Music

Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit, Groundhog… Music Monday

It is clear and cold out, but warmer this morning than it has been in the past few days. I look out my office window and wonder if the monthly lapin invocation will bring better luck this month, if it will snap the metaphorical cold spell. Tomorrow is Groundhogs’ day. Will the groundhog see his shadow? Will the rabbits see theirs? Will they all simply huddle in their tunnels waiting for warmer days? We shall see.

“But February made me shiver
With every paper I'd deliver
Bad news on the doorstep, I couldn't take one more step”

I was a paperboy forty years ago. Now, I write blog posts. When someone important dies today, I hear about it on Twitter, instead of finding it on the front page of a newspaper delivered by an aspiring young musician. “Something's lost but something's gained in living every day.”

So, Buddy Holly’s death made Don McLean shiver. Joni Mitchell managed to find something gained in living every day. And then, there’s Buffy:

Every single night
The same arrangement
I go out and fight the fight
Still I always feel
This strange estrangement
Nothing here is real
Nothing here is right
I’ve been making shows of trading blows
Just hoping no one knows
That I’ve been
Going through the motions
Walking through the part
Nothing seems to penetrate my heart

So, what will your February be like? Will bad news on the door step make you shiver? Will you simply be going through the motions? Or will something be gained in living every day?

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Follow Friday

@conncan @Alex_Johnston @ctgifted @viennateng @mikegermano @onakiser @contactjr @cksample

It has been a few weeks since I’ve written a Follow Friday blog post, and so I’ll explain again my general approach. I write it as a blog post, which through Twitterfeed ends up on Twitter and from there on to Facebook. I try to follow some sort of theme for the week, but this week am combining a few different themes.

First, there is what is going on in Connecticut Education. I’m on the mailing list of @conncan. Connecticut Coalition for Achievement Now (ConnCAN) “is an advocacy organization building a new movement of concerned Connecticut citizens working to create fundamental change in our education system.” @Alex_Johnston is their executive director. If your interested in education in Connecticut and especially issues around the achievement gap, I strongly encourage you to check out @conncan.

In following @conncan, I found @ctgifted, the Connecticut Association of the Gifted. I haven’t interacted with their organization yet, but I have long been interested in issues of gifted education.

Changing gears, I want to focus on @viennatang. Ms. Tang is a folk musician that I heard a few years ago at the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival. I signed up for her mailing list, and last week got a fascinating message. It let her listeners know that she is on Twitter and asked her listeners to joiner her in “a big messy free-for-all multi-way conversation, in a good way.” Last Saturday from 6 to 9 PM Pacific time she was responding to questions. I missed it, but heard it was great fun and hope that she will be doing it again sometime soon. It seems like a great way for musicians to connect with their fans, and I’d love to see other performers do something similar. Oh, and by the way, I like Ms Tang not only because she is making good use of social media, but also because her music is really great.

For my final theme, I want to shout out to some of the people that I met at Digiday:APPS a week and a half ago. Yes, I know, I still need to write up my thoughts on that event. It is coming. Leading the list is @mikegermano of Carrot Creative. He did a great presentation on their group’s work on a Facebook application for Major League Baseball. Other folks joining in a conversation about Digiday:APPS included @onakiser @contactjr @cksample.

So, that’s it for this week’s Follow Friday. Tune in next week (if I manage to fit it in), or other Fridays to see who some of the people I find interesting on Twitter are. Also, let me know who you find interesting out there.

Music Monday - #frff 2009 - The Nields sing The Fox


At the Family Tent at Falcon Ridge 2009, The Nields sang the traditional folk song "The Fox"

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#frff 2009 Falcon Ridge Emerging Artists Recap

One of the most important parts of the Falcon Ridge experience for me is attending the Emerging Artists Showcase. It is an opportunity to listen to some great new acts and find favorite new bands. For the past two years, I’ve listened to the selected artists recordings before hand on the Internet. I’ve written brief reviews of my impressions of these artists.

Then, on Friday afternoon, I plant myself at the Main Stage from noon until four thirty and listen to each artists, take notes and rank them so that I can give an honest and well thought out recommendation of the three bands that I would most like to see return in the following year.

One of my favorite bands from 2008 was Blue Moose and the Unbuttoned Zippers. They were back as part of the Most Wanted Song Swap, which features those emerging artists that received the most votes on the previous year. They did a great job at the Song Swap and later did a set at the Dance Stage with Beth Molaro calling. I did not hear them at the Dance Stage, but I’m told that they did great. Another performer that I really enjoyed from last year was Amy Speace. She has a great song about a high school girl carrying the weight of the world on her shoulders as her big brother heads off to Iraq and later comes back to be honored at a high school football game with the flag flown at half mast.

For this year’s performers, one artists that I really liked the online music of was Aiden James of Philadelphia PA, (EPK). He was the next to last performer on Friday and did a great job, earning third place on my ranking and his name on my survey for performers to return the following year.

Coming in second was Calaveras of Lafayette CA, (EPK). They illustrate why I consider events like the Emerging Artists Showcase so important. When I listened to their music online, it sorted faded into the general mix of all the performers. However, when they got up on the stage talked about their music and then performed their tunes, I found them very compelling.

In particular, they sang a song, “Ready to Fly” that I really liked. They spoke about performing at an ambulatory care facility and hearing the stories of many of the people there. They wove the stories into a great song with a chorus,

I’m standing on the edge of the water
And I am watching the wild birds fill the sky
And I am longing to be lifted up among them
I am not dying, I’m getting ready to fly

They started off a capella and then joined in with their instruments at the first verse.

Narrowly beating out Calaveras was Angelo M of Lancaster PA, (EPK). He spoke about having been a steel worker and seeing his company reorganize and hear job and years of seniority evaporate. He played a mean guitar and sang well. Like the Aiden James and Calaveras, he should return next year and you should go check out all of their music.

