30 November 2020

Baltimore Fiddle Fair presents 'The 12 days of Christmas'

The Baltimore Fiddle Fair in Baltimore, Co. Cork, had, like nearly all other events, to replace its normal festival with online events this year - and the experience has been put to good use. The Fiddle Fair now announces:

As we reach the end of this year like no other, we thought it would be nice to bring some Fiddle Fair joy into your homes this Christmas. We have asked some of our favourite musicians, from Ireland and around the world, to record twelve exclusive concerts for a very special virtual festival and we’re sure you'll agree the lineup is pretty spectacular.

Our musicians welcome us into their homes to share their Christmas memories and talk about what the season means to them. As well as the chance to listen to some truly great music, this is also your chance to support our festival, and especially our wonderful artists who have had such a tough year in 2020.


For booking and information, see the Fiddle Fair website. It's worth a visit just to see the illustrations the Fair has provided for each of the twelve days; the BIB's favourite is the Three French Hens.

Update 22 Dec.: A 'Twelve days of Christmas' programme is also being presented by the Hawk's Well Theatre in Sligo town.

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Applications open for Whelan's 'Ones to Watch' Festival 2021

Whelan's of Wexford St., Dublin 2, announce that their 'Ones to Watch' festival

... returns this January 2021 as - you guessed it - a virtual event. It will be streamed for free online to give you the opportunity to check out all the up and coming talent that’s been bubbling up during lockdown.

While Whelan’s remains closed and live music is at a standstill, we’ve had plenty of time to plan the next step. We’ve invested in broadcast equipment that will allow us to stream gigs online, to bridge the gap until we can all be together again, and to give new artists an opportunity to perform. We’re asking all up and coming acts that would like to play to APPLY NOW. This year's event will be limited so don’t delay.


Whelan's present the event in association with Hop House 13 and the Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media.

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27 November 2020

Kristy Cox (AUS) nominated for three Golden Guitar awards

Mountain Fever Records (USA) announce that 'Aussie bluegrass queen' Kristy Cox (right) has received three nominations for the 2021 Golden Guitar Awards - for her personally as Female Artist of the Year, for her album No headlights as Traditional Album of the Year, and for the track on the album featuring her with Tommy Emmanuel for Bluegrass Recording of the Year. The awards are usually made at the annual Tamworth Festival, which will not be possible in 2021 because of the pandemic, so the ceremony will take place online on 23 Jan. 2021.

Kristy and her band toured in Ireland in May 2019 and were scheduled to be back again this year as part of a European tour, both tours being organised by the mygrassisblue.com team in Co. Wicklow, but the latter tour of course has had to be postponed. Further details are in the Mountain Fever press release.

Update 28 Nov.: Still more detail can be found in John Lawless's feature on Bluegrass Today.

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For fiddlers, but not exclusively

On 29 June the BIB mentioned the release of The John Hartford fiddle tune project, volume 1, a seventeen-track album drawn from the 2019 publication of 176 original fiddle tunes composed by John Hartford (1937-2001). All seventeen tracks can now be heard on the John Hartford YouTube channel. Thanks to Hearth Music for a reminder that Jordan Tice (see the BIB for 29 Sept.) is the guitarist on two of them, 'Long white road' and 'Little country town'. Links to these are on this Hearth Music press release.

The selection illustrates the breadth of Hartford's knowledge of American fiddle music, and while the tunes will be of immediate appeal to fiddlers, mandolin-, banjo-, and guitar-players should also enjoy working on them. The album is one of five nominated for Best Bluegrass Album in the coming Grammy awards. The others are
For bluegrass-related nominees in the Best Americana Album category, see Bluegrass Today.

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25 November 2020

The Randy Wood FeatherLite banjo

The BIB editor writes:

For any bluegrass banjo player who has ever wished that the lovely thing wasn't quite so heavy (or has even just wondered how it would feel to play a banjo that made no more physical demands than a classical guitar), there's good news: luthiers are addressing the problem, and one of the best solutions so far is the Randy Wood FeatherLite Performance Banjo. 'Performance' in the name is important: it implies that the banjo both sounds and looks like a bluegrass banjo should.

Randy Wood announces in his latest e-newsletter that he is currently accepting orders for his next batch of FeatherLite banjos. Mahogany models start at $3495 (with hard case); the curly maple model starts at $3995. Contact his store (+1-912-748-1930) for more details.

The newsletter also includes links to videos of four musicians playing Featherlites at professional level - and one of them is a video by John Watson of Ballinamallard, Co. Fermanagh, taken when the fine Virginia band East of Monroe were touring Ireland in April 2018, with Terry Wittenberg on banjo.

The 2018 photo (above, from Facebook) shows an early model of the FeatherLite, fitted with the optional Kavanjo pickup system.  As well as being one of the most experienced and respected luthiers and repairmen in the bluegrass world, Randy Wood operates Randy's Pickin' Parlor in Bloomingdale, GA.

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World Virtual Bluegrass Banjo Contest results

Steve Kaufman announces the results of the World Virtual Bluegrass Banjo Contest, part of the series of World Virtual Acoustic Contests:

We wrapped up the World Virtual Bluegrass Banjo Contest last weekend and it was a blast.

1st place and $500 went to David Benda of the Czech Republic
2nd place and $250 - Steve Louvat from Belgium
3rd place and $100 - Traj Wellington of TN
4th place - Max Allard of IL
5th place - Frank Evans of TN

This was an exciting contest. You can see it all as it appeared LIVE. We had a few videos hang up, so speed through them to see the finalists. Congratulations to all the contestants from around the world and especially to those top five.

