THURSDAY July 18

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

THURSDAY July 18 THURSDAY July 18 GREY FOX BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL SCHEDULE High Meadow Creekside Catskill Grass Roots Slow Jam Collings / Deering / Eastman D’Addario / Shubb Sierra Nevada Brewing CodaBow International / Beard Thirsty Lizards Event Co / Northfield 11 Welcome to Grey Fox Bluegrass University GREY FOX! Free, Hands-on Classes for Beginners Daytime shows 12 in the shade of the Grassroots Tent Slow Jam Tent High Meadow Tent 11am-1pm 11am-1pm Berklee American Harmony Singing Guitar Roots Showcase* Tony Watt John Rossbach 1 Dry Branch Fire Squad Celebrating 10 years 1 p.m. of Berklee College of Music’s American Roots 1pm-3pm 1pm-3pm Program Banjo Fiddle 12:30-2:45 p.m. 2 I Draw Slow Welcome Dance: Eli Gilbert Bryan McDowell 2 p.m. Quickstep with John Kirk and Trish Miller 2 p.m. 3pm-5pm 3pm-5pm 3 Fireside Collective Molly Tuttle Bluegrass Jamming Mandolin 3 p.m. 3 p.m. Tony Watt Tara Linhardt 4 The Lil Smokies Storytelling for Adults Mandolin Orange 4 p.m. Rona Levanthal and 4:15 p.m. Regi Carpenter The Bluegrass University classes at Grey 4 p.m. Fox are designed for beginners, or those looking for a review of the fundamentals. These two-hour, 5 DINNER BREAK 5:00 p.m. Grain Thief* hands-on classes taught by top-flight instructors High Meadow Stage 5:15 p.m. I Draw Slow are free of charge; just bring an instrument, a Out Under the Stars 5:30 p.m. chair, and be ready to learn! More information at: 6 www.thebluegrassuniversity.com Molly Tuttle 6 p.m. Dirty Grass Players 6:30 p.m. Steep Canyon 7 Rangers 6:45 p.m. *Emerging Artists Mandolin Orange Thursday, Friday, AWESOME JAM! 7:30 p.m. Sierra Nevada Booth on Vendors’ Row 8 Fireside Collective Emerging Artists: Grain Thief *Emerging Artists 8 p.m. Showcasing artists 7-7:30 p.m. on-the-rise from around the country! 9 Del McCoury Band Thurs/Fri/Sat 9 p.m. sponsored by Delaware Valley Dirty Grass Players Bluegrass Festival 9:30 p.m. 10 Steep Canyon A FEW THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW: Rangers 1. Chairs are provided at High Meadow Day Tent & 10:30 p.m. The Lil Smokies 11 11 p.m. Creekside Stages. You may also bring your own. 2. Bring your own seating to High Meadow Night Stage, Family, Grassroots, and Slow Jam venues. 3. All sets end 15 minutes prior to the next act 12 unless otherwise noted. Billy Strings 4. Schedule is subject to change without notice. 12:30 a.m. ‘til... FRIDAY July 19 GREY FOX BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL SCHEDULE High Meadow Creekside Catskill Grass Roots Slow Jam Collings / Deering / Eastman D’Addario / Shubb Sierra Nevada Brewing CodaBow International / Beard Thirsty Lizards Event Co / Northfield Giri and Uma Peters* Meditation: 9:15 a.m. 11 High Meadow Tent D’Addario String Songwriting: 11 a.m. Yoga: 10 a.m. Experience Mike Burns, Rob Clark Colebrook Road Beginning Clogging with 10:30a to 12:30p and Chris Brashear 11 a.m. Bring your Quickstep, John Kirk 10 a.m. to Noon guitar, mando, or Hands-on Workshop 12 Cane Mill Road The Wildmans* and Trish Miller banjo in for new Noon Noon 11:15 a.m. strings! Slow Jam Central Learn to Jam with The Wernick Method 1 Mipso Chatham Rabbits* Bluegrass Harmony Square Dance with Jeff Horton, Mary 1 p.m. 1 p.m. Wernick Method Quickstep, John and Trish Maguire & Others Workshop Leader, Noon 1 p.m. Paul Dube & Team will 2 Frank Solivan Dry Branch Fire Squad Celtic Connection get you jamming! 