28 August 2020

Roscommon County Line from Mules & Men

On the eve of lockdown Dublin's Mules & Men released The John Keavney singles (see the BIB for 19 and 21 Mar.). Today, the band have released their full ten-track, 99.9%-original* album Roscommon County Line, with this announcement on their Facebook (bold type and links added by the BIB):

Here it is! We've been incubating this baby for almost a year, like so many other bands delaying the release until we can launch it with a gig but sure that's life.

We're very happy to share Roscommon County Line. It was a real pleasure to record and is our first record with Paddy and Niall and sure aren't they great.

You can support us here on bandcamp if you want, or listen for free on the usual digital distribution services. Funnily enough, we made a small typo when we were handing over our cash to Spotify and the album's called Roscommon Country Line. Haha, imagine, Roscommon, a country! Profound. They say they will amend it in a week or two.

Anyway, enjoy and share. Thanks from Luke, Paddy, Lily, and Niall, for all the great support we continually receive. We miss the gigs greatly, but at least we had great fun doing the streams over the summer and getting to connect with you again.

We want to dedicate this album to Aran Wooly Sheehan who we lost this year, who promoted 'havin' it' , and without whom there would be no Dublin Bluegrass Community, which still plays in his honour, with the same spirit.

Love & Rockets xxxx

*The track 'Disco' includes the Ronnie McCoury tune 'Noppit Hill breakdown'.

Mules & Men is Lily Sheehan (guitar, vocals), Niall Hughes (bass, vocals), Paddy Cummins (mandolin, vocals), and Luke Coffey (banjo, vocals). During lockdown they've been far from idle, turning out in June a punchy, bouncy, hard-driving, wide-ranging ninety-minute online set, and two weeks ago their version of the neglected gem 'Lost' by Buzz Busby.

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27 August 2020

Jens Kruger on Deering Live TONIGHT

Jens Kruger, 'one of the world’s most musically sophisticated and technically accomplished five‐string banjo players' (Happy Traum), whose close relationship with Deering Banjos includes helping to develop their finest instruments, will be playing and talking on tonight's interactive instalment of 'Deering Live' at the new time of 7.30 p.m. EDT on Deering's YouTube channel, where you can also watch last week's 90-minute instalment in which Jens discusses banjo strings with Jon Moody of GHS.

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26 August 2020

Balla Bluegrass Festival 2020 CANCELLED

Sad news from the organisers of the Balla Bluegrass Festival in Co. Mayo:

With continued uncertainty regarding the reopening of the pubs and the general future of the live music industry, the organisers of the Balla Bluegrass Festival had no choice but to call off this year's festival which was due to take place on the October Bank Holiday [23-26 Oct. 2020].

Like everyone else, we are very much looking forward for the reopening of the pubs and music venues and the return of domestic and international live music. We are looking forward to seeing all our friends back in Mayo in 2021.

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Support for Ron Kavana in hospital (Update)

Ron Kavana (second from left) with Tony Rice (extreme right) at MerleFest

Thanks to Ray Barron of Two Time Polka for this news; Ray writes:

Just heard today that a friend of mine, Ron Kavana, is unwell and is hospitalised at the moment. Some friends of his have set up a GoFundMe page at this link: https://gf.me/u/ytz6g2

You may not know Ron but he was in many great bands such as Juice on the Loose, Balham Alligators, Loudest Whisper, and the Alias Ron Kavana band.

He’s a great guitar and mandolin player with a special feel for gospel music. I’m sure lots of people who visit your blog will know him and may want to donate.

Donations for Ron can be made here.

Update 8 Sept.: Two-thirds of the €20,000 goal has so far been raised. Organiser Katie Theasby writes:

Blown away by your support so far, thank you so much. Quick update; Ron is out of hospital and is now staying with a friend until his home is ready to welcome him back. He has a long road ahead with dialysis but is so glad to be out.

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AOIFE plans Day of Action for 16 Sept. 2020

Thanks again to Mick Daly of Dunmore East, Co. Waterford, for a view of the Association Of Irish Festival Events (AOIFE) August 2020 report for the arts sector.

AOIFE's offices will reopen fully from 1 Sept., but the report presents the grim view that 'we as a society will be living in the limbo land of stage 3 with occasional visits back to stage 2 for the autumn, winter, spring ahead [...] we wlll be inhabiting this twilight world of living cheek by jowl in a pandemic for a period of two to three years.'

