Archive - Jul 2011

July 26th

The Falcon Ridge Moon

As I pulled the 2005 Grey Prius laden with camping gear off of Route 22 in Hillsdale, NY onto a small farm road, and then into a field, my wife proclaimed to our nine year old daughter in the back seat, “We’re here!”

I rolled down the window and spoke to the young man standing in the field. He echoed a similarly excited welcome to us. The day before, there had been volunteers on the road holding up signs saying, “Welcome Home.”

I told him how our GPS would always say as we approached our destination, “You have arrived!” I’ve always thought that was an especially appropriate announcement at the end of a long road trip, and it held especially true for that moment in time when we arrived at the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival. Not only were we arriving physically, but there was some sort of emotional or perhaps spiritual arrival as well.

I’ve gone to Falcon Ridge pretty much every year since 1994. My wife Kim has always gone since we met, and Fiona first kicked her feet to the music of a drummer on the main stage a few months before she was born. The words of Dave Carter and Tracy Grammer came to mind

This is my home, this is my only home
This is the only sacred ground that I have ever known

It was going to be a hot weekend, so we set up camp as quickly as possible and headed to the local State Park; an old quarry turned into a swimming hole. Everywhere we turned we ran into people who had become our friends in previous years of the folk festival. In the evening, I listened to some music up at the Lounge stage, and the next morning we headed off to the dance stage.

Falcon Ridge is a place where I’ve always felt comfortable letting my children run free. It is a safe, loving community. This would be the year that Fiona would start pursuing this freedom, especially if it meant more time at the dance tent. Friday morning, I headed down to the dance tent with her and ran into some friends who were struggling to make ends meet. They talked about their part time jobs and the goals of making enough money to feed, clothe and shelter the family, so that they could spend as much time on creative community oriented tasks as possible.

The idea stuck with me as I later listened to a performer introduce a song. She spoke about having watched a bunch of documentaries like Fast Food Nation or Gasland and wondered what had gone wrong with our country that we were allowing men corrupted by greed to destroy our nation. I thought about the impasse in the debt ceiling negotiations in Washington. I thought about some of the extremely wealthy folks I had worked with on Wall Street who seemed incapable of soaking in the enjoyment of a gathering like Falcon Ridge.

Now there's smoke across the harbor, and there's factories on the shore
And the world is ill with greed and will and enterprise of war

I often come back to Maslow's hierarchy of needs. How is it that some of the richest people I know are stuck in the lowest levels of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, seeking to satisfy only their physiological and safety needs, even when they have more money than they could ever spend, when money simply becomes their way of keeping score in the game of life?

Yet here I was, surrounded by people just barely meeting their physiological needs so they could focus on other things like loving, belonging, esteem, self-actualization and self-transcendence. Falcon Ridge is a place where we feel loved and belonging. It is a place where people live up to creative potentials.

It is an inclusive community where all religious beliefs are honored. Yet I return back to the religious framework of my formative years. I’ve always thought of humans as being created in God’s image. Yet what is that image? It isn’t white skin, or brown, two eyes and a nose. No, the essence of our creation to me has always seemed to be about being creatures capable of creating, of loving, and of forgiving.

Later in the festival, I listened to Red Molly perform Susan Werner’s great song, “May I suggest”

May I suggest this is the best part of your life…
This time is blessed and shining almost blinding bright…

My mind returned to those who seem incapable of savoring the best part of their lives, to the people I have worked with on Wall Street and in politics that have gotten stuck fighting to run up the score in their financial balance sheets at the expense of being able to find love, belonging and esteem. My mind went to the words of Woody Guthrie’s song, “Pretty Boy Floyd”.

Some will rob you with a six-gun,
And some with a fountain pen.

It then drifted to the great old Zen Story:

Ryokan, a Zen master, lived the simplest kind of life in a little hut at the foot of a mountain. One evening a thief visited the hut only to discover there was nothing to steal.
Ryokan returned and caught him. "You have come a long way to visit me," he told the prowler, "and you should not return empty-handed. Please take my clothes as a gift."
The thief was bewildered. He took the clothes and slunk away.
Ryoken sat naked, watching the moon. "Poor fellow," he mused, "I wish I could have given him this beautiful moon."

I looked around at the crowd on the hill enjoying the music and the moon over Falcon Ridge, and I thought about the poor fellows fighting to defend taxes breaks for the wealthiest and wished I could give them this beautiful Falcon Ridge moon.

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July 25th

Music Monday - #FRFF Recap

So, it is Monday evening after Falcon Ridge. I am exhausted, but there is so much that I need to write, I figure I’ll power through this blog post, and hopefully write another one tomorrow. This one will be about some of the music

We arrived at Falcon Ridge Thursday at around noon. We set up camp, and headed to the quarry to swim and cool off. In the evening, I went up to The Lounge to hear some of the pre-festival music.

