28 June 2019

Sideline (USA): updates

Thanks to Dave Byrne jr of mygrassisblue.com for an update on the radio spot schedule in advance of the coming Sideline tour (9-14 July). The Radio Kerry interview will go out on air at 19:15 on 9 July, less than an hour before the band take to the stage for the first gig of the tour in Letterkenny.

Dave also sends the correct version of the tour flyer (above). The venue for the 10 July show in Sligo town was updated back in March to Andersons Live, on Kempten Promenade, and the BIB calendar was amended accordingly; but up till now (and as recently as yesterday) the flyer image used on the BIB showed the old venue originally fixed for that date. To avoid any possible confusion, the new image has now replaced the old one everywhere that it appeared on the BIB.

27 June 2019

Steve Dilling of Sideline - on the air

Sideline, 'the embodiment of the North Carolina bluegrass sound', will begin their first tour of Ireland less than two weeks from now. The six-day itinerary (on the BIB calendar and the poster image below) takes them to each of the historic provinces of Ireland. Every bluegrass enthusiast in this island should be grateful to the mygrassisblue.com team for bringing over a band of this calibre.

Before the band arrive, mygrassisblue.com have arranged a series of radio appearances with Steve Dilling (above), founder, banjo-player, and 'Big Man' of the band. Before forming Sideline, Steve played banjo for the Bass Mountain Boys, the Lonesome River Band, and (for twenty years) Russell Moore & IIIrd Tyme Out. He endorses banjos by the top-rank Czech maker Prucha, who has put Steve's name on two banjo models. More on his life with the banjo is in an interview by David Russell in Banjo News Letter for July last year.

Thanks to Dave Byrne jr of mygrassisblue.com for the following schedule of radio spots featuring Steve - and, in the last of these, the full band:

Pre-arrival
  • Fri. 28th June, 11.00-11.30 p.m. | 'Country Show' with Tommy Rosney, Highland Radio, Donegal (http://www.highlandradio.com/on-air/listen-live/) | Chat with Steve Dilling
  • Mon. 1st July, 7.30 p.m. | 'Country Jamboree' with John Ryan, Ocean FM, Sligo (https://www.oceanfm.ie/) | Chat with Steve Dilling
  • Tues. 2nd, 8.10 p.m. | 'Country Roads' with Joe Cooney, Midlands 103 (http://www.midlands103.com/radioplayer/) | Chat with Steve Dilling
  • Tues. 2nd-Thurs. 4th, TBD | 'Sounds Country' with Dermot Moriarty (https://www.radiokerry.ie/) | Chat with Steve Dilling
  • Sat. 6th, 11.10 a.m. | 'The Saturday Connection' with Charlie McGettigan (https://www.northernsound.ie/) | Chat with Steve Dilling
During tour
  • Tues. 9th, 1.30 p.m. | 'The John Breslin Show', Highland Radio, Donegal (http://www.highlandradio.com/on-air/listen-live/) | Full band in studio ahead of the tour's first gig in Letterkenny ]
Details of the Radio Kerry interview will be confirmed ASAP. Yesterday (26 June) the Donegal News carried this report about the band, with special reference to the show in Letterkenny that  opens the tour.

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26 June 2019

Bluegrass/ Americana Night in Belfast, TOMORROW (27 June 2019)

Thanks to Robert Wills in Belfast for the news that a Bluegrass/ Americana Night, featuring the Jesse Janes and the Cool Hand String Band, is being presented tomorrow night (Thursday 27 June) at the Points (formerly Auntie Annie's), 44 Dublin Rd, Belfast BT2 7HN. The time is shown as 8.30-11.30 p.m., and tickets (£9) can be pre-ordered on Eventbrite.

The Jesse Janes are an all-female quartet from Tyrone and Liverpool, whose repertoire takes in blues, Americana, skiffle, rock, country, folk, Irish trad, and original material. The present lineup of the Cool Hand String Band, from Omagh, Co. Tyrone, is Nevin Colton (vocals, guitar), Bronagh Broderick (fiddle, vocals), and Gary McAleer (5-string banjo).

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Detached notes

Devon Léger of Hearth Music announces that this coming Friday (28 June) the duo Tui (Jake Blount and Libby Weitnauer) will release Pretty little mister, a thirteen-track album of old-time fiddle-and-banjo duets and songs, drawn from black, brown, and white sources. Quite apart from showing the interwoven traditions that make up Southern music, this is simply fine music which any old-time fan (or indeed anyone who relishes hearing musicians playing together, not just at the same place and time) should love.
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The BIB mentioned on 2 June another band on Hearth Music's artists roster, Che Apalache, based in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Their twelve-track second album, Rearrange my heart, produced by Béla Fleck, is due for release on 9 Aug. 2019. A feature by John Lawless yesterday (25 June) on Bluegrass Today includes a video of a live performance of one song from the album, 'The wall', commenting (using a traditional gospel quartet form) on the wall-building project on the US's southern border. Another song from the album, 'The dreamer', can be heard on the American Songwriter website.
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Organic Records announce another example of mingled traditions: Zoe & Cloyd - Natalya Zoe Weinstein (granddaughter of a Russian Klezmer musician) and John Cloyd Miller (grandson of Jim Shumate, the pioneer bluegrass fiddler who introduced Earl Scruggs to Bill Monroe) - are releasing 'Berditchever Sher' and 'Satan, your kingdom must come down', two singles from their forthcoming third album. More details are on Organic Records' e-newsletter.
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The organisers of the free-admission Rotterdam Bluegrass Festival 2019 report that their ninth festival, which took place last weekend (21-23 June), had a record attendance of 16,000 people. The generous international lineup included our old friends the Blue Grass Boogiemen (NL) and Chance McCoy (USA), who was on tour in Ireland earlier this month.
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Mountain Song Productions and Deering Banjos announce that a Deering White Lotus banjo, with the head autographed by the five top teachers at Béla Fleck's Blue Ridge Banjo Camp, is being auctioned to raise funds for special Camper Sponsorships for exceptional pickers chosen in coming years. James Henry of Belfast is attending the Camp this year; see the BIB for 10 April.
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Singer, songwriter, and activist Si Kahn (USA) received the Labor Heritage Foundation's Joe Hill Award last Thursday in Washington, DC. Si performs and records a lot with the Looping Brothers bluegrass band from Germany. The photo shows him with a marker commemorating 'Mother Jones' - Mary Harris Jones (1837-1930), the Cork-born 'Grand Old Champion of Labor', about whom he has written a musical play.