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Hal Ketchum

Thanks to Des Butler for this sad news:

The death has occured on 23 Nov. of Hal Ketchum [right] at 67 years of age from complications of the dementia he has been suffering with for the past number of years.

Hal Michael Ketchum was an American country music artist. He released eleven studio albums since 1986, including nine for divisions of Curb Records. Ketchum's 1991 album Past the point of rescue was his most commercially successful, having been certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America. The title song was written by our own Mick Hanly.

Ketchum toured until early 2019, when his wife revealed that his dementia had progressed to the point where it was no longer possible for him to perform. This was the second time he'd retired, having done so in 2008 before returning to the studio and stage in 2014. It was rumored that he had to learn how to play guitar again. Ketchum's battle with Alzheimer's/dementia was a quiet one until he publicly announced he was finally done in 2019.

Hal Ketchum 1953-2020 RIP

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24 November 2020

Jody Stecher on music

The latest episode in Dave Berry's 'California report' series on Bluegrass Today is 'Jody Stecher discusses his new release and a lot more', and 'a lot more' are the operative words. This is a major interview with an outstanding multi-instrumentalist, singer, songwriter, and composer who has gone deeply into many genres of music.

The feature includes several videos - this one is an excerpt from a video he made, Celtic melodies for flatpicking guitar. The new double album, Dreams from the Overlook, can be bought on the website of Jody Stecher and his wife and music partner Kate Brislin, both of whom have visited Ireland singly or together. Here's a very brief sample from the interview:

Most working bluegrass musicians I’ve met are at least curious about other music. Many are seriously interested in other kinds of music, and often are good players in other genres. It’s always been like that, as bluegrass itself is a confluence of many streams. Most keep their musical interests separate. Who wants to hear a fiddler that sounds like a violinist? A guitarist who plays jazz chords in a bluegrass band is going to ruin the music. Each music has its own special beauty and musical toolbox.

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Bluegrass country soul: next phase of Golden Anniversary celebration

Thanks to Ellen Pasternack, executive director of the Bluegrass Country Soul organisation, for news of the next phase in celebrating the Golden Anniversary of the classic 1971 film (see the BIB for 2 June 2020). Now available are:
  • a combo pack (Blu-Ray and DVD), with bonus features (see YouTube);
  • a 168-page book on the festival with a wealth of contributions from artists who took part (second edition; see YouTube);
  • two additional CDs of music recorded from the stage but not included in the original film (see YouTube).
These items can also be bought separately here. The limited edition de luxe set first issued in June is now completely sold out.

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More old-time news

FOAOTMAD, the UK's national association for old-time music, carries on its news blog a message from Su and Jules, who have been hosting online old time sessions on Zoom since COVID restrictions began:

On Sunday 29th Nov. & Tuesday 1st Dec. we’re asking Zoom participants to get set up with a background of Xmas lights for a count down special Light Up Session! Real lights and not a virtual background! People who watch on live stream are also welcome to join us to do the same. Let's keep our spirits up for nearing the end of 2020 with some tunes and colourful lights together.

Details are on Facebook for the 29 Nov. and 1 Dec. sessions. How the sessions work is explained here.
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FOAOTMAD also announces that the film The Mountain Minor (see many previous posts on the BIB) is now available to stream on Amazon Prime and Vimeo On Demand in the UK, as well as being available on DVD and Blu-ray from Amazon.

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23 November 2020

Ain't nothin' but a thing from the Grits & Gravy Stringband

The BIB mentioned as early as 23 January this year that the Grits & Gravy Stringband were releasing a new album, Ain't nothin' but a thing, and the official release date was 18 March, so it's high time that we gave more details. Everything you need to know is on their Bandcamp page, including the fact that the cover art (right) is by Colin Derham of I Draw Slow.

The fifteen tracks avoid warhorses and chestnuts - 'Shady Grove', for instance, is a non-modal version, and 'Sweet Nell' is a fine recent composition by Jim Mullany and Rob Pine. Warmly recommended. Grits & Gravy consist of Ian Knepper and Caolán Keogh (twin fiddles), Ben Keogh (banjo), Camilla Monroe (guitar), and Síona Knepper (double bass).

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No Depression needs just a few more subscribers... (update)

No Depression, 'the journal of roots music', announces:

No Depression, part of the nonprofit FreshGrass Foundation, has secured a generous donor that will match funds for 100 new journal subscriptions. We only need 36 more to reach our goal! Please help us get there.

While we offer our content on nodepression.com for free, subscriptions to our gorgeous journal help fuel our entire operations! Now, you can double your financial impact to No Depression by becoming a subscriber in print/digital or digital-only.

All new subscribers will receive our current Winter 2020 'All Together Now' issue, plus our gratitude, as your purchase is paired with matching funds that help No Depression and the FreshGrass Foundation continue our mission to preserve, support, and create innovative grassroots music!


As reported on the BIB on 20 August, the FreshGrass Foundation and the Compass Records Group are now partners in supporting the Steve Martin Banjo Prize.

Update 25 Nov.: Only 18 subscriptions are now needed to reach the goal!

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Looking backwards, and forwards

The BIB editor writes:

When it comes to remembering people or things that are no longer with us, bluegrass music has few rivals. The New England band Rock Hearts have released a poignant video of the title song from their recent debut album Starry southern nights, which can be seen on YouTube. More details are on Bluegrass Today. Rock Hearts have not visited Ireland yet, but many of the artists involved in the following news items have Irish 'history'.

