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4 posts from July 2007

Videos from the 2007 Festival of American Fiddle Tunes

[Jesse Wells, Brett Ratliff, Dirk Powell, and Yvette Landry onstage in their mainstage performance at the 2007 Festival of American Fiddle Tunes, July 7, 2007.]

In addition to the above, enjoy the following videos from the 2007 Festival of American Fiddle Tunes, at (sometimes!) sunny and warm Fort Worden State Park in July:

Liz Carroll with John Doyle playing an Irish reel from their mainstage performance, July 6, 2007

Denis Maheux and Sans Ages in their Free Fridays at the Fort performance, July 6, 2007

The Carolina Chocolate Drops in their Free Fridays at the Fort performance, July 6, 2007

Many thanks to those who posted these videos! Also, read Mac and Jenny Traynham's new blog and their post on their Fiddle Tunes experience here.

Centrum's next Fiddle Tunes experience will be a Southern Mountain Music workshop November 16-18 with Dirk Powell, Riley Baugus, and Tim Eriksen. Follow this link for more information on this fall workshop and performance.

2007 Fiddle Tunes Workshop Evaluation

Were you a workshop participant at the 2007 Festival of American Fiddle Tunes? If so, we want to know how the week went for you.

This year, we are handling our workshop evaluations online using SurveyMonkey. If you were a participant, you've received an email link to the survey. If your email filter kept that out of your inbox, here's a direct link to the survey.

Thanks--we look forward to hearing from you.

A Few Photos from 4th of July

The weather in Port Townsend is magnificent. It pales in comparison to the music being generated, however. Here are a few snaps from the public 4th of July concert in McCurdy Pavilion. Hope to see you at the Friday night and Saturday afternoon shows!

Traynhams
Jenny and Mac Traynham.

Nightingale
Nightingale.

Carolinachocolatedrops
Carolina Chocolate Drops with Joe Thompson.

Aprilverch_2
April Verch.

Joe Thompson Wins National Heritage Award

Fiddler Joe Thompson (center), who for decades single-handedly preserved the tradition of African-Carolinachocolatedrops_2 American fiddle music, has won the National Heritage Fellowship award, the country’s highest honor in the folk and traditional arts! 

The award, which is presented annually by the National Endowment for the Arts, was awarded to twelve recipients in 2007. The awardees were chosen on the basis of artistic excellence, cultural authenticity and contributions to their field, and were chosen from 259 nominations.

On July 4 in Port Townsend, Thompson will give a performance of traditional African-American string tunes at the Festival of American Fiddle Tunes. He'll play with the Carolina Chocolate Drops (pictured), one of the finest string bands in the country.

The show begins at 1:30 at Fort Worden State Park’s McCurdy Pavilion, a WWI-era balloon hangar converted into a 1,200-seat concert hall. Tickets are available by calling Centrum at 360.385.3102, x117 and online at our secure Acteva site.

Thompson has upheld and represented the tradition of African-American country fiddling for more than eighty years. The tradition, representing some of the earliest string band instrumentation on the continent, melds African and Anglo instrumentation and styles. Born into a North Carolina farming family that dated its musical heritage to before the Civil War, Thompson was playing fiddle by the age of five.

Joe_thompson Thompson's father was sought after by both black and white neighbors to provide music for local square dances.  As soon as Thompson took up the fiddle, he and his brother, Nate, and their cousin, Odell, were in demand for local house parties.

Most of the tunes they learned have today become standards for Southern fiddlers and banjo players, but some were unique to the African American repertoire. Thompson punctuates his performance with sung verses and square dance calls, many of which are rarely heard today.

After Odell's death in 1994, Thompson considered giving up music but he began playing publicly again with younger musicians in the region. 

In 1999, Rounder Records released Joe Thompson: Family Tradition, which focuses exclusively on his unique musical repertoire.

“Joe’s music is important,” says Centrum program manager Peter McCracken.

“He has essentially single-handedly preserved an African-American fiddle style. He is acutely aware of the tradition he was bearing, and he took it seriously. Joe’s music is instantly identifiable, recognizable, the culmination of multiple generations in his community blending Scottish melodies with African rhythms.”

Continue reading "Joe Thompson Wins National Heritage Award" »

NEXT FIDDLE WORKSHOPS

  • 06/28/09-07/05/09: Festival of American Fiddle Tunes

NEXT FIDDLE PERFORMANCES

  • 06/28/09-07/05/09: The Festival of American Fiddle Tunes

FIDDLE CONTACT INFO

  • Peter McCracken
    360-385-3102 x127
    peter@centrum.org

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