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25 June 2019

Wayne Taylor & Appaloosa (USA) - what you see...

The BIB post of five days ago showed a photo of Wayne Taylor & Appaloosa with Keith Arneson on banjo. In their trip this coming autumn to headline the Moniaive Michaelmas Bluegrass Festival in Scotland (and to play in Ireland as well?), Donnie Little of North Carolina will be playing banjo. Many thanks to Wayne Taylor for these photos of the band that will be coming over, and for supplying this information on Donnie:

I think you will appreciate all he has done in his life. He started playing early in his life, as his father was a bluegrass musician that led the Little Family band. His father built a smaller-sized banjo, and when he was five years old he played that mini-banjo at NC State University on the same concert with Mother Maybelle Carter. Donnie was a regular at Brother Oswald's Christmas parties and traded licks with Earl Scruggs on many occasions. Donnie has many students: he teaches banjo, guitar, mandolin, and dobro. Quite the bluegrass contributor.

Wayne adds:

I'm sure you're familiar with Emory Lester's mandolin playing. Emory also teaches many students, played in Del McCoury's Dixie Pals back in the day, and plays with Mark Johnson as a duo.

So what you see above is what the BIB hopes we shall get in the first two days of October.

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Cairncastle Ulster Scots Bluegrass Musical Evening, 26 July 2019

Thanks to Adrian Rolston of the Cairncastle Ulster Scots for copies (above) of the flyer for this year's Cairncastle Ulster Scots Bluegrass & Folk Cross Community Festival, to be held on 23-28 July at Ballygally, near Larne, Co. Antrim. In particular, Adrian sends the press release for the Festival's Bluegrass Musical Evening on Friday 26 July, starting at 7.30 p.m. and held (like most of the Festival's events) in the Halfway House Hotel, Ballygally. Admission is £10 p.p.

The BIB reproduces the release almost in full, because we're glad to see this wealth of information on bluegrass musicians in Ireland in print in one place. This applies especially to the legendary Geordie McAdam, whose talents have made their mark in many fields. The NVTV interview is worth half-an-hour of anyone's time, and Geordie's own account of his early career should be noted in conjunction with the text below.


The Watery Hill Boys hail from Drogheda, Co. Louth. Although they were formed in late 2010, the group’s individual members bring a wealth of experience in old-timey and bluegrass together to play their dynamic and tuneful version of a music which sprang from many different traditions in the United States in the 1920s to the 1960s.

Their live shows recreate the feel and sound of ‘old-timey’ music by the use of the single microphone, bringing to life the sounds of such legendary groups as the Carter Family, the Blue Sky Boys, and Bill Monroe, with sweet harmonies and great instrumental virtuosity.

They play regularly at many prestigious Irish and international bluegrass festivals, including La Roche-sur-Foron (France), Athy, Cairncastle, Ardara, and Moniaive (Scotland). Their appearances have not been confined to the annual bluegrass festival circuit. They have played the prestigious Electric Picnic (Ireland's largest rock festival) and have toured annually in Catalonia over the last few years, playing venues such as the Harlem Jazz Club in Barcelona to the Chê Beach Bar in St Pere Pescador. In June of this year they play their first German tour, based mostly in the Munich area, and are currently preparing for numerous dates all over Ireland and a number of regular dates in and around their home town of Drogheda, particularly Clarke’s Bar in Peter St. and Carberry’s of the North Strand. They are also regular visitors to the famed Red Room in Cookstown.

Their first self-titled CD was issued in 2011, and their second CD, titled Somebody’s been usin’ that thing, was issued on July 2013.

Multi-instrumentalist Donal Óg Black features on banjo, mandolin, guitar and vocals, Jim MacArdle on guitar, autoharp, and vocals, and Seán Óg Collins on bass and vocals.

‘Their music hails from and is inspired by bygone times. By rejuvenating the music of these prolific periods the happy go lucky trio shine a light of objectivity on the current zeitgeist and the contrast between the experiences of our forefathers and our own’ – The Athy Bluegrass Festival

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The Bluestack Mountain Boys / Dublin Bluegrass Collective

Luke Coffey is from Boyle, Co. Roscommon, and has been playing the banjo for the past ten years. A multi-talented musician, his playing is influenced by Flatt & Scruggs, the Stanley Brothers, Béla Fleck & the Flecktones, and the Grateful Dead. He is a member of several bands including Well Enough Alone, the New Breadwinners, the Dublin Bluegrass Collective, Out and Outer, and the Blue Light Smugglers. He has played festivals such as Electric Picnic, Balla Bluegrass Festival, Westport Folk and Bluegrass Festival, the Guinness International Bluegrass Festival, Dunmore East, the Battle of Clontarf Festival, and the European World of Bluegrass Festival & Tradeshow (EWOB), in Voorthuizen, the Netherlands, has extensively toured France playing in auditoriums, churches, and stages to crowds of 1000 people, and has performed with David McSavage at the Vodafone Comedy Festival 2014 and two of Dublin’s best music venues, the Olympia and Vicar Street.

Aran Sheehan is a bluegrass mandolin playing hedonist, brought up in festivals and the music since a baby. Given his first guitar at 6 years old, by a stepdad who is a well renowned UK bluegrass musician, he has been immersed in the bluegrass world all his life. Inspired by all the newgrass greats, he is strongly into the edgy improvisational approach to mandolin. An attendee of Sore Fingers week-long bluegrass camp in the UK, he had the honour of being guided by IBMA mandolin player of the year Jesse Brock. The list of festivals and concerts is too long to list but includes a tour of Texas, USA in 2013 with the Boxcar Preachers (US), a highlight being the Austin String Band Festival, where the amazing mandolin luthier Tom Ellis played with him and gave his personal instrument to use. A tour of France in 2012 with Tom Hanway (US) and Hugh Taggart (IRL), where the main event was to headline the 'Yes Weekend' festival to a full-house audience of 2000 in Le Vieux-Marche concert theatre. In 2014 the band of which Aran is the manager, the Dublin Bluegrass Collective, headlined the US Ambassador's residence in Phoenix Park for the US embassy's 4th of July Independence Day Festival.