Tribute is paid to the late Steve Gulley in two recent recordings by friends and bandmates. Phil Leadbetter & the All Stars of Bluegrass have released a video for 'One way rider', from their album Swing for the fences which was recorded shortly before Steve's death; his vocals are an important ingredient of the cut. The video can be seen on YouTube and on Bluegrass Today. A wide and distinguished group of those who knew Steve Gulley have come together to record the Mark Wheeler song 'In the resurrection morning', looking forward to reunion. This can also be heard on YouTube and Bluegrass Today.

Finally, looking forward just as far as the coming Christmas, Darin and Brooke Aldridge, who recently signed with Billy Blue Records, have released a single, 'Light of the stable'; see David Morris's feature on Bluegrass Today.

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21 November 2020

Hank Smith on chord forms

The Deering Banjo Company blog continues its series of banjo lessons from Hank Smith with the latest (also on YouTube) - a ten-minute lesson in which Hank

shows you how to build chord forms with extensions. He starts you with a regular G triad and demonstrates how to change this shape to make a G minor, G7, G minor 7th, and G minor 7th with a flatted 5th. Learning how to build chord shapes on your own is an essential skill needed to construct all of the many types of chords forms. It also will greatly improve your knowledge of the banjo fingerboard, improve your understanding of harmony, and improve your ear.

The principles behind these chord changes can of course be applied on all instruments. Hank's lessons on the blog can be seen here.

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20 November 2020

Releases by visiting artists (or nearly)

The Kody Norris Show, who would have brought their exuberant Jimmy Martin-style music to this year's Westport Folk and Bluegrass Festival if it hadn't been for the pandemic, have had the second single released from their forthcoming album on Rebel Records. 'Ole Carolina', a classic piece of bluegrass nostalgia, was learned by Kody from the 1972 album Tarheel country by the Bluegrass Tarheels (you can hear the whole original album here). More information is on the Rebel press release.
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The Engelhardt Music Group (EMG) announce the release of 'Come on down', the new single by Fast Track, the veteran 'new' supergroup comprising Dale Perry (banjo, bass vocals), Steve Day (fiddle, vocals), Ron Spears (bass, vocals), Jesse Brock (mandolin, vocals), and Duane Sparks (guitar, vocals). Ron and Jesse have both toured in Ireland in past years. 'Come on down' is an up-tempo gospel song with five vocal parts, and some sparkling instrumental work. This is the fourth single to be featured from the band's self-titled album, which is available everywhere through the usual outlets. 'Come on down' can be heard through a link on the EMG press release.

Update 24 Nov.: Bluegrass Today now carries the news of the release of 'Ole Carolina'. Remember, you saw it first on the BIB...

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Support each other, support bluegrass!

The International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA) announces the 'Play a Part' concert series, presented by its Leadership Bluegrass alumni committee. The shows will take place on the first three Tuesdays in December, and as can be seen from the poster image on the right, there are names on each lineup that are well known to audiences in Ireland - none more so than the Special Consensus, who have played here more than any other US band. On the same bill is a less familiar name, but the Foreign Landers (photo below) are the duo of David Benedict (Mile Twelve) and Tabitha Agnew Benedict (Cup O' Joe). All three concerts will be streamed on Facebook and YouTube; details will follow soon.

The 'Play a Part' concert series is part of the IBMA's annual end-of-year fundraising campaign. Full details of the ways in which one can support bluegrass through donations and other actions (including a Martin guitar auction), and how the IBMA deploys its resources, are given on the latest IBMA e-newsletter.

Update 23 Nov.: Please note that at present the IBMA can only accept online donations from US banks.

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19 November 2020

Grand Ole Opry celebrates 75 years of bluegrass, 5 Dec. 2020 (correction)

Thanks to Roger Ryan of the Country Music Association of Ireland for the press release from Schmidt Relations of Goodlettsville, TN, announcing that on Saturday 5 Dec. 2020 the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, TN, will present a special show to mark the 75th anniversary of the performance on the Opry stage by Bill Monroe and his Blue Grass Boys (including Lester Flatt on guitar) for the first time with their new banjo player, Earl Scruggs.

The show will feature Del McCoury, Ricky Skaggs, and Sister Sadie, IBMA Entertainers of the Year and Vocal Group of the Year. Seats will be assigned and socially distanced in the order they were originally received. Ticket buyers will receive their tickets and seat assignments by e-mail, approximately 48 hours before the show. Full details are on the Schmidt Relations press release. The BIB has carried the 'bg75' logo on the sidebar all this year - this is part of what it's all about. 

Sorry, everyone - when this post was first published I had mistakenly assumed that Earl Scruggs's first show with the Blue Grass Boys was also the first show by the band's 'classic' lineup, with Chubby Wise on fiddle and Howard Watts on bass. This did not in fact come together till some months later.

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We Banjo 3 present 'A Winter Wonderful' online, 18 Dec. 2020

Galway's We Banjo 3, the originators of 'Celtgrass', invite you to 'cozy up, settle in, and holiday party' with them for a one-night-only festive holiday livestream, 'A Winter Wonderful', on Friday 18 December at 8.00 p.m. EST.

The evening will feature a special We Banjo 3 performance, plus musical sets by Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn, Skerryvore, The Whileaways, BackWest, and Ajeet. Event tickets are $20; limited-edition merch bundles with ticket included are also available and can be bought here.