AOIFE asks everyone concerned with this sector to share in a Day of Action, planned for 16 September.

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Nechville Musical Products support We Banjo 3 event

This coming Saturday (29 Aug.) Galway's We Banjo 3, originators of 'Celtgrass', will be holding 'Follow the Light', their 'virtual festival experience celebrating Irish traditions', in which they will be joined by Gaelic Storm, Sharon Shannon, Nathan Carter and the East Pointers, with non-music festival features throughout the programme (see the BIB for 10 Aug.).

Nechville Musical Products, originators of the most innovative developments in banjo construction in the past fifty years (and makers of Enda Scahill's recent custom-built instrument) are supporting the event by offering two free tickets to persons on their mailing list.

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25 August 2020

Danny Burns signs with Bonfire Music Group

The Bonfire Music Group in Nashville, TN, announce that Danny Burns (right), raised in Co. Donegal, has signed with them to bring out his sophomore album early next year, with a first single - 'Many moons ago', featuring Sarah Jarosz - to be released this coming September. This follows his successful and critically-acclaimed debut album North country (2019). More details are on the Bonfire press release.

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Jack Lawrence interviewed by Darin and Brooke Aldridge

Jack Lawrence with John Nyhan at the Meeting Place, Midleton, Co. Cork: 2006?

Thanks to Eilis Boland of Lonesome Highway for making us aware of a fascinating hour-long interview in the 'Carolina Sessions' series conducted by Darin and Brooke Aldridge (headliners at the 2018 Omagh festival). Their guest last week was Jack Lawrence, probably best known as musical partner to Doc Watson for a quarter-century; but as the interview shows, this was just one part of the long, varied, eventful career of a musician from one of the richest source areas of bluegrass. Eilis writes:

He talks about his personal history of bluegrass music and characters in NC from his childhood in the '50s right up to now. Great anecdotes etc. Enjoy!

You can enjoy the interview on YouTube.

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Dunmore East Festival obliged to postpone to 2021

Thanks and condolences to Mick Daly, organiser of the Dunmore East Bluegrass Festival, Co. Waterford, for the sad news that this year's festival, which it was hoped would be held this coming weekend (29-30 Aug.), has had to be cancelled after constant efforts by Mick and his team to make an event possible in one format or another. Mick writes:

You will understand that we had to pull the mini bluegrass festival because of the latest directives. Plan D was to have a 100-people event outdoors. I would like to thank all the acts that were to play and hung in there with all the changes over the summer. We had hoped that the situation would improve over the summer, but alas...

Roll on 27/ 28/ 29 August 2021, and a big thank you to all our Dunmore East supporters.

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24 August 2020

News from Gold Tone


Gold Tone Musical Instruments announce in their latest e-newsletter that select B-stock 25"-scale fretted Microbasses are available at 50% off retail price. A complete list of B-list stock is here. Gold Tone also announce that they are now selling the highly regarded Rickard Cyclone 10:1 geared 5-string banjo tuners at $223.70 for a set of five in nickel or gold finish.

Wayne Rogers, owner of Gold Tone, and some of the company's instrument makers recently experimented with cutting down the weight of a 5-string, and achieved encouraging results which may result in a production model weighing five pounds (2.268 kg). A brief video of the test model being played, with details of its components, is here.

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Tom Mindte to be honoured by DC Bluegrass Union, 26 Aug. 2020

Thanks to Jamie Daly of the Constituents band of Arlington, VA, who were playing over here last year (and see the BIB for 20 Mar. 2019), for the news that the DC Bluegrass Union (the august association for bluegrass in the region of the US capital) will present their annual Washington Monument Award this year to Tom Mindte. The DCBU announcement says (links added by BIB):

Tom Mindte has many bluegrass identities, including performing musician and bandleader, audio engineer, and record label owner. Our bluegrass music community for many years has enjoyed the great benefit of all his work. We see his influence especially through the successful studio operation of his Patuxent Music label, whose catalogue features traditionalists and innovators alike, with important attention to younger artists. Thank you, Tom!

Tom is known in Ireland for several memorable visits, festival performances, and tours with his Patuxent Partners band, who in past years have featured such rising young fiddlers as Patrick McAvinue, Nate Leath, and Daniel Greeson. The presentation will be made live online this coming Wednesday (26 Aug.) on the DCBU Facebook at 8.00-9.00 p.m. EDT. Congratulations to Tom, and a big hand to the DCBU for making the award.