Over many years, Aran has played at almost every Irish bluegrass festival. Also, for example, in 2015 the Dublin Bluegrass Collective played Knockanstockan Festival for the second time and also the Secret Garden Party Festival in Co. Wicklow, which shows that his band, and the bluegrass genre, are appealing to a wider audience in recent years. Aran started the famous weekly (Tuesday 9.00 p.m.) bluegrass session in Siné Pub, Ormond Quay, Dublin 1, which - now in its fourth year - has welcomed musicians from North Carolina to Australia and beyond, as it is truly on the bluegrass map of Ireland, with both listeners and players who love the genre of bluegrass, having found it through word of mouth, the Bluegrass Ireland Blog run by Richard Hawkins, or by searching online and finding his www.facebook.com/DublinBluegrass page. Aran also teaches bluegrass style on the mandolin to a number of students and has run a mandolin workshop for the Jack of Diamonds Festival in Dublin, where he has performed every year since it was started. An approachable gentleman that lives and breathes bluegrass mandolin, most likely found at a festival jam session.

Patrick Simpson is from Toronto, Canada, and has sang and played guitar for thirty years. His high tenor vocals and mountain-style guitar make him a true bluegrass artist. He is a passionate bluegrass music fan and has performed at many of the bluegrass music festivals here in Ireland and abroad, including the Athy Bluegrass Festival, Westport Folk and Bluegrass Festival, the Battle of Clontarf Festival, and the Guinness International Bluegrass Festival, Dunmore East, to an auditorium-size crowd as well as hundreds of festival attendees. He sings in the Dublin Bluegrass Collective and has also played with other Irish and Canadian bluegrass bands such as the Wakami Wranglers, the Acoustic Rockets, and the Simpson Bluegrass Band. In 2014 he joined Well Enough Alone to compete for Ireland in the European World of Bluegrass Festival & Tradeshow (EWOB) in Voorthuizen, the Netherlands, to a crowd of 400 bluegrass fans and musicians. He occasionally joins Well Enough Alone in the Kilkenny Shop, Dublin, on Sunday afternoons.

Niall Hughes, from Hollymount, Co. Mayo, has been playing guitar for thirteen years and is hugely talented. He is highly influenced by jazz and bluegrass music and is a leading double bass player in Ireland. He has performed in numerous bands including Well Enough Alone, the New Breadwinners, Feather, the Dublin Bluegrass Collective, and Pine Marten. He has played festivals such as Electric Picnic, Balla Bluegrass Festival, Westport Folk and Bluegrass Festival, the Battle of Clontarf Festival, the European World of Bluegrass Festival & Tradeshow (EWOB) in Voorthuizen, the Netherlands, and has extensively toured France playing in auditoriums, churches, and stages to crowds of 1000 people.

TJ Screene is from London, England, and is the newest member of the Bluestack Mountain Boys. He has been playing double bass for.four years. He is a bluegrass music fan, performed in the 2015 Knockanstockan Festival to hundreds of people, and is a band member of Well Enough Alone, the Dublin Bluegrass Collective, Davina and the Messengers, and with Suzanne Rhatigan. He has played to an international crowd of 300 people at the Sore Fingers Summer School in Oxfordshire, UK.

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Internationally acclaimed duet comprising Geordie McAdam and Wilson Davis

Geordie has been on the music scene for more than seventy years; his introduction to music came when he joined Duncairn Marching Flute band at age nine. Through a series of circumstances, he got involved in the traditional music scene and, inspired by the Dubliners and the Chieftains, formed a traditional folk group, the Decent Folk, along with two fellow members from the band – Geordie himself played tin whistle.

But, with a desire to play the fiddle, he took the bold step of frequenting a pub on the Falls Road to listen and learn from some of Ireland's best fiddlers - Seán McGuire and Seán McAloon. They were the crème de la crème of Irish music, and he is very grateful for everything they taught him. They played gigs in a wide range of pubs and halls.

His career took a different direction in the mid 70s after the purchase of the record Wild rose of the mountain by Kentucky fiddle player J.P. Fraley, introducing him to bluegrass music. Geordie toured mid-west America a few times with the Appalachian Strings and played with the Black Mountain String Band, Ragged and Rough, and the Lagan Valley Boys.

While playing with the Appalachian Strings, they were joined by Wilson playing guitar and bass fiddle. In 2003 the Broken String Band was formed out of the amalgamation of Appalachian Strings and the Black Mountain String Band. The band played extensively throughout Northern Ireland, Republic of Ireland, and Scotland (e.g. Dunkeld) festivals for a decade until Geordie left in late 2013, followed by Wilson the following year. Both musicians now play a wide genre of music at many musical events, in Northern Ireland, Republic of Ireland (e.g. Fleadh Cheoil, Dunfanaghy festival), Germany, and Scotland (e.g. Monaive), giving demonstrations on crossover music and encouraging other musicians to play with them.

Geordie’s love of music led him to making and repairing fiddles, initially in his garden shed and for the past fifteen years in his shop 'The Music Box' on Gray's Hill in Bangor, where he has many visitors and bluegrass bands from around the world (e.g. Hong Kong) to see him making fiddles from a range of materials - including sweet-tin and jigsaw puzzle - and hear him play his music.

Geordie’s expertise includes making matchstick violins and Norwegian Hardanger fiddles. He loves showing and playing them for people. The Hardanger fiddles have eight strings (rather than four as on a standard violin) and are made of thinner wood. Four of the strings are strung and played like a violin, while the rest, aptly named sympathetic strings, resonate under the influence of the other four.

Sources:
Geordie McAdam interviewed on NVTV by Ciarán Ó Brolcháin in the 'Our generation' series (28-min. video)
Irish News feature, 'Bluegrass Music Festival back at Ulster American Folk Park', 25 Aug. 2016
Information from Geordie McAdam and Wilson Davis

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23 June 2019

US bass player in Ireland, 4-12 Sept. 2019

Thanks to Gary Rinehart and his wife Betty, of Topeka, Kansas, USA, for the news that they will be visiting Ireland and staying in Mountrath, Co. Laois, from 4 September to 12 September, and would like to know of any bluegrass jams, events, or pub locations that they can visit or sit in with during their stay.

Gary is an upright bass player and founder member of the Tallgrass Express String Band, based in the Flint Hills area of the Tallgrass Prairie region of midwestern North America and reflecting the ranching culture of that country in their music. Gary can be contacted by e-mail.

