We have to cancel tonight's Monday Night Music Session so that makes 2 in a row.
We'll re-schedule the Songwriters Circle with our special guest Dean McTaggart for sometime in 2011.
Stay warm, be safe and dream Summerfolk in August!
Monday, December 13, 2010
Monday, November 22, 2010
Santa Claus Parade
The Folk Society added some live music to Saturday's Santa Claus parade in Owen Sound.
The weather co-operated and it was a blast.
Beaker, Steve Ritchie and yours truly strolled the street singing Christmas favourites.
Horsing around...
Happy Holidays.
Monday, November 15, 2010
Summerfolk 2011 - Our 36th!
Things are starting to roll in preparation for the 2011 Summerfolk Music & Crafts Festival.
If there is someone you'd like to see perform at Summerfolk next August, send me your thoughts at summerfolkad@brucetelecom.com
Thanks to all who filled out the survey at the 2010 Festival. Getting your feedback really helps determine what adjustments we need to make as we go along.
We are currently looking for a poster design to use with our 'Feel the Rhythm' theme and we are updating the forms for next year's Fest.
Tickets will be available shortly...we are going with Ticket Pro and we hope this will help make your entrance to Summerfolk fast and efficient.
The Scenic City Order of Good Cheer has installed their new Splash Pad at Kelso Beach. This will be a nice addition to the Park and kudos to them for making it happen. We'll have to make a few changes with our set-up for the Festival but this will be something the kids will enjoy big-time.
That's a few of the things we're doing these days. Keep in touch.
Richard
If there is someone you'd like to see perform at Summerfolk next August, send me your thoughts at summerfolkad@brucetelecom.com
Thanks to all who filled out the survey at the 2010 Festival. Getting your feedback really helps determine what adjustments we need to make as we go along.
We are currently looking for a poster design to use with our 'Feel the Rhythm' theme and we are updating the forms for next year's Fest.
Tickets will be available shortly...we are going with Ticket Pro and we hope this will help make your entrance to Summerfolk fast and efficient.
The Scenic City Order of Good Cheer has installed their new Splash Pad at Kelso Beach. This will be a nice addition to the Park and kudos to them for making it happen. We'll have to make a few changes with our set-up for the Festival but this will be something the kids will enjoy big-time.
That's a few of the things we're doing these days. Keep in touch.
Richard
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Douglas Lonsdale 2010 Summerfolk Photos
Here are some pics taken by my pal Doug Lonsdale at this year's Summerfolk:
Friday, August 27, 2010
Special Things Happen at Summerfolk
There were lots of great moments at Summerfolk this year and many musical highlights. Plus a couple emotional items I'd like to pass on:
Danny Brooks underwent a quintuple bypass in mid-July and had hoped to be available for August performing dates. Complications in the recovery process forced him to cancel numerous engagements including the Summerfolk Festival.
For musicians, 'no play means no pay'. Just over $1700 was donated at Summerfolk for Danny Brooks to help him through while he's not gigging.
Information on contributing to the Danny Brooks Trust is available at www.dannybrooksmusic.com
Denis Langlois from the Owen Sound Sun Times did a moving piece on a tribute for Sheri Melick - http://www.youtube.com/v/IieDMg77nl4?fs=1&hl=en_US
Danny Brooks underwent a quintuple bypass in mid-July and had hoped to be available for August performing dates. Complications in the recovery process forced him to cancel numerous engagements including the Summerfolk Festival.
For musicians, 'no play means no pay'. Just over $1700 was donated at Summerfolk for Danny Brooks to help him through while he's not gigging.
Information on contributing to the Danny Brooks Trust is available at www.dannybrooksmusic.com
Denis Langlois from the Owen Sound Sun Times did a moving piece on a tribute for Sheri Melick - http://www.youtube.com/v/IieDMg77nl4?fs=1&hl=en_US
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Summerfolk Saturday Night and Sunday
Saturday night at the Summerfolk Amphitheatre promises to be outstanding!
It starts at 6:00 pm with Eco Andino, a Montreal group that performs the music of South America on traditional Bolivian and Peruvian instruments. Then lively duo The Human Statues will entertain with their catchy folk-pop songs. Two of Canada's finest traditional players, Grit Laskin and Ian Robb, join forces for the following set and next up is Jack Williams; whom if you remember, I highlighted in my first blog this year. Jack could well be the one that many Summerfolk fans will be talking about long after the Festival.
Then I have a feeling the night will really take off as the fabulous songstress Sarah Harmer and her band will make their much-anticipated Summerfolk debut performance. Next it's Red Horse, featuring three of America's most admired performing songwriters - Eliza Gilkyson, John Gorka and Lucy Kaplansky. For a comedic change of pace, Chuck & Albert bring their Acadian charm for some Down East fun before the driving Celtic sounds of Poor Angus fittingly closes the show with their energetic, power-house performance.
As the audience filters out of the Amphitheatre on their way to the Down By the Bay tent, they will see the Fire Poi 'happening' at The Summerfolk Circle. This is something I highly recommend Summerfolk fans see - it's truly fascinating. Then upon arrival at Down By the Bay, we will be treated to a performance by Baskery followed by Delhi 2 Dublin - two rockin' bands that will have the place jumping!
Earlier in the night, Down By the Bay hosts four special shows - the performance of JumbleJam songs, a set by Samantha Martin & the Haggard alongside Lickin' Good Fried, the fresh young sounds of First Rate People and a guitar workshop/concert by three great players - Danny Brooks, Colin Linden and Jack Williams. So Down By the Bay offers plenty of great music Saturday night as well.
If dancing is your thing, the Over the Hill tent is the place to be on Summerfolk Saturday night. A Newfoundland Set Dance is the first featured dance at 7:30. This is an opportunity to spend a night 'on the Rock' without going there. Russells in the Corner make their first-ever appearance off the Island to play and call dances at Summerfolk. Then at 9:00 there's a contra dance with music of Blue Moose and the Unbuttoned Zippers, who in another first, make their inaugural Canadian appearance. This group is famous in New England dance circles as one of the finest young bands to dance to. Steps will by called by Nils Fredland, who is one of America's favourite and most sought-after dance callers.
Saturday night at Summerfolk sounds irresistible, doesn't it. But there's a whole day left to enjoy and Sunday begins at 10:30 with the 'Make Ye a Joyful Noise' concert in the Amphitheatre. This much-loved Sunday morning show will offer songs of inspiration from Danny Brooks, Artisan, Samantha Martin & the Haggard and Matt Watroba. The First Nations Village will also have 'Spiritual Stories and Songs...lessons from our ancestors' starting at the same time - so it will be a tough choice. The talents of John Somosi, Kathryn Edgecombe, Virginia Barter and Darlene will be featured here.
Workshop sessions get rolling at noon on the seven Summerfolk stages. Down by the Bay has a songs in Spanish session to start off and finishes with the very popular 'Mixed Up Bands' workshop. The Gazebo stage highlight may be the Baskery, Eliza Gilkyson, Darlene and Lucy Kaplansky workshop at 4:00. A 'Community Singing' session at Under the Willows brings together Matt Watroba, Nils Fredland and Tom Leighton, all of whom have much expertise in leading singing groups.
As has become a Summerfolk tradition, there will be a 2:00 pm join-in 'Drum Circle' at The Sharing Circle. The Children's Village stage has shows from Sheesham & Lotus and Chuck & Albert among others. For those who can only come to the Festival on Sunday, Homemade Jam features Namgar in concert at noon. This is one band you shouldn't miss - they are unique.
At Over the Hill, there's a full afternoon of dancing. A session on clogging, step dancing and jig dancing is first. Then there's an Irish Ceili dance, Delhi 2 Dublin performs a dance set and a contra dance with De Temps Antan.
Michelle Minke will demonstrate the beautiful art of wax-resist batik at the Craft Demo tent on Sunday afternoon. There will be also Food Demonstrations in the Food Village and sessions at the Musical Petting Zoo.
Down By the Bay hosts 'The Last Laugh' at 6:30 in the evening. This year Chuck & Albert, The Oddville Music Show and Terry V. Hart & Rob McLean match wits in the quest to make the most people laugh.
The Amphitheatre show starts at 6:00 with a performance by the Summerfolk Choir. They've rehearsed all weekend and this is their chance to shine on Summerfolk's main stage. It is inspiring to hear the arrangements and see people sharing the joy of singing together. Tom Leighton puts his heart and soul into making the Summerfolk Choir a memorable part of the Summerfolk experience - not only for the Choir members but for all of us in the audience.
Songwriter Rob Szabo then has a Sunday night Amphitheatre spot followed by bluegrass band Randy Morrison & the Flatt River Band and the gypsy sounds of Darlene. Next up De Temps Antan will show their Quebec-style joie de vivre. This trio was one of the most popular acts at the recent Goderich Celtic Roots Festival. They are very good!
The iconic Canadian performer/record producer Colin Linden makes a return visit to Summerfolk before sets by Delhi 2 Dublin and Lennie Gallant take us to the Summerfolk Finale. If you've never been in attendance for the Finale, just ask someone who has. It is one of the most emotional and moving moments of Summerfolk.
So that's it. Summerfolk 35. That's how it looks on paper. But nothing can fully describe the experience of being there and being a part of it. For that, you have to come to Kelso Beach Park on Summerfolk weekend.
It starts at 6:00 pm with Eco Andino, a Montreal group that performs the music of South America on traditional Bolivian and Peruvian instruments. Then lively duo The Human Statues will entertain with their catchy folk-pop songs. Two of Canada's finest traditional players, Grit Laskin and Ian Robb, join forces for the following set and next up is Jack Williams; whom if you remember, I highlighted in my first blog this year. Jack could well be the one that many Summerfolk fans will be talking about long after the Festival.
Then I have a feeling the night will really take off as the fabulous songstress Sarah Harmer and her band will make their much-anticipated Summerfolk debut performance. Next it's Red Horse, featuring three of America's most admired performing songwriters - Eliza Gilkyson, John Gorka and Lucy Kaplansky. For a comedic change of pace, Chuck & Albert bring their Acadian charm for some Down East fun before the driving Celtic sounds of Poor Angus fittingly closes the show with their energetic, power-house performance.
As the audience filters out of the Amphitheatre on their way to the Down By the Bay tent, they will see the Fire Poi 'happening' at The Summerfolk Circle. This is something I highly recommend Summerfolk fans see - it's truly fascinating. Then upon arrival at Down By the Bay, we will be treated to a performance by Baskery followed by Delhi 2 Dublin - two rockin' bands that will have the place jumping!
Earlier in the night, Down By the Bay hosts four special shows - the performance of JumbleJam songs, a set by Samantha Martin & the Haggard alongside Lickin' Good Fried, the fresh young sounds of First Rate People and a guitar workshop/concert by three great players - Danny Brooks, Colin Linden and Jack Williams. So Down By the Bay offers plenty of great music Saturday night as well.
If dancing is your thing, the Over the Hill tent is the place to be on Summerfolk Saturday night. A Newfoundland Set Dance is the first featured dance at 7:30. This is an opportunity to spend a night 'on the Rock' without going there. Russells in the Corner make their first-ever appearance off the Island to play and call dances at Summerfolk. Then at 9:00 there's a contra dance with music of Blue Moose and the Unbuttoned Zippers, who in another first, make their inaugural Canadian appearance. This group is famous in New England dance circles as one of the finest young bands to dance to. Steps will by called by Nils Fredland, who is one of America's favourite and most sought-after dance callers.
Saturday night at Summerfolk sounds irresistible, doesn't it. But there's a whole day left to enjoy and Sunday begins at 10:30 with the 'Make Ye a Joyful Noise' concert in the Amphitheatre. This much-loved Sunday morning show will offer songs of inspiration from Danny Brooks, Artisan, Samantha Martin & the Haggard and Matt Watroba. The First Nations Village will also have 'Spiritual Stories and Songs...lessons from our ancestors' starting at the same time - so it will be a tough choice. The talents of John Somosi, Kathryn Edgecombe, Virginia Barter and Darlene will be featured here.
Workshop sessions get rolling at noon on the seven Summerfolk stages. Down by the Bay has a songs in Spanish session to start off and finishes with the very popular 'Mixed Up Bands' workshop. The Gazebo stage highlight may be the Baskery, Eliza Gilkyson, Darlene and Lucy Kaplansky workshop at 4:00. A 'Community Singing' session at Under the Willows brings together Matt Watroba, Nils Fredland and Tom Leighton, all of whom have much expertise in leading singing groups.
As has become a Summerfolk tradition, there will be a 2:00 pm join-in 'Drum Circle' at The Sharing Circle. The Children's Village stage has shows from Sheesham & Lotus and Chuck & Albert among others. For those who can only come to the Festival on Sunday, Homemade Jam features Namgar in concert at noon. This is one band you shouldn't miss - they are unique.
At Over the Hill, there's a full afternoon of dancing. A session on clogging, step dancing and jig dancing is first. Then there's an Irish Ceili dance, Delhi 2 Dublin performs a dance set and a contra dance with De Temps Antan.
Michelle Minke will demonstrate the beautiful art of wax-resist batik at the Craft Demo tent on Sunday afternoon. There will be also Food Demonstrations in the Food Village and sessions at the Musical Petting Zoo.
Down By the Bay hosts 'The Last Laugh' at 6:30 in the evening. This year Chuck & Albert, The Oddville Music Show and Terry V. Hart & Rob McLean match wits in the quest to make the most people laugh.
The Amphitheatre show starts at 6:00 with a performance by the Summerfolk Choir. They've rehearsed all weekend and this is their chance to shine on Summerfolk's main stage. It is inspiring to hear the arrangements and see people sharing the joy of singing together. Tom Leighton puts his heart and soul into making the Summerfolk Choir a memorable part of the Summerfolk experience - not only for the Choir members but for all of us in the audience.
Songwriter Rob Szabo then has a Sunday night Amphitheatre spot followed by bluegrass band Randy Morrison & the Flatt River Band and the gypsy sounds of Darlene. Next up De Temps Antan will show their Quebec-style joie de vivre. This trio was one of the most popular acts at the recent Goderich Celtic Roots Festival. They are very good!
The iconic Canadian performer/record producer Colin Linden makes a return visit to Summerfolk before sets by Delhi 2 Dublin and Lennie Gallant take us to the Summerfolk Finale. If you've never been in attendance for the Finale, just ask someone who has. It is one of the most emotional and moving moments of Summerfolk.
