5.21.2010

Local Listings...

flying bike

The days of having to leave town to find worthy entertainment are long gone, the most recent example being last weekend's Dominion Riverrock extravaganza on Brown's Island with extreme biking, boating and people watching in our singular spot wedged between towering skyline and wilderness river.  It's a wondrous place put to proper use for an event like this, comfortably accommodating thousands with much to see, do and hear...much like our maturing Richmond Folk Festival returning October 8-10.  Another nod to taskmaster Stephen Lecky of Venture Richmond for making it all look grace tambourine easy and scoring top talent like the electric Grace Potter & the Nocturnals and Robert Randolph & the Family Band as headliners.  It was a very big time and another colorful feather in our town's increasingly festive cap.  And then there was the terrific Tuesday night showdierks rob & ron at the National with Dierks Bentley and the Travelin' McCourys.  Dierks  was obviously having a blast sharing the stage with these seasoned bluegrassers and hearing the adoring shrieks from his female fanbase packing the old Broad Street theater.  He spent the better part of an hour after the show to shake and sign.  His Jon Randall-produced Up On The Ridge CD will be out next month with a host of guesting luminaries.

Cheers2010 But that was last week...let's dive into what's ahead and there's a lot.  Tonight, back on Brown's Island, Friday Cheers continues with the creative and long-running string band Railroad Earth.  Bring enough to cover the P1060054more-than-fair $2 admission and a few brews and it should be another sweet night by the river, no doubt punctuated by a well-timed CSX coal train on the high trestle.  I love when that happens.  And you might save a little strength to catch honky tonk experience the last set at Shenanigans tonight with big Brad Spivey and his Honky Tonk Experience.  These guys have real country down pat.  Yet another option would be mandolin prodigy Harper Speagle Price and her band at Ellwood's Cafe on Thompson from 7-9p...no cover.  Or how about the veteran Texas singer/songwriter Tish Hinojosa at Ashland Coffee & Tea...wow.  Friday Night in America.  Not a night to sit home.

abbey road-samson And here's something for your June calendar...the CD release concert for Samson Trinh's long-anticipated Abbey Road Project on June 11 at Dogwood Dell.  Samson and his Upper East Side Big Band have been recording, mixing and tweaking this ambitious homage to the Beatles at In Your Ear Recording for the past few years and you'll want to sample the formidable fruits of their labors.  The CD's out but you'll want to hear it performed live, for free, at the Dell.  Andtodd herrington 9 the next night,  you can take a look at Todd Herrington's paintings at the Camel.  I had no idea...the busy bass master will show off yet another side of his gifted self and then join one of the many top bands he's part of, the Big Payback for a sweaty night of James Brown hits aP1150651s hot as the originals.   These guys can cook.  As can all of Todd's other ensembles including the DJ Williams Projekt and Modern Groove Syndicate.  The boy went through the talent line a few extra times.

Hope to see you somewhere around town tonight.

TT

5.13.2010

Givin' It Up...

delbert & sb Last week marked the kickoffs for our big outdoor music seasons including the 25th anniversary of Innsbrook After Hours with Delbert McClinton (in an odd choice of hats) john hiatt jamming with his go-to B-3 guy, Steve Bassett.  Delbert and the boys warmed it up for the great Hoosier tunesmith John Hiatt but watching the crowd ebb and flow, it appeared most had come to see the opening act.  Billy Currington played tonight and Travis Tritt is up next Wednesday, the 19th.

Folks must've gotten the word that Groovin' In The Garden had to get its groove on in another greenspace, at least initially, as the next night saw a big crowd at Maymont for the high-energy Sharon Jonessharon jones wchris and her Dap Kings (with a local kid named Chris doing his best to look dap).  The series will return to Lewis Ginter on June 3 with Patty Griffin and Buddy Miller.  But first, there's loopy Keller Williams tonight (Thursday) and Carbon Leaf on May 27.  The May 20th show with Jay Farrar and Ben Kweller, hastily set to replace Jakob Dylan and Neko Case who bailed, has been canceled due to apathy.  And this just in, Old Crow Medicine Show will play Maymont in a stand-alone concert on Friday, July 23.  Don't forget the Summer Love tour of Prairie Home Companion stops at the Lewis Ginter rose garden on August 13th...all very confusing...in a good way.

Friday Cheers got off to a great start last week too, with country comer Lee Brice and Puddleduck.  I had moondi & jimmy to pass on that one to be among the few, the proud, to welcome old friends Moondi Klein and Jimmy Gaudreau back to Ashland Coffee & Tea...two seasoned crooners and instrumentalists who have evolved into a delectable duo since their years with Chesapeake.  Catch them next time down the tracks.  Maybe you'd be interested in a strong young bluegrass band Chatham County Line playing there this Saturday.  And congrats to Ben Shirley for taking top prize in the first Songwriters' Showdown finals last Saturday.  BJ Kocen's started round two already, every Tuesday night at AC&T.  Check out the great new Website for more.