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22 June 2019

NTB: 'Myles Walter Keogh' video released

Thanks to Niall Toner for the news that the video of the Niall Toner Band's new single, 'Myles Walter Keogh' (composed by Niall and Johnny Gleeson) can now be seen on YouTube. Full details of the song and the story behind it are on the BIB for 11 June.

The video - produced, directed, and filmed in black and white by Fiaz Farrelly - shows a run-through of the song by the Niall Toner Band: Niall (guitar, lead vocals), Johnny Gleeson (dobro, harmony vocals), Dick Gladney (upright bass), and Gerry Madden (mandolin).

NB: when the news of the impending release of the song and video was announced on Bluegrass Today, Donald Teplyske, freelance US roots and bluegrass music writer, commented: 'Niall Toner is one of the best!'

PS: Thanks to Niall for the information that the banjo-player on the recording is Keith Sewell, Nashville songwriter, multi-instrumental sideman, and longtime friend and collaborator with Niall.

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21 June 2019

Bluegrass, country, and a touch of Cajun at the 25th Dunmore East Bluegrass Festival


Thanks to Karen Cheevers of B2B Communications for this release on the 25th Dunmore East Bluegrass Festival. The picturesque Co. Waterford fishing village will play host to the Festival, which returns to its shores from 22 to 25 August:

Fans of bluegrass, honky-tonk, blues, country, Americana, and rhythm ‘n’ roots are in for a real musical treat as the festival will feature a host of artists playing almost forty free gigs throughout the village.

This year’s headline act reflects the broadened remit of the festival as the Sarah Savoy Band will bring a touch of Cajun to the festival. A talented multi-instrumentalist and vocalist, Sarah’s vocal style has been compared to that of Patsy Cline, Patti Smith, and Wanda Jackson.

Born to Cajun ‘royalty’ in Louisiana, Sarah’s father Marc is a world-renowned accordion craftsman and her mother Ann wrote the reference on Cajun music, Cajun music: a reflection of a people. A move to France lead Sarah to become a certified chef, and her passion for Cajun food and flavours led to the publication of a cookbook, The Savoy kitchen: a family history of Cajun food.

Along with the 'Princess of Cajun' the festival lineup includes Irish, UK, and American big-name bluegrass and country acts.

Making their Dunmore East debut is the 19th Street Band. Hailing originally from Hollywood, Northern Ireland, Caolaidhe Davis moved to the US in 2005 to pursue a career in music. While establishing an earlier band, he found himself in need of a fiddle player and met Meghan, who auditioned for his band. What Caolaidhe didn’t know was that he was auditioning his future wife. Fast-forward a few months and the pair found themselves living on 19th St. in Arlington, Virginia, writing songs and creating the sound that would become the backbone of the 19th Street Band, an exciting fusion of Americana, country, and rock.

New acts appearing at this year’s festival include Liz Morionda, Raglan Rodeo, and Alfi, along with returning acts Lands End, Mons Wheeler Band, Pilgrim St, Kiss My Grass, Whistle, and Charlie Reader.

Mick Daly, Festival organiser, is looking forward to welcoming lots of new names and some old favourites back to the festival.

'Sarah Savoy is a wonderful addition to the lineup this year. She has been described as the Voice of Cajun by Rolling Stone magazine and she’ll bring an authentic Cajun vibe to the festival. Joining Sarah on the lineup is Missourian Liz Moriondo, a popular singer songwriter who is well known by her dynamic voice as a force of nature.

'While bluegrass remains at the heart of the festival, many of the new Irish and international acts are bringing a more eclectic offering to the festival. Pilgrim St bring a broad range of Americana, country, folk, and bluegrass to their concerts across the country, while Alfi is a fresh new trio combining American old-time, bluegrass and traditional Irish music.

'The festival appeals to die-hard bluegrass fans who have been visiting Dunmore for decades, but it also has a broader appeal to those who simply like good toe-tappin’ music, in a beautiful seaside setting, under the sun!'

The 25th Dunmore East Bluegrass Festival, Co. Waterford, kicks off on Thursday 22 August at the Strand Inn and heralds the start of four days of free gigs throughout the village. For more information visit www.discoverdunmore.com or keep up to date on the Discover Dunmore East Facebook page.

BIB editor's note: More about Sarah Savoy appeared on the BIB on 11 Mar. 2019. Longtime attenders at Omagh festivals will remember when Cajun bands took part to play for dancers, and the older Cajun music has much in common with anglophone old-time music - but all this aside, the Sarah Savoy Band make powerful, exciting, and tradition-based music.

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20 June 2019

Wayne Taylor & Appaloosa (USA) - for Ireland this October?

Halfway through 2019, this is already a classic year for great visiting bands, and the second half begins with a powerful double helping: Sideline (USA) and Alecia Nugent (USA) and her band. who will be followed by outstanding festival lineups.

Thanks now to Wayne Taylor and his band Appaloosa (above) for this prospect of keeping up the heat (and the standard) into the autumn. Wayne writes:


I am Wayne Taylor, former band mate of Bill Emerson, and band leader for Appaloosa. Wayne Taylor and Appaloosa is comprised of Emory Lester, mandolin, Kene Hyatt on bass, Donnie Little on banjo and myself on lead vocals and guitar. We performed at the European World of Bluegrass in 2010, and have performed in Scotland, Norway, Holland in previous occasions. We are trying to get more performance venues during our tour starting 27 Sept. and returning to the US on 4 Oct. 2019.

We are scheduled to perform at the Moniave Michaelmas Bluegrass Festival in Moniave, Scotland, on 27-29 September. We plan on traveling to Ireland on the 30th, and are open to perform in Ireland on the 1st and 2nd of October, travel back to Scotland in the morning of Oct. 3rd, scheduled to perform again at Macmerry Primary School in Scotland in the evening, and travel back to USA on the 4th.

Any help in securing performances on the 1st and 2nd of October would be greatly appreciated. Please visit our website for more information.

The highly respected bluegrass DJ Dennis Jones (see Bluegrass Today) wrote: 'Whether singing one of his own great songs or a carefully selected cover, Wayne Taylor delivers it with heart and soul. His feel for the tradition and the incredible band Appaloosa show bluegrass in a fantastic modern light. Go see them... and buy two CDs.' The BIB hopes this fine band will be performing in Ireland in October.