2 p.m. Irish Fiddle & Banjo and Dirty Kitchen Session One 2 p.m. 2 p.m. Earls of Leicester Noon-2 p.m. 2:30 p.m. Storytelling for All BG instruments 3 Balsam Range Colebrook Road Adults 3 p.m. 3 p.m. Rona Levanthal and Session Two Regi Carpenter 2-4 p.m. All BG instruments The Travelin’ McCourys 3 p.m. Tim O’Brien Jerry Douglas 4 3:45 p.m. Workshop (TBA) Session Three Bluegrass Band Interview by John Rossbach 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4-6 p.m. 4 p.m. All BG instruments 5 DINNER BREAK Mipso We Banjo 3 Stand-Up Bass Details in program 5 p.m. 5 p.m. 5 p.m. presented by book. Bring your D’Addario Strings High Meadow Stage instrument and Out Under the Stars 5 p.m. learn to “play well with others!” 6 Earls of Leicester I Draw Slow 6 p.m. The Larry Keel 6 p.m. Experience Cane Mll Road 6 p.m. 6:15 p.m. Open for Wernick Method 7 Balsam Range Jammers 7 p.m. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. The Lil Smokies Tim O’Brien 7:30 p.m. Bluegrass Band 8 7:30 p.m. *Emerging Artists Billy Strings We Banjo 3 Showcasing artists 8:45 p.m. 9 9 p.m. on the rise from AWESOME JAMS! around the country! Sierra Nevada Booth on Vendors’ Row Thurs/Fri/Sat 2019 Emerging Artists: sponsored by 10 Delaware Valley Chatham Rabbits Bluegrass Festival Jimmy Rea’s 2:30 to 3 p.m. The Travelin’ McCourys & MarleyGrass The Wildmans The Larry Keel Experience 10:15 p.m. 5 to 5:30 p.m. 11 present Grateful Ball The Lil Smokies 10:30 p.m. 11:30 p.m. All shows end 15 mins. prior to the next, 12 Frank Solivan and unless otherwise noted. Dirty Kitchen See Thursday schedule for stage seating info. and friends Schedule subject to change. 12:45 p.m. until ? SATURDAY July 20 GREY FOX BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL SCHEDULE High Meadow Creekside Catskill Grass Roots Slow Jam Collings / Deering / Eastman D’Addario / Shubb Sierra Nevada Brewing CodaBow International / Beard Thirsty Lizards Event Co / Northfield 11 High Meadow Tent Bluegrass Karaoke Meditation: 9:15 a.m. Cane Mill Road w/Kitsy Kuykendall, The Yoga: 10 a.m. 11 a.m. Queen of Bluegrass Intermediate Clogging: Quickstep with John and Trish Slow Jam Central 11 a.m. 11 a.m. Bluegrass Harmony Learn to Jam with 12 Man About A Horse The Arcadian Wild* Jeff Horton, Mary The Wernick Method Noon Noon Squares, Circles, Contras: Maguire & Co. Quickstep with John and Trish Wernick Method Noon 11:30 a.m. Workshop Leader, Paul Dube & Team will 2019 Scholarship * 1 Stillhouse Junkies Resonation! get you jamming! Presentations 1 p.m. Our host band, Two Chads, No Waiting 1 p.m. Dry Branch Fire Squad w/Graves & Darous Session One 1 p.m. Noon-2 p.m. Kieran Kane and 1:15 p.m. 2 Damn Tall Buildings* All About the Song All BG instruments Rayna Gellert 2 p.m. 1:45 p.m. Host Jim Gaudet with Cane Mill Road Jim Rea, Matt Royles, Session Two Sara & Matt McCombie 2-4 p.m. and Friends All BG instruments Sierra Hull Eric & Leigh Gibson with Dance Caller, 2-3:45 p.m. 3 2:45 p.m. Brother Duets Joyce Rossbach 3 p.m. 2:30 p.m. Session Three “Kenny Baker Plays 4-6 p.m. Kieran Kane and Bill Monroe” Jam All BG instruments 4 Adv fiddle-centric jam Leftover Salmon Rayna Gellert Jim Gaudet and led by Ellen Carlson Details in program 30th Anniversary Tour 4 p.m. The Railroad Boys 4 p.m. book. Bring your “Songs from the 4:15 p.m. Living Room” instrument and Got Banjo? learn to “play well 5 4:15 p.m. Dry Branch Fire Squad 5 p.m. Mark Cassidy, Ira Gitlin with others!” DINNER BREAK & Brad Kolodner Billy Strings 5:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 5 p.m. Open for 6 High Meadow Stage Man About A Horse Americana Out Under the Stars 6 p.m. Wernick Method Originals: Jammers Gibson Brothers From Story to Song: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. 