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18 November 2020

Instruction and other goodies from across the Atlantic

Ken Perlman (USA), master of 'melodic clawhammer' banjo (not to mention fingerstyle guitar) continues his programme of online live instructional banjo workshops on Zoom this month, with a workshop on playing jigs in 6/8 time on Sat. 21 Nov. at 1.00-2.30 p.m. EST, one on playing waltzes in 3/4 time on Mon. 7 Dec. at 7.30-9.00 p.m. EST, and one on drop-thumbing and double-thumbing on Mon. 21 Dec. at the same time. These are for players of intermediate level and upwards, and each costs $20.00 per computer.
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April Verch (CAN) and her band offer a Super Sale on their CDs from today (18 Nov.) to 2 Dec.: seven releases for just $5 each, or all seven for $30 while stocks last. This is a fundraiser to enable April to get a new computer for business purposes, so you can make a donation if you already have all the CDs. April and the band will also be playing a 'Tis the Season' holiday concert a month from now on YouTube - her e-newsletter gives the date as 15 Dec., but it appears as 16 Dec. on YouTube, so check as mid-December approaches.
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More news from Deering Banjos, who - like many manufacturers and suppliers with retail sales disrupted by pandemic restrictions - encourage customers to deal direct with them: they have issued information on shipping internationally, which may be useful if (for instance) you want to take advantage of their sale of banjo string sets on a 'buy-one-get-one-free' basis, which is on from now till Monday 23 Nov.
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Steve Kaufman (USA( is offering new classes in guitar and mandolin in early December - for details, see the poster image below (click to enlarge) and Steve's website. PS: Indie-pop-folk group Mipso have been digging into their North Carolina musical roots this year, and their fiddler Libby Rodenbough mentions the Quarantine Happy Hour, hosted by the Horsenecks (see the right-hand column of the BIB), during Mipso's interview by Dacey Orr Sivewright on the Bluegrass Situation.

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17 November 2020

A new 'old' old-time banjo

Deering Banjos announce a new product - the Vega Vintage Star,
'a banjo that captures the soul of late nineteenth-century banjos with the playability and adjustability of a modern instrument'. The old soul of the instrument is in the Dobson-type tone ring, originally patented by Henry Dobson in 1881. Introductory videos are on the Deering website and on YouTube here and here, with some nice playing by Clint Davis. The list price is $2,299.00.

Update 18 Nov.: More details and pictures can now be seen in John Lawless's feature on Bluegrass Today.

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16 November 2020

Greg Blake to release single with Claire Lynch as guest

The Bluegrass Standard magazine announces that Greg Blake - well known over here from his tours (organised by John Nyhan) as guitarist and lead singer with Jeff Scroggins & Colorado, as a bandleader, and as a solo artist - is releasing today a single on Turnberry Records: 'People, places, and songs', featuring Claire Lynch.

Earlier this autumn, Greg signed with Turnberry Records for a two-album deal: the first to be a solo album with a mixture of traditional and contemporary bluegrass and traditional country music, and the second with his band, Greg Blake & Hometown, playing straight-ahead, traditional bluegrass,

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13 November 2020

Red Hat Club meets virtually TONIGHT (13 Nov.)

Paul and Anne McEvoy, organisers of the Red Hat Acoustic Music Club, announce another Virtual meeting of the Club tonight (Friday 13th).

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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Navá nominated for Best Folk Group in RTÉ Radio 1 Folk Awards 2020

Congratulations to Navá (right) on their nomination for the Best Folk Group award in the RTÉ Radio 1 Folk Awards 2020. The band announce on their Facebook:

We are absolutely delighted to announce that we have been nominated for the 'RTÉ Folk Awards 2020' (Best Folk Group of The Year). The ceremony will be broadcasting live on RTÉ Radio 1 on Thursday 26th November 8-10 p.m. Congratulations to other nominees.

Navá, with their unique mission to explore the relationship between the ancient musical cultures of Ireland and Persia, consist of Shahab Coohe (santoor), Shayan Coohe (tombak/ tar), Paddy Kiernan (5-string banjo), and Niall Hughes (double bass/ guitar). Paddy and Niall are respected members of the Dublin bluegrass community, and a load of bluegrass feeling comes into Navá's 'The magic box', which can be heard in this video and on their debut album Tapestry.

Update 2 Dec.: The results of the RTÉ Folk Awards 2020 are shown here.

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12 November 2020

The new BU

The BIB editor writes:

The November 2020 issue of Bluegrass Unlimited magazine, the first to come from its new home at the Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame & Museum, is now out, and it's good news. Editor Dan Miller has put BU's traditional wealth of content into a helpful, unobtrusive framework (features are grouped under 'The tradition', 'The artists', 'The sound', etc.) together with a visual makeover - for instance, the annual talent directory is peppered with images of bands and artists.

The official new website address is www.bluegrassunlimited.com, but the familiar www.bluegrassmusic.com will still get you there. One of the site's new features is a fourteen-minute video banjo lesson from Ned Luberecki. A bonus feature of the Bluegrass Unlimited Facebook is that from day to day the birthday of a notable figure in bluegrass, past or present, is celebrated. The most recent is Alan Munde's.

PS: The 'History' section includes the true story of how Bill Monroe came to say 'No, you back up', told by one who was there.