NB: The photo above shows Keith Arneson on banjo. Donnie Little, who will be with the band on the tour, is highly regarded both for playing and for setting up banjos, and can be seen in many YouTube videos.

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Mississippi River Suite now available for download - and more

In his latest e-newsletter, Michael J. Miles (USA) - the man who showed that Bach could be beautifully played on the clawhammer banjo - announces that
  • his 22-minute 'Mississippi River Suite' is now available for download on Bandcamp
  • in this year of the centenary of Pete Seeger's birth the show '100 years of protest' is preparing to go on the road; 
  • Gold mine for banjo: 100 banjo lessons has now been published by Hal Leonard and will soon be available from Michael's own website; and more.

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19 June 2019

'The North began' - Ireland's first bluegrass festival, Nov. 1990

The title of Eoin MacNeill's epoch-making 1913 article is appropriate to introduce the following historic document. Many thanks to John Kinsella for a facsimile of a feature published in the Donegal News on 3 November 1990. John draws attention to some familiar names, and recalls that the festival subsequently 'ran for six or seven years in a few small pubs in Donegal. Nice memories.'

The
Donegal News feature is transcribed faithfully below; none of the BIB's editorial conventions have been applied, apart from the correction of one typo.

NORTH-WEST BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

McGinley's Bar, Letterkenny, is the venue for a major celebration of Bluegrass Music on the week-end of November 15th to 18th.

The first North-West Bluegrass Festival, sponsored by Budweiser, promises to be a fabulous non stop session with the best of Irish Bluegrass talent.

Special guests of the Festival will be the Dublin based Texas Kellys, featuring Jimmy Kelly, late of Sackville String Band, on banjo, Steve Wickham, formerly of the Waterboys, on fiddle, one time "In Tua Nua" member, Paul Byrne, on drums, Frank Gleeson and Alan Johnston on guitars, with Martin O'Keefe on double bass. They play McGinley's on Saturday night, November 17th.

Donegal's own, The Whunbushes, open the Festival on Thursday night and close it again on Sunday.

Other features include the Wild Duck Bluegrass Club, who meet once a month in the Wild Duck Bar, Portglenone, on the shores of Lough Neagh. This dedicated gat[h]ering of musicians from all over the North and Donegal represents some of the finest Bluegrass talent in the country. The Club will meet in McGinley's Bar on Friday night, November 16th, and Saturday afternoon, November 17th.

Derry guitar players, Frankie Robinson and Ray Jordan, have brought music from the Foyle to the very heartlands of Bluegrass on their regular tours Stateside. They play McGinley's on Sunday afternoon, November 18th, and will be joined by friends and neighbours.


McGinley's, 25 Lower Main St., Letterkenny, Co. Donegal, and the Wild Duck, 93 Main St., Portglenone, Co. Antrim, shown in recent photos

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18 June 2019

BAND festival opening night, Thurs. 20 June 2019

Thanks to the organisers of the BAND (Bluegrass And Nashville Dunfanaghy) festival in Co. Donegal for the latest news of this year's event:

With only a few days to go to BAND 2019, the excitement is mounting. We are very happy to say that the festival will kick off with an Opening Night in Arnolds Hotel on Thursday 20 June. Donegal's very own Hillbilly Rednecks will be on stage from about 8.00 p.m. - the perfect start to a weekend jammed packed of top notch music. Some of the international musicians are arriving on Thursday, so you never know who might join the Hillibillies for a tune or two!

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Gary Ferguson (USA) in Ireland, 19-26 July 2019

Thanks to singer/ songwriter Gary Gene Ferguson (USA) for news of his forthcoming tour of Ireland, due to begin a month from now.

Gary has toured Ireland almost every year since 2005, and the coming thirteenth tour, we learn with regret, may be his last visit. The unifying theme will be evenings in concert with fellow songwriters Johnny Tanner (South Carolina), Niall Toner (Co. Carlow), Roy Thompson (Co. Kildare), Colin Henry (Belfast), Thomas Copeland (Belfast), and Joseph Murray (Castledawson, Co. Londonderry). The dates shown on his website are:

Fri. 19th: Roy Thompson, Johnny Tanner, and Gary Ferguson, 'Songwriters in the Round', DC Music Club, 20 Camden Row, Dublin 2, 9.00 p.m. +353 87 682 5306, €13 (€15)

Sat. 20th: Roy Thompson, Johnny Tanner, and Gary Ferguson, 'Songwriters in the Round', Moy River Folk Club, Moy River B&B, near Cloonacool, Co. Sligo, 8.00 p.m.; 071 9121903 or 087 2512030 (hosts Pat and Rita; bring your own beer!)

Sun. 21st: Roy Thompson, Johnny Tanner, and Gary Ferguson, 'Songwriters in the Round', Dorney Bridge, Enniskillen, Co. Fermanagh, 6.00 p.m., 077 1626 7625; minimum donation of £12.50; contact John at dorneybridge@gmail.com

Mon. 22nd: Thomas Copeland, Johnny Tanner, and Gary Ferguson, 'Songwriters in the Round', the Old Forge, 8 John St., Randalstown, Co. Antrim BT41 3AD; 028 9447 9777

Wed. 24th: Tanner, Ferguson, Murray, and Henry, Sessions in the House Listeners Club, Castledawson, Co. Londonderry, 07927900171/ 07565273265; info@sessionsinthehouse.com

Thurs. 25th: Tanner, Ferguson, Murray, and Henry, the Red Room, Cookstown, Co, Tyrone, BT80 9UR, 8.00 p.m.; contact Sharon Loughrin (sharonloughrin05@yahoo.co.uk, 077 36837779)

Fri. 26th: Niall Toner, Gary Ferguson, and Colin Henry, 'Songwriters in the Round', Art Bank, 88 Main St, Ballinapark, Bunclody, Co. Wexford, 8.00 p.m., €15; +353 53 937 5200
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Earlier this year Gary started a songwriter network, 'for gigs, co-writing, and anything song-related'. The roster of writers taking part includes several from Ireland.

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Visiting old-time players, July and Nov. 2019

Thanks to the FOAOTMAD news blog for the news that old-time maestro Riley Baugus will be on a three-week tour in these islands from the end of October this year. The Alan Bearman Music agency, organising the tour, write:

Riley Baugus represents the very best of old time American banjo and song. His powerful singing voice and his expert musicianship place him squarely in the next generation of the quality American roots tradition.