6:30 p.m. Sierra Hull Kane & Gellert 7 The HillBenders 6:45 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 Tommy Emmanuel Man About a Horse 8 p.m. 8 p.m. AWESOME JAMS! Sierra Nevada Booth on Vendors’ Row *Emerging Artists 2019 Emerging Artists: Showcasing artists 9 on the rise from Damn Tall Buildings around the country! I’m With Her Thurs/Fri/Sat The Hillbenders 2:30 to 3 p.m. 9:30 p.m. sponsored by 9:30 p.m. Stillhouse Junkies 10 Delaware Valley 4 to 4:30 p.m. Bluegrass Festival The Arcadian Wild 5 to 5:30 p.m. 11 Billy Strings 11:15 p.m. Leftover Salmon SUNDAY SCHEDULE! Stuff to Know: Happy 30th Anniversary! We’ll have Sunday’s Schedule soon, including Check notes on Thursday 11:30 p.m. ‘til... Dry Branch Fire Squad’s Gospel Show schedule re: chairs, set 12 Schedule subject to 21st Annual Bluegrass Academy for Kids length, etc. change w/o notice. Don’t forget to bring food pantry donations! .
Recommended publications
  • Flatpicking Guitar Magazine Index of Reviews
    Flatpicking Guitar Magazine Index of Reviews All reviews of flatpicking CDs, DVDs, Videos, Books, Guitar Gear and Accessories, Guitars, and books that have appeared in Flatpicking Guitar Magazine are shown in this index. CDs (Listed Alphabetically by artists last name - except for European Gypsy Jazz CD reviews, which can all be found in Volume 6, Number 3, starting on page 72): Brandon Adams, Hardest Kind of Memories, Volume 12, Number 3, page 68 Dale Adkins (with Tacoma), Out of the Blue, Volume 1, Number 2, page 59 Dale Adkins (with Front Line), Mansions of Kings, Volume 7, Number 2, page 80 Steve Alexander, Acoustic Flatpick Guitar, Volume 12, Number 4, page 69 Travis Alltop, Two Different Worlds, Volume 3, Number 2, page 61 Matthew Arcara, Matthew Arcara, Volume 7, Number 2, page 74 Jef Autry, Bluegrass ‘98, Volume 2, Number 6, page 63 Jeff Autry, Foothills, Volume 3, Number 4, page 65 Butch Baldassari, New Classics for Bluegrass Mandolin, Volume 3, Number 3, page 67 William Bay: Acoustic Guitar Portraits, Volume 15, Number 6, page 65 Richard Bennett, Walking Down the Line, Volume 2, Number 2, page 58 Richard Bennett, A Long Lonesome Time, Volume 3, Number 2, page 64 Richard Bennett (with Auldridge and Gaudreau), This Old Town, Volume 4, Number 4, page 70 Richard Bennett (with Auldridge and Gaudreau), Blue Lonesome Wind, Volume 5, Number 6, page 75 Gonzalo Bergara, Portena Soledad, Volume 13, Number 2, page 67 Greg Blake with Jeff Scroggins & Colorado, Volume 17, Number 2, page 58 Norman Blake (with Tut Taylor), Flatpickin’ in the
    [Show full text]
  • Winter 2021 Digital Boomer
    HEARTH & HOME ASK AMY HEALTH & WELLNESS Decorating & Selling DNA Disasters Healthy, Legal Mushrooms WINTER 2020 Virginia’sGUITAR MAKERS Master FROM OUR READERS Car Collector Childhood & Candy Family Pool Table TRAVEL Kentucky Bourbon Country Joseph Rosendo’s Travel Musings Travel Insurance Museum of the U.S. Army Fredericksburg, Texas Nostalgia • Food & Booze Plus Books • Giving Back Fun & Games CONTENTS Vol. 15 , No. 4 WINTER ’20 HEARTH & HOME ASK AMY Decorating & Selling HEALTH & WELLNESS DNA Disasters Healthy, Legal Mushrooms THE CREATIVE LIFE WINTER 2020 2 Virginia’s Master Guitar Makers ON THE 4 Behind the Scenes with Art Conservators Virginia’s Master COVER GUITAR MAKERS J. PlunkyFROM Branch OUR READERS This custom guitar was FROM OUR Photograph by READERS 5 Confessions of a Car Collector Car Collector Patrick Mamou made by the craftsmen Childhood & Candy 6 Memories of Childhood and Candy Family Pool Table TRAVEL at Rockbridge Guitar Co. Kentucky Bourbon Country 7 The Family Pool Table Joseph Rosendo’s Travel Musings Travel Insurance Museum of the U.S. Army in Charlottesville, Virginia. Fredericksburg, Texas Nostalgia • Food & Booze Plus Books • Giving Back YESTERYEAR Fun & Games 8 Jacqueline Bisset’s Sizzling Career Photograph by JJ Huckin 9 ‘Tinker Bell’ Model Engages with Flame TRAVEL 10 Experience Kentucky Bourbon Country FOOD, BREWS, & BOOZE 11 Joseph Rosendo, Cultivating Memories from Travel Experiences 24 Virginia Recipes for Home Cooks 12 Fredericksburg, Texas: A Tantalizing Twist 25 Explore American Craft Beer from Home