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Redon and Gómez, Una Más - music and tab

Earlier this year two of the finest 5-string banjo players in Europe - both of whom have performed more than once in Ireland - released Una Más, a ten-track album of banjo duets, chiefly original compositions. Jean Marie Redon was one of the players listed in Tony Trischka & Pete Wernick, Masters of the 5-string banjo (1988); it's a safe bet that Lluís Gómez would be there if the book were ever updated, and Trischka and Wernick have both warmly endorsed the album.

Jean Marie Redon has played at the Omagh and Dunmore East festivals as a member of the fine French band Blue Railroad Train, and Lluís Gómez and his Barcelona Bluegrass Band established themselves as audience favourites at successive Johnny Keenan Banjo Festivals. Two years ago Lluís interviewed Jean Marie for the August 2018 issue of Banjo News Letter. On Una Más they are accompanied by leading European musicians, including Henrich Novak (dobro) and Jesper Rübner-Petersen (mandolin).

The release of the album (which can be heard and bought on BandCamp) was featured on Bluegrass Today on 11 Mar. 2020; the publication of a banjo tab book (available via Lluís's website) was also featured on BT (26 May).

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21 August 2020

Why is this man smiling?

Russell 'Russ' Carson from central Pennsylvania has been breathing in old-time and bluegrass music since birth, has learned from master musicians, and has played professional bluegrass banjo with Gold Heart, with Audie Blaylock & Redline, and subsequently to the present with Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky Thunder, one of the most high-profile banjo positions anyone can occupy.

His father Glenn plays old-time fiddle and banjo and builds very high-quality instruments (reviews of his work can be seen on Banjo Hangout), and Russ often plays duets with him on Russ's '81crowe' YouTube channel.

Russ has posted today a twenty-minute video, 'My father's story: a conversation with Glenn Carson', in which one of the first things we learn is that Glenn's father's parents were Irish - his grandmother from Co. Cavan, and his grandfather from Co. Antrim, 'just a few miles from the Giant's Causeway and the Bushmills factory' - while his mother's grandfather came from Scotland. Worth watching and listening to, up to the very last second. (Look out for the doughnut-shaped fiddle at 10:15.) A too-brief Vimeo on Glenn's luthiery, together with some of his own fine banjo-playing, is here.
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Another luthier, Dan Drabek, has just contributed to Banjo Hangout a wealth of photos of his latest frailing banjo, 'The Buckdancer', a masterpiece of craftsmanship, artistic imagination, and humour - practically every detail in it is a visual pun in one way or another. Essential viewing for banjo nerds who need to lighten up, in two parts: 1 and 2.

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For your listening pleasure...

L-r: 'Cousin' Charlie Lowman, Mary Rachel Nalley-Norris, 
Kody Norris, Josiah Tyree

The Kody Norris Show (USA), who (in a happier world) would have been entertaining us at the top of the bill at Westport in June, have just released 'Love bug', the first single from their forthcoming Rebel album All suited up - and it has all the bounce and pep of Jimmy Martin in his 'up' mood. The official video can be watched here on the Rebel Records YouTube channel, and via a link on the Rebel press release. Teasers can be seen on the video page of the band's Facebook.

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Linda Lay signs with Mountain Fever Records

Many bluegrass fans in Ireland, especially in the north-west, will remember the performances by Linda Lay and Appalachian Trail (USA) as highlights of more than one of the Bluegrass Weekends directed by Frank Galligan as part of the Maiden City Festivals in Derry. Linda (left), 'one of the best kept secrets among bluegrass vocalists', gave her powerful, expressive singing to a band that was a pleasure to watch as well as hear.

Mountain Fever Records now announce that Linda has joined their roster of artists and is recording new material, with a single due for release on 1 September 2020 and an album in preparation. More detail is given by John Lawless on Bluegrass Today, together with two videos of Linda and her husband David on stage with their band Springfield Exit.

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20 August 2020

Steve Gulley, 20 Sept. 1962-18 Aug. 2020

(photo: Dean Hoffmeyer)

The BIB learns with great regret of the death of Steve Gulley (shown above with guitar and his band New Pinnacle) from pancreatic cancer. The very high regard in which he was held by those who knew him is shown by the tributes from Phil Leadbetter, Tim Stafford, Alan Bibey, and others in David Morris's feature on Bluegrass Today. See also this message from the Mountain Home Music Company and John Lawless's 'Some further thoughts on the passing of Steve Gulley'.