The tour includes these three dates in Ireland:

Wed. 13th Nov.: Linenhall Arts Centre, Castlebar, Co. Mayo
Thurs. 14th: The White Horse, Ballincollig, Co. Cork
Fri. 15th: The Red Room, Cookstown, Co. Tyrone
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Nearer the present, FOAOTMAD also announce that Canadian neo-old-time duo Mama's Broke (Lisa Maria, vocals, fiddle. mandolin, guitar, feet; Amy Lou, vocals, banjo, guitar, mandolin) will be touring these islands from 21 July to 18 Aug., in the course of which they will play one date in Ireland - on Fri. 26 July in the Cobblestone, Dublin. Their powerful and complex music can be heard, for instance, on Bandcamp. The Cobblestone website includes a link for online booking and a video (also on YouTube).

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12 June 2019

Omagh 2019: foundations for a stellar lineup (update)

As many people already know from flyers issued by the Ulster American Folk Park at Omagh, Co. Tyrone, there will be a stellar lineup at the Folk Park's Bluegrass Festival (30 Aug.-1 Sept.) this year. The international acts alone include Joe Mullins & the Radio Ramblers (USA; photo), Front Country (USA), Chris Jones & the Night Drivers (USA), Bill and the Belles (USA), Hoot and Holler (USA), Buffalo Gals (GB/USA), Paris Texas - the band (B), and - marking a welcome return for what was always a valued part of former festivals - the Bailey Mountain Cloggers (USA) from Mars Hill, NC.

A few notes: Joe Mullins can make the stock phrases of bluegrass banjo sound as if they had just come fresh from his inspiration. His father, fiddler and radio presenter Paul 'Moon' Mullins, created the text of 'Come down the mountain, Katie Daly' in the form everyone knows.* Front Country, from the West Coast, are the spearhead of 'string-band pop'. Bill and the Belles are the 'house band' of the Birthplace of Country Music Museum in Bristol, TN/VA. The Buffalo Gals, led by Kate Lissauer, are the premier old-time string band in Britain, with the virtuoso dancing of Sibylle Riesen. And Paris Texas, from Belgium, include on mandolin Jan Michielsen of 4 Wheel Drive (NL/D/B).

Details on homegrown talent, online booking, and more, will be coming shortly.

*Update 23 May 2020: The BIB apologises for this statement, which at the time of writing we believed to be true on the authority of published accounts. The text that the Bluegrass Playboys (the band Paul Mullins was then with) recorded in 1962 was identical with that recorded in 1961 by the original composer, Herman Weight ('Eamon O'Shea') who was cited as composer on the Playboys' version; see the BIB for 28 Aug. 2019.

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Two Time Polka: June gigs

Ray Barron of Two Time Polka announces:

Here are the details of our June gigs.

Cork Summer Show
Sun. 16th: Entertainment Zone, Cork Summer Show, Curaheen Rd, Cork city. Start 12.00 noon

Bluegrass And Nashville Dunfanaghy (BAND) Festival
Fri. 21st: Arnolds Hotel, Main St. Dunfanaghy, Co. Donegal. Adm. free. Start 10.00 p.m. Tel. 074 9136208
Sat. 22nd: Roonies Nightclub, Dunfanaghy, Co. Donegal. Adm. free. Start 9.00 p.m. Tel. 074 9136101

Italian Folkest (Friuli-Venezia-Giulia region)
Thurs. 27th: Cassacco, Parco Europa. Open air. Start 9.15 p.m
Sat. 29th: Flaibano, Piazza Monumento. Open air. Start 9.15 p.m
Sund. 30th: Aquileia, Piazza Capitolo. Open air. Start 9.15 p.m

Our next mail will have details of our gigs at the Charlotte St. Festival in Wexford and at the Phil Murphy Festival in Carrig-on-Bannow, Co. Wexford.

Regards & thanks,
Ray & TTP

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A marriage is announced

'It's been a while', writes John Lawless on Bluegrass Today, 'since we’ve seen a bluegrass wedding as star-studded as this one'.

Alluded to by the BIB on 22 May, the marriage of David Benedict, mandolinist with Boston's Mile Twelve, and Tabitha Agnew, banjoist with Cup O' Joe and Midnight Skyracer, was celebrated (with plenty of music) on 31 May at Ballylane Reformed Presbyterian Church, Clady Milltown, near Markethill, Co. Armagh.

More details and more photos are on the Bluegrass Today feature. Congratulations to the happy couple, who will by now have returned from their honeymoon on the Isle of Skye.

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Red Hat Acoustic Music Club at Naas, 14 June 2019

Thanks to Paul and Anne McEvoy, organisers of the Red Hat Acoustic Music Club, for a reminder that the Club's sixth meeting of 2019 will be held this coming Friday (14 June).

The Red Hat meets on the second Friday of every month at the Harbour Hotel, Naas, Co. Kildare. Music starts around 8.30 p.m.; a donation of €3.00 covers coffee/ tea and sandwiches at the interval.

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Editorial relaxation

The BIB editor will be out of the editorial chair on pleasure bent for a few days, starting tomorrow (Thursday 13 June); so please keep sending in news, but don't expect it to appear before Tuesday 18 June at the earliest.

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11 June 2019

Sideline (USA) tour - only a month away!

Thanks to mygrassisblue.com for this release and video (also on YouTube) on the approaching tour by Sideline, one of the most respected and powerful US bands:

Here it is, the official #sidelineireland2019 pre-tour 'y'all come out and see us' shout-out video from the Sideline guys, recorded from the tour bus while on the road in the US.

There's only 32 days to go, so mark your summer diary for some pedigree bluegrass and to meet the guys in person. The tour kicks off in An Grianan Theatre, Letterkenny, on July 9, followed by Andersons Live, Sligo, on July 10; Mullingar Arts Centre on July 11; the INEC, Killarney, on July 12; Theatre Royal, Waterford, on July 13; and Dublin Unitarian Church on July 14.

This sort of awesomeness doesn't come along very often, so don't miss this oppertunity to catch chart-toppin' North Carolina bluegrass right here in Ireland. As the Big Man himself says herein, 'it's gonna be something!'