So that's it. Summerfolk 35. That's how it looks on paper. But nothing can fully describe the experience of being there and being a part of it. For that, you have to come to Kelso Beach Park on Summerfolk weekend.
Monday, August 9, 2010
Summerfolk - What's in Store for Friday Night and Saturday Daytime
The 35th annual Summerfolk Music & Crafts Festival is lss than a couple of weeks away. The gates open at 4:30 pm on Friday, August 20th and the music begins with a Cafe Concert on the Homemade Jam stage at 5:00.
Featuring the Kelso Céilà Collective, this is an opportunity to listen to a session of traditional Irish music and partake of some delicious food. Summerfolk's Food Village offers everything from sandwiches, salads, pizza and hamburgers to Indian curries, Caribbean jerk chicken and Chinese dishes.
At 6:00 pm, attention is focused on Summerfolk's famous Amphitheatre stage. Bob Dixon's bagpipes signal the start of the Opening Ceremonies that precede the evening concerts. With its finely tuned sound system and intimate atmosphere, the Amphitheatre is a delight for both performer and audience. There is nothing quite like listening to music outdoors. Attending an evening concert in the Amphitheatre at Summerfolk is an unforgettable experience.
First up is the Siberian group Namgar to lead off a night of exciting music. Sheesham & Lotus follow with their old-time flavoured fun, then golden-voiced Mose Scarlett and Newfoundland band The Dardanelles. Next is Caracol fronted by Francophone chanteuse Carole Facal, England's Artisan, Canadian songwriter Danny Michel and the evening closes with a bang as Swedish trio Baskery bring their high-energy sound to the Summerfolk stage.
There are two other stages to hear music on Friday night. In the Down By the Bay tent, Samantha Martin and the Haggard kick things off with their country blues at 7:00 pm. Then it's the bluegrass of Randy Morrison and the Flatt River Band followed by Larry Jensen and his band. Tom Parker's group Lickin' Good Fried put in a concert of foot-stomping tunes before the Celtic explosion of Poor Angus closes the night with 2 sets of music that will have Darlene performing in between.
The third Friday night concert is Summerfolk Discoveries on the Over the Hill stage at the south end of Kelso Beach Park. Leading up to the electrifying closing act Delhi 2 Dublin, the show commences with The Jocelyn Pettit Band at 7:00 pm, then First Rate People and Boston's Blue Moose and the Unbuttoned Zippers. The four acts selected from the Georgian Bay Folk Society's Discoveries Showcase also get special spots to perform here - Ben Turcotte, Davenport Brown, Jill Jambior and Anne & David Beverly-Foster.
How's that for a Summerfolk start - 23 acts to choose from on Friday night!
The Summerfolk workshops commence at 11:00 am on Saturday. There's a full slate of them at Down by the Bay and the Gazebo stage. These folk festival workshops are a combination of education, performance and entertainment. Several perfomers with differing approaches are assembled together on stage to work around a theme. This is a chance for both the audience and performers to experience some informal and spontaneous music making, often with amazing results.
Some of the themes for Saturday include 'Harmony', 'Vintage Performing Styles' and 'Finding Common Ground'. Plus there's the ever-popular 'Summerfolk Quiz' at Down By the Bay.
The Homemade Jam stage starts off with a 'Guitar' workshop at 11:00. Budding guitarists can pick up lots of tips about improving their technique. Then the Bolivian music group Eco Andino performs a concert at 11:45 (how about lunch?) before the Open Stage gets into full swing. This is where patrons are invited to sign up to play their music at Summerfolk.
Homemade Jam also hosts a workshop at 2:00 followed by more Open Stage slots and the 5:00 pm Cafe Concert with Namgar.
Todd Crowley's Musical Petting Zoo is back this year. You can get up close and personal with more than 100 instruments in Todd's travelling collection. Not only can you touch them, but you are encouraged to play them. A new feature this year will be 'The Zoo Workshop Room' where you can get instruction and play along with Summerfolk performers on various instruments.
Audience members can share the joy of singing together in the Summerfolk Choir. Under the direction of Tom Leighton, rehearsals take place at the Under the Willows stage. There are also 3 workshop sessions here, in between choir practices.
Feel like kickin' up your heels? Head to the Over the Hill Dance stage. There will be an Irish Ceili dance, a contra dance, a beginner's West African dance and a Quebecois Kitchen Party with De Temps Antan. The afternoon finishes with an interesting Patter Squares dance which is a type of square dancing. Nils Fredland will call out the steps while Sheesham and Lotus provide the music.
There are six sessions planned for The Sharing Circle, an acoustic area where patrons are invited to actively join in making music with Summerfolk performers. Starting off with a 'Down East Fiddle' session, there's also a 'Bluegrass Jam' and a 'Newfoundland Music' session on Saturday.
Kids love coming to Summerfolk! At the Children's Village they enjoy hands-on craft projects, a playground, games and a lots of great music on stage. There will be a Family Dance on Saturday and puppet shows with The Friends and Neighbours Club.
For those interested in writing songs, Saturday's JumbleJam sessions are a unique approach to doing so. Facilitators Ken Dow and Martin Cooper curate 15 volunteer players into three bands, each anchored by a Summerfolk performer. These bands create an original song and perform it on the Down by the Bay stage in the evening.
Summerfolk isn't just about music. A stroll through the Artisan Village will reveal a fabulous array of handmade, one-of-a-kind items. The creative artisans here are selected for the quality of their work and are encouraged to demonstrate and discuss their art. Saturday has the Juried Craft Exhibition which showcases their best pieces.
The First Nations Village offers cultural workshops and special guest Virginia Barter will spin tales of Canada's fur trading history. There's also the Fire Poi workshop at 5:00 pm and new this year, Food Demonstrations throughout the day.
How's that for an action-packed day? Music, food, crafts and a lot more. I'll be back soon with a look at Saturday night and Sunday at Summerfolk.
Featuring the Kelso Céilà Collective, this is an opportunity to listen to a session of traditional Irish music and partake of some delicious food. Summerfolk's Food Village offers everything from sandwiches, salads, pizza and hamburgers to Indian curries, Caribbean jerk chicken and Chinese dishes.
At 6:00 pm, attention is focused on Summerfolk's famous Amphitheatre stage. Bob Dixon's bagpipes signal the start of the Opening Ceremonies that precede the evening concerts. With its finely tuned sound system and intimate atmosphere, the Amphitheatre is a delight for both performer and audience. There is nothing quite like listening to music outdoors. Attending an evening concert in the Amphitheatre at Summerfolk is an unforgettable experience.
First up is the Siberian group Namgar to lead off a night of exciting music. Sheesham & Lotus follow with their old-time flavoured fun, then golden-voiced Mose Scarlett and Newfoundland band The Dardanelles. Next is Caracol fronted by Francophone chanteuse Carole Facal, England's Artisan, Canadian songwriter Danny Michel and the evening closes with a bang as Swedish trio Baskery bring their high-energy sound to the Summerfolk stage.
There are two other stages to hear music on Friday night. In the Down By the Bay tent, Samantha Martin and the Haggard kick things off with their country blues at 7:00 pm. Then it's the bluegrass of Randy Morrison and the Flatt River Band followed by Larry Jensen and his band. Tom Parker's group Lickin' Good Fried put in a concert of foot-stomping tunes before the Celtic explosion of Poor Angus closes the night with 2 sets of music that will have Darlene performing in between.
The third Friday night concert is Summerfolk Discoveries on the Over the Hill stage at the south end of Kelso Beach Park. Leading up to the electrifying closing act Delhi 2 Dublin, the show commences with The Jocelyn Pettit Band at 7:00 pm, then First Rate People and Boston's Blue Moose and the Unbuttoned Zippers. The four acts selected from the Georgian Bay Folk Society's Discoveries Showcase also get special spots to perform here - Ben Turcotte, Davenport Brown, Jill Jambior and Anne & David Beverly-Foster.
How's that for a Summerfolk start - 23 acts to choose from on Friday night!
The Summerfolk workshops commence at 11:00 am on Saturday. There's a full slate of them at Down by the Bay and the Gazebo stage. These folk festival workshops are a combination of education, performance and entertainment. Several perfomers with differing approaches are assembled together on stage to work around a theme. This is a chance for both the audience and performers to experience some informal and spontaneous music making, often with amazing results.
Some of the themes for Saturday include 'Harmony', 'Vintage Performing Styles' and 'Finding Common Ground'. Plus there's the ever-popular 'Summerfolk Quiz' at Down By the Bay.
The Homemade Jam stage starts off with a 'Guitar' workshop at 11:00. Budding guitarists can pick up lots of tips about improving their technique. Then the Bolivian music group Eco Andino performs a concert at 11:45 (how about lunch?) before the Open Stage gets into full swing. This is where patrons are invited to sign up to play their music at Summerfolk.
Homemade Jam also hosts a workshop at 2:00 followed by more Open Stage slots and the 5:00 pm Cafe Concert with Namgar.
Todd Crowley's Musical Petting Zoo is back this year. You can get up close and personal with more than 100 instruments in Todd's travelling collection. Not only can you touch them, but you are encouraged to play them. A new feature this year will be 'The Zoo Workshop Room' where you can get instruction and play along with Summerfolk performers on various instruments.
Audience members can share the joy of singing together in the Summerfolk Choir. Under the direction of Tom Leighton, rehearsals take place at the Under the Willows stage. There are also 3 workshop sessions here, in between choir practices.
Feel like kickin' up your heels? Head to the Over the Hill Dance stage. There will be an Irish Ceili dance, a contra dance, a beginner's West African dance and a Quebecois Kitchen Party with De Temps Antan. The afternoon finishes with an interesting Patter Squares dance which is a type of square dancing. Nils Fredland will call out the steps while Sheesham and Lotus provide the music.
There are six sessions planned for The Sharing Circle, an acoustic area where patrons are invited to actively join in making music with Summerfolk performers. Starting off with a 'Down East Fiddle' session, there's also a 'Bluegrass Jam' and a 'Newfoundland Music' session on Saturday.
Kids love coming to Summerfolk! At the Children's Village they enjoy hands-on craft projects, a playground, games and a lots of great music on stage. There will be a Family Dance on Saturday and puppet shows with The Friends and Neighbours Club.
For those interested in writing songs, Saturday's JumbleJam sessions are a unique approach to doing so. Facilitators Ken Dow and Martin Cooper curate 15 volunteer players into three bands, each anchored by a Summerfolk performer. These bands create an original song and perform it on the Down by the Bay stage in the evening.
Summerfolk isn't just about music. A stroll through the Artisan Village will reveal a fabulous array of handmade, one-of-a-kind items. The creative artisans here are selected for the quality of their work and are encouraged to demonstrate and discuss their art. Saturday has the Juried Craft Exhibition which showcases their best pieces.
The First Nations Village offers cultural workshops and special guest Virginia Barter will spin tales of Canada's fur trading history. There's also the Fire Poi workshop at 5:00 pm and new this year, Food Demonstrations throughout the day.
How's that for an action-packed day? Music, food, crafts and a lot more. I'll be back soon with a look at Saturday night and Sunday at Summerfolk.
Friday, July 30, 2010
The Rest of the Summerfolk Lineup
Here we are, just three weeks until Summerfolk. I am very excited about our 35th anniversary Festival and know there will be many musical highlights at concerts and workshops over the weekend.
In previous blogs, I have featured maybe half the performer lineup and yet there are many more, each deserving of an article on their own accomplishments. But time is running out, so this week, I'll give you a brief look at the additional 2010 Summerfolk performers.
Delhi 2 Dublin has created a buzz at folk festivals, last summer and this one, all across Canada. For example, this response came in from Rick Newbury of the Atlin Arts and Music Festival in northern British Columbia when I asked about the band's performance there last year: "D2D was a huge hit here and I recommend them highly. Seamless fusion of genres, traditional & new. What amazing energy and audience engagement. They will steal the show from other stages".
In previous blogs, I have featured maybe half the performer lineup and yet there are many more, each deserving of an article on their own accomplishments. But time is running out, so this week, I'll give you a brief look at the additional 2010 Summerfolk performers.
Delhi 2 Dublin has created a buzz at folk festivals, last summer and this one, all across Canada. For example, this response came in from Rick Newbury of the Atlin Arts and Music Festival in northern British Columbia when I asked about the band's performance there last year: "D2D was a huge hit here and I recommend them highly. Seamless fusion of genres, traditional & new. What amazing energy and audience engagement. They will steal the show from other stages".
The five members of Vancouver-based Delhi 2 Dublin come from different backgrounds and different musical influences. Their music is an exciting melting pot that blends the traditional sounds of North India with those of Ireland. Incorporating tabla, dhol, fiddle and sitar to progressive dance rhythms and cutting edge DJ aesthetics, Delhi 2 Dublin creates a multi-cultural celebration.
Danny Brooks is well known in blues music circles. One of the most soulful singers on the circuit, Danny's strength is in his simplicity and sincerity. An excellent rhythm guitarist and harmonica player, his powerful voice compels every member of the audience to believe that he is singing to him or her alone.
At the teepee, the centerpiece of Summerfolk's First Nations Village, hosts Kathryn Edgecombe and John Somosi will offer workshops on Aboriginal cultural traditions. John is also a drum maker who readily shares his enthusiasm for drumming and singing. They will be joined by special guest Virginia Barter who is a Métis/Cree historical writer, musician, storyteller and filmmaker. Inspired by her family’s experiences in the Canadian north, Virginia weaves fascinating tales of fur trade history.
The music of Caracol is filled with emotion. This quartet is fronted by singer Carole Facal, one of Quebec's best-known young performers and whose former band, DobaCaracol, was hugely popular in that province. She transcends the language barrier for those not fluent in French with her charismatic and charming delivery. With a supporting cast of superb musicians, her music draws from American folk and Jamaican rock-steady mixed into an interesting vintage '50s style approach..
Darlene is a performer who defies description. However once you've seen her perform, you won't forget her. It has been 10 years since Darlene last appeared at Summerfolk and a return visit is long overdue. With songs that are whimsical and adventurous, and while most often accompanied by guitar, she is apt to play a tune on a child's toy accordion and on the next, accompany herself with a didgeridoo.