Selecting the top three performers was difficult. Just about everyone who appeared on the stage was noteworthy, and some deserve special mention. Sean Rowe of Albany NY, (EPK) did great. Kim really liked him as well, and he was narrowly beaten out by Aiden James.

I also liked K.C. Clifford of Oklahoma City OK, (EPK), a lot as well as Swing Caravan of Northampton MA, (EPK). Swing Caravan is another group that I enjoyed much more on the main stage than I did online.

Also falling in that category was Nels Andrews of Brooklyn NY, (EPK). His ten minutes of Falcon Ridge fame was quite enjoyable. At the end, he joking told the audience that after his act would be a good time to go get some food or something to drink, since the next performer wasn’t really worth listening to. Nels had spent a bit of time touring with A.J. Roach & His Strange Pilgrims of NYC, (EPK). A.J. was one of those interesting exceptions that I liked better online than I did on the Main Stage. The other performer falling into this category was Robyn Landis of Vashon WA, (EPK). I really liked the music she had in her EPK and expected her to set a high bar for performers that followed her. Perhaps it was because she came on right after Angelo M that she didn’t live up to the expectations.

I chatted with others on the hill in front of the Main Stage who had different impressions and it will be interesting to see who ends up emerging to be in next year’s Most Wanted Song Swap.

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#frff Falcon Ridge 2009 Recap – Part 1.

Now that the car is mostly unpacked, though still mud stained, the Falcon Ridge Tan, a mixture of mud, sweat and sunscreen, has mostly faded in the shower, and the backlog of unread emails and social media messages have had their first perusal, it is a good chance to reflect on Falcon Ridge 2009.

Following our standard schedule, Fiona and I drove up Wednesday morning to get a good campsite. Everyone has their own definitions of a good campsite at Falcon Ridge. For some, it is a place near all their friends where they can have great jam sessions all night long. For others, it is a place where they can take their little ones after a day at the kids’ tent and the family stage and can get a peaceful rest. For us, the most important thing is a campsite that is an easy walk from the main stage and the festival.

When Fiona and I arrived at Falcon Ridge, they were not allowing people to drive in or to carry their camping gear up to our favorite camping area, so we sat by our cars in the large field turned into a parking lot near where we check in. We chatted with the volunteers who directed us where to park. One was wearing some henna designs and I spoke with Fiona about how we had painted a henna design on Kim’s belly a few weeks before Fiona was born.

We wandered over to the check in tent where I got my shiny green wrist band. Another person waiting for an opportunity to set up camp was Dan Navarro. Fiona gave him a big hug and told him yet again how much she likes his music, especially the song “Teacher, Teacher”.

Eventually, they felt that the road up to the camping area, and the fields we would camp in had dried enough and they let us head up. We camped in almost the same place we camped last year, just a little further down the hill. We hiked up the hill to fill up our water jug. We passed another volunteer who was expecting a child on August 2. Her husband was painting a henna design on her belly.

On the way back from the water trucks, we found some raspberries which we picked. We ate some, and brought some down to the pregnant volunteer and her family. They offered Fiona the use of some of the henna, and she painted henna designs on her arms. Back at the camp, we ate, read and darkness and quieter voices settled on the 10 acre camping.

Thursday morning was foggy. The festival event wasn’t until the afternoon so I needed to find something for Fiona and I to do. Just down the hill from us I spied a potential playmate for Fiona and we went down and said hello.

It turned out that Sarah was camping with her family and friends at ‘Bungieville’. We chatted as Fiona and Sarah played. Bungieville was designed by engineers using bungie cords to better withstand the harsh Falcon Ridge storms. While we chatted, the porta-potties were from down a muddy road next to bungieville. Plans were made, and later executed on how to make the porta-potties a little nicer. Cheap pictures, push button lights, and air fresheners would be purchased. Bungieville would do its part to help make the Falcon Ridge experience nicer. There was considerable joking about what to use for pictures, from Looney Tunes cartoons to velvet paintings of Jesus.

Thursday, we mostly focused on the folk dancing. Later in the day, Kim arrived and settled into the camp. In the evening, the main stage started off with Kim and Reggie Harris, together with Magpie, singing Pete Seeger’s song “One blue sky above us”. Joan Baez’s Angeline came to mind, “yesterday's news is old news, the skies are all grey”. It occurred to me that last time I was sitting on the hill in front of the main stage, I had a tarp over my head as the hail pelted down.

During their set, they talked about mountain top removal and mentioned the site ilovemountains.org. I sent out a message via twitter to try and remember it, and others commented about it being a great site.

Later, on the main stage, John Flynn sang a song “Two Letters”: “Do we do as we do as if it is to be Or is it as it is so it is up to me” where he mentioned Twitter.

As much as I like getting to Falcon Ridge early and enjoy the music on Thursday, Friday always feels like the first real day of Falcon Ridge. Perhaps that is because of attending Falcon Ridge so many years when it started on Friday. As is our custom, we started the day at the dance tent with the Morning Glory Contra Dance for Beginners.

For me, this is followed by four and a half hours sitting at the Main Stage listening to the Emerging Artists Showcase. Twenty four emerging artists are given ten minutes each to introduce themselves and sing a couple songs. They are selected out of hundreds of applicants and is perhaps one of the best opportunities to hear some of the best up and coming artists live.

Last year I listened to the 2008 Falcon Ridge Emerging Artists online and wrote up my thoughts before attending the showcase. This year, I posted my thoughts about the 2009 Falcon Ridge Emerging Artists shortly before heading up to Falcon Ridge. As I always do, I take copious notes so that I can recommend my favorites for the coming year. Yet this will need to wait for another post.

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