With apologies, the rest of this post will be woefully under-illustrated...this photo editing takes time and I don't have enough of it tonight to cover the upcoming with pix. 

* Dominion Riverrock...two days of free for all fun on Brown's Island this Friday with the amazing Grace Potter & The Nocturnals Friday night and Robert Randolph & The Family Band on Saturday.  All that with mud races and flying dogs too!

John Cowan takes a break from his Doobie Brothers tour to play the beautiful Mockingbird music hall in downtown Staunton this Friday night.

*  Some of our town's a-list bands and performers put on the big show to benefit the Positive Vibe Cafe in Stratford Hills this Sunday for Vibefest 2010 from noon to six.  Great music, great cause and world-class fare thanks to their new chef Frits Huntjens.

*  At the National on Tuesday, May 18:  Dierks Bentley with the Travelin' McCourys which is basically the Del McCoury Band minus Del.  Saw this show at MerleFest and it's top-notch.  Congrats to our ticket winner Michael Mulvey who knew that Dierks' new CD Up On The Ridge was produced by the gifted Jon Randall.  I've admired Jon for so many years and still wonder why he's not a bigger name.  He has all the goods...he can write, he can sing, he can play and he has the look. And now he's a producer.  Makes no sense at all. 

*  And of course you're more than invited to make it up the Old Blue Ridge Turnpike to Syria, VA June 3-5 for the Graves Mountain Festival of Music with names like Dailey & Vincent, Darrin's sis Rhonda & The Rage, Seldom Scene, Lonesome River Band, IIIrd Tyme Out and a host of others, plus unrivaled campground jams and the best festival food anywhere.  Join me for the Wednesday night seafood buffet if you can...I'm starting my fast next week to prepare.

*  On a sad note...due to an illness in Robin's family, our final JAMinc/In Your Ear concert of the season on May 26, with guitarists Todd Hallawell & Robin Kessinger has been canceled.  We hope to reschedule and our prayers are with the Kessinger family.

*  I'll leave you with a clip of the Dixie Chicks' spinoff band Court Yard Hounds on the Ellen DeGeneres show today featuring Daniel Clarke on keys.  The tune's called "It Didn't Make A Sound."  Wait for the break.

TT

5.05.2010

MerleFest Moments…

arm rest

The elegantly engraved arm rest of Jimmy Stelling’s five-string masterpiece, one of the coveted prizes in this year’s MerleFest raffle, reflects the commitment to quality that this behemoth of a festival exempifies, by most any measure.  Avett crowd This 23rd edition of the annual tribute to Doc Watson’s too-early departed son Merle, still hosted by his dad, the 87-year-old national treasure, offered four rain-free days of music for so many palates.  From Thursday night’s packed house for the Zac Brown Band to Sunday’s record crowd for the avetts watson Avett Brothers’ rousing finale, John Adair and his team programmed a lineup that held reward for everyone, especially the open-minded who were looking for something fresh and exciting. The music has moved to new places beyond the hills and hollows around Deep Gap, North Carolina, still Doc Watson’s home.  But there’s an undeniable kinship among musicians and those who gather tony talksto hear them in this inviting place. Missing were MerleFest stalwarts like John Cowan, Gillian Welch, Emmylou Harris, Bela Fleck and Tim O’Brien.  But traditions were carried well by Tony Rice, Peter Rowan, the Kruger Brothers, the Nashville Bluegrass Band, Jim Lauderdale and of course Sam Bush.  MerleFest is difficult to describe to one who hasn’t experienced it over a period of time, so if that includes you, I’ll let the camera do most of the talking for the rest of this post.  If you like what you see, consider making the trip down for the 24th.  April 28-May 1, 2011.

dr. doc

A Saturday afternoon surprise saw Arthel Watson awarded an honorary doctorate by a trio of professors from Boston’s prestigious Berklee College of Music…a deserving Dr. Doc.

doc & nbbOne of the most meaningful MerleFest traditions is the Sunday morning gospel sing on the Creekside Stage with Doc and the Nashville Bluegrass Band featuring Stuart Duncan and Alan O’Bryant.alan o'bryant

stu bob 

alvin lee & ron mccoury

The sacred steel power of the Lee Brothers joined by Rob & Ron McCoury and Jason Carter brought another level of praise to the Sunday Watson Stage.  Look for the Travelin’ McCourys with Dierks Bentley in Richmond at the National on May 18.  (Still a chance to win tickets in the “On The Verge” post below)