Always exploring new territory, Darlene has lived the life of a troubadour since 1990. Seeking inspiration from the minstrel road, she has a different sense of folk roots seasoned with styles ranging from blues, jazz, gipsy, First Nations, Mexican and American folk music. Truly unique, she is a modern day musical gypsy.
De Temps Antan, composed of Éric Beaudry, André Brunet and Pierre-Luc Dupuis, perform time-honoured melodies from the stomping grounds of Quebec’s musical past. Using instruments like fiddle, accordion, harmonica, guitar and bouzouki, these three virtuosos blend boundless energy with the unmistakable joie de vivre found only in traditional Quebec music. You can catch De Temps Antan at the dance tent, in workshops and at Sunday night's amphitheatre concert.
Performing the hauntingly beautiful music of the Andes, Eco Andino is a Montreal-based sextet that presents the musical wealth of South America on Canadian soil. Formed in 1993, the group incorporates traditional flutes (quena, quenacho and tarkas), panpipes (sikus), stringed instruments (charango, ronroco and hualaycho) and many percussion instruments unique to Peruvian and Bolivian culture.
New Hampshire's Nils Fredland is one of the busiest and most sought-after dance callers in the business. He has been making music, leading dances and bringing people together for 20 years as a teacher, singer, instrumentalist and community dance caller. He will be bringing his technical skills, friendliness and soothing voice to Summerfolk's dance tent. So get ready to kick up your heels with one of North America's top contra dance callers.
Though Grit Laskin is world-famous for the guitars he builds, he has also spent 25 years writing and performing music. He plays tenor mandolin, Northumbrian smallpipes, concertina, guitar and fiddle, and he has accompanied musicians as diverse as Raffi and Stan Rogers. Respected as a songwriter as well as a musician, Grit’s songs have been recorded by the likes of Pete Seeger and the Tannahil Weavers.
Our enthusiastic Summerfolk Choir director, Tom Leighton is a man who loves music. He has a great appreciation for every musician who plays and every singer who sings. His work can be heard on countless recordings and he's played with many notable performers including a long association with pal Mark Haines. A strong supporter and contributor to the folk scene in Canada, Tom makes The Summerfolk Choir a wonderful experience.
Colin Linden is a genuine renaissance man of roots music who needs no introduction to folk music fans. He is a singer and songwriter of great skill; an in-demand and prolific record producer i.e. Bruce Cockburn, Tom Wilson, Colin James, and a sideman to the stars as guitarist for the likes of Cockburn, Emmylou Harris and Robert Plant & Alison Krauss. He has played on 300 recordings and produced 60 albums, yet somehow finds time to pursue both a prolific solo career and perform with Blackie and the Rodeo Kings
Danny Michel is another artist who need no introduction. This uniquely gifted guitarist and songwriter is universally lauded for his lyrics. He has released six solo albums, a DVD and an entire CD devoted to covers of David Bowie songs. His creative live shows leave audiences raving about his talents.
The electrifying group Poor Angus returns this year after an impressive debut at Summerfolk in 2009. Performing both traditional and original music, Poor Angus encompasses Scottish, Irish and East Coast sounds in their fiery arrangements. Highland pipes and Irish whistles are accompanied by fiddle, guitar, mandolin, bodhran and bass guitar. Add to that, their full-voiced four part vocal harmony makes Poor Angus one of Canada's strongest acoustic bands.
Traditional songs and tunes give Ian Robb an important place in Canadian folk music. Since arriving from his native England in 1970, Ian has performed at festivals, concerts and clubs across the continent. Recipient of a Canadian Folk Music Award for best Traditional Singer in 2005, his extensive repertoire of songs and concertina instrumentals is unsurpassed.
A Summerfolk favourite, Mose Scarlett's golden rich baritone voice and intricate finger-picking guitar style takes us on a sentimental journey through the 'good old tunes'. With his entertaining blend of blues, jazz, ragtime and Tin Pan Alley treasures, Mose never fails to entertain. Grizzled yet verging on elegance, deadpan yet bordering on hilarity, he is truly one of a kind.
Sheesham & Lotus created quite a stir the last time they came to the Festival. Performing a genre few others tackle, their old-time tunes and performance style harkens back to another time. They flatfoot buck-dance and hambone hand-jive; they perform harmonica duets, minstrel show and crooked fiddle tunes, and they play instruments like the jaw-harp, fiddle, fretless and gourd banjos, spoons and bones.
I was so impressed by the songs of Rob Szabo and the way he presented himself when I saw him perform, that I knew he would be a perfect fit for Summerfolk. His songs have twists and points of interest that make you pay attention and Rob's ever-present wry smile makes you feel like you’re in on a shared secret.
Len Wallace is a folksinger and musician in the truest sense. He is a virtuoso accordionist who breathes life into his instrument and a passionate vocalist with songs that tell the tales of ordinary folk - their extraordinary lives, histories, struggles, hopes and dreams. His is music that stirs the soul, performed with integrity and conviction.
Michigan's Matt Watroba is perhaps best known as the producer and host of 'Sing Out! Radio Magazine' for XM/Sirius satellite radio. However Matt has long been a folk music aficionado building his repertoire of songs for over 25 years. With a friendly and engaging style, his voice reaches right into the heart. His goal: 'always leave the audience feeling better than they did when they came'.
So that's pretty much everyone scheduled to perform. If you're keeping track, there are 54 acts in total, soloists and groups, coming to Kelso Beach Park to play Summerfolk. I can't wait - our 35th anniversary is going to have some fabulous music!
Danny Brooks is well known in blues music circles. One of the most soulful singers on the circuit, Danny's strength is in his simplicity and sincerity. An excellent rhythm guitarist and harmonica player, his powerful voice compels every member of the audience to believe that he is singing to him or her alone.
At the teepee, the centerpiece of Summerfolk's First Nations Village, hosts Kathryn Edgecombe and John Somosi will offer workshops on Aboriginal cultural traditions. John is also a drum maker who readily shares his enthusiasm for drumming and singing. They will be joined by special guest Virginia Barter who is a Métis/Cree historical writer, musician, storyteller and filmmaker. Inspired by her family’s experiences in the Canadian north, Virginia weaves fascinating tales of fur trade history.
The music of Caracol is filled with emotion. This quartet is fronted by singer Carole Facal, one of Quebec's best-known young performers and whose former band, DobaCaracol, was hugely popular in that province. She transcends the language barrier for those not fluent in French with her charismatic and charming delivery. With a supporting cast of superb musicians, her music draws from American folk and Jamaican rock-steady mixed into an interesting vintage '50s style approach..
Darlene is a performer who defies description. However once you've seen her perform, you won't forget her. It has been 10 years since Darlene last appeared at Summerfolk and a return visit is long overdue. With songs that are whimsical and adventurous, and while most often accompanied by guitar, she is apt to play a tune on a child's toy accordion and on the next, accompany herself with a didgeridoo.
Always exploring new territory, Darlene has lived the life of a troubadour since 1990. Seeking inspiration from the minstrel road, she has a different sense of folk roots seasoned with styles ranging from blues, jazz, gipsy, First Nations, Mexican and American folk music. Truly unique, she is a modern day musical gypsy.
De Temps Antan, composed of Éric Beaudry, André Brunet and Pierre-Luc Dupuis, perform time-honoured melodies from the stomping grounds of Quebec’s musical past. Using instruments like fiddle, accordion, harmonica, guitar and bouzouki, these three virtuosos blend boundless energy with the unmistakable joie de vivre found only in traditional Quebec music. You can catch De Temps Antan at the dance tent, in workshops and at Sunday night's amphitheatre concert.
Performing the hauntingly beautiful music of the Andes, Eco Andino is a Montreal-based sextet that presents the musical wealth of South America on Canadian soil. Formed in 1993, the group incorporates traditional flutes (quena, quenacho and tarkas), panpipes (sikus), stringed instruments (charango, ronroco and hualaycho) and many percussion instruments unique to Peruvian and Bolivian culture.
New Hampshire's Nils Fredland is one of the busiest and most sought-after dance callers in the business. He has been making music, leading dances and bringing people together for 20 years as a teacher, singer, instrumentalist and community dance caller. He will be bringing his technical skills, friendliness and soothing voice to Summerfolk's dance tent. So get ready to kick up your heels with one of North America's top contra dance callers.
Though Grit Laskin is world-famous for the guitars he builds, he has also spent 25 years writing and performing music. He plays tenor mandolin, Northumbrian smallpipes, concertina, guitar and fiddle, and he has accompanied musicians as diverse as Raffi and Stan Rogers. Respected as a songwriter as well as a musician, Grit’s songs have been recorded by the likes of Pete Seeger and the Tannahil Weavers.
Our enthusiastic Summerfolk Choir director, Tom Leighton is a man who loves music. He has a great appreciation for every musician who plays and every singer who sings. His work can be heard on countless recordings and he's played with many notable performers including a long association with pal Mark Haines. A strong supporter and contributor to the folk scene in Canada, Tom makes The Summerfolk Choir a wonderful experience.
Colin Linden is a genuine renaissance man of roots music who needs no introduction to folk music fans. He is a singer and songwriter of great skill; an in-demand and prolific record producer i.e. Bruce Cockburn, Tom Wilson, Colin James, and a sideman to the stars as guitarist for the likes of Cockburn, Emmylou Harris and Robert Plant & Alison Krauss. He has played on 300 recordings and produced 60 albums, yet somehow finds time to pursue both a prolific solo career and perform with Blackie and the Rodeo Kings
Danny Michel is another artist who need no introduction. This uniquely gifted guitarist and songwriter is universally lauded for his lyrics. He has released six solo albums, a DVD and an entire CD devoted to covers of David Bowie songs. His creative live shows leave audiences raving about his talents.
The electrifying group Poor Angus returns this year after an impressive debut at Summerfolk in 2009. Performing both traditional and original music, Poor Angus encompasses Scottish, Irish and East Coast sounds in their fiery arrangements. Highland pipes and Irish whistles are accompanied by fiddle, guitar, mandolin, bodhran and bass guitar. Add to that, their full-voiced four part vocal harmony makes Poor Angus one of Canada's strongest acoustic bands.
Traditional songs and tunes give Ian Robb an important place in Canadian folk music. Since arriving from his native England in 1970, Ian has performed at festivals, concerts and clubs across the continent. Recipient of a Canadian Folk Music Award for best Traditional Singer in 2005, his extensive repertoire of songs and concertina instrumentals is unsurpassed.
A Summerfolk favourite, Mose Scarlett's golden rich baritone voice and intricate finger-picking guitar style takes us on a sentimental journey through the 'good old tunes'. With his entertaining blend of blues, jazz, ragtime and Tin Pan Alley treasures, Mose never fails to entertain. Grizzled yet verging on elegance, deadpan yet bordering on hilarity, he is truly one of a kind.
Sheesham & Lotus created quite a stir the last time they came to the Festival. Performing a genre few others tackle, their old-time tunes and performance style harkens back to another time. They flatfoot buck-dance and hambone hand-jive; they perform harmonica duets, minstrel show and crooked fiddle tunes, and they play instruments like the jaw-harp, fiddle, fretless and gourd banjos, spoons and bones.
I was so impressed by the songs of Rob Szabo and the way he presented himself when I saw him perform, that I knew he would be a perfect fit for Summerfolk. His songs have twists and points of interest that make you pay attention and Rob's ever-present wry smile makes you feel like you’re in on a shared secret.
Len Wallace is a folksinger and musician in the truest sense. He is a virtuoso accordionist who breathes life into his instrument and a passionate vocalist with songs that tell the tales of ordinary folk - their extraordinary lives, histories, struggles, hopes and dreams. His is music that stirs the soul, performed with integrity and conviction.
Michigan's Matt Watroba is perhaps best known as the producer and host of 'Sing Out! Radio Magazine' for XM/Sirius satellite radio. However Matt has long been a folk music aficionado building his repertoire of songs for over 25 years. With a friendly and engaging style, his voice reaches right into the heart. His goal: 'always leave the audience feeling better than they did when they came'.
So that's pretty much everyone scheduled to perform. If you're keeping track, there are 54 acts in total, soloists and groups, coming to Kelso Beach Park to play Summerfolk. I can't wait - our 35th anniversary is going to have some fabulous music!
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
More on Our Homegrown Talent
In last week's blog I highlighted four acts with connections to Owen Sound and area. This week I continue on that theme.
There are a number of people I count on to bring their enthusiasm and expertise to the Festival. For example, The Voice of Summerfolk, Dave Carr is back for his 26th year as Summerfolk's MC. Dave is of course, a well-known Owen Sound broadcaster. Along with hosting our evening amphitheatre concerts, Dave works on The Summerfolk Quiz and emcees the amazing Mixed Up Bands workshop on Sunday.
Bognor's Bob Dixon is another valued contributor. As is the tradition at Summerfolk, his bagpipes signal the start of the nightly amphitheatre concerts and are featured in Sunday night's Finale.
The popular JumbleJam songwriting sessions are facilitated by Owen Sounders Ken Dow and Martin Cooper. They curate fifteen volunteer players into three bands, each anchored by a Summerfolk performer. These bands create an original song during a writing session in the afternoon and then perform it on the Down by the Bay stage on Saturday evening. It is, when you think about it, quite an incredible feat and always sparked with large doses of creativity.
Taking the excitement of 'building a song from scratch' to the Children's Village, Ken and Martin are also offering a JumbleJam workshop for children on Sunday.
Vita Bowen first attended Summerfolk with her parents, pottery experts Vince Bowen and Kate McLaren, and has been a long-time attendee. Now as Vita Twirlin' Diva, she heads up the fire poi demonstration in the Summerfolk Circle on Saturday night. This is really quite a thing to see as flames at the end of chains are spun around the body in an expressive way to create beautiful patterns and visual effects. Vita also leads impromptu hula hooping sessions for children and adults, animating the site in a unique way.
Featuring some of the most creative and talented up-and-coming performers from Owen Sound and area, First Rate People includes core members Jon Lawless, Liam Sanagan, Alicia Ross and Hayden Stewart.
The idea for First Rate People was spawned in 2007. Just out of high school, this group of young musicians started creating folk-pop music and evolved into more of a collective than a band. In fact, their first recording included some 60 people.
First Rate People loves to experiment as songwriters and musicians who believe in the art of collaborating. They are a band that knows no boundaries. The online momentum and buzz about FRP is spreading rapidly. This is a group that is adapting to new mediums to promote itself but has its' roots firmly planted in the Summerfolk tree.