Steve Gulley and other founder members of Mountain Heart had left the band before it took part in one of the Johnny Keenan Banjo Festivals in Longford, but he was later on stage with Dale Ann Bradley as headliners at Omagh. As far as the BIB is aware, this remains, regrettably, his only time before audiences in Ireland.

Update 21 Aug.: Arrangements for the funeral (Sun. 23 Aug.) are given here by Richard Thompson.

Update 22 Aug.: Pinecastle Records announce that Phil Leadbetter has made all the proceeds from a forthcoming record over to Steve Gulley's family. More details, and a link to download the song, are on the Pinecastle press release.

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The Steve Martin Banjo Prize

Bluegrass Today reports that the Steve Martin Prize for Excellence in Banjo & Bluegrass, after a decade of annual awards, will be thoroughly reorganised in its administrative and award structure, in its title, and in its scope.

Steve Martin will remain as chairman emeritus, with the Freshgrass Foundation and the Compass Records group as partners with seats on the board. A full list of board members is given on Bluegrass Today. The annual award has been $50,000 up to now; this year it will be divided between five banjo-players, in recognition of 2020's difficulties. In future, a grant of $25,000 will be given to one or more players each year.

And in future, its title will be simply 'The Steve Martin Banjo Prize'. Bluegrass Today reports: '... it will no longer be limited to bluegrass and the five string. Banjo players in any style are eligible, and the board intends to honor important contributors from all areas of banjodom.' The prize sculpture by Eric Fischl is shown above.

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19 August 2020

GHS to supply Deering strings

Deering Banjos announce that from now on, the complete range of strings sold under the Deering name will be supplied by GHS, with new foil packaging and GHS's Nitro-Pack system. An introductory video can be seen on the Deering blog and YouTube. GHS have been supplying their strings to Deering's production line since early this year.

Tomorrow night (Thurs. 20 Aug.) you can watch Jens Kruger and John Moody of GHS talk about strings and answer questions from 6.00 p.m. EDT on Deering's YouTube channel. Jens Kruger comments: 'For an authentic bluegrass sound, the Vintage Light set [9.5, 11, 12, 20w, 9.5] will provide the true feel and tone of the good old days. Clean attack, plenty of volume, distinct note separation, as well as excellent properties for sliding and bending.'

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Greg Blake (USA) signs with Turnberry Records

Thanks to John Nyhan, Greg Blake (USA) is well known to bluegrass fans in Ireland from successive tours, whether solo, with his own Greg Blake Band, or as the powerful lead singer and guitar player of Jeff Scroggins & Colorado - and these are only some of the combinations in which he plays.

The Bluegrass Standard announces today that Greg has now signed on for a two-record deal with its record label division, Turnberry Records, which is headed by Jeff Brown, leader of the hardcore band Jeff Brown & Still Lonesome. The press release has not yet appeared on the web, but both parties seem very happy with the deal. Greg's first release with Turnberry is planned as a solo record, with the second to be with his own band.

Greg launched a Kickstarter campaign at the end of last month, with the aim of developing the songwriting side of his career. Click the link to pledge your support for the campaign.

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Old-time camping-and-picking weekend in England, 18-20 Sept. 2020

For those who are keen enough to travel to the neighbouring island for an old-time camping-and-picking weekend - or who are even just interested in knowing that such things are being held - the BIB reports this item from the FOAOTMAD news blog:

There is an extra camping and picking weekend being added to our calendar at our normal camp site, Croft Farm Water Park, Tewkesbury [Gloucestershire], from Friday 18 until Sunday 20 September 2020. It's a DIY weekend but booking is essential which, as normal, should be done through Croft Farm. Details and phone numbers for the site can be found either on the FOAOTMAD website or the Croft Farm Water Park website.

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18 August 2020

Cup O' Joe tribute to New Grass Revival

John Lawless posted yesterday on Bluegrass Today news of Co. Armagh's Cup O' Joe, who have celebrated the induction of New Grass Revival into the Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame by recording a video of the Revival's 'Metric lips', recreating the original breaks. The video can be seen on the band's Facebook as well as on Bluegrass Today.

The photo (above left), showing them appropriately dressed for a Revival tribute, also comes from Facebook. David Benedict, mandolinist of Boston's Mile Twelve, is third from left and husband of Tabitha (extreme right). John Lawless reports that Tabitha has now been granted a US green card, entitling her to permanent residence in the States.