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Banjo Summit to take place online, 4-6 Dec. 2020

Thanks to Bluegrass Today for the news that like many other events in the bluegrass calendar, the Banjo Summit will take place this year online. It is to be held on the first weekend in December, from 12.30 p.m. on Friday 4th to 9.00 p.m. on Sunday 6th. The Summit's website describes it as a

3-day online banjo workshop aimed at teaching accessible techniques to add colour to your traditional playing or take you beyond bluegrass. Regardless of your favorite styles, the Banjo Summit Online will expand your expertise and inspire countless new ideas that will raise your playing to new heights.

The instructors are Béla Fleck, Kristin Scott Benson, Jake Blount, BB Bowness, Wes Corbett, Adam Larabee, Jayme Stone, Bennett Sullivan, and Jake Schepps (who founded and directs the Summit). Bio details and links to websites for all instructors are given here. An all-access pass for the weekend is $200, with a $25 discount for all who enrol before 20 Nov. Among other goodies, students will receive 'tons' of tablature, and all classes and concerts will be recorded and accessible after the weekend on a password-protected site.

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Tray Wellington on Deering Live TONIGHT

Deering Banjos announce that tonight (Thurs. 12 Nov.) the young award-winning banjo player Tray Wellington will be featured on Deering Live at 6.00 p.m. EDT.

You can send in questions by e-mail, and watch the interview here. Last week's feature with John Kavanaugh of Kavanjo Pickups - discussing different types of banjo pickups, how they work, how they are made, and how to use them to the best advantage - can also be watched on YouTube.

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11 November 2020

Chris Eldridge takes a chair at Oberlin

Chris 'Critter' Eldridge (right), who as guitarist for the Punch Brothers (USA) has played several times in Ireland, has been appointed Visiting Associate Professor of Contemporary American Acoustic Music at the prestigious Oberlin College & Conservatory in Ohio. Bio information is on both his own website and Oberlin's.

Chris Eldridge graduated from Oberlin in 2004 and became a founder member of Punch Brothers the following year. In 2019 he was the Americana Music Association's Instrumentalist of the Year. He will be teaching three semesters at Oberlin from January 2021, giving courses on American string-band music and private lessons to guitarists and singer/ songwriters.

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10 November 2020

First release from Tony Trischka's Shall we hope? project

Thanks to John Lawless on Bluegrass Today for news of the first release from a major recording project by Tony Trischka (right), one of the most influential players, composers, teachers, and communicators for banjo of our time, who for some years past has been working on a 'dramatised listening experience' based on real and imagined stories from the American civil war (1861-5). He has written all the music and lyrics, and many prominent musicians are taking part in the recording, which is scheduled for release in January 2021 under the title Shall we hope.

The first single is released today: 'Carry me over the sea', a song of emigration from Ireland into war in America, sung by Maura O'Connell backed by Michael Daves (guitar), Brittany Haas (fiddles), Brian Fleming (percussion), John Mock (whistle), Skip Ward (bass), Dominick Leslie (mandolin), and Trischka (cello banjo). it can be heard on Bluegrass Today and on YouTube, and can be ordered from all music outlets. Shall we hope can be pre-ordered on Tony Trischka's website.

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'Banjo in the Holler' in England announced for 29 Aug. 2021

The FOAOTMAD news blog announces that 'Banjo in the Holler', 'a relaxed day of bluegrass & old time jamming' will be held on Sunday 29 Aug. 2021 in the Surrey hills (North Downs) south of London. The venue is the village hall at Holmbury St Mary, a few miles south-west of Dorking. Jamming outdoors will be from 10.00 a.m., with an open-mic concert at 4.00 p.m.

Hot food and a bar will be available from 12.30 p.m. More information, including contact data, can be seen on the poster image (click to enlarge).

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A not-really-necessary defence of Bluegrass: a history (and more)

The BIB editor writes:

The BIB post of 14/18 Aug. was mainly concerned with 'Making black influence in bluegrass visible', a student post by Teiana Nakano in Feb. 2018 on the blog 'Music 345: race, identity, and representation in American music'. Nakano's first paragraph (with links added by the BIB) reads:

Neil Rosenberg’s book Bluegrass: a history presents a greatly different idea of bluegrass history when being compared to Rhiannon Giddens’ keynote speech at the International Bluegrass Music Association Business Conference. I took particular interest to Giddens’ point that scholars and historians, which surely includes Rosenberg, have contributed the erasure of black history in bluegrass.

In fact, Rhiannon Giddens’s 2017 IBMA keynote address doesn't make this point. The scholars and historians she names are Dena J. Epstein, Phil Jamison, and Patrick Huber, all of whom strongly emphasise the importance of black traditions and performers in American folk and old-time music and dance. The people she blames are (a) Ralph Peer and others who created a segregated music marketing industry, fostering a myth that those who made and those who bought 'mountain music' were all white; and (b) folklorists and song collectors who colluded in creating this myth, among whom she focuses on Cecil Sharp. Readers of the BIB for 5 Oct. won't be surprised that I don't agree with her on this (see below).

Bluegrass: a history and the 2017 IBMA keynote address 'present different pictures' because they're about different things. Giddens asks 'Why is bluegrass so white?', and the answer (as she shows) is the artificial barriers that were erected before bluegrass developed. Her valid and important message - that it's time to remove barriers - takes nothing away from the value of Bluegrass: a history. Neil Rosenberg produced a comprehensive account, meticulously detailed and admirably organised and analysed, of the music that took its classic form in 1945, gained a name a decade later, and subsequently evolved. Those who wish the book had paid more attention to black music before 1945 should note that it does not pretend to be a history of white music before 1945 either.