Samantha Martin and the Haggard is a Toronto-based roots/rock foursome who add blues and country sounds into their musical mix.
Samantha Martin began her musical career in Lion's Head on the Bruce Peninsula. In her teens she sang country, blues, bluegrass and 60's folk/rock songs, quickly becoming a crowd favourite with her exceptional voice. Now in her 20's, she manages The Dakota Tavern in Toronto and pursues her musical career with The Haggard.
Those lucky enough to hear Martin sing are left wondering how all that soulful power comes out of a five-foot frame. She recorded her debut album Back Home in 2008 with a group of session musicians. Material from that album remains a staple of her live show with The Haggard, but they really shine on material they have since worked up together.
All three members of The Haggard bring with them a wealth of musical knowledge and also perform with the country group, The Kensington Hillbillies. Samantha says of drummer Pete Lambert, guitarist Mikey McCallum and bass player Greg Sweetland, "We draw out the best parts of each other, we bring out the best in each other musically. We`re friends and becoming a really tight unit."
Randy Morrison & the Flatt River Band is a newly formed group but they are not newcomers to bluegrass music in Ontario. The band is made up of experienced players centered around Randy Morrison, an award-winning fiddle/mandolin player who first came on the scene with the band Bruce County Grass in the 1980s.
Randy is from Teeswater and traces his fiddle roots to his father Lincoln Morrison who was a well-known fiddler in Huron County. Around the time the Bruce County Grass group broke up, Randy was in many ways, mentored by Graham Townsend. Graham was without question, one of Canada's most versatile and smoothest fiddlers. In subsequent years, Randy has played with many groups including a stint with Charlie Pride.
Lead singing for The Flatt River Band is handled by guitarist Richard Dugal, formerly of the fine band Clean Sweep. Banjo player Larry Millar rounds out the band along with Martin Chapman on standup bass.
Oddville Stage Company is an umbrella for many exciting projects, including the Oddville Music Show, developed by Steven Morel and Jenny Parsons, award-winning Second City alumni.
Jenny and Steve recently moved to West Grey, in the vicinity of Allan Park between Hanover and Durham.
Jenny co-wrote and performed in six original revues for Second City, two of which received Toronto's theatre award, The Dora, for best new musical review. She performed in Martin Short's live show which toured North America and her film credits include appearances in Hairspray, Cheaper by the Dozen Two and Pushing Tin. Steve performed, produced and directed with Second City for almost 20 years and has worked with the likes of Martin Short, Eugene Levy, Colin Mochrie and Ron James.
They have created a neo-vaudevillian road-show called A Swell Chaos which toured Northern England earlier this year and a 'silent' musical feature film The Oddville Picture Show, for which they sang and played all of the instruments as accompaniment. They can also be seen on TV co-starring in the Family Channel’s new show Wingin’ It.
Together they perform original and old-timey sing-a-longs on banjo ukulele and washboard as the musical comedy duo - The Oddville Music Show. With appearances throughout the Festival weekend, they will be featured in Sunday night's The Last Laugh at Summerfolk.
Along with PEI's Chuck and Albert, Rob McLean and Terry V. Hart make up the comedic third act for The Last Laugh. Rob works regularly with Larry Jensen but he is also part of the Canadian comedy scene as musical director for the Canadian Comedy Awards and a recipient of several awards himself. His pal Terry V. Hart is a master of improvisation and alumni of the famed Second City, having spent over twenty years delighting audiences across Canada and the U.S.
The Jocelyn Pettit Band performs a high-energy fusion of original, old and new music led by fiddler Jocelyn Pettit and her youthful enthusiasm. She is just 15 years of age. With outstanding talent, unwavering determination and an excitement to explore new ideas, Jocelyn has quickly developed impressive musicianship well beyond her years.
Jocelyn resides in Squamish, British Columbia with her parents Siew Wan Khoo and Joel Pettit who also play in the band. She has attended Summerfolk on many occasions as the family makes yearly trips to visit relatives in Owen Sound during August. At last year's Festival, her fine performance on Summerfolk's Open Stage earned her a spot in our 35th anniversary lineup.
First inspired by the fiddle music of Cape Breton, Jocelyn enjoys creating her own compositions and crafting arrangements of Canadian, Scottish and Irish tunes, both traditional and contemporary.
Two fine folks who help to make Summerfolk a special place are John Somosi and Kathryn Edgecombe. They reside in Bentinck Township just outside of Hanover. I 'inherited' John and Kathryn from previous artistic director Liz Harvey Foulds who brought them to Summerfolk to create the First Nations Village; and what a fine addition they've been. They set up the centerpiece teepee and present cultural workshops based on Aboriginal traditions.
So that's a look at the Summerfolk performers with connections to the area. Celebrating the culture and talent of the region gives each of us a sense of place. They speak to us directly, and in many ways, they speak for us. Summerfolk has long been a showcase for the world-class talent that lives right next door.
There are a number of people I count on to bring their enthusiasm and expertise to the Festival. For example, The Voice of Summerfolk, Dave Carr is back for his 26th year as Summerfolk's MC. Dave is of course, a well-known Owen Sound broadcaster. Along with hosting our evening amphitheatre concerts, Dave works on The Summerfolk Quiz and emcees the amazing Mixed Up Bands workshop on Sunday.
Bognor's Bob Dixon is another valued contributor. As is the tradition at Summerfolk, his bagpipes signal the start of the nightly amphitheatre concerts and are featured in Sunday night's Finale.
The popular JumbleJam songwriting sessions are facilitated by Owen Sounders Ken Dow and Martin Cooper. They curate fifteen volunteer players into three bands, each anchored by a Summerfolk performer. These bands create an original song during a writing session in the afternoon and then perform it on the Down by the Bay stage on Saturday evening. It is, when you think about it, quite an incredible feat and always sparked with large doses of creativity.
Taking the excitement of 'building a song from scratch' to the Children's Village, Ken and Martin are also offering a JumbleJam workshop for children on Sunday.
Vita Bowen first attended Summerfolk with her parents, pottery experts Vince Bowen and Kate McLaren, and has been a long-time attendee. Now as Vita Twirlin' Diva, she heads up the fire poi demonstration in the Summerfolk Circle on Saturday night. This is really quite a thing to see as flames at the end of chains are spun around the body in an expressive way to create beautiful patterns and visual effects. Vita also leads impromptu hula hooping sessions for children and adults, animating the site in a unique way.
Featuring some of the most creative and talented up-and-coming performers from Owen Sound and area, First Rate People includes core members Jon Lawless, Liam Sanagan, Alicia Ross and Hayden Stewart.
The idea for First Rate People was spawned in 2007. Just out of high school, this group of young musicians started creating folk-pop music and evolved into more of a collective than a band. In fact, their first recording included some 60 people.
First Rate People loves to experiment as songwriters and musicians who believe in the art of collaborating. They are a band that knows no boundaries. The online momentum and buzz about FRP is spreading rapidly. This is a group that is adapting to new mediums to promote itself but has its' roots firmly planted in the Summerfolk tree.
Samantha Martin and the Haggard is a Toronto-based roots/rock foursome who add blues and country sounds into their musical mix.
Samantha Martin began her musical career in Lion's Head on the Bruce Peninsula. In her teens she sang country, blues, bluegrass and 60's folk/rock songs, quickly becoming a crowd favourite with her exceptional voice. Now in her 20's, she manages The Dakota Tavern in Toronto and pursues her musical career with The Haggard.
Those lucky enough to hear Martin sing are left wondering how all that soulful power comes out of a five-foot frame. She recorded her debut album Back Home in 2008 with a group of session musicians. Material from that album remains a staple of her live show with The Haggard, but they really shine on material they have since worked up together.
All three members of The Haggard bring with them a wealth of musical knowledge and also perform with the country group, The Kensington Hillbillies. Samantha says of drummer Pete Lambert, guitarist Mikey McCallum and bass player Greg Sweetland, "We draw out the best parts of each other, we bring out the best in each other musically. We`re friends and becoming a really tight unit."
Randy Morrison & the Flatt River Band is a newly formed group but they are not newcomers to bluegrass music in Ontario. The band is made up of experienced players centered around Randy Morrison, an award-winning fiddle/mandolin player who first came on the scene with the band Bruce County Grass in the 1980s.
Randy is from Teeswater and traces his fiddle roots to his father Lincoln Morrison who was a well-known fiddler in Huron County. Around the time the Bruce County Grass group broke up, Randy was in many ways, mentored by Graham Townsend. Graham was without question, one of Canada's most versatile and smoothest fiddlers. In subsequent years, Randy has played with many groups including a stint with Charlie Pride.
Lead singing for The Flatt River Band is handled by guitarist Richard Dugal, formerly of the fine band Clean Sweep. Banjo player Larry Millar rounds out the band along with Martin Chapman on standup bass.
Oddville Stage Company is an umbrella for many exciting projects, including the Oddville Music Show, developed by Steven Morel and Jenny Parsons, award-winning Second City alumni.
Jenny and Steve recently moved to West Grey, in the vicinity of Allan Park between Hanover and Durham.
Jenny co-wrote and performed in six original revues for Second City, two of which received Toronto's theatre award, The Dora, for best new musical review. She performed in Martin Short's live show which toured North America and her film credits include appearances in Hairspray, Cheaper by the Dozen Two and Pushing Tin. Steve performed, produced and directed with Second City for almost 20 years and has worked with the likes of Martin Short, Eugene Levy, Colin Mochrie and Ron James.
They have created a neo-vaudevillian road-show called A Swell Chaos which toured Northern England earlier this year and a 'silent' musical feature film The Oddville Picture Show, for which they sang and played all of the instruments as accompaniment. They can also be seen on TV co-starring in the Family Channel’s new show Wingin’ It.
Together they perform original and old-timey sing-a-longs on banjo ukulele and washboard as the musical comedy duo - The Oddville Music Show. With appearances throughout the Festival weekend, they will be featured in Sunday night's The Last Laugh at Summerfolk.
Along with PEI's Chuck and Albert, Rob McLean and Terry V. Hart make up the comedic third act for The Last Laugh. Rob works regularly with Larry Jensen but he is also part of the Canadian comedy scene as musical director for the Canadian Comedy Awards and a recipient of several awards himself. His pal Terry V. Hart is a master of improvisation and alumni of the famed Second City, having spent over twenty years delighting audiences across Canada and the U.S.
The Jocelyn Pettit Band performs a high-energy fusion of original, old and new music led by fiddler Jocelyn Pettit and her youthful enthusiasm. She is just 15 years of age. With outstanding talent, unwavering determination and an excitement to explore new ideas, Jocelyn has quickly developed impressive musicianship well beyond her years.
Jocelyn resides in Squamish, British Columbia with her parents Siew Wan Khoo and Joel Pettit who also play in the band. She has attended Summerfolk on many occasions as the family makes yearly trips to visit relatives in Owen Sound during August. At last year's Festival, her fine performance on Summerfolk's Open Stage earned her a spot in our 35th anniversary lineup.
First inspired by the fiddle music of Cape Breton, Jocelyn enjoys creating her own compositions and crafting arrangements of Canadian, Scottish and Irish tunes, both traditional and contemporary.
Two fine folks who help to make Summerfolk a special place are John Somosi and Kathryn Edgecombe. They reside in Bentinck Township just outside of Hanover. I 'inherited' John and Kathryn from previous artistic director Liz Harvey Foulds who brought them to Summerfolk to create the First Nations Village; and what a fine addition they've been. They set up the centerpiece teepee and present cultural workshops based on Aboriginal traditions.
So that's a look at the Summerfolk performers with connections to the area. Celebrating the culture and talent of the region gives each of us a sense of place. They speak to us directly, and in many ways, they speak for us. Summerfolk has long been a showcase for the world-class talent that lives right next door.
Summerfolk Performers with Connections to Owen Sound and Area
In this week's blog, I would like to start highlighting the Summerfolk performers who have a connection to Owen Sound and area.
A dance music collective, world-class songwriter, puppetry group and the heart-warming story of Tom Parker's new band will be all I can fit in this piece. So as they say, 'to be continued' next time because there are many more to talk about.
Kelso Céilà Collective
Members of the Kelso Céilà Collective have in common, a great joy in the jigs, reels, hornpipes, polkas and slides of Irish social dance and session music.
These Owen Sound and area musicians have played this repertoire at traditional music sessions around the Grey-Bruce region for many years. Some have also been members of contra dance bands including the Glenelg Full Moon Country Dance Band, Jump Start and Scatter the Cats.
For Summerfolk this year, and for the first time together, these players will focus on their shared enthusiasm for the traditional Irish céilà dance repertoire.
The Collective will offer their lively tunes and rhythms for social set and céilà dancing at the Summerfolk Dance area, with dance callers Wilfred Gaube and Elisa MacDonald guiding the dancers' steps. The group will also perform for diners and listeners at the Summerfolk Café of The Senses Friday evening at 5 pm, and you’ll see them throughout the weekend at whatever informal sessions they can stir up.
The Kelso Céilà Collective relies on, but, as with any collective, is not limited to the participation of Will and Lynda Henry - fiddle and concertina, Maureen Keating - piano and piano accordion, Bob Robins - guitars, banjo and mandolin, Scott Henderson - flute, whistles and border pipes, Dan McGee - flute, Frank Francalanza - mandolin, tenor banjo and percussion, Ned Vereecke - flute, whistles and bodhran.
Larry Jensen
One of the most loved and admired songwriters in the Owen Sound region, Larry Jensen has been writing, recording and performing his songs for four decades.
A dance music collective, world-class songwriter, puppetry group and the heart-warming story of Tom Parker's new band will be all I can fit in this piece. So as they say, 'to be continued' next time because there are many more to talk about.
Kelso Céilà Collective
Members of the Kelso Céilà Collective have in common, a great joy in the jigs, reels, hornpipes, polkas and slides of Irish social dance and session music.
These Owen Sound and area musicians have played this repertoire at traditional music sessions around the Grey-Bruce region for many years. Some have also been members of contra dance bands including the Glenelg Full Moon Country Dance Band, Jump Start and Scatter the Cats.
For Summerfolk this year, and for the first time together, these players will focus on their shared enthusiasm for the traditional Irish céilà dance repertoire.