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17 August 2020

Steep Canyon Rangers: Arm in arm for release in October

North Carolina's Steep Canyon Rangers were in Dublin in March as part of the Steve Martin & Martin Short comedy show, but had the tour cut short by the pandemic before the scheduled show in Belfast. They thank the generosity of their patrons (including those on Patreon) for helping them through the last few months.

Meanwhile they've been playing drive-in concerts and recording their new eleven-track album, Arm in arm, scheduled for release on 16 October, which can be pre-ordered here. A brief warning: it includes electricity and drums (an official video of track 4, 'Every river', is on YouTube). More details are on their e-newsletter.

Woody Platt, the Steeps' lead singer and guitarist, can be seen in a more traditional setting, in a recent video by the fine traditional NC band Carolina Blue, on YouTube and on Bluegrass Today.

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14 August 2020

Alan Lomax, the banjo, and bluegrass (CORRECTION)

The BIB editor writes:

[Update 18 Aug.: My face is red after finding the amount of correction needed in this post, so red will be used below where the necessary changes have been made.]

Alan Lomax (1915-2002; see also here) was by any standards an outstanding ethnomusicologist, an endlessly energetic folk-music collector, and a prolific activist in related fields, whose influence was felt throughout the world. It is no detraction from his stature to say that his enthusiasms at times overcame his judgment.

His film Appalachian journey (1991) can be seen on YouTube. Just over halfway through, Tommy Jarrell (1901-85) is shown playing a fretless banjo. Lomax comments at 31:08: 'This was of course an instrument of African origin, the banjo, and was given by white musicians the fifth string, so that there was a constant high, pinging drone there that was put in between every, every beat.'

Two things can be said for this statement: first, that it gives a nod to the belief, still common last century, that the thumb string was added by Joel Sweeney, without committing to naming him as its inventor; secondly, that it does actually offer a reason, right or wrong, for adding this odd short string. But otherwise, banjo historians would now generally agree that the thumb string was inherited from the banjo's African ancestors, and was there before Sweeney had anything to do with the instrument.

In the August 2020 iaaue of Banjo News Letter, Bill Evans - a supreme player as well as a banjo historian and analyst of banjo music - looks at the tune 'Altamont', recorded in the 1940s by the black banjo-player Murphy Gribble, and later released on a Rounder album. Evans's judgment is: 'The parallels between Gribble’s approach, which he could have developed as early as the 1920’s [sic], and Scruggs-style technique is the revelation of this recording.' It's a fine piece; it sounds, nonetheless, to my ears like an old-time tune rather than anything Scruggs ever played. The double-C tuning sets it further apart from mainstream bluegrass.*

The link with Alan Lomax comes...

[At this point my original post went astray. The links at the end of Bill Evans's article begin with one headed: 'John [sic] Lomax letter about Murphy Gribble'. It leads to two student posts on the blog 'Music 345: Race, identity and representation in American music'. The earlier post, Teiana Nakano's Feb. 2018 post 'Making black influence in bluegrass visible', quotes from a letter to Joseph Hickerson at the Library of Congress about Murphy Gribble's playing: 'If you listen carefully… you will hear the steady 3,3,2 complex measure of so-called Bluegrass. From before Earl Scruggs and his mentors were born.'

Nakano, attributing this letter to Alan Lomax, comments: 'Here, Lomax clearly states the contradiction within the history of bluegrass. Earl Scruggs is the one credited with this core sonic marker of bluegrass, yet Lomax has recorded, physical proof that it existed before him.' The rest of my own post was largely concerned with pointing out the holes in these statements.

I had, however, failed to check the original document online. A check showed that the letter - three closely-typed pages with MS additions, dated 20 July 1977 - was not from John or Alan Lomax, but from Robert Stuart 'Stu' Jamieson. (Helena Webster, in her Sept. 2019 post 'Bluegrass and Black Appalachian banjo', gives the correct attribution, but dates the letter as 'about 1978'.)

Jamieson, as well as being a folk music collector, was a dedicated banjo-player and student of traditional banjo techniques - his revivalist string band, 'Stu Jamieson's Boys', contributed three tracks to the 1965 compilation album String band project (Elektra EKS-292) - and his remarks about Murphy Gribble's playing deserve full attention, as regards both its unique features and what might be inferred from it about undocumented black banjo traditions.