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Warning: Readers who have seen quite enough about Cecil Sharp on this blog should stop reading now.

The paragraph on Sharp from the 2017 keynote address is as follows, in italics. My comments are in roman.

Folklorists and song collectors at the time also had a huge hand in the creation of this myth; Cecil Sharp, founder of the English Folk Dance and Song Society, was one of the first to brave the Appalachian mountains in search of it.
Of the myth? No; some people have written of Sharp as if he were looking for Elizabethan settlers or a 'pure Anglo-Saxon race', but he was in search of songs that had originated in Britain and Ireland, because that was the focus of his life. He had devoted himself to English folk song and dance for fifteen years, and he had been given solid evidence that many such ballads and songs were still being sung in Appalachia. Not surprisingly, he wanted to find them.

With Maud Karpeles he spent three years in the Appalachian mountains,
Nearly a year, all told: two months in 1916, about four-and-a-half in 1917, and a similar total in 1918.

... recording families and making much of what he found there – but only the white folks.
And not even all of them - not the Dutch or Germans, for instance, who were surely white enough...

Now by the time they got to western North Carolina, the black population wasn’t as high as it was, but that’s only part of the reason there’s no black representation in his collections, which influenced everyone who came after; they just plain didn’t like black people.
Regrettably, there is truth in this, but not the whole truth. Sharp, from long experience with country people in England, found the white mountain people familiar, accessible, and congenial, as well as being richer in the music he was seeking than he could ever have expected. By contrast, he had no experience to put him on an easy footing with African-Americans or encourage him to approach them, as he did not expect them to have songs with origins in these islands. When he met an individual black person who did - such as Aunt Maria Tomes, who sang 'Barbara Allen' for him - they seem to have got on well together; but Sharp and Karpeles certainly expressed feelings (to use the words of Kehrberg and Keith) of 'disdain and dismissal' about black people in general.

This abounds in their writings – my favorite quote is this one; after a long hard hike looking for the most isolated homesteads to record, they caught sight of some likely looking log cabins. Sharp says [in his private diary]: 'We tramped – a very hard and warm walk, mainly uphill. When we reached the cove we found it peopled entirely by negroes!! All our trouble and spent energy for naught.' Except of course, he didn’t say negroes.
It wouldn't have helped if he had, by some present-day standards. The dismay of Sharp and Karpeles at this place was clearly (as Phil Jamison recognises) because they believed no suitable songs would be found among black people; this was before they had met Mrs Sinda Walker or Aunt Maria Tomes. However, a year later Sharp's intense dislike of Winston-Salem, NC, was partly due to its black population. Mike Yates, in his major account of Sharp in Appalachia, considers the way Sharp writes in his diary about them 'indefensible', though possibly exacerbated by the effects of ill-health.

Two things more about Sharp and race: first, after his initial visit to Appalachia his view was that the mountain people had 'so many of the essentials of culture' chiefly because 'they have one and all entered at birth into the full enjoyment of their racial heritage' (English folk songs (1917), introduction, p. ix). Developing that further (ibid., pp xix-xx) - and using 'racial' and 'national' interchangeably - he suggested 'with the greatest diffidence' that city education authorities in the USA tended

to ignore the educational and cultural value of that national heritage which every immigrant brings with him [...].  I admit that the problem which faces the educationist in America is a peculiarly difficult one, but it will, I am convinced, never be satisfactorily solved until the education given to every foreign colonist is directly based upon, and closely related to, his or her national inheritance of culture [bold type added by the BIB].

In theory, at least, Sharp was consequently arguing against 'Anglo' supremacy in education.

Secondly, by the time he finally left Appalachia, his own brief experience there had indicated, and his communications with John C. Campbell would have confirmed, that there were no simple answers to the question of ethnic origins of its population. What he felt entitled to observe was that 'whatever admixture of races there may be in the mountains', the predominant culture there (judging by traditional songs and dances) was 'Anglo-Celtic' - a term that Campbell hoped might reconcile the proponents of 'Scotch-Irish' and 'English' origin.
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John C. Campbell, The southern highlander and his homeland. Russell Sage Foundation, New York, 1921. Chapter IV, 'Ancestry', pp 50-71 (see Sharp's contribution, pp 69-71).

English folk songs from the southern Appalachians (1917 ed.), introduction by Sharp, pp ix, xix-xx.

© Richard Hawkins

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09 November 2020

Two good tips from Uri

On another note - thanks again to Uri Kohen, who writes:

I would like to point you and the readers towards a superb radio show and a fantastic podcast.

Ruth Smith [right] of 'Simply Folk' on RTÉ Radio 1 presented a superb documentary about the origin of the song 'The lakes of Pontchartrain' which can be heard here.

Our good friend Brennen Leigh was a guest contributor in a podcast looking at all aspects of the ground-breaking album by The Byrds, Sweetheart of the rodeo, which can be played back here.

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Westport Folk and Bluegrass Festival confirmed for 11-13 June 2021

Following hard upon Mick Daly's announcement from Dunmore East last week, thanks to Uri Kohen in Westport, Co. Mayo, for this welcome news:

The organising team of the Westport Folk and Bluegrass Festival are happy to confirm that the festival will take place in 2021 on the weekend of 11-13 June.

Usually we will have a full lineup and tickets available to purchase by Christmas; however, as the uncertainty as regards live events and international travel continues, we are monitoring the developments closely and working to create a safe and successful event.