The Collective will offer their lively tunes and rhythms for social set and céilà dancing at the Summerfolk Dance area, with dance callers Wilfred Gaube and Elisa MacDonald guiding the dancers' steps. The group will also perform for diners and listeners at the Summerfolk Café of The Senses Friday evening at 5 pm, and you’ll see them throughout the weekend at whatever informal sessions they can stir up.
The Kelso Céilà Collective relies on, but, as with any collective, is not limited to the participation of Will and Lynda Henry - fiddle and concertina, Maureen Keating - piano and piano accordion, Bob Robins - guitars, banjo and mandolin, Scott Henderson - flute, whistles and border pipes, Dan McGee - flute, Frank Francalanza - mandolin, tenor banjo and percussion, Ned Vereecke - flute, whistles and bodhran.
Larry Jensen
One of the most loved and admired songwriters in the Owen Sound region, Larry Jensen has been writing, recording and performing his songs for four decades.
In 2009, he was awarded the Owen Sound Cultural Award, given in recognition of his outstanding musical contribution to his home community. He has released 14 albums of original songs and a recent tribute CD, Demons & Saints, features 19 cover versions of Jensen songs with some 50 musicians contributing to the project.
Jensen appears in concert with his band on Friday night in Summerfolk's Down by the Bay tent. The band includes some of Owen Sound's finest musicians - bassist Tyler Wagler, guitarist Joel Morelli, drummer Dave Farrar and Rob McLean on keyboards.
This year will mark Larry's 19th appearance at Summerfolk.
The Grey Bruce Friends and Neighbours Club
Designed to increase awareness of mental health issues for children, The Grey Bruce Friends and Neighbours Club uses child-sized puppets to engage children in lively and thought provoking shows they can relate to.
Jackie Ralph and her FAN Club team will be featured performers in Summerfolk's Children's Village, presenting shows on Saturday and Sunday during the day. There will be plenty of interaction and fun, with good messages that children find useful. Kids are encouraged to talk, listen and learn; then find solutions to issues.
Offered through the Grey Bruce branch of the Canadian Mental Health Association since 2003, the Friends and Neighbours Club has made presentations to thousands of children in schools and at special events.
Lickin' Good Fried
So named after a line in the Roger Miller song My Uncle Used to Love Me But She Died, Lickin’ Good Fried takes up that wacky bard's mission to balance tragedy and comedy in a 3 minute or less country song.
Lickin' Good Fried is fronted by Tom Parker who's grandfather Harry Parker was one of Owen Sound's best known fiddlers. Tom has appeared previously at Summerfolk with his band, The Backstabbers Country Stringband, in 2000 and 2001.
Lickin' Good Fried includes Tom's wife, jazz singer Alex Pangman. Nicknamed 'Canada’s sweetheart of swing', Pangman has been singing vintage songs since her early teens when she discovered the music of ’20s and ’30s. She released four CDs with her band, The Alleycats, including two produced by the late guitar great Jeff Healey, and she went on to win national awards for her work.
Tom and Alex put everything 'on hold' in 2008. Pangman had been born with cystic fibrosis and her lungs were failing. It was becoming increasingly difficult for her to sing. “Getting out of bed was a struggle" she recalled. "As soon as I sat up, I would cough for half an hour, and getting showered and dressed left me winded.” The 33-year-old singer underwent a life-saving double lung transplant at the Toronto General Hospital that fall.
"It's a miracle and gift," Pangman said of the replacement surgery. Today, her lung capacity averages about 80 percent and her voice has returned stronger than ever. “The good news is that I can sing again. It’s not like being a singer is just a job for me - it’s who I am. To have my craft slowly taken from me was hard; to have it back is pure joy!”
Pangman still fondly recalls the day she returned home from the hospital and told her husband to grab his guitar. “We sang a song by Connie Smith called Darling Are You Ever Coming Home. Before the operation it was like I was singing through a straw, and now I had a megaphone. For me, November 4 will always be a joyous anniversary, but for some family out there it’s a sad one. I won’t ever know who my donor was, but I intend to honour the gift I’ve been given. I want the donor family to know the joy their generosity has brought back into my life.”
Pangman and Parker marked the one year anniversary of her operation by releasing Say Uncle!, which was recorded with their bandmates in Lickin’ Good Fried and produced in the couple’s home a few months before Pangman’s operation.
Coming through such tragedy, the rollicking old-time country music of Lickin' Good Fried offers the couple the opportunity to enjoy making music again. Lickin' Good Fried also includes veteran stand-up bassist Sam Petite along with John Showman and Andrew Collins who, in my opinion, are two of Canada's most talented instrumentalists on fiddle and mandolin respectively.
John Showman's recent album release entitled Showman, is one of the finest recordings of fiddle music I have heard. Both John and Andrew also perform with the well-known bluegrass band Foggy Hogtown Boys and the innovative Creaking Tree String Quartet.
Todd Crowley's Musical Petting Zoo
One of the most talked about 'exhibits' at last year's Summerfolk was Todd Crowley's Musical Petting Zoo.
Festival patrons were really enamored with Todd's collection of musical instruments. In and around a tent, more than 100 were on display, set up on tables and on tarps. Representing the musical alphabet from accordion to zither, the Musical Petting Zoo is a fully interactive and hands-on activity. Not only can you examine how the instruments are made, but you are encouraged to play them.
When it came time to determine which performers should be invited to our 35th anniversary Festival, there was no question - Todd Crowley and the Musical Petting Zoo had to return.
At the Zoo, there are stringed instruments like the kantele, qanun, bouzouki, charango, dulcimer and harp; odd musical gizmos like saws and zouks; percussion instruments like the udu, djembes and other drums; flutes of all description; the didgeridoo and yidaki ...plus oodles of more familiar instruments like guitars, banjos, fiddles and autoharps.
Participants of all ages are welcomed to pick up an instrument, often for the first time, and 'pet' it. Some instruments are strummed or plucked, others bowed or plucked. Some you beat or strike, some you blow into. It is about the magic of discovery that a crafted work of wood and strings can make beautiful harmony or disharmony, and that a drum from West Africa can sound much like a Native American drum.
This spirit of discovery is the inspiration of the Zoo keeper - Todd Crowley is a patient, caring man with a true love for folk music. "My belief about folk music is that it isn’t just music to listen to from a seat in the audience. Folk music is about making music of our own, on all levels, and then passing it on to the next generation."
"The instruments have a common DNA" says Todd, "just like all human beings, from a primitive mouth bow to a Celtic harp, from a Puerto Rican Cuatro to an African Kora. The Musical Petting Zoo, with a choice of instruments from around the world, is a vivid and tangible display that we are all interconnected."
"Often I have found the Musical Petting Zoo attracts the artists as often as it attracts novices and children. At the Folk Alliance in Memphis recently I watched an accomplished professional steel guitar/harmonica/accordion player 'toy' with an Anglo concertina for over an hour. He became a child again rediscovering the joy of making sounds on an instrument totally unfamiliar to him. By the time he walked away playing Mary Had a Little Lamb you might have thought he’d have just won a Grammy."
Todd was first attracted to folk music as a youngster, listening and singing along to his sister's LP records of people like The Chad Mitchell Trio, Joan Baez and Bob Dylan.
"Early on, I also connected with the politics of folk music and the way it often brings dignity to the stories of the poor and dispossessed. Whether a Civil Rights Era Phil Ochs song or an old Irish ballad about resisting English oppression, folk songs tell a history not often found in the history books. As a folk singer I want to be part of the oral tradition that gives voice to the sacrifices men and women have made to promote peace and justice."
In 1981, Todd lived with the legendary autoharp performer Bryan Bowers. Todd was then the assistant coach for Bryan's son's varsity basketball team. At the end of their year together, Bryan gave Todd his first autoharp lesson and presented him with his first single key G 'harp. In the years since, Todd has collected over 50 autoharps.
"I have found the diatonic autoharp to be the perfect accompanying instrument for the songs I sing" says Todd. "The autoharp lets me keep the instrumental part of the song simple, so the words in story and poetry can take center stage."
"I am not a rocker or bluesman or singer-songwriter. I sing and play folk songs, old and new" Todd says of his musical career.
He believes a folk instrument is part of the folk tradition, where the sharing of one’s love and knowledge of the music, song and stories of the past help to keep the traditions alive. The instruments in the Zoo tell a story of their own, each time a child connects to the folk tradition by trying an instrument for the first time, or an adult rediscovers the joy of making music.
Todd has just opened a year-round home for his collection of instruments. Todd’s Musical Petting Zoo and Folk Life Center in North East, Pennsylvania is open during the school year for free field trips, after school drop-ins, lessons, evening jams, concerts, open mics, etc. He is hoping it becomes not just a regional attraction, but a nationally recognized folk music center.
However, for the upcoming summer season, Todd is taking the Musical Petting Zoo on the road to festivals across North America - Mariposa, Champlain Valley, Hartford, Ottawa, Delaware, Flagstaff and of course, a stop at Summerfolk August 20, 21 and 22.
Festival patrons were really enamored with Todd's collection of musical instruments. In and around a tent, more than 100 were on display, set up on tables and on tarps. Representing the musical alphabet from accordion to zither, the Musical Petting Zoo is a fully interactive and hands-on activity. Not only can you examine how the instruments are made, but you are encouraged to play them.
When it came time to determine which performers should be invited to our 35th anniversary Festival, there was no question - Todd Crowley and the Musical Petting Zoo had to return.
At the Zoo, there are stringed instruments like the kantele, qanun, bouzouki, charango, dulcimer and harp; odd musical gizmos like saws and zouks; percussion instruments like the udu, djembes and other drums; flutes of all description; the didgeridoo and yidaki ...plus oodles of more familiar instruments like guitars, banjos, fiddles and autoharps.
Participants of all ages are welcomed to pick up an instrument, often for the first time, and 'pet' it. Some instruments are strummed or plucked, others bowed or plucked. Some you beat or strike, some you blow into. It is about the magic of discovery that a crafted work of wood and strings can make beautiful harmony or disharmony, and that a drum from West Africa can sound much like a Native American drum.
This spirit of discovery is the inspiration of the Zoo keeper - Todd Crowley is a patient, caring man with a true love for folk music. "My belief about folk music is that it isn’t just music to listen to from a seat in the audience. Folk music is about making music of our own, on all levels, and then passing it on to the next generation."
"The instruments have a common DNA" says Todd, "just like all human beings, from a primitive mouth bow to a Celtic harp, from a Puerto Rican Cuatro to an African Kora. The Musical Petting Zoo, with a choice of instruments from around the world, is a vivid and tangible display that we are all interconnected."
"Often I have found the Musical Petting Zoo attracts the artists as often as it attracts novices and children. At the Folk Alliance in Memphis recently I watched an accomplished professional steel guitar/harmonica/accordion player 'toy' with an Anglo concertina for over an hour. He became a child again rediscovering the joy of making sounds on an instrument totally unfamiliar to him. By the time he walked away playing Mary Had a Little Lamb you might have thought he’d have just won a Grammy."
Todd was first attracted to folk music as a youngster, listening and singing along to his sister's LP records of people like The Chad Mitchell Trio, Joan Baez and Bob Dylan.
"Early on, I also connected with the politics of folk music and the way it often brings dignity to the stories of the poor and dispossessed. Whether a Civil Rights Era Phil Ochs song or an old Irish ballad about resisting English oppression, folk songs tell a history not often found in the history books. As a folk singer I want to be part of the oral tradition that gives voice to the sacrifices men and women have made to promote peace and justice."
In 1981, Todd lived with the legendary autoharp performer Bryan Bowers. Todd was then the assistant coach for Bryan's son's varsity basketball team. At the end of their year together, Bryan gave Todd his first autoharp lesson and presented him with his first single key G 'harp. In the years since, Todd has collected over 50 autoharps.
"I have found the diatonic autoharp to be the perfect accompanying instrument for the songs I sing" says Todd. "The autoharp lets me keep the instrumental part of the song simple, so the words in story and poetry can take center stage."
"I am not a rocker or bluesman or singer-songwriter. I sing and play folk songs, old and new" Todd says of his musical career.
He believes a folk instrument is part of the folk tradition, where the sharing of one’s love and knowledge of the music, song and stories of the past help to keep the traditions alive. The instruments in the Zoo tell a story of their own, each time a child connects to the folk tradition by trying an instrument for the first time, or an adult rediscovers the joy of making music.
Todd has just opened a year-round home for his collection of instruments. Todd’s Musical Petting Zoo and Folk Life Center in North East, Pennsylvania is open during the school year for free field trips, after school drop-ins, lessons, evening jams, concerts, open mics, etc. He is hoping it becomes not just a regional attraction, but a nationally recognized folk music center.
However, for the upcoming summer season, Todd is taking the Musical Petting Zoo on the road to festivals across North America - Mariposa, Champlain Valley, Hartford, Ottawa, Delaware, Flagstaff and of course, a stop at Summerfolk August 20, 21 and 22.
Sunday, July 4, 2010
Sarah Harmer at Summerfolk
Sarah Harmer has just released a new CD oh little fire, her first in five years. Touring in support of the new recording will bring her to Summerfolk along with stops at the Winnipeg, Vancouver, Regina and Edmonton Folk Festivals
The album was recorded in an east end Toronto studio and on Wolfe Island, near Kingston. As the songs for the album came together, a strong lyrical theme emerged involving embers, flames and ashes. "That's why I called the album oh little fire" explained Harmer, "because of the idea of keeping something burning and tending to a fire."
"I heat my home with wood and you can have the best materials, the driest wood, but put too big a log on it and you can bury it, and you don't give it enough air, it does not burn. I just found that was really metaphorical for relationships. You just have to gingerly care for them and tend to them."
Clearly a flame is burning in Sarah Harmer, fanning her creative process.
oh little fire is 'rockier' than her previous efforts but her forte of crafting brilliant songs is still obviously showcased. The album sounds like she has been reinvigorated and positively charged.
Blessed with one of the most natural and distinctive voices in Canadian music, this multi-talented, down-to-earth singer/songwriter sets her lyrics over roots, pop and folk rhythms. She writes catchy songs that you enjoy hearing again and again. In an industry that pumps out songs like candy from a machine, Harmer is a breath of fresh air. She is not afraid to take her time getting it right - with a confidence to experiment and let her music grow.