I didn’t make it there until around 6 PM and missed the first couple sets, catching only the end of Joe Iadanza, Hugh McGowan, and Marcia Hendricks’ set. Unfortunately, I listened to so much music they all kind of faded into part of the general blur.

The next set was supposed to be Charles Nolan, Chris O'Brien, and David Glaser. Unfortunately, there was a mixup and Chris O’Brien wasn’t there. I was disappointed, since Chris O’Brien was one of the performers I really liked from last year, both in some late night performances on the hill and on the main stage as an emerging artist.

I had forgotten about David Glaser. I had heard him the year before, and really liked his music. Thinking back at this point, the one song that particularly remains in my mind is “House in Baltimore”. It is a great song that I’ll want to listen to more closely again as I write other reflections on Falcon Ridge.

This was followed by a short dinner break. After the break was ilyAIMY. They sang a song entitled ‘Phantom’, talking about the itch that can’t be itched that people who have lost a limb sometimes experience, part of phantom pain, and comparing it to the phantom pain of a relationship that had gone bad. This was followed by a song about ‘Dune’. It was a really good set.

The next set was Brittany Ann, Phil Henry, and Bethel Steele. I had heard Brittany Ann last year at The Lounge and really liked her as well. I think she sang October during that set, as well as Puzzle Pieces. She was one of the Emerging Artists and sang Puzzle Pieces the next day on the main stage and it was this morning’s ear worm.

This was followed by Spuyten Duyvil, another band I really enjoyed last year, when I heard them at The Lounge as well as being one of last year’s Emerging Artists. They did not disappoint.

All of this led up to the penultimate set of Thursday evening at The Lounge, with We're About 9, Pesky J. Nixon, and Anthony da Costa. This was an incredible set. Again, much of the music blurred together, so there aren’t any particular memories, other than one point when Anthony da Costa said something to the effect of, “Okay now, time for the audience whistling solo”. The audience pulled it off incredibly. There were some great songs for singing along, and the audience also excelled there.

I figured I’d end of the evening on a very positive note, so I left before the last set, which I’m sure would have been quite good as well.

Friday afternoon was the emerging artists showcase. Twenty five different performers get ten minutes on the main stage. I had listened to each performer online already, so I had a sense of who was who. One thing that had bothered me was that many of the female vocalists sounded all the same online, sort of a generic female vocalist. However, there were two pretty amazing exceptions.

Bulat Gafarov wowed just about everyone. Falcon Ridge always has ASL interpreters. Typically when there is an instrumental piece, the interpreter does something to indicate what the music is like. When Bulat was on, the interpreter just sat there, leaning her mouth, which was open in awe of the performance, against her hand, transfixed by the performance. Perhaps that is the best way to summarize Bulat’s performance. They only other words would be overused superlatives.

The other performer that I really liked was Paul Sachs. Again, in the haze of the festival, I don’t have the clearest recollection of the songs he sang, other that Dirty Trucks. The rough and ready lyrics matched his voice for a powerful performance. These two performers clearly had to be my two to picks.

Three of the performers from The Lounge were also in the emerging artist’s show case, Pesky J. Nixon, ilyAIMY, and Brittany Ann. In my mind it was probably a three way tie between them, and at this point, I can’t remember who I picked.

I love seeing and hearing many musicians who perform regularly at Falcon Ridge. They have become old friends and their songs have found their place in my canon of favorites. Yet the Emerging Artist’s Showcase has always been a special part of Falcon Ridge for me, a chance to meet new performers to add to my list of favorites. This year, The Lounge further amplified this wonderful part of Falcon Ridge.

To be continued…

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July 24th

#FRFF Home

Okay. I'm home. Falcon Ridge was great. There is lots to write about, and perhaps I'll do it when I'm not so tired, not so sweaty, when the computer isn't as slow, and when I catch up a little bit on social media.

Key ideas: A short story about aliens. A political piece tying together Maslow, Falcon Ridge, and the debt ceilint.

Also, a review of some of the music listened to.

Lots to write about, hopefully I'll be rested soon.

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July 23rd

At the dance text

Another hot day... Having problems keeping the phones charged, do I don't have as many pictures or videos as I would like.

So far, it has been a great festival, setting lots of old friends

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July 22nd

At the folk festival

Well, we're here. It is clear and very hot. Yesterday went to the quarry to swim. On the evening, I went to The Lounge. There were some great performers and a wonderful sense of community.

This morning, I am charging up my cellphone, resting, and preparing to diy in the sun for several hours.

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