The News & Observer’s Tar Heel of the Month in April 2021.

County music artist Rissi Palmer stands for a portrait outside her home, on March 29, 2021, in Durham, N.C. She is host of “Color Me Country,” an Apple Music show in which she spotlights Black, Indigenous and Latinx histories of country music.
County music artist Rissi Palmer stands for a portrait outside her home, on March 29, 2021, in Durham, N.C. She is host of “Color Me Country,” an Apple Music show in which she spotlights Black, Indigenous and Latinx histories of country music.

How to attend Durham screening of Rissi Palmer film

The screening of “Rissi Palmer: Still Here” is at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 15, at the Durham County Main Library, 300 N. Roxboro St.

The screening is free to attend, but seating is limited and registration is required. If seats are filled when you go to register, there is a waiting list.

Register: durhamcountylibrary.libcal.com

How to watch ‘Rissi Palmer: Still Here’ on PBS

The Rissi Palmer film is part of an American Masters short series called “In the Making,” which will focus on nine artists “whose work explores and influences American culture today,” said a news release from PBS.

The first installment of “American Masters: In the Making,” hosted by Audra McDonald, features the Palmer film and a film on opera singer J’Nai Bridges.

It airs at 9 p.m. March 24 on PBS North Carolina.

More info: Get more info on the series or watch it at pbs.org/americanmasters and the PBS App.

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