The youngest of six children born to farmer Clem Harmer and his school teacher wife Isabelle, Sarah grew up on a hundred-acre farm near Hamilton. It was a musical family - her brother passed down classic ‘70s albums, her sister Nancy took her to see Springsteen when she was 14 and her sisters Mary and Barb snuck the 16-year-old Sarah into clubs to see their friends in a brand new band called the Tragically Hip."We’d go to Brampton, Kincardine, Wasaga Beach, when they were playing these little bars to nobody," enthused Harmer, lighting up like the wide-eyed teenager she was in 1986. "I vividly remember going into the graffitied band room and being really shy after watching these guys on stage. I was forever changed after that."Tragically Hip front-man Gord Downie remembers the teenaged Sarah Harmer quite well. "I met Mary Harmer in my first year at Queen’s and we were inseparable. I went out to the Harmer homestead on occasion. You figure out very quickly that all the Harmers are big-hearted and fun lovin’ people, every one of them, and you want to be around that a lot. They all sang for its own sake, and still do."
At the age of 17, she was invited to join a Toronto band, The Saddletramps. For three years, she juggled playing in the band with her studies in philosophy and women's studies at Queen's University in Kingston.
After leaving The Saddletramps, Harmer put together a band of her own called Weeping Tile. The band released its first independent cassette in 1994. They signed to a major label, the cassette was re-released as an EP and they quickly became a popular draw on the rock club circuit and on campus radio with their subsequent albums.
Around this time, Sarah moved into the farmhouse at the edge of Kingston where she still currently resides. On sabbatical from Weeping Tile, Sarah recorded Songs For Clem, a collection of country and jazz favourites to give to her father as a Christmas gift. Harmer’s voice was a natural fit for such songs like 'Stormy Weather', 'Black Coffee' and 'Sentimental Journey'.
It was never intended for release, but at the insistence of her friends, she made it available to the public. Songs for Clem soon earned high-praise from a bevy of critics throughout Canada, and inspired Billboard's Larry LeBlanc to describe it as "the most intimate, personalized and tasteful roots-styled album I've heard in years."
This kick-started her solo career and Harmer quickly began working on another album. In 2000 she released You Were Here, a 'poppier', more laid-back effort than her work with Weeping Tile. You Were Here became Harmer's mainstream breakthrough, spawning the hits 'Basement Apartment' and 'Don't Get Your Back Up'. The album also appeared on many critics' year-end lists, including TIME magazine, which called it the year's best debut album. It was eventually certified platinum for sales of 100,000 copies in Canada. Almost half of the album, including both of its major hits, consisted of songs she had previously recorded with Weeping Tile or The Saddletramps.
In 2004, she released All of Our Names which included the singles 'Almost' and 'Pendulums'. Her fourth album, I'm a Mountain, was released the following year. It was nominated for the Polaris Music Prize, a jury-selected $20,000 cash prize for the Canadian Album of the Year.
This folk and bluegrass flavoured CD was also was nominated for a Juno Award - Best Adult Alternative Album, and Sarah was nominated in the Songwriter of the Year category. In a third nomination, Escarpment Blues was up for Best Music DVD.
Harmer co-founded PERL (Protecting Escarpment Rural Land), an organization which campaigned to protect the Niagara Escarpment from a proposed gravel development on the Mount Nemo Plateau. To support the organization, she and her acoustic band embarked on a tour of the escarpment, hiking the Bruce Trail and performing at theatres and community halls in towns along the way - including a couple in this neck of the woods. The Escarpment Blues DVD that documented the trip is still available.
"This was a very grass-roots tour," Harmer said of the adventure. "We used biodiesel in our van, to be easier on the air, and started at Tobermory at the tip of the Bruce Peninsula. We just kept heading south. We played eight shows and received an excellent reception. They were such intimate venues and we met people all along the escarpment. The final concert was on Lake Ontario at the Royal Botanical Gardens in Burlington - it seemed like the perfect place to end the tour."
Harmer is a prolific poet who performs an infectious country/folk blend that owes much to her imagery, and an environmental activist who uses her music to purpose. Her voice is one of the most affecting in contemporary music. With hooky melodies and insightful lyrics, she has attracted many fans to her music.
With a history of a successful recording and touring career, it will be a treat to hear Sarah Harmer Saturday night at Summerfolk.
The album was recorded in an east end Toronto studio and on Wolfe Island, near Kingston. As the songs for the album came together, a strong lyrical theme emerged involving embers, flames and ashes. "That's why I called the album oh little fire" explained Harmer, "because of the idea of keeping something burning and tending to a fire."
"I heat my home with wood and you can have the best materials, the driest wood, but put too big a log on it and you can bury it, and you don't give it enough air, it does not burn. I just found that was really metaphorical for relationships. You just have to gingerly care for them and tend to them."
Clearly a flame is burning in Sarah Harmer, fanning her creative process.
oh little fire is 'rockier' than her previous efforts but her forte of crafting brilliant songs is still obviously showcased. The album sounds like she has been reinvigorated and positively charged.
Blessed with one of the most natural and distinctive voices in Canadian music, this multi-talented, down-to-earth singer/songwriter sets her lyrics over roots, pop and folk rhythms. She writes catchy songs that you enjoy hearing again and again. In an industry that pumps out songs like candy from a machine, Harmer is a breath of fresh air. She is not afraid to take her time getting it right - with a confidence to experiment and let her music grow.
The youngest of six children born to farmer Clem Harmer and his school teacher wife Isabelle, Sarah grew up on a hundred-acre farm near Hamilton. It was a musical family - her brother passed down classic ‘70s albums, her sister Nancy took her to see Springsteen when she was 14 and her sisters Mary and Barb snuck the 16-year-old Sarah into clubs to see their friends in a brand new band called the Tragically Hip."We’d go to Brampton, Kincardine, Wasaga Beach, when they were playing these little bars to nobody," enthused Harmer, lighting up like the wide-eyed teenager she was in 1986. "I vividly remember going into the graffitied band room and being really shy after watching these guys on stage. I was forever changed after that."Tragically Hip front-man Gord Downie remembers the teenaged Sarah Harmer quite well. "I met Mary Harmer in my first year at Queen’s and we were inseparable. I went out to the Harmer homestead on occasion. You figure out very quickly that all the Harmers are big-hearted and fun lovin’ people, every one of them, and you want to be around that a lot. They all sang for its own sake, and still do."
At the age of 17, she was invited to join a Toronto band, The Saddletramps. For three years, she juggled playing in the band with her studies in philosophy and women's studies at Queen's University in Kingston.
After leaving The Saddletramps, Harmer put together a band of her own called Weeping Tile. The band released its first independent cassette in 1994. They signed to a major label, the cassette was re-released as an EP and they quickly became a popular draw on the rock club circuit and on campus radio with their subsequent albums.
Around this time, Sarah moved into the farmhouse at the edge of Kingston where she still currently resides. On sabbatical from Weeping Tile, Sarah recorded Songs For Clem, a collection of country and jazz favourites to give to her father as a Christmas gift. Harmer’s voice was a natural fit for such songs like 'Stormy Weather', 'Black Coffee' and 'Sentimental Journey'.
It was never intended for release, but at the insistence of her friends, she made it available to the public. Songs for Clem soon earned high-praise from a bevy of critics throughout Canada, and inspired Billboard's Larry LeBlanc to describe it as "the most intimate, personalized and tasteful roots-styled album I've heard in years."
This kick-started her solo career and Harmer quickly began working on another album. In 2000 she released You Were Here, a 'poppier', more laid-back effort than her work with Weeping Tile. You Were Here became Harmer's mainstream breakthrough, spawning the hits 'Basement Apartment' and 'Don't Get Your Back Up'. The album also appeared on many critics' year-end lists, including TIME magazine, which called it the year's best debut album. It was eventually certified platinum for sales of 100,000 copies in Canada. Almost half of the album, including both of its major hits, consisted of songs she had previously recorded with Weeping Tile or The Saddletramps.
In 2004, she released All of Our Names which included the singles 'Almost' and 'Pendulums'. Her fourth album, I'm a Mountain, was released the following year. It was nominated for the Polaris Music Prize, a jury-selected $20,000 cash prize for the Canadian Album of the Year.
This folk and bluegrass flavoured CD was also was nominated for a Juno Award - Best Adult Alternative Album, and Sarah was nominated in the Songwriter of the Year category. In a third nomination, Escarpment Blues was up for Best Music DVD.
Harmer co-founded PERL (Protecting Escarpment Rural Land), an organization which campaigned to protect the Niagara Escarpment from a proposed gravel development on the Mount Nemo Plateau. To support the organization, she and her acoustic band embarked on a tour of the escarpment, hiking the Bruce Trail and performing at theatres and community halls in towns along the way - including a couple in this neck of the woods. The Escarpment Blues DVD that documented the trip is still available.
"This was a very grass-roots tour," Harmer said of the adventure. "We used biodiesel in our van, to be easier on the air, and started at Tobermory at the tip of the Bruce Peninsula. We just kept heading south. We played eight shows and received an excellent reception. They were such intimate venues and we met people all along the escarpment. The final concert was on Lake Ontario at the Royal Botanical Gardens in Burlington - it seemed like the perfect place to end the tour."
Harmer is a prolific poet who performs an infectious country/folk blend that owes much to her imagery, and an environmental activist who uses her music to purpose. Her voice is one of the most affecting in contemporary music. With hooky melodies and insightful lyrics, she has attracted many fans to her music.
With a history of a successful recording and touring career, it will be a treat to hear Sarah Harmer Saturday night at Summerfolk.
Friday, June 25, 2010
Down East Music at Summerfolk
It wouldn't be Summerfolk without a taste of East Coast music and this year is no exception. From PEI, the fantastically fun Acadian duo Chuck & Albert and legendary songwriter Lennie Gallant. And from the Rock, Russells in the Corner for their first mainland appearance and Newfoundland's hip traditional band The Dardanelles.
Russells in the Corner
The family group Russells in the Corner come from Bell Island, Newfoundland. Featuring Dad - Kelly Russell, Mom - Tonya Kearley Russell, and daughters Naomi age 12 and Tamsyn age 9. Collectively they are skilled in Newfoundland fiddle and accordion music, folk song, storytelling and traditional dance.
Kelly Russell was an original member of landmark Newfoundland bands Figgy Duff and The Wonderful Grand Band during the 1970s and more recently, The Irish Descendants and The Plankerdown Band. He also spent 10 years working closely with Newfoundland’s late, great fiddle masters, Rufus Guinchard and Emile Benoit. Kelly has collected and transcribed into notation over 500 fiddle tunes unique to Newfoundland.
As well as furthering Newfoundland traditional music, Kelly has also been active in preserving another important Newfoundland tradition - the art of storytelling and recitation, as inspired by his late father, Ted Russell (creator of The Chronicles of Uncle Mose - Tales from Pigeon Inlet).
With wife and partner Tonya Kearley, Kelly runs music and dance events in Trinity. With the expert guidance of Tonya calling the dances, participants quickly and easily learn the basic moves for Newfoundland Set Dancing. She also plays bass guitar in the group. Kelly & Tonya's daughters are talented and seasoned performers in their own right. Both sing, Naomi plays fiddle and guitar, Tamsyn accordion and piano.
Encompassing many facets of Newfoundland's cultural heritage, having Russells in the Corner at Summerfolk will showcase time honoured traditions passed down through generations of Newfoundlanders and onto the next.
The Dardanelles
With a love of Newfoundland music and an energy found more often in punk rock bands than in 5-piece folk acts, The Dardanelles have become one of the hottest acts to come out of the province in years. They pack clubs in their native St. John's and their debut self-titled CD became one of the top 3 sellers on the 'Rock'.
The band members, all in their twenties, firmly believe Newfoundland traditional music doesn’t have to be limited to either loud, boisterous bar scenes or the solemn concert audience. Instead, the folk dance band draws from traditional Newfoundland jigs and reels, and reinvents them to make music that speaks to their own generation.
Founding band member Tom Power, who hosts the CBC Radio 2 program Deep Roots, was asked about the philosophy behind the band. "I think the whole goal is to make traditional music 'cooler'. It’s really wicked, fun, dance music. Traditional music and folk music in general are becoming more accessible - I notice in St. John’s, trios of guitars and banjos and mandolins starting to play around. I don’t think that would have happened a few years ago. It’s nice to see."
Last summer, The Dardanelles played the Mariposa Folk Festival - their first gig off the island. "We got a really good reception, which gave us even more confidence to do what we do. When we went to Mariposa we were like, 'Let's see how this goes,' and we got a tremendous ovation. We got off stage and we said, 'We can't let this die. This is obviously something more powerful than the sum of our parts.'"
Nominated for a 2010 East Coast Music Award, the rest of the world is about to catch on to what Newfoundland has known for years - The Dardanelles will change the way you think about folk music.
Chuck & Albert
Chuck and Albert Arsenault are remarkable showmen in both of Canada’s official languages: French and English - and both of Canada’s un-official languages: comedy and music.
As members of the Acadian group Barachois, a mainstay on the folk/roots touring circuit for nearly a decade, they developed their distinctive musical talents and performed roughly 2000 shows. Performing as a duo since 2004, Chuck & Albert have adapted music from the Acadian repertoire picked up from local singers, fiddlers and historians. Then they added new material in keeping with the traditional style, building everything around their strengths.
As the duo’s bass player, Albert (say Albert in French) Arsenault comes by his talent naturally and continues the fiddling legacy of his father Eddy Arsenault. A talented singer, Albert’s vocal interpretations are one of a kind. His other musical roles are as a percussionist - that is to say an Acadian percussionist: spoons, guimbarde (jaw harp), knives and forks, saw and the rhythm bones.
Chuck Arsenault plays the acoustic guitar and vocals. Chuck’s vocal abilities are well suited to handling ballads and harmonies as well as anchoring acapella arrangements. Unlike Albert, Chuck grew up in Eastern PEI where his grandparent’s language and much of their Acadian heritage had been assimilated into the larger surrounding English speaking community.
Fluently bilingual, the two offer up clever banter in English or French by way of explaining the unique charm inherent to their performance. Laughter after all 'is the best medicine'. As a natural extension of their Acadian background, Chuck & Albert skillfully and tastefully carry their penchant for humour to the concert stage with vibrant characters, stories, songs, physical comedy and one-of-a-kind dance choreographies.
Lennie Gallant
At last fall's Summerfolk Volunteer Appreciation party, I asked for suggestions of whom we should invite to perform at our 35th anniversary Festival. Lennie Gallant was hand's down, the most requested artist.
