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Coming Soon: Fall Fiddle Tunes Workshop

FIDDLE TUNES WEEKEND
November 15–18, 2007

For the second consecutive year, the Fiddle Tunes party returns to Fort Worden in the fall! The Fiddle Tunes Weekend is a total-immersion workshop presenting many regional styles of fiddle music, particularly the songs of the Southern mountain region.

The program will be jam-packed with workshop classes, tutorials, and open jams, culminating in a faculty concert on November 17 that is free for participants. A public dance in the USO building follows the concert.

We'll taking registrations shortly. Stay tuned for more info very soon!

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Tutorial Program

The Fiddle Tunes tutorial program supports and encourages beginning players: those who are true beginners, people with no previous experience, as well as those who already have some experience but may wish to take up a new instrument. Tutors for beginners have been carefully selected for fiddle, banjo, guitar, mandolin and piano. Participants with no previous experience may expect friendly and useful advice to support their entry into all the workshops and band labs offered at Fiddle Tunes. A special tutor introduction is planned for the opening evening of the workshop.

2007 Artist/Faculty

Bob_mcquillen_2006 The heart of Centrum’s Festival of American Fiddle Tunes is its faculty. Each year, we scour the continent to bring you the best players, in the broadest array of styles, found anywhere. These are authentic bearers of North American fiddle traditions. Their knowledge, stories, musicianship, and commitment to the community are part of what makes this week such a special celebration of traditional music.

2007 Faculty:

Artistic Director Dirk Powell learned traditional Appalachian music directly from his grandfather, yet grew up mostly away from the mountains in Ohio, giving him a unique combination of inside and outside perspectives. Powell has the ability to convey the essence of the tradition to people of all backgrounds, a quality which has led to work with artists such as T-Bone Burnett, Sting, Loretta Lynn, Jack White, and others.

A fiddler and guitarist, Kenny Applebee is adept at several guitar styles, including the traditional old-time Missouri backup that is preferred by many Missouri fiddlers.

Christine Balfa Powell is one of Cajun music’s most talented vocalists. She began playing as a teenager with her father, Dewey Balfa and has continued her family legacy.

For twelve years, Jean-Paul Beaulieu was the leader of Les Montagnard Laurentien. His clarinet and saxophone inspired many French Canadian folk musicians.

André Bouchard hails from Matane, on the Gaspé Peninsula, a region that has produced great accordion players. A virtuoso on the accordion, Bouchard also plays piano and bass.

Fiddler Liz Carroll has been amazing audiences around the world for many years. In 1994, the National Endowment for the Arts awarded her the National Heritage Fellowship.

Fiddler Paul Dahlin plays Sweden’s most venerable and admired regional music—that of the province of Dalarna. Dahlin was awarded a National Heritage Fellowship in 1994.

Guitarist John Doyle was playing professionally in Ireland by the age of sixteen. Recently, he has accompanied fiddler Liz Carroll in acclaimed recordings and tours.

Sean Doyle has played at numerous festivals around the world. He recently released his debut CD, The Light and the Half-Light.

As part of the Carolina Chocolate Drops, guitarist Dom Flemons uses his harmonicas for additional melody and his jug and guitar root the band in an infectious rhythm.

Banjo player Rhiannon Giddens is a famed contra dance caller. She worked extra jobs to buy her first banjo and fiddle, and hasn’t looked back since.

Accordion player Kristi Guillory is obsessed with sad, pitiful Cajun songs, raunchy drinking ones and the fantastical lyrics of old Cajun a capella ballads.

Jerry Holland is a fiddler strongly rooted in Cape Breton, Scottish and Irish dance music traditions. Many of his tunes have entered the traditional repertoire around the world. He'll be joined by the irrepressible Daniel Lapp.

Yvette Landry is a sought-after bassist. She brings a regal air and poise to Bon Soir Catin and is often called the Queen of Cajun bass.

Fiddler Denis Maheux has shared the stage with such musicians as Sabin Jacques, Gaston Nolet, Jean-Yves Hamel, and others. He has toured for over thirty years.

Accordionist and pianist Jeremiah McLane’s solo recording, Smile When You're Ready, was nominated by NPR as a “favorite pick.” His has played on nearly forty albums.

Guitar and mandolin ace Keith Murphy is a native of Newfoundland, a setting which has been the source for many of his songs over the years.

Justin Robinson is the fiddler for the Carolina Chocolate Drops. He studies with the legendary Joe Thompson and plays the music of the Carolina Piedmont.

Anya Schoenegge Burgess incorporates many styles into her fiddle playing, including old-time and country. She grew up in New England and began playing while young.

Adélard Thomassin plays the diatonic accordion. In Quebec, there is no dance hall that Thomassin has not seen. His compositions are played by many traditional musicians.

Fiddler Becky Tracy studied Irish fiddling styles and French Canadian fiddling. These elements combine to give Becky her distinctive clarity of tone.