    [Show full text]
  • Floydfest: Floyd, VA 8/13-15/2004
    Floydfest: Floyd, VA 8/13-15/2004 SEARCH: GLIDE UPDATES: features :: reviews :: columns :: downloads :: news :: forums » Show: Galactic - Mr. Floydfest Smalls Theater, Millvale, PA Floyd, VA 8/13-15/2004 Brian Gearing » CD: Dirty Dozen Brass Wednesday, September 15, 2004 Band - Funeral For A Friend » Gallery: Gov't Mule, Orpheum Theatre, Boston The approach into the Floyd World Music Festival on the MA 10/15/04 Blue Ridge Parkway is one of the most beautiful on the east coast. The Parkway is nationally recognized as one » CD: Barbara Cue - Rhythm of the most serene drives in the country. Boasting Oil spectacular views of the surrounding valleys and almost completely unspoiled by gas stations or motor-miles, it » Feature: John “Jojo” is one of the few roads anywhere where one can drive Hermann: Another Round Of for miles without seeing any sign of human intervention Smiling Assassins aside from the occasional rustic home. Even on the evening of the first day of the festival, the incoming » Download: moe. - traffic was thin at best, and the stereotypical, sticker-plastered Winnebagos and Westfalias Somerville Theater were nowhere to be seen. Rather than the faceless car-and-bag-checkpoints of Bonnaroo and the like, the entrance to the Floydfest grounds is done up like the visual incarnation of an eager hug from a long- lost friend. An arch reading “Welcome to Floydfest” opens its arms to visitors who walk down a mulched path adorned with flowers both real and sculpted as the warm sounds of acoustic music from five separate stages blend together into a noise one can almost smell.
    [Show full text]
  • Floydfest Partnership Package
    FloydFest Partnership Package 888-VA-FESTS | FloydFest.com [email protected] Who Is AtWP? Across the Way Productions, Inc. creates, designs and executes one-of-a-kind LIVE events. Dedicated to providing a unique experience for each and every attendee. AtWP is excited to present in 2019 the nationally accredited FloydFest Music and Arts Festival, dubbed “FloydFest 19~Voyage Home.” We are five days of music, magic and mountains, featuring outdoor adventures, vibrant and varied vendors, quality brews and chews, healing arts, workshops and whimsy, children's activities, art installations, and a lineup featuring more than 100 artists on eight+ stages. Website: FloydFest.com Facebook: facebook.com/FloydFestVA Twitter: twitter.com/floydfest Instagram: instagram.com/floydfestva With two decades of success conceptualizing and implementing unique outdoor events, AtWP is a forerunner in the field of event management. “Our mission is to be the best music festival experience of our time. To sell a limited quantity of tickets to the highest quality event experience, bar none, celebrating music, art and life in an intimate, visually stunning environment; and to embody our values day-to-day within the organization, balancing relaxed style and a chill authenticity with detail orientation and high-quality work standards.” History of FloydFest FloydFest was conceived by musician, promoter, and co-founder Kris Hodges, and began as a love for all of the best that live entertainment could offer. Hodges’ passion for deep roots music led him from Virginia, where he performed music across the mid- Atlantic in high school, to studying Music Business at the Atlanta Art Institute and at the University of GA.