Full tour details & tickets available at 💻 http://mygrassisblue.com/sideline-2019/. And a big thanks to BarryzProductions, our multimedia production company of choice, for helping to put the video together.

Go to the mygrassisblue.com Facebook for links to venues and more. Venue links are also on the BIB calendar.

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NTB to release new single 'Myles Walter Keogh', 25 June 2019 (update)

Thanks to Niall Toner (above) for this news of his latest recording:

The Niall Toner Band (NTB) release their new single 'Myles Walter Keogh' on 25 June 2019, to coincide with the 143rd anniversary of the battle of the Little Bighorn in 1876.

This original song, composed by Niall Toner and Johnny Gleeson, tells the tragic story of Myles Keogh from Leighlinbridge (pronounced 'Loughlinbridge') in County Carlow, who emigrated to America, fought on the Union side in the American civil war, subsequently joined the ill-fated 7th Cavalry under General Custer, and died, along with almost 400 of his comrades and an unknown number of Native Americans, at the battle of the Little Bighorn on 25/26 June 1876. The only known survivor was Keogh's horse, named (ironically) 'Comanche'.

A performance video of 'Myles Walter Keogh', featuring Niall and the band, directed and filmed by Fiaz Farrelly, is being simultaneously released on YouTube.

The song tells the story in simple verse, neither glorifying or condemming the action, but rather pointing to the futility of war in any, and all, circumstances.

'Myles Walter Keogh' is just one of the new songs and tunes taken from the upcoming sixth all-original album from Niall and the band, Between the stone fox and the culm crusher, on Avalon Records, due for release in late 2019.

Further information: 087-2877299/ 059-9157570

Niall adds a personal note: 'We may get arrested by the Bluegrass Police for the use of some non-bluegrass rhythm instrument on this track, but a short spell of incarceration might be good for a few new prison songs!'

Update 18 June: A feature by Richard Thompson, with illustrations, audio track, and a video on Myles Walter Keogh's military career (also on YouTube) is now on Bluegrass Today.

Here also is a list of upcoming events for Niall and the band:


Sun. 16th June: Niall Toner Band, Club D'Art, Carlow, 6.30 p.m., €15
Sun. 23rd: Niall Toner Band, the Wild Duck, 17/20 Sycamore St., Temple Bar, Dublin 2, 6.30 p.m., €15
Tues. 25th: Niall Toner Band, release of single and video 'Myles Walter Keogh'

Sat. 6th July: 'Roots Freeway' returns to RTE Radio One, 1.00 p.m.
Fri. 26th: Niall Toner/ Solo/ Guest/ Gary Ferguson/ Artbank, Bunclody, 8.00 p.m., €15
Mon. 29th: Niall Toner and Richie Foley with Ray Barron and Hank Wedel, Cork (details TBA)

Sun. 4th Aug.: Niall Toner Band, St Enda's, Rathfarnham, Dublin, 3.00-5.00 p.m.; admission free
Sat. 10th: Niall Toner Band, Codys, Rahanna (private party)

Sat. 5th-Sun. 6th Oct.: Niall Toner, solo, Cork Folk Festival

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Westport 2019 in retrospect

Blouser's session, early Friday evening

Thanks to Des Butler for this report and photos:

Just got back on Monday afternoon from the 13th Westport Folk and Bluegrass Festival, and what a great weekend of music was to be had at Westport. Having attended all of the Westport festivals since its inception I had thought that it doesn't get better than last year's 12th festival, but this year it was exceptional.

The Friday night concert in Holy Trinity Church opened with a splendid performance from the Local Honeys from the US [above] who explained about and then sang some truly angst-filled ballads about the destruction caused by and then the demise of the coal mining industry in Kentucky. They were followed by Big Chimney Barn Dance [below], and they performed exactly as it said on the tin with some great old-time Appalachian dance tunes.


Saturday night's concert in the Town Hall Theatre was opened by a very talented and the youngest bluegrass band that I have ever seen perform, their ages ranging from 16 to 20 years. They were followed by A.J. Lee & Blue Summit [above, at the Wyatt Hotel on Friday night] who were for me 'band of the festival'. This band blew me away with their strong vocals and harmonies and great instrumentation. I couldn't wait to buy one of their CDs.

They were followed by McKay & Leigh [above, at the Clew Bay Hotel on Friday night], a duo who sing and play most of their own material and whose songs are full of wit, irony, and basic logic concerning the human condition, accompanied by some great guitar playing by both. A thoroughly enjoyable performance. The concert ended with the three bands taking the stage together for a rousing finale.

The Sunday night concert, which is Folk Night in Matt Molloy's Yard Bar, commenced with local talent giving great interpretations of songs of ancient lore, and the final official performance of the festival was given by Niall Hanna & Rachel McGarrity [above] performing some heart-rending ballads of unrequited love. A very talented duo on guitar and fiddle, and a truly enjoyable performance.

The entire weekend had some very talented bands playing in many hostelries throughout the town - Red Herring [above], the Rocky Top String Band, and Bluegrass 43, to name just a few. Add to all of that some great jamming sessions ably led by Tim Rogers, Bill Forster, Leo Hayes, Sean McGarr, and Dessie from Donegal on fiddle (to mention just some of the performers), and it all added up to a great bluegrass, old-time, and folk weekend.

The Lowly Strung, Sunday lunchtime show

All thanks for organising this extravaganza goes to Uri Kohen and his team who were working tirelessly throughout the weekend to ensure the smooth running and the excellent sound for our enjoyment.

BIB editor's note: The weekend's highlights for me (apart from meeting so many good people) were the old-time jam at the Clew Bay Hotel after the Friday concert; the astounding power and clarity of Bill Forster's Saratoga Star banjo; and the moving force of 'Amazing grace' sung by everyone in Holy Trinity church on Sunday morning, 'lined out' in traditional style by Linda Jean Stokley of the Local Honeys.

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The Cabin Session, Dundrum, 27 June 2019

Gerry Fitzpatrick, organiser of the Cabin Sessions series, announces the sixth Session of 2019:

We're back with you on Thursday 27 June. Special guests are: Sarah Buckley, Elva MacGowan. Hope to see you there!
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The Sessions are held on the last Thursday of every month at Uncle Tom's Cabin in Dundrum, south Dublin (not far from Dundrum Luas station, in the city direction). Shows run from 9.30 to 11.30 p.m. and admission is FREE. If you or someone you know would like to perform at the Cabin Sessions, let Gerry know by e-mail. The Sessions are particularly interested in featuring local musicians and singers.