We hope to have a better idea of the format by which the festival will be staged and a confirmation of the lineup and venues by early in the new year. One way or another, we will celebrate Folk, Bluegrass, and Old-Time music in Westport in June 2021 one way or another.

We are looking forward to see all of our friends again and preserve the long legacy of our festival and the bluegrass traditions in Ireland.

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07 November 2020

A.P. Carter, d. 7 Nov. 1960

Alvin Pleasant Carter, born on 15 Dec. 1891 in Scott county, VA, died sixty years ago today in Kingsport, TN. In 1927 he and his wife Sara Dougherty Carter and sister-in-law Maybelle Addington Carter took part in Ralph Peer's recording sessions in Bristol, TN, which have come to be seen as the 'Big Bang' of country music.The three of them - the original Carter Family - helped to bring about radical change in the recording of rural music by their mastery of a diverse range of old and new material, and although the group broke up in 1943 their recordings remained an incalculable influence on tradition-oriented country music, bluegrass, and the folk revival.

A.P. took on the task of searching out and arranging new material for the Family to record, and in this he had vital assistance from black musician and song collector Lesley Riddle (1905-79), who not only acted as a 'human jukebox', supplying and memorising material, but influenced Maybelle Carter's guitar playing. An annual RiddleFest is held in his home town, Burnsville, NC, and a thirteen-minute video on his life is on the 'Black in Appalachia' YouTube channel.

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06 November 2020

Jerry Jeff Walker

Thanks to Des Butler for this sad news:

The death has occurred on 23 Oct. at 78 years of age of Jerry Jeff Walker (right) from throat cancer. Jerry was probably best known for his writing of the song 'Mr Bojangles' which went on to be recorded by many artists from many genres of music - the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Bob Dylan, Nina Simone, and Sammy Davis Junior, to name but a few. Jerry had it on his first album and it is said that his inspiration for the song came from a time he was on the road busking and wound up in a New Orleans jail cell for public inebriation. His cellmate was a homeless man who called himself 'Mr Bojangles' to conceal his true identity from the police.

The real Bojangles was Bill 'Bojangles' Robinson (born Luther Robinson; 25 May 1878–25 Nov. 1949), an American tap dancer, actor, and singer, the best known and the most highly paid black American entertainer in America during the first half of the twentieth century.

Jerry, born in NY, cut his teeth on the folk scene coming out of Greenwich Village at the time. He then moved to Austin, TX, and joined the country 'outlaw' sound coming via the songs of Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, and Billy Joe Shaver etc. He released thirty-eight albums, sang with Guy Clark, and covered songs by Townes Van Zant, Rodney Crowell, and Paul Siebel, to name a few.

Jerry Jeff Walker 1942-2020 RIP

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More news from the Mother Country


'An artistic triumph on all sides' is how John Lawless on Bluegrass Today sums up the video of 'I wish the wars were all over', just released by Billy Blue Records. The song, written by Tim Eriksen, is played by the Appalachian Road Show (right) - who would have been headliners at Omagh six months ago - with Barry Abernathy's powerful and evocative singing, and it is on their latest album Tribulations. No details are given of who made the video (on YouTube as well as on Bluegrass Today), but it's well worth watching as well as hearing.
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Thanks to Banjo Hangout for the news that Tony Trischka has reviewed Mississippi River suite by Michael J. Miles (left) in the November 2020 issue of Banjo News Letter, and it's a good deal more than just a review of that album. As an added bonus, tablatures can be downloaded for three of the pieces in the suite, and there's a not-so-brief interview with Michael by the BNL editor Donald Nitchie.

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05 November 2020

Al Ras Festival, Barcelona: online programme begins TONIGHT (5 Nov.)

John Lawless reports on Bluegrass Today that the annual Al Ras Bluegrass & Old Time Festival at Barcelona has been prevented at a very late date from going ahead as a live event this year, owing to COVID restrictions being reimposed in Spain.

Undaunted, the organisers have laid on a solid, varied online programme instead, including videos of performances from past festivals, screenings of historic footage of Bluegrass Hall of Fame members, workshops, jams, merchandise, and more, beginning tonight (5 Nov.) and continuing to Monday 9 Nov. The full schedule is shown on Bluegrass Today and the Festival website. All events can be seen streamed on Facebook.

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Richard Blaustein and The thistle and the brier

The BIB learns with regret of the death of Richard Blaustein, professor emeritus of East Tennessee State University (ETSU), scholar, old-time fiddler and banjo player, and director of ETSU's Center for Appalachian Studies and Services. An obituary by Jack Tottle is on Bluegrass Today, which includes an audio recording of Dr Blaustein (with friends) singing the old-timey song 'Boozy Creek'.

His prolific scholarly output includes a book specially likely to interest readers this side of the Atlantic: The thistle and the brier: historical links and cultural parallels between Scotland and Appalachia, published by McFarland Press at $29.95. A preview can be seen here

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Kavanjo Pickups on Deering Live TONIGHT (5 Nov. 2020)

Deering Banjos announce that tonight (Thurs. 5 Nov.) John Kavanaugh of Kavanjo Pickups will be featured on Deering Live at 6.00 p.m. EDT, and will talk about different types of banjo pickups, how they work, how they are made, and how to use them to the best advantage. Deering add:

The Kavanjo Banjo Pickup System is a magnetic humbucking pickup and jack suspended from a customized mylar head. This is the newest, and we believe the most effective, way to amplify ANY banjo, while maintaining the instrument's authentic characteristics.