    [Show full text]
  • Sunnyside Singers Club in Woodside, Queens, 8Pm 1 Sun Chantey & Folk Song & Music Session; John St
    Folk Music Society of New York, Inc. Oct. 2017 vol. 52 No. 9 October Mondays: Irish Traditional Music Session at the Landmark, 8pm Wednesdays: Sunnyside Singers Club in Woodside, Queens, 8pm 1 Sun Chantey & Folk Song & Music Session; John St. Ch; 2pm 4 Wed Folk Open Sing; 7pm in Brooklyn 6 Fri Geoff Muldaur, 7:30pm, Saint John's Ch., Christopher St. 8 Sun Singing Party in Marine Park, Brooklyn, 1­5pm 9 Mon FMSNY Board of Directors Meeting; 7:15pm; see p. 5 11 Wed Sunnyside Singers Club; performer Liz Hanley, 8pm 15 Sun Shanty Sing on Staten Island, 2­5 pm 15 Sun Exploring "Tradiginal" Folk Music, perf.­talk, 2pm 15 Sun Upper West Side Song Swap at HI­NY, 103 St & Amsterdam Av , 5­8pm 20 Fri John Roberts, 7:30pm at O.S.A. Hall, 220 E. 23 St. 26 Thur Newsletter Mailing, 7pm in Jackson Heights, Queens 27­29 Fall Folk Music Weekend at HVRS ­ see centerfold November Mondays: Irish Traditional Music Session at the Landmark, 8pm Wednesdays: Sunnyside Singers Club in Woodside, Queens, 8pm 1 Wed Folk Open Sing; 7pm in Brooklyn 3 Fri Ed Trickett, 7:30pm at O.S.A. Hall, 220 E. 23 St. 5 Sun Yiddish Singing Workshop with Ethel Raim 2 to 3:30 pm, Upper West Side 12 Sun Upper West Side Song Swap at HI­NY; 5­8pm (tentative) 13 Mon FMSNY Board of Directors Meeting; 7:15pm; see p. 5 15 Wed Mike Agranoff, Sunnyside Singers Club; performer, 8pm 17 Fri Heather Wood, 7:30pm, Saint John's Ch., Christopher St.
    [Show full text]
  • If You Follow the Sound of Mountain Music Down the Last Narrowing
    SC_Smiles_095 11/17/06 3:43 PM Page 95 pace. Many parents take their children home, only to return for some truly great Bluegrass from Old Crowe Medicine Show, Reeltime Travelers, Larry Keel, Peter Rowan and Tony Rice and headliner Sam Bush, among others. Aiken organizer Steve Groat says Bluegrass music has a unifying effect on a community, with an appeal that stretches across all ages, incomes and social levels. “And our festival is for a wonderful cause, supporting STAR Riding and Driving, an equestrian volunteer organization dedicated to helping children and adults with disabilities through therapeutic interaction with horses,” says Groat. “We couldn’t be more pleased, bringing great music to our town and helping so many through the music.” By Stephen Delaney Hale Make your plans for some musical fun May 11-12, 2007. For more information and a lineup of events, If you follow the sound of mountain music down the last see www.aikenbluegrassfestival.org narrowing ridge of the Great Smoky Mountains, you’ll come to a foot-stompin’ halt at the Aiken Bluegrass Festival. Four years old in May 2007, the Aiken Bluegrass Festival is already an important stop on the national circuit as it winds its way around the Carolina mountains where it was born and throughout the rest of the country. From the start, the Aiken festival has drawn some of the greatest names in Bluegrass—and their fans. Part of the reason for the festival’s instant popularity is its venue. The new, wide-open Newberry Street Festival Site in downtown Aiken was fashioned by the city for just this sort of thing.