Not only is he a favourite of folk music fans, Lennie Gallant is recognized by his peers as one of Canada’s best performing songwriters. He has released nine albums (seven in English and two in French) which have won him a host of awards and nominations from both the JUNO and East Coast Music Awards.
Over 30 artists have recorded his songs, including Jimmy Buffett, who invited Gallant to perform it onstage with him. His songs have also appeared in feature films, television series, and in numerous theatrical productions.
As a performer, Gallant’s intense delivery reaches down to touch the very souls of his audience. "Like many Canadian songwriters, my music crosses boundaries and encompasses my musical history which includes folk, rock, Celtic and a touch of Cajun and country." says Lennie of his music.
He was inducted into the Order of Canada where it was said, “Gallant has garnered much respect for his hard hitting songs chronicling the lives of people dealing with tremendous adversity and serious issues. Songs like Peter’s Dream, Island Clay, Man of Steel and The Hope for Next Year, articulate the feelings of many caught up in desperate situations beyond their control, and at the same time celebrate the beauty of lifestyle and landscape with their strong poetry and stirring narratives."
Born in Rustico, PEI, he received his first guitar for Christmas when he was 13. He has come a long way since then. He has just released two new albums, one in English If We Had A Fire and one in French Le coeur hante.
Russells in the Corner
The family group Russells in the Corner come from Bell Island, Newfoundland. Featuring Dad - Kelly Russell, Mom - Tonya Kearley Russell, and daughters Naomi age 12 and Tamsyn age 9. Collectively they are skilled in Newfoundland fiddle and accordion music, folk song, storytelling and traditional dance.
Kelly Russell was an original member of landmark Newfoundland bands Figgy Duff and The Wonderful Grand Band during the 1970s and more recently, The Irish Descendants and The Plankerdown Band. He also spent 10 years working closely with Newfoundland’s late, great fiddle masters, Rufus Guinchard and Emile Benoit. Kelly has collected and transcribed into notation over 500 fiddle tunes unique to Newfoundland.
As well as furthering Newfoundland traditional music, Kelly has also been active in preserving another important Newfoundland tradition - the art of storytelling and recitation, as inspired by his late father, Ted Russell (creator of The Chronicles of Uncle Mose - Tales from Pigeon Inlet).
With wife and partner Tonya Kearley, Kelly runs music and dance events in Trinity. With the expert guidance of Tonya calling the dances, participants quickly and easily learn the basic moves for Newfoundland Set Dancing. She also plays bass guitar in the group. Kelly & Tonya's daughters are talented and seasoned performers in their own right. Both sing, Naomi plays fiddle and guitar, Tamsyn accordion and piano.
Encompassing many facets of Newfoundland's cultural heritage, having Russells in the Corner at Summerfolk will showcase time honoured traditions passed down through generations of Newfoundlanders and onto the next.
The Dardanelles
With a love of Newfoundland music and an energy found more often in punk rock bands than in 5-piece folk acts, The Dardanelles have become one of the hottest acts to come out of the province in years. They pack clubs in their native St. John's and their debut self-titled CD became one of the top 3 sellers on the 'Rock'.
The band members, all in their twenties, firmly believe Newfoundland traditional music doesn’t have to be limited to either loud, boisterous bar scenes or the solemn concert audience. Instead, the folk dance band draws from traditional Newfoundland jigs and reels, and reinvents them to make music that speaks to their own generation.
Founding band member Tom Power, who hosts the CBC Radio 2 program Deep Roots, was asked about the philosophy behind the band. "I think the whole goal is to make traditional music 'cooler'. It’s really wicked, fun, dance music. Traditional music and folk music in general are becoming more accessible - I notice in St. John’s, trios of guitars and banjos and mandolins starting to play around. I don’t think that would have happened a few years ago. It’s nice to see."
Last summer, The Dardanelles played the Mariposa Folk Festival - their first gig off the island. "We got a really good reception, which gave us even more confidence to do what we do. When we went to Mariposa we were like, 'Let's see how this goes,' and we got a tremendous ovation. We got off stage and we said, 'We can't let this die. This is obviously something more powerful than the sum of our parts.'"
Nominated for a 2010 East Coast Music Award, the rest of the world is about to catch on to what Newfoundland has known for years - The Dardanelles will change the way you think about folk music.
Chuck & Albert
Chuck and Albert Arsenault are remarkable showmen in both of Canada’s official languages: French and English - and both of Canada’s un-official languages: comedy and music.
As members of the Acadian group Barachois, a mainstay on the folk/roots touring circuit for nearly a decade, they developed their distinctive musical talents and performed roughly 2000 shows. Performing as a duo since 2004, Chuck & Albert have adapted music from the Acadian repertoire picked up from local singers, fiddlers and historians. Then they added new material in keeping with the traditional style, building everything around their strengths.
As the duo’s bass player, Albert (say Albert in French) Arsenault comes by his talent naturally and continues the fiddling legacy of his father Eddy Arsenault. A talented singer, Albert’s vocal interpretations are one of a kind. His other musical roles are as a percussionist - that is to say an Acadian percussionist: spoons, guimbarde (jaw harp), knives and forks, saw and the rhythm bones.
Chuck Arsenault plays the acoustic guitar and vocals. Chuck’s vocal abilities are well suited to handling ballads and harmonies as well as anchoring acapella arrangements. Unlike Albert, Chuck grew up in Eastern PEI where his grandparent’s language and much of their Acadian heritage had been assimilated into the larger surrounding English speaking community.
Fluently bilingual, the two offer up clever banter in English or French by way of explaining the unique charm inherent to their performance. Laughter after all 'is the best medicine'. As a natural extension of their Acadian background, Chuck & Albert skillfully and tastefully carry their penchant for humour to the concert stage with vibrant characters, stories, songs, physical comedy and one-of-a-kind dance choreographies.
Lennie Gallant
At last fall's Summerfolk Volunteer Appreciation party, I asked for suggestions of whom we should invite to perform at our 35th anniversary Festival. Lennie Gallant was hand's down, the most requested artist.
Not only is he a favourite of folk music fans, Lennie Gallant is recognized by his peers as one of Canada’s best performing songwriters. He has released nine albums (seven in English and two in French) which have won him a host of awards and nominations from both the JUNO and East Coast Music Awards.
Over 30 artists have recorded his songs, including Jimmy Buffett, who invited Gallant to perform it onstage with him. His songs have also appeared in feature films, television series, and in numerous theatrical productions.
As a performer, Gallant’s intense delivery reaches down to touch the very souls of his audience. "Like many Canadian songwriters, my music crosses boundaries and encompasses my musical history which includes folk, rock, Celtic and a touch of Cajun and country." says Lennie of his music.
He was inducted into the Order of Canada where it was said, “Gallant has garnered much respect for his hard hitting songs chronicling the lives of people dealing with tremendous adversity and serious issues. Songs like Peter’s Dream, Island Clay, Man of Steel and The Hope for Next Year, articulate the feelings of many caught up in desperate situations beyond their control, and at the same time celebrate the beauty of lifestyle and landscape with their strong poetry and stirring narratives."
Born in Rustico, PEI, he received his first guitar for Christmas when he was 13. He has come a long way since then. He has just released two new albums, one in English If We Had A Fire and one in French Le coeur hante.
Monday, June 21, 2010
The Youthful Spirit of Summerfolk
This past Sunday, the Summerfolk TuneUp concert at Owen Sound's Kelso Beach Park featured 10 of the finalists from the Georgian Bay Folk Society's youth Discoveries Showcases.
Once again I was reminded of how truly talented all of the acts were and how difficult a task it must have been for the judges to select just four for an appearance at this year's Summerfolk Music & Crafts Festival. These 'kids' come from places like Ripley, Barrie, Chesley and Port Elgin as well as Owen Sound. The camaraderie amongst them was clearly evident and it was fun.
Jon Farmer, selected through the same process to appear at last year's Summerfolk, was an excellent and enthusiastic MC. He helped coordinate the 3 song jam at the end of the concert that brought everyone together in the Summerfolk spirit.
Representing this group at the Friday night Summerfolk Discoveries Concert in about two months time will be Jackie Rose Brown and Carrie Davenport who appear as Davenport Brown; brother and sister team Anne & David Beverly-Foster; along with soloists Jill Jambor and Ben Turcotte.
While not young enough to qualify in the 21 and under category, there are two groups in this year's lineup that are youthful enough (in their 20's) to attest to the boundless energy and fearlessness associated with musicians in the early part of their career.
Blue Moose & the Unbuttoned Zippers
The four members of Boston-based Blue Moose and the Unbuttoned Zippers met while studying at the Berklee College of Music. Mixing old-time Appalachian tunes and songs with Celtic and Scandinavian sounds, the band has its finger on the pulse of the new generation of folkies.
Guitarist Stash Wyslouch was asked about the band name which is an obvious place to start any talk of Blue Moose and the Unbuttoned Zippers. "The 'Moose' part comes from a general appreciation of titanic creatures." My guess is that every large creature needs a colour too - the Purple People Eater as another example.
Stash went on, "The 'Unbuttoned Zippers' part is definitely the duality-of-man idea - you can't unbutton a zipper and you can't unzipper a button." Okay I guess that's true but the name is still a mouthful. To their fans, like those who heard them two years ago at the New York State's Falcon Ridge Festival and voted them the band to bring back in 2009, 'BMUZ' covers the moniker end of things. It is all about the music after all and this band has the chops and inventiveness to make great music.
Each member of the Blue Moose crew comes from strikingly different backgrounds. Wyslouch was influenced by hip-hop and funk. Brownyn Bird plays accordion and nyckelharpa, the traditional stringed instrument of Sweden, where she lived and studied for a year. Fiddler Andy Reiner played for years with his father in the Reiner Family Band and loves the jigs and reels of Cape Breton. Mariel Vandersteel having studied the traditional music of Ireland and Norway, plays the Norwegian Hardanger fiddle.
Attending the prestigious Berklee College of Music expanded the horizons for each of them. One fateful day, all four were in the same room for an informal jam session and found chemistry together. What might seem to be a challenge turned out to be a blessing according to Reiner. "Since we have three fiddle-based instruments, we can't all just play the tune. We're forced by our instrumentation to become creative and come up with unique arrangements. Nobody plays lead for a whole song - it's always changing up."
One thing that helps to set the band apart is Brownyn Bird's 16 string nyckelharpa which is bowed like a fiddle but has keys like a hurdy-gurdy. "We were exposed to many musical styles at Berklee and it feels right for us to be doing this" she says of BMUZ's contemporary, no boundaries approach to performing. "We still try to respect traditional music but also love to do new things. That's how, I think, tradition evolves."
A Blue Moose set inspires lots of toe-tapping so it's natural that the foursome gets booked for contradances around New England. It is different than a concert, with lots of repetition as the dancers learn the steps, but band members love to see folks on their feet.
"Musically speaking, we basically play the same tune over and over again. I love rhythm and for me, it's just getting more and more inside the tune; more of a Zen thing." says Stash.
Bird agreed. "Folk music and traditional music is meant for dancing; it's meant to be enjoyed."
The Human Statues
The Human Statues is actually the name for two acts with the same two people - a musical duo that’s known for tight vocal harmonies and playful onstage antics; and motionless 'human statue' performances.
Zachary Stevenson and Jeff Byant used The Human Statues name for their act as buskers, when they would stand stock-still, slathered in metallic face paint, for hours on end. "One of the first things I did after graduating university to make a living between theatre gigs, was to perform as a human statue that I dubbed Discoman" said Stevenson. "Jeff did the same."
When Zach and Jeff perform as the musical Human Statues, they are frequently compared to other duos like Flight of the Conchords because of the fun elements of their show, and to Simon and Garfunkel because of the close-knit, two voice harmony that defines their sound.
Armed with two guitars and their voices, The Human Statues perform what are essentially catchy pop songs - well-crafted and entertaining. They leap and bounce around the stage and often choreograph their moves - but there is no pretension. The joy translates immediately as they incorporate comedic and theatrical aspects into their show.
Their lofty mission is to 'spread jubilation across the nation'. They have honed diverse skill sets through professional experience as actors, filmmakers, producers, writers, teachers, managers, bookers, buskers, circus performers, and of course, musicians.
“The theme word for us is jubilation” says Zach Stevenson. “Our music generally reflects a positive attitude and is fun. We write songs that initially hook you with a sense of amusement but upon further scrutiny you’ll find deeper ground, honesty and personality.”
The duo formed in Victoria when they mastered the harmonies in Simon and Garfunkel’s Cecilia. “We really connected over that music” said Stevenson. “Then we started jamming Beatles songs and found we have the ability to harmonize effortlessly together. That was the core of our interest."
Originally from the west coast, they are now both based in Toronto. Zachary Stevenson was raised in Parksvillle, British Columbia. He has been featured in theatrical productions across the country and has enjoyed success as a solo singer/songwriter and music producer. Jeff Bryant grew up in Victoria and has written and produced short films and stage productions.
Currently they are back in B. C. performing in a production of Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story. Zach is playing the lead role of Buddy Holly and Jeff plays The Crickets’ lead guitarist Tommy. The show runs at the Arts Club Theatre in Vancouver until July 11th. Come August, they will be a part of the exciting Summerfolk lineup.
Once again I was reminded of how truly talented all of the acts were and how difficult a task it must have been for the judges to select just four for an appearance at this year's Summerfolk Music & Crafts Festival. These 'kids' come from places like Ripley, Barrie, Chesley and Port Elgin as well as Owen Sound. The camaraderie amongst them was clearly evident and it was fun.
Jon Farmer, selected through the same process to appear at last year's Summerfolk, was an excellent and enthusiastic MC. He helped coordinate the 3 song jam at the end of the concert that brought everyone together in the Summerfolk spirit.
Representing this group at the Friday night Summerfolk Discoveries Concert in about two months time will be Jackie Rose Brown and Carrie Davenport who appear as Davenport Brown; brother and sister team Anne & David Beverly-Foster; along with soloists Jill Jambor and Ben Turcotte.
While not young enough to qualify in the 21 and under category, there are two groups in this year's lineup that are youthful enough (in their 20's) to attest to the boundless energy and fearlessness associated with musicians in the early part of their career.
Blue Moose & the Unbuttoned Zippers
The four members of Boston-based Blue Moose and the Unbuttoned Zippers met while studying at the Berklee College of Music. Mixing old-time Appalachian tunes and songs with Celtic and Scandinavian sounds, the band has its finger on the pulse of the new generation of folkies.