Casey, Emmette & Molly Driessen

MerleFest serves as a family-style homecoming and reunion for artists and fans alike.  Casey Driessen proposed to Molly during a set on the Cabin Stage a few years ago…this year guesting with the Duhks, Casey and Molly brought daughter Emmette to her first one.  MerleFest in 3-D.

c sky rearview

My home away from home for these four days is the old log cabin-turned-tweener stage next to the Watson. Here Cadillac Sky cranks it up the day after their sold out AC&T show. Unbridled energy and creativity.  They love this place.lovell cabin

The Lovell Sisters staged a Thursday night reunion including elder sister Jessica who’s sitting out the new band Larkin Poe started by younger sibs Megan and Rebecca.

sibleys

Jackson Hole’s Pete & Anne Sibley posed for a backstage Cabin portrait after their short set of their pristine harmonies.  If you were at their JAMinc/In Your Ear concert, you know what I mean.

shannon A very pleasant re-discovery of Biscuit Burner founder Shannon Whitworth and her tasteful band proved to be a personal highlight this year.  I’d forgotten about her dark and dreamy vocals which were put to good use I’m told during the Waybacks’ ambitious Album Hour set on the Hillside Stage.  Shannon rendered two selections from the Beatles’ odessa file Abbey Road album, including “Something.” 

Anchorage, Alaska’s award-winning Bearfoot featuring newest member Odessa Jorgensen on fiddle, held a prime spot on the Cabin Saturday night between Steve Martin with the Steep Canyon Rangers and Elvis Costello & The Sugarcanes.

zac joins Rory Feek and Joey Martin

Zac Brown was a surprise Friday night guest on the Cabin Stage with his pals Rory Feeks and Joey Martin.  His closing set the night before set a Thursday night MerleFest crowd record.

 

 

 

brothersBrothers Tony & Wyatt Rice got the Unit back together Saturday afternoon after the former signed copies of his just-out biography Still Inside-The Tony Rice Story.  I hear it’s a great read…order yours here.

kate shumway with Scythian

Seems like every year, some prodigious young talent gets a chance to shine and steal hearts.  DC-based Celtic band Scythian brought up 8-year-old Ruthie Shumway from Charlotte to fiddle an old-time tune that may be the moment we look back on and say “Remember when?”

 

 

harry's combo

Another first-time experience was the intense Indian-infused blues created by the worldly Harry Manx, who’s called the harry manx essential link between the music of East and West.  He brought strange instruments including the sitar-slide guitar above and a stage full of gear and proceeded to cast a spell.  It’s a thrill to hear someone who’s found his niche and mines it thoroughly.  Go see this guy if you get the chance.

yahoooo

And for something completely different, how about Mr. Yahooo-ooooo himself Wylie Gustafson who rocked our Richmond Folk Festival last fall with his Wild West cowboy tunes and a yodel to die for.

red molly

New York- based Red Molly, a gifted and practiced trio I’d heard really good things about, conveniently made its first MerleFest appearance at the Cabin Sunday.  They more than lived up to advance billing.

elvis

Saturday’s closer was Elvis Costello and the Sugarcanes, his rootsy rock band that included Jerry Douglas, Stuart Duncan, Mike Compton and Jim Lauderdale.

sugarcanes

 lauderdale

Jim Lauderdale again chaired the Chris Austin Songwriter’s Contest that’s produced such high-profile past winners as Gillian Welch, Tift Merritt and Adrienne Young.  Berklee product Liz Longley, who won the General category this year, could be joining that list.  Time will tell.

steep steve

Anticipation was running high for Saturday night’s Steve Martin bluegrass set with his newfound road mates, Carolina’s Steep Canyon Rangers.  The multi-faceted white-haired and -suited comedian who used his banjo-playing skills as a gimmick during his early years, now seriously celebrates the five-string through a set full of original and imaginative tunes he plays at a level that’s no laughing matter.  Woody Platt and the boys provide the perfect musical backdrop and comedic foil as their iconic bandleader indulges himself and delights the crowd with just the right amount of his signature sense of humor.  He even encored with “King Tut.”  And it worked.  Big fun.

king sammy

But when all’s said and done, it’s all about Sam Bush. At the very first MerleFest in 1988 with his renegade New Grass Revival, the newly crowned “Father of Newgrass” (above with Friday closers Little Feat) brings the goods that have made him the ring leader of the most beloved and respected group of super-pickers.  His still youthful energy, imagination and ability to fit effortlessly into any musical context, has set him apart from his more mortal contemporaries.  And despite his lofty perch, he’s as generous and approachable as your next door neighbor.  Sam exemplifies what draws so many of us to this music…breathtaking artistry from real, relatable people.  And it doesn’t hurt that he married well.  Sam & Lynn continue to defy the odds against show biz marriages.  Their joyful inseparability is inspiring.  Just like this remarkable union of music and fellowship that is MerleFest.  The memory bank has been refilled.

TT