    [Show full text]
  • Color Front Cover
    COLOR FRONT COVER COLOR CGOTH IS I COLOR CGOTH IS II COLOR CONCERT SERIES Welcome to our 18th Season! In this catalog you will find a year's worth of activities that will enrich your life. Common Ground on the Hill is a traditional, roots-based music and arts organization founded in 1994, offering quality learning experiences with master musicians, artists, dancers, writers, filmmakers and educators while exploring cultural diversity in search of a common ground among ethnic, gender, age, and racial groups. The Baltimore Sun has compared Common Ground on the Hill to the Chautauqua and Lyceum movements, precursors to this exciting program. Our world is one of immense diversity. As we explore and celebrate this diversity, we find that what we have in common with one another far outweighs our differences. Our common ground is our humanity, often best expressed by artistic traditions that have enriched human experience through the ages. We invite you to join us in searching for common ground as we assemble around the belief that we can improve ourselves and our world by searching for the common ground in one another, through our artistic traditions. In a world filled with divisive, negative news, we seek to discover, create and celebrate good news. How we have grown! Common Ground on the Hill is a multifaceted year-round program, including two separate Traditions Weeks of summer classes, concerts and activities, held on the campus of McDaniel College, two separate Music and Arts festivals held at the Carroll County Farm Museum, two seven-event Monthly Concert Series held in Westminster and Baltimore, and a new program this summer at the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Gettysburg, Common Ground on Seminary Ridge.
    [Show full text]
  • Ring Carrboro
    A MonthLy MusIc, Arts And literAture publicAtIon MILLof the cArrboro cItIzen voL. 4 + no. 6 + MArCH 2011 InsIde: t rIng cArrboro’s bell t froM milltown to MeccA t bAsIc vAnilla froM bill smith t good food AwArds The ArtsCenter Presents Southern Sacred Steel Conference Part of the 8th annual American Roots Series Thursday, March 17-Sunday, March 20 Featuring Aubrey Ghent, The Lee Boys, The Allen Boys, master classes, lectures, documentary photography, church service and community lunch! The events are made possible by the Carrboro Citizen, Courtyard by Marriott, Center for the Study of the American South and North Carolina Humanities Council, a statewide nonprofit and affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities. For ticket information visit ArtsCenterLive.org *some events free and open to the public 300-G East Main St. • Carrboro, NC • 919.929.2787 2 carrborocitizen.com/mill + march 2011 MILL Milestones FestivaL with a sounDtracK f you’re reading this copy of mILL on of what is to be. as we look at the town the day of publication, today marks through its yesterdays, we can’t help but call it mardi Gras or the end of carrboro’s first century wonder about its tomorrows. One hun- carnival or whatever and the beginning of its second. as dred years from now, the map coordinates you like, the stretch of we note in several spots here and in and the town’s boundaries will be little time just ahead of the IThe Citizen itself, the shindig at the aptly changed, but the people, their way of Lenten season is sup- named carrboro century center is just life and those things thought of as local the start of a period of celebration and institutions will be far different.
    [Show full text]
  • Keller Williams
    Keller Williams Keller Williams released his first album in 1994, FREEK, and has since given each of his albums a single syllable title: BUZZ, SPUN, BREATHE, LOOP, LAUGH, HOME, DANCE, STAGE, GRASS, DREAM, TWELVE, LIVE, ODD, THIEF, KIDS, BASS, PICK, FUNK, VAPE, SYNC, RAW, SANS and Add, those who have followed his career will know this. Each title serves as a concise summation of the concept guiding each project. GRASS, for example, is a bluegrass recording cut with the husband-wife duo The Keels. STAGE is a live album, and DREAM is the realization of Keller’s wish to collaborate with some of his musical heroes. THIEF is a set of unexpected cover songs, KIDS offers Keller’s first children’s record, PICK presents Keller’s collaboration with royal bluegrass family The Travelin’ McCoury’s, and RAW is a solo acoustic album. Each album showcases Keller’s comprehensive and diverse musical endeavors and functions to provide another piece of the jigsaw puzzle that is Keller Williams. Keller’s collaborative and solo albums reflect his pursuit to create music that sounds like nothing else. Unbeholden to conventionalism, he seamlessly crosses genre boundaries. The end product is astounding and novel music that encompasses rock, jazz, funk and bluegrass, and always keeps the audience on their feet. Since he first appeared on the scene in the early ’90s, Williams has defined the term independent artist. And his recordings tell only half the story. Keller built his reputation initially on his engaging live performances, no two of which are ever alike. For most of his career he has performed solo.