Guitarist Stash Wyslouch was asked about the band name which is an obvious place to start any talk of Blue Moose and the Unbuttoned Zippers. "The 'Moose' part comes from a general appreciation of titanic creatures." My guess is that every large creature needs a colour too - the Purple People Eater as another example.
Stash went on, "The 'Unbuttoned Zippers' part is definitely the duality-of-man idea - you can't unbutton a zipper and you can't unzipper a button." Okay I guess that's true but the name is still a mouthful. To their fans, like those who heard them two years ago at the New York State's Falcon Ridge Festival and voted them the band to bring back in 2009, 'BMUZ' covers the moniker end of things. It is all about the music after all and this band has the chops and inventiveness to make great music.
Each member of the Blue Moose crew comes from strikingly different backgrounds. Wyslouch was influenced by hip-hop and funk. Brownyn Bird plays accordion and nyckelharpa, the traditional stringed instrument of Sweden, where she lived and studied for a year. Fiddler Andy Reiner played for years with his father in the Reiner Family Band and loves the jigs and reels of Cape Breton. Mariel Vandersteel having studied the traditional music of Ireland and Norway, plays the Norwegian Hardanger fiddle.
Attending the prestigious Berklee College of Music expanded the horizons for each of them. One fateful day, all four were in the same room for an informal jam session and found chemistry together. What might seem to be a challenge turned out to be a blessing according to Reiner. "Since we have three fiddle-based instruments, we can't all just play the tune. We're forced by our instrumentation to become creative and come up with unique arrangements. Nobody plays lead for a whole song - it's always changing up."
One thing that helps to set the band apart is Brownyn Bird's 16 string nyckelharpa which is bowed like a fiddle but has keys like a hurdy-gurdy. "We were exposed to many musical styles at Berklee and it feels right for us to be doing this" she says of BMUZ's contemporary, no boundaries approach to performing. "We still try to respect traditional music but also love to do new things. That's how, I think, tradition evolves."
A Blue Moose set inspires lots of toe-tapping so it's natural that the foursome gets booked for contradances around New England. It is different than a concert, with lots of repetition as the dancers learn the steps, but band members love to see folks on their feet.
"Musically speaking, we basically play the same tune over and over again. I love rhythm and for me, it's just getting more and more inside the tune; more of a Zen thing." says Stash.
Bird agreed. "Folk music and traditional music is meant for dancing; it's meant to be enjoyed."
The Human Statues
The Human Statues is actually the name for two acts with the same two people - a musical duo that’s known for tight vocal harmonies and playful onstage antics; and motionless 'human statue' performances.
Zachary Stevenson and Jeff Byant used The Human Statues name for their act as buskers, when they would stand stock-still, slathered in metallic face paint, for hours on end. "One of the first things I did after graduating university to make a living between theatre gigs, was to perform as a human statue that I dubbed Discoman" said Stevenson. "Jeff did the same."
When Zach and Jeff perform as the musical Human Statues, they are frequently compared to other duos like Flight of the Conchords because of the fun elements of their show, and to Simon and Garfunkel because of the close-knit, two voice harmony that defines their sound.
Armed with two guitars and their voices, The Human Statues perform what are essentially catchy pop songs - well-crafted and entertaining. They leap and bounce around the stage and often choreograph their moves - but there is no pretension. The joy translates immediately as they incorporate comedic and theatrical aspects into their show.
Their lofty mission is to 'spread jubilation across the nation'. They have honed diverse skill sets through professional experience as actors, filmmakers, producers, writers, teachers, managers, bookers, buskers, circus performers, and of course, musicians.
“The theme word for us is jubilation” says Zach Stevenson. “Our music generally reflects a positive attitude and is fun. We write songs that initially hook you with a sense of amusement but upon further scrutiny you’ll find deeper ground, honesty and personality.”
The duo formed in Victoria when they mastered the harmonies in Simon and Garfunkel’s Cecilia. “We really connected over that music” said Stevenson. “Then we started jamming Beatles songs and found we have the ability to harmonize effortlessly together. That was the core of our interest."
Originally from the west coast, they are now both based in Toronto. Zachary Stevenson was raised in Parksvillle, British Columbia. He has been featured in theatrical productions across the country and has enjoyed success as a solo singer/songwriter and music producer. Jeff Bryant grew up in Victoria and has written and produced short films and stage productions.
Currently they are back in B. C. performing in a production of Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story. Zach is playing the lead role of Buddy Holly and Jeff plays The Crickets’ lead guitarist Tommy. The show runs at the Arts Club Theatre in Vancouver until July 11th. Come August, they will be a part of the exciting Summerfolk lineup.
Summerfolk - It's music...and a lot more!
The fabulous music you can hear at Summerfolk receives lots of attention. However many other components make Summerfolk the special event that it is.
Firstly, it is after all, The Summerfolk Music & Crafts Festival and crafts have always played a major role at the Festival. The Artisan Village is outstanding. On Saturday there is a juried show of works created by the Summerfolk artisans and Craft Demonstration on Sunday.
Then there's the wonderful food available on site plus opportunities for all to get involved playing music or joining in the folk and multi-cultural dance sessions. For kids and families there's The Children's Village. Young and old enjoy the Summerfolk experience!
Below is more detail on these Summerfolk features.
The Artisan Village
Summerfolk's Artisan Village is a showcase of one-of-a-kind, hand-crafted work. It is the perfect spot to find a unique gift or something special for yourself.
A total of 42 vendors were chosen from nearly 100 applicants to be included in this year's Festival. The standard is high. Festival artisans sell only their own hand-crafted products. The selection process for these artisans is based on the quality of their work and a willingness to demonstrate and discuss their craft with festival goers.
During Summerfolk, tents and booths adorned with a wide array of gorgeous handmade products line the pathways at Kelso Beach Park. The artistry represented takes many forms - glasswork, jewellery, textiles, paper, instruments, wood, pottery and metal. Vendors are happy to show off their latest creations. The open-air market is a vibrant display of fine professional craft work.
Information on all the 2010 artisans can be viewed on the Summerfolk website.
The Food Village
Enjoy food from around the world and close to home all imaginatively presented in the Food Village. Sixteen different food vendors offer delicious choices such as Indian curries, pulled pork, fine local meat products, pizza, hamburgers, Chinese, Caribbean, steamed corn and potatoes.... and then specialty coffees, lemonade, yogurt, brownies, sundaes and ice cream to finish off.
Also included this year will be Food Preparation Demos with local chefs using local foods presented in cooperation with The Grey Bruce Agricultural and Culinary Association.
Summerfolk Kids Just Wantta Have Fun!
Summerfolk is a wonderful place to bring the family. The Children's Village, with its hands-on craft projects, games, playground equipment and terrific musical line-up is a place where kids will be inspired and totally entertained.
When children arrive at Summerfolk, they are assigned a number on their wristband so they, or their parents, can be identified that way instead of by name. Safety and security issues are always considered when planning the Festival. Many parents have commented that Summerfolk was the very first place they felt comfortable enough to allow their kids to be 'on their own'.
All of the activities in the Children's Village are contained within a fence and the area is well supervised. Tents provide protection from the elements, washrooms are available and the friendly crew of volunteers make sure the kids have lots to do.
Open Stage
Want to play your music at Summerfolk? Then signing up for the Open Stage is something to consider.
Open Stage slots at Summerfolk take place on the Homemade Jam Stage, Saturday and Sunday. Each spot is shared by 2 or 3 performers. You can reserve an 'Advance Sign-up' spot by contacting the Georgian Bay Folk Society office (a limited number are available) or you can sign-up on-site. 'Festival' registration for patrons and volunteers is on a first-come, first-served basis. Drop by and sign-up with the Homemade Jam crew.
One performer from the weekend's Open Stage will be booked for the performer lineup of the 2011 Summerfolk!
The Sharing Circle
Everyone is invited to bring musical instruments, songs and stories to actively join in the sessions at Summerfolk's Sharing Circle. Those wishing to leave instruments on site can store them safely at 'Stash Yer Stuff' located next to the Sharing Circle tent.
First Nations Village
Visit the teepee and learn more about First Nations cultural traditions from hosts John Somosi and Kathryn Edgecombe. Special guest Virginia Barter will also be on hand to help celebrate the 'Year of the Metis' - the 125th anniversary the Northwest Rebellion.
Fire Poi
Join Vita Twirlin' Diva and friends at the Summerfolk Circle around 11:00 pm on Saturday night to witness the wonders of Fire Poi.
Fire Poi employs two weights, either glow balls or kevlar fire wicks, on the ends of chains which are spun around the body in an expressive way to create beautiful patterns and visual effects. Poi originated from the Maori people of New Zealand and has since evolved around the world as performance art.
JumbleJam
Jam with the pros, create an original piece of music and perform it on stage at Summerfolk - all on the same day! If you sing or play an instrument and you can spare a few hours on Saturday, apply for the JumbleJam workshop.
JumbleJam workshops are about creating songs through a unique songbuilding process. The guided approach makes it possible for anyone to participate in the creation of a song, regardless of musical background.
Facilitators Ken Dow and Martin Cooper will 'curate' 15 volunteer players into three bands, each anchored by a Summerfolk performer. The bands create an original song and perform it on the Down by the Bay stage on Saturday evening. Sign-up sheets are available at the Information Booth inside Summerfolk's Main Gate.
Firstly, it is after all, The Summerfolk Music & Crafts Festival and crafts have always played a major role at the Festival. The Artisan Village is outstanding. On Saturday there is a juried show of works created by the Summerfolk artisans and Craft Demonstration on Sunday.
Then there's the wonderful food available on site plus opportunities for all to get involved playing music or joining in the folk and multi-cultural dance sessions. For kids and families there's The Children's Village. Young and old enjoy the Summerfolk experience!
Below is more detail on these Summerfolk features.
The Artisan Village
Summerfolk's Artisan Village is a showcase of one-of-a-kind, hand-crafted work. It is the perfect spot to find a unique gift or something special for yourself.
A total of 42 vendors were chosen from nearly 100 applicants to be included in this year's Festival. The standard is high. Festival artisans sell only their own hand-crafted products. The selection process for these artisans is based on the quality of their work and a willingness to demonstrate and discuss their craft with festival goers.
During Summerfolk, tents and booths adorned with a wide array of gorgeous handmade products line the pathways at Kelso Beach Park. The artistry represented takes many forms - glasswork, jewellery, textiles, paper, instruments, wood, pottery and metal. Vendors are happy to show off their latest creations. The open-air market is a vibrant display of fine professional craft work.
Information on all the 2010 artisans can be viewed on the Summerfolk website.
The Food Village
Enjoy food from around the world and close to home all imaginatively presented in the Food Village. Sixteen different food vendors offer delicious choices such as Indian curries, pulled pork, fine local meat products, pizza, hamburgers, Chinese, Caribbean, steamed corn and potatoes.... and then specialty coffees, lemonade, yogurt, brownies, sundaes and ice cream to finish off.
Also included this year will be Food Preparation Demos with local chefs using local foods presented in cooperation with The Grey Bruce Agricultural and Culinary Association.
Summerfolk Kids Just Wantta Have Fun!
Summerfolk is a wonderful place to bring the family. The Children's Village, with its hands-on craft projects, games, playground equipment and terrific musical line-up is a place where kids will be inspired and totally entertained.
When children arrive at Summerfolk, they are assigned a number on their wristband so they, or their parents, can be identified that way instead of by name. Safety and security issues are always considered when planning the Festival. Many parents have commented that Summerfolk was the very first place they felt comfortable enough to allow their kids to be 'on their own'.
All of the activities in the Children's Village are contained within a fence and the area is well supervised. Tents provide protection from the elements, washrooms are available and the friendly crew of volunteers make sure the kids have lots to do.
Open Stage
Want to play your music at Summerfolk? Then signing up for the Open Stage is something to consider.
Open Stage slots at Summerfolk take place on the Homemade Jam Stage, Saturday and Sunday. Each spot is shared by 2 or 3 performers. You can reserve an 'Advance Sign-up' spot by contacting the Georgian Bay Folk Society office (a limited number are available) or you can sign-up on-site. 'Festival' registration for patrons and volunteers is on a first-come, first-served basis. Drop by and sign-up with the Homemade Jam crew.
One performer from the weekend's Open Stage will be booked for the performer lineup of the 2011 Summerfolk!
The Sharing Circle
Everyone is invited to bring musical instruments, songs and stories to actively join in the sessions at Summerfolk's Sharing Circle. Those wishing to leave instruments on site can store them safely at 'Stash Yer Stuff' located next to the Sharing Circle tent.
First Nations Village
Visit the teepee and learn more about First Nations cultural traditions from hosts John Somosi and Kathryn Edgecombe. Special guest Virginia Barter will also be on hand to help celebrate the 'Year of the Metis' - the 125th anniversary the Northwest Rebellion.
Fire Poi
Join Vita Twirlin' Diva and friends at the Summerfolk Circle around 11:00 pm on Saturday night to witness the wonders of Fire Poi.
Fire Poi employs two weights, either glow balls or kevlar fire wicks, on the ends of chains which are spun around the body in an expressive way to create beautiful patterns and visual effects. Poi originated from the Maori people of New Zealand and has since evolved around the world as performance art.
JumbleJam
Jam with the pros, create an original piece of music and perform it on stage at Summerfolk - all on the same day! If you sing or play an instrument and you can spare a few hours on Saturday, apply for the JumbleJam workshop.
JumbleJam workshops are about creating songs through a unique songbuilding process. The guided approach makes it possible for anyone to participate in the creation of a song, regardless of musical background.
Facilitators Ken Dow and Martin Cooper will 'curate' 15 volunteer players into three bands, each anchored by a Summerfolk performer. The bands create an original song and perform it on the Down by the Bay stage on Saturday evening. Sign-up sheets are available at the Information Booth inside Summerfolk's Main Gate.
Todd Crowley's Musical Petting Zoo
Todd's Petting Zoo was a huge hit at last year's Summerfolk and he's back! This is an opportunity to get up close and personal with more than 100 acoustic instruments covering the musical alphabet from accordion to zampoya.
Fully interactive and hands-on, this is your chance to explore the workings of the instruments and to actually play them. Along with the Musical Petting Zoo, Todd also provides an instrument play station for the Children's Village.
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