I don't accept Nakano's view that 'the steady 3,3,2 complex measure' is a 'core sonic marker of bluegrass'; it's the basic roll in the setting of 'Cindy' that begins the bluegrass section of Pete Seeger's How to play the 5-string banjo, and consequently could be heard in the playing of many learners, but is much less important in the music of Scruggs himself. In any case, Jamieson makes clear that while Gribble's picking greatly resembled the 'motions' of a bluegrass player, what came out was not in the 'language' of bluegrass.]

Nakano writes: 'Listening to other performances by Murphy Gribble and his other band members, the similarity with bluegrass is undeniable', and offers as illustration their recording of 'Pateroller'll catch you' (YouTube). Unfortunately, from this example the similarity is very clearly deniable. Gribble, York, and Lusk were a fine old-time string band, full of vitality, but do not sound like any bluegrass band I (or, I'll bet, you) ever heard.

Why are they not mentioned in bluegrass history? For the same reason that the white musician J.C. Sutphin isn't mentioned; they didn't play bluegrass. Sutphin had three tracks on what has since been considered the 'first bluegrass album', now reissued as American banjo: three-finger and Scruggs style - 'Don't let your deal go down', 'Under the double eagle', and 'I don't love nobody'; but all his style has in common with bluegrass is picking with thumb and two fingers.

Another theme of Nakano's paper is that 'scholars and historians' (Neil Rosenberg is singled out several times) 'have contributed [to] the erasure of black history in bluegrass'. This may be considered in a later BIB post. Meanwhile, I regret having charged Alan Lomax with words he did not write, and of which I did not at the time understand the context.

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*PS (19 Aug.): Bill Evans's playing of 'Altamont' can be seen and heard on YouTube.

© Richard Hawkins

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6th Virtual Red Hat Club meeting TONIGHT

Paul and Anne McEvoy, organisers of the Red Hat Acoustic Music Club, announce:

Hi, all Red Hatters,

Hope you are all keeping well. Would you believe this is our 6th Red Hat Virtual? We know you can't make it in body, so let's make it in spirit!


In normal times 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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13 August 2020

More news of past visitors

Alecia Nugent (who was here last summer with her band for a tour that included the Ardara Bluegrass Festival and the last Woodbine Bluegrass Event at Athy, Co. Kildare) will release next month a country album, The old side of town, which includes as a bonus track a bluegrass version of her song 'They don't make 'em like my daddy anymore'. This was released as a single two weeks ago, and can be heard on her website and on John Lawless's feature on Bluegrass Today.
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The Mountain Home Music Company announce the release of 'Leave it at the gate', a new single by Chris Jones & the Night Drivers. The song, written by Chris and the former Night Drivers bassist Jon Weisberger, celebrates having a life outside your job; it can be heard through links on the press release and the band's website, and also on Bluegrass Today.
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In addition, Mountain Home released a few days ago a single by the Night Drivers' mandolinist Mark Stoffel (on the right in the band photo above) - the instrumental 'Shadowbands', from his forthcoming album Coffee & cake, which has some intriguing titles (see the press release). The album can now be pre-ordered; the single can be heard here.
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Fans of Mary 'Mean Mary' James will be glad to know that an hour-long solo video concert by her can be seen on the Deering blog (she plays a Deering Midnight Special banjo) and on YouTube. Her 'Listen to the mockingbird', by the way, is not the familiar old tune but a song charged with emotion. The video was shot by Johnny Giles for the Black Hawk Folk Society in Wisconsin. There are not many compelling solo singers with a highly accomplished three-finger banjo technique; Mean Mary is one.
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Fast Track (right), including Ron Spears on bass and Jesse Brock on mandolin, are releasing now 'Life's highway', a single from their debut album which is scheduled to appear on 11 September. It's a hard-core bluegrass song, originally recorded decades ago by Bobby Smith & the Boys from Shiloh, and this 'new' band of seasoned campaigners in bluegrass deliver it with the strength it deserves. More details are on the Engelhardt Music Group press release.

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12 August 2020

A treasury of bluegrass stories

Thw BIB has mentioned a few times in the past some outstanding interviews conducted by radio presenter Katy Daley with notable people in the blugrass world. We're therefore delighted to learn from Bluegrass Today that the interviews can be heard (or will be accessible) in podcast form on the website Bluegrass Stories, which also carries many performance videos featuring the artists interviewed. The list includes many artists who have played in Ireland: Greg Cahill, Missy Raines, Tom Mindte, Jimmy Gaudreau, Joe Newberry, Patrick McAvinue, Lynn Morris & Marshall Wilborn, Jerry Douglas, Rob Ickes, Lisa & Wally Hughes...