    [Show full text]
  • 2017 High Sierra Music Festival Program
    WELCOME! Festivarians, music lovers, friends old and new... WELCOME to the 27th version of our annual get-together! This year, we can’t help but look back 50 years to the Summer of Love, the summer of 1967, a year that brought us the Monterey Pop Festival (with such performers as Jimi Hendrix, The Who, Otis Redding, Janis Joplin and The Grateful Dead) which became an inspiration and template for future music festivals like the one you find yourself at right now. But the hippies of that era would likely refer to what’s going on in the political climate of these United States now as a “bad trip” with the old adage “the more things change, the more they stay the same” coming back into play. Here we are in 2017 with so many of the rights and freedoms that were fought long and hard for over the past 50 years being challenged, reinterpreted or revoked seemingly at warp speed. It’s high time to embrace the two basic tenets of the counterculture movement. First is PEACE. PEACE for your fellow human, PEACE within and PEACE for our planet. The second tenet brings a song to mind - and while the Beatles Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band gets all the attention on its 50th anniversary, it’s the final track on their Magical Mystery Tour album (which came out later the same year) that contains the most apropos song for these times. ALL YOU NEED IS LOVE. LOVE more, fear less. LOVE is always our answer. Come back to LOVE.
    [Show full text]
  • Arden Club Calendar (302) 475-3126 2126 the Highway, Arden DE 19810 MARCH 2020 Printed on 100% Post-Consumer Fiber Paper
    Arden Club Calendar www.ArdenClub.org (302) 475-3126 2126 The Highway, Arden DE 19810 MARCH 2020 Printed on 100% post-consumer fiber paper CONCERT GILD Friday, March 6, 2020 - 8:00 PM A Tribute to John Wesley Harding Feat. Robert Lloyd, Wesley Stace with special guest John Faye $17 Members $20 General - Email [email protected] for member reservations! Once upon a time, there was an iconic folk singer named John Wesley Harding. He is known for catchy tunes like Kill The Messenger, The Devil in Me, Here Comes The Groom and of course his rousing cover of Madonna’s Like A Prayer. We are thrilled to announce that Wesley Stace has agreed to perform music from John Wesley Harding’s songbook at the Arden Gild Hall on March 6, 2020. He will be accompanied by the exceptional Robert Lloyd on keyboard, mandolin, and accordion, who was recently coaxed out of retirement in order to pay tribute the Harding’s work. Delaware’s own John Faye will open the show, fresh off his reunion show with The Caulfields. Friday, March 13 - 8:00pm LANKUM with Andy the Doorbum $20 Members $25 General LANKUM create crushing, apocalyptic, layered drones using Uilleann pipes, harmonium, fiddle, voice and more. NPR calls LANKUM the #8 Album of the Year – “Brothers Ian and Daragh Lynch, Radi Peat and Cormac MacDiarmada create crushing, apocalyptic, layered drones using Uilleann pipes, harmonium, fiddle, voice and more. It has the intensity of electronic music, but this is all acoustic music in service of songs that are often centuries old.
    [Show full text]
  • Gloucester Mardi Gras
    this week magazine twVolume 40 Issue 7 • 2|14|19m - 2|20|19 G lou ras cester Mardi G FEATURED PHOTO Volume 40 Issue 7 • 2|14|19 - 2|20|19 3 COVER STORY The 27th annual Gloucester Mardi Gras will take place from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 16 at the Gloucester Community Club. Josh Potter, owner of Summer Melons Farm in Beaufort, is sur- rounded recently by many of the birds he owns or has raised at his farm in this photograph by News-Times reporter Cheryl Burke. To see your photograph in this space, email it and a short caption to 4 MOVIE REVIEW [email protected], share it with us on our This Week Magazine social media feeds or mail hard copies with a postage-paid “The LEGO Movie” is a hard act to follow. The big envelope if you would like the photograph returned to you. test was always going to be the sequel and whether or not it recreates the magic of the first. ON THE COVER: Mary Robinson Brown of Swansboro dons her 5 RECIPES favorite mask for the 2018 Gloucester Mardi Gras. (Dylan Ray photo) Crafting quick, easy, nutritious meals is one of the most common goals for home chefs, yet it may CONTACT INFORMATION sometimes be difficult to keep the menu fresh. twm is published Thursdays by Carteret Publishing Co. Inc. 4206 Bridges St., Morehead City, N.C. 28557. THEATER 6 EDITOR: “Miss Evers’ Boys,” a play based on historical Megan Soult events, will be performed on the New Bern Civic [email protected] Theatre stage for two weeks.
    [Show full text]