You can send in questions by e-mail, and watch the interview here. Last week's feature with Graham Sharp can also be watched on YouTube.

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04 November 2020

Dunmore East prepares for 26th Bluegrass Festival, 26-29 Aug. 2021

The BIB wrote yesterday: 'At present, [...] no established bluegrass and/or old-time events in this island are confidently advertising for 2021', and today we gladly eat our words. Thanks to Mick Daly, organiser of the Dunmore East Bluegrass Festival, Co. Waterford, for the good news that he and his team are making flexible preparations for next year's event. Mick writes:

The dates for the 26th Dunmore East Bluegrass Festival are 26/27/28/29 August 2021. The first button for 2021 was pressed today; the format will be adjusted to whatever guidelines are in place on the dates.

This year five different plans were put in place as the year progressed, but sadly this was down to fifteen people by the end of August; we had planned to run it with the 200-people limit and had approval from the authorities. We had to cancel a week out. It may be pods or drive-in, in fact whatever it takes. Only stipulation is that it breaks even, and all acts receive a fee. It will not be a virtual event. There will be an admission fee.

UPDATE: The 2021 Festival is now scheduled as a one-day ticketed event on Sat. 28 Aug. For more details, see the BIB for 7 Aug. and 16 Aug. 2021.

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03 November 2020

Wild Roots in Sligo, 30 Apr.-2 May 2021 (update)

At present, as far as the BIB is aware, no established bluegrass and/or old-time events in this island are confidently advertising for 2021. However, the Wild Roots Festival of 'music, performing arts, and adventure' is scheduled to take place by Lough Gill in Co. Sligo on the weekend 30 April-2 May 2021. The impressive website states:

The sights and sounds of Wild Roots Festival will speak to a part of your soul that craves that little bit of magic. Let us lead you to the forest, let your roots down and be wild!

The 'right kind' of bluegrass band should fit well into this concept, and if Rackhouse Pilfer (who were based in Sligo) were still gigging, we'd expect to see them on the lineup. The nearest act to bluegrass that is currently there, however, is the Dublin Ukulele Collective.

Update 17 Nov.: The organisers announce additions to the lineup (still no bluegrass, though) and, just as importantly, announce that the festival will set a new standard of safety procedures for live events. See this RTE website article on the festival.

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02 November 2020

And more (update)

Boston's Mile Twelve (who have toured Ireland several times, thanks to John Nyhan) won the New Artist of the Year award at this year's IBMA World of Bluegrass. Three weeks ago (11 Oct.) they published a video on their YouTube channel of the classic 'Will you be loving another man' - an impressive example of how tight a band can be while geographically separated, with mandolinist David Benedict presumably the most socially distanced, up in Ulster.
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Kentucky's McLain Family Band have toured scores of countries in over fifty years, with the family's most recent visit to Ireland coming in 2018 (again, thanks to John Nyhan). The many friends and fans they have made will be glad to know that this month the West Virginia University Press is publishing Paul O. Henry's book about the band, Bluegrass ambassadors, in its 'Sounding Appalachia' series, at $29.99 in hard copy and $26.99 as an e-book. The 288 pages include in-depth analysis and a complete discography.
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A 'virtual' jam video of a bluegrass classic, this time from Russ Carson's '81crowe' YouTube channel: 'I'm on my way back to the old home'. On the left of the screen you can see two artists who have played a lot in Ireland: Jesse Brock on mandolin and Rick Faris on tenor vocals.

Jesse, who is now a member of Fast Track, is bringing out his own composition 'Streamliner' (see image below) as a single on the Sound Biscuit label, to be released on 12 Nov. with pre-ordering from 5 Nov. This is part of Jesse's project for an album with top-flight guest musicians: Greg Blake, Jason Carter, Rob Ickes, and Russ Carson are just a few of them. Full details are on the Jesse Brock website.

Update 5 Nov.: 'Streamliner', with Greg Blake singing lead, is now released to radio. More detail is on the Wilson Pickins Agency press release.

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News from the Mother Country (mainly about previous visitors)

The image on the right shows how the November 2020 issue of Bluegrass Unlimited will look - a highly visible change, reflecting the magazine's transfer to the Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame & Museum in Owensboro, KY. Previous statements in print indicate that existing subscriptions will run their full course.

The new cover shows Becky Buller, who visited Ireland some years back as fiddler with Valerie Smith & Liberty Pike, and is now an award-winning musician, singer, songwriter, and bandleader. Her strong new album Distance and time is reviewed on Bluegrass Today by John Curtis Goad, and by Stacy Chandler on No Depression.
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The Lonesome River Band, sometime headliners at Omagh, have just released (30 Oct.) a single, 'That's life' (written by Brandon Rickman and Billy Droze), on the Mountain Home label. More details are on the Mountain Home press release, and the track can be heard on Bluegrass Today.
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Dale Ann Bradley, another former Omagh headliner, released on 30 Oct. her new single 'Falling down' on the Pinecastle label. The song, written by Ashby Frank (over here some years back as mandolinist with Special Consensus), is the lead single on her forthcoming album Things she couldn't get over, due out early in 2021, and features her full touring band. More info is on the Pinecastle press release. [Update: the song can now be heard on Bluegrass Today.]
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Finally, we learn with regret from Bluegrass Today of the death of Bill Torbert on 24 Oct. from COVID-19 at the age of 81. His long career included spells with some of the classic lineups of Jimmy Martin's Sunny Mountain Boys, including J.D. Crowe and Bill Emerson; photos are on the BT feature.

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