Last night the first of three instalments of Ben Eldridge, banjo player with the original Seldom Scene, was launched. Bluegrass Stories is a real treasury of bluegrass history and more - the personal stories of bluegrass people. Strongly recommended for BIB readers.

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10 August 2020

News from Kate Lissauer

Kate Lissauer (left), who brought her Buffalo Gals band (GB) to the 28th Bluegrass Omagh Music Festival last autumn, sends her greetings and announces:

On Saturday 15 August at 7.00 p.m. Jenny Read (one of our amazing Buffalo Gals Stampede dancers) and I will be live on stage as part of the Merlin Theatre (Frome, Somerset) outdoor summer festival; a short concert packed with the best of traditional and original Appalachian music and percussive dance.

This is a fundraiser gig for the theatre and the artists. Due to social distancing the audience will be limited to sixty people, and tickets (£10.50) should be booked online. Kate also draws attention to one of her most recent projects, Sonic Silents, in which she, Leon Hunt, and Jason Titley bring live accompaniment to early 1920s and '30s Hollywood silent Wild West shorts. A sample can be seen here.

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Many happy returns!

A belated 'Many happy returns!' and congratulations to Alec Somerville, now of Co. Donegal, who had his ninetieth birthday earlier this year and looks game for another ninety. Alec's distinguished careers in music and the day job are outlined in the amply illustrated four-page interview with him by William Duddy in issue no. 97 (spring 2019) of the FOAOTMAD magazine Old Time News. It's enough to say that in his time he has probably sold more records, owned more banjos, and known more US pickers than anyone else on the old-time scene here.

The photo above, taken this month, shows Alec in a home-made tee shirt; the image depicts him with Edwin 'Ed' Haggard, musician and banjo collector of Winchester, Kentucky. Alec describes him as 'One of my oldest friends in the mountains. We traded a bit and talked a lot. I eventually sold him, for a client, my Orpheum no. 2, a banjo by Rettburg & Lange (later made Paramount) with a 12 1/8" pot, an archtop, and a 28" scale. Ed [...] was a standout.'

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Virtual Winfield, and 'Follow the Light' with We Banjo 3 (update)


Rex Flottman of the Walnut Valley Festival, home to the national instrument championships and held annually since 1972 at Winfield, Kansas, announces that this year a Virtual Walnut Valley Festival will be held from 12 to 20 September, coupled with a fundraising campaign.

Events begin with a weekend (12-13 Sept.) of workshops and masterclasses via Zoom, followed by a special evening concert on 16 Sept. devoted to 'Maintaining a sense of community in COVID-19); a special 'Champions showcase' concert on 17 Sept., with last year's instrument contest winners performing; a new songwriters' showcase concert on 18 Sept.; and on 19-20 Sept. streaming concerts by artists who had been scheduled to play live at Winfield this year. Sixty percent of funds raised will be split equally between all artists in the lineup; the remaining forty percent will help to pay for production costs of this year's event and to prepare for the 49th Walnut Valley Festival in 2021.

Update 11 Aug.: It has been announced that MerleFest will be held next year on the same weekend as the Walnut Valley Festival.
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Galway's We Banjo 3, originators of 'Celtgrass', announce in their latest e-newsletter an invitation to 'Follow the Light', described as:

A virtual festival experience celebrating Irish traditions [...] Harnessing the unique potential of the shared live music experience in a virtual setting, Follow the Light brings artists and fans together for an entertaining, engaging and authentic celebration of community. Hosted with We Banjo 3’s signature heart and humor, the immersive live event weaves in musical performances by WB3, Gaelic Storm, Sharon Shannon, Nathan Carter and the East Pointers, with non-music festival features throughout the program.

Full details are on the band's website.

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07 August 2020

Deering present innovative banjo masters online

In the last ten days, the Deering Banjo Company has presented online three masters of innovative banjo playing. In their 'Deering Live' series, Tony Trischka appeared on 30 July for 85 minutes, and Ryan Cavanaugh for 95 minutes on 6 August. On a more modest scale - six minutes - tonight (7 Aug.) Hank Smith demonstrates how to take the Earl Scruggs classic 'Ground speed' and develop a break in melodic style. Hank's lesson can be seen on YouTube and on the Deering Banjos blog.