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10 June 2019

The Brothers Blue (USA) in Dublin and Cork, late June 2019

Benny Haravitch (banjo), Matthew Sperber (guitar), and Charlie Coughlin (fiddle) are The Brothers Blue, an American folk trio from New York State, basing their sound in southern Appalachian old-time fiddle music, and incorporating country and bluegrass sounds as well. You can hear their music on their own YouTube channel. Towards the end of this month they'll be in Dublin and Cork in (their words) 'a half vacation/ half play-as-much-OT-music-in-Ireland-as-we-can for a week'.

The Brothers Blue (also on Facebook) will be at the venerable old-time jam in the Cobblestone on Saturday 22 June, and are playing a gig later that evening at the Patriots Inn, Kilmainham, Dublin 8. They’re in Dublin just for that weekend before proceeding to Cork, which has long been a stronghold of old-time and bluegrass music in this island. They can be contacted by e-mail.

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Nic Gareiss at An Chúirt Chruitireachta 2019

For fans of percussive dance, Nick Gareiss (USA) will be taking part in An Chúirt Chruitireachta (30 June-5 July), the annual international harp festival at An Grianán, Termonfechin, Co. Louth. Nick Gareiss will be involved in workshops on 3 and 4 July and an 8.00 p.m. concert on 4 July with harpist Maeve Gilchrist and the RTÉ Con Tempo Quartet.

In his appearances with This Is How We Fly, the freer rhythms of the group display his artistry very well, but perhaps at the expense of the excitement generated when he responds to traditional tunes - for instance, in these YouTube videos of him dancing to the fiddling of Brittany Haas and Bruce Molsky.

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4th Woodbine Bluegrass Jamboree - book now!

The Woodbine Bluegrass Jamboree Facebook gives a reminder that this year's Jamboree (12-13 July) is only five weeks away, so: 'If you have not booked already it's time to do so.'

Details of the programme, the lineup, the distinguished members of Alecia Nugent's band, and the schedule for her tour in Ireland (culminating in the Ardara Bluegrass Festival in Co. Donegal a week after Athy) appeared on the BIB on 11 April, 2 May, and 14 May. Tour dates are all on the BIB calendar.

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09 June 2019

Ophelia Trio open Irish tour in Dublin, 13, 16 June 2019 (update)

Ophelia Trio: (l-r) Gab, Luke, Lily

Thanks to Luke Coffey for this news:

Ophelia Trio is a musical project consisting of Luke Coffey (banjo, vocals), Lily Sheehan (guitar, vocals) and Gab Faure (fiddle). The music is a synergy of Breton folk, Irish traditional music, and old-time. It takes a different direction from the music of the members' other projects, to create something a bit different. The songs are written collaboratively and have an appreciation of nature and music ingrained in the lyrics.

Here is a video of a song recorded in Brittany, France.

We are playing in
  • The Blue Light Pub, Barnacullia, Co. Dublin, Thursday 13 June, 6.00-9.00 p.m. (free entry)
  • The Leeson Lounge, 148 Upper Leeson St., Dublin 4, Sunday 16 June, 6.00 p.m. (free entry)
BIB editor's note: Ophelia Trio performed at the Crossover Bluegrass and Old-Time Music Festival in England last month, having won a place in the showcase competition.

Update 11 June: NB - the Blue Light gig on 13 June runs from 6.00 to 9.00 p.m., instead of starting at 9.00 as first shown here.


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JigJam interviewed at John Hartford Memorial Festival

Tullamore's JigJam took part in the 'most laid-back festival in America' - the 9th Annual John Hartford Memorial Festival (29 May-1 June) at Bean Blossom, Indiana, USA, the location of Bill Monroe's Music Park & Campground.

The report by Dave Berry on Bluegrass Today includes many fine photos (one is of our old friends Special Consensus on stage), and eight audio recordings of interviews with artists taking part in the festival - and one of these is a two-minute clip of an interview with the members of JigJam, talking about their US tour and their favorite bands.

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Second single from Rick Faris

On 29 March Rick Faris, who was here as guitarist with the Special Consensus (USA) early this year, released a debut solo on Dark Shadow Recording - the title track of his coming album Breaking in lonesome.

On Friday (7 June) Rick's second single, 'If the Kansas River can', was released. It can be bought on the Dark Shadow website. A clip is also featured in John Lawless's post on Bluegrass Today.

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06 June 2019

10 String Symphony (USA) for Ireland, 6-17 May 2020

Music Network announce that as part of their 2019/20 touring programme, 10 String Symphony (Christian Sedelmyer and Rachel Baiman) will be touring here from 6 to 17 May 2020.

The duo (formed in 2012) took part in the recording of 'Squirrel Hunters' on the last Special Consensus album, the track that won the IBMA's 2018 Instrumental Recorded Performance award. They have at present a busy touring schedule with their own latest album, Generation frustration. A video of their 'I can't have you anymore' can be seen on their Music Network web page and on YouTube. Details of the Irish tour are to be released in August 2019.

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More old-time news

The latest issue (vol. 14, no. 11) of the Old Time Herald includes - among many other good things - its '2019 festival and camp guide', in which the only entry for Ireland is the traditional Willie Clancy Summer School in Co. Clare (6-14 July). No dates earlier than March are in the guide; so FOAOTMAD's Gainsborough festival in England, and the Annual Irish Old Time Appalachian Music Gathering, both in February, do not appear. In 2020 the 26th Gainsborough festival will begin on St Valentine's day (14 Feb.) and the 3rd Gathering a week later (21-23 Feb.).
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Murphy Henry's 'General store' column in the latest issue of Bluegrass Unlimited magazine reports the publication of Tommy Thompson: new-timey string band musician by Lew Stern, the author of the exemplary biography of Dwight Diller.

Lew Stern, together with David Brooks, has already published 'He could surely make a banjo talk' - 109 clawhammer banjo tabs by Tommy Thompson (£13.95 in paperback and £3.83 in Kindle from Amazon.co.uk). He is currently preparing a book on a Tommy Thompson bandmate, the late Bill Hicks (see the BIB for 26 Nov. 2018)

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