At the age of 22, she began playing the fiddle in "self-defense against the banjo". One of the first fiddle tunes Williams played is “Old Molly Hare”, which she got from a
Mike Seeger album. When
Bill Monroe played Washington State in the early 1960s, he hired Williams to play fiddle for two shows. Monroe said, “I have never heard a lady fiddler that could beat Williams, and a lot of men fiddlers can’t beat her". Williams disclosed that she relied on her friend and local musician Paul Wiley (originally from Kentucky) to help her learn several Monroe tunes before he arrived in Seattle. Murphy Hicks Henry writes that Vivian Williams has a "well-deserved reputation as one of the top fiddlers in the Northwest". In 1962, Vivian and Phil Williams formed a string band named 'The Turkey Pluckers' to play at square dances, coffee houses, and on television. KAYO, a local country radio station, were broadcasting a milking contest from the top of the newly built
Seattle Space Needle and hired the Williams' band to play background music. When a local square dance caller, Kappie Kappenman, heard this on the radio he rushed to the Space Needle with his group of eight young square dancers all decked out in western wear. They got off the elevator at the top of the Space Needle and immediately began calling and dancing to the tune the Williams' were playing. This event led to quite a bit of publicity for square dancing, which had been dwindling. == The Mid-1960s and Darrington, Washington ==