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Oldtime Central August newsletter

The editors of Oldtime Central (OTC) report in their latest e-newsletter that their first (online) festival, The Hoot, held last weekend (24-26 July), was a huge success. Videos of the concerts can be seen on the OTC YouTube channel:

Friday night concerts
Featuring Emily Schaad, Brad Kolodner, Seth Shumate, and Rachel Eddy

Saturday night concerts
Featuring Craig Judelman, Tricia Spencer and Howard Rains, Jake Blount, and David Bragger and Susan Platz

The newsletter also lists 'five oldtime-related things across the internet that you should probably know about!', one of which is a feature on Jake Blount: 'Breaking down the legacy of race in traditional music in America', on the NPR website.

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06 August 2020

BU - August 2020 (update)

The latest issue of Bluegrass Unlimited contains a lot that has special significance for the bluegrass fan in Ireland. The cover story by Derek Halsey is about Laurie Lewis (headliner at Omagh an incredible twenty years ago). Bob Webster writes a major feature on Rick Faris, best known here as mandolinist/ guitarist and lead singer with the Special Consensus but with the foundations laid for a major career as songwriter, recording artist, and luthier. Professor Jack Bernhardt, in charge of the McAuley Lectures series at many Omagh festivals, writes on Charles Pettee, who played and instructed at Omagh several times.

Richard D. Smith gives a Highlight Review to the latest album by award-winning Australian artist Kristy Cox, who toured here in May 2019, should have been here in May 2020, and will be here in May 2021. (The review section of the BU website is still linked to the July reviews, so keep looking for when the August reviews appear.) Nancy Cardwell contributes two features, one on celebrated songwriter/ activist Si Kahn (see Si's latest newsletter here) and one on Z Mandolins, made of carbon fibre.

Mother goes to the Care Home

This month it will be three years since the death of Peter V. Kuykendall, the moving spirit of BU (and a great deal else) throughout its history. Two days ago the Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame & Museum in Owensboro, KY, announced that it has acquired BU and will continue to publish the Mother of Bluegrass Magazines, with the Nov. 2020 issue being the first to appear under its auspices. The press release has some nice photos, and to judge by John Lawless's feature on Bluegrass Today everyone concerned seems very happy with the arrangement.

Update 27 Aug.: John Lawless reports on Bluegrass Today that Dan Miller, formerly editor of Flatpicking Guitar Magazine, will be the new editor of Bluegrass Unlimited as from the Nov. 2020 issue.

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Tabitha Agnew Benedict nominated for two IBMA awards

The International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA) announced last Friday the names of nominees for this year's Industry and Momentum awards, which will be presented during IBMA’s Virtual World of Bluegrass (28 Sept.-3 Oct. 2020).

As fans of Co. Armagh's Cup O' Joe will already know, Tabitha Agnew Benedict is nominated for two Momentum awards in her own right - Vocalist and Instrumentalist - and one of her 'other' bands, the UK's Midnight Skyracer, is nominated in the Band category.

Three of the other four bands nominated have played recently in Ireland, and there are familiar names elsewhere among the nominees, including Mike Armistead (Tennessee Mafia Jug Band, Leroy Troy's Hillbilly Trio) for the Graphic Designer award, and Kris Truelsen (Bill & the Belles) for Industry Involvement. More details are in the IBMA press release.


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05 August 2020

Nu-Blu present 'Bluegrass Ridge' from Dublin Bay this month

Carolyn and Daniel Routh of Nu-Blu

On 26 December 2019 the BIB reported that the dynamic Nu-Blu from Siler City, NC, who were on tour here in October in a trio configuration, would be back in autumn 2020 - this time as hosts, guides, and entertainers for visitors to Ireland as part of the Encounter Ireland Tours programme, in which the Deering Banjo Company are involved.

The current pandemic has ruled out the project for this year, but Nu-Blu (also on Facebook) will be giving concerts and workshops to Encounter Ireland tourists in Sept. 2021, which will give not more than twenty fans ' the perfect chance to explore one of the most intriguing cultures in the world'. And in the meantime, they have begun this week (starting 3 Aug.) a four-week series of episodes of their 'Bluegrass Ridge' show, hosting it from Dublin Bay. Full details are here.

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