Guitarist Jenny Traynham and her husband, Mac, have become a popular duo, known as the Southern Mountain Melody Makers. They have released two CDs.

Mac Traynham plays clawhammer banjo. He excels on a slew of instruments including banjo, fiddle and guitar, and he often performs in a band with his wife, Jenny.

Joe Thompson is a dynamic fiddler with a distinctive short bow action. For years, he has continued the tradition of African-American country fiddling.

Fiddler and step dancer April Verch’s repertoire ranges through material from Americana to simple country songs and rollicking tunes from her native Ottawa Valley. She has released several acclaimed CDs, and she will be accompanied at the Festival by percussionist Marc Bru and guitarist Isaac Callender.

John White’s fiddle style was developed while playing for square dances. He plays old-time tunes learned through contests and fiddler conventions.

Jesse Wells has been attending festivals since an early age. He is influenced by his father Jamie, an old-time fiddler. Jesse plays several instruments and sings harmony vocals.

Jamie Wells performed for fifteen years with the Bottom of the Barrel Bunch and later with the Trough Sloppers. His performances include playing at multiple festivals.

Randy Wilson plays the guitar, dulcimer, and autoharp. In Kentucky, he learned stories and tunes from Lee Boy Sextno, Marcus Howard, and Roscoe Halcomb, among others.

Workshop Schedule

Mornings are devoted to workshops in fiddle, banjo, guitar, mandolin, bass and songs. The intended focus of these morning sessions is on the individual faculty member’s regional and personal style and repertoire. All faculty members will give four morning workshops during the week, and the nature of these workshops will vary according to their personal preferences. While some of the faculty will be experienced teachers, some will not. In general, the emphasis will be on the participant’s learning in the tradition of close observation and listening, followed by industrious, personal experimentation. Some tutors will give morning workshops in subjects of their choosing.

 

Fiddle_tunes_porch_jam Afternoons are focused on the band labs in which participants join the faculty members of their choice to form ensembles and learn tunes as close to the styles of their faculty leaders as possible. These bands play for dancers on Friday night and for the climactic band concert on Saturday morning. The second afternoon period presents the tutors in “office hours” where they can trouble-shoot and answer questions uncovered in the band labs, as well as imparting instruction in instrumental technique. Tutors are chosen to be very responsive to the needs of the individual participants. The last afternoon hour is devoted to dance workshops and the popular do-it-yourself or “wild card” workshops.

 

Evenings feature intimate, unamplified showcase concerts in the Joseph F. Wheeler Theater, including the vastly entertaining Participants’ Concert on Thursday night. Splendid social dancing takes place in two dance halls, and a limited number of master jams are hosted in the Schoolhouse. All of this is stirred up with a full-load of night-long jamming and impromptu parties.

Typical Schedule

First Sunday

  • 3:30-5:30 check-in
  • 7:30 welcome session

Monday- Friday

  • 9:30 am workshop
  • 11:00 am workshop
  • 2:00pm band labs
  • 3:30pm tutorials
  • 4:30pm dance & wildcard workshops
  • 7:00pm showcase concerts
  • 9:30pm dancing & jamming

Meals

  • Breakfast    8:30
  • Lunch        12:30
  • Dinner        5:30

Last Sunday
Check out by 11am

Workshop Description

Spend the week of July 1 - 8, 2007, living, learning, and jamming with masters of North American fiddling traditions. The Festival of American Fiddle Tunes is a week-long, total-immersion workshop presenting many regional styles of fiddle music. You’ll play in community with carefully selected bearers of North American fiddle traditions. The program’s particularly wide spectrum includes workshop classes, band lab classes, tutorials, dances, concerts, open jams, parties, and informal and spontaneous gatherings.

Fiddle_workshop_photo The emphasis at the workshop is on the oral tradition of close observation and listening, followed by personal experimentation. Band labs, in which participants join the faculty members of their choice to form ensembles and learn tunes, are also a popular workshop feature. Evenings feature intimate, unamplified showcase concerts and social dancing takes place in two dance halls. All of this is stirred up with a full load of night-long jamming and impromptu parties.

The heart of the workshop is the faculty. Each year we scour the continent to bring you the authentic bearers of North American fiddle traditions. Their knowledge, stories, musicianship, and commitment to the community are part of what makes this week such a special celebration.

Fiddle Tunes is unique in creating a setting in which participants may immerse themselves in many traditional fiddle styles. These styles have been passed down in a family or neighborhood setting since early days. Modern times have disturbed this process with forces that cause distraction and disenfranchisement; these days professional music lessons and public school band and orchestra classes tend to filter out people who are judged, all too often by self-serving experts, as having insufficient talent. Fiddle Tunes helps add self-made music to people's lives by providing the setting for this intense experience of learning in the time-honored process of close observation and personal experimentation, teaching yourself to play.

Tuition for the workshop is $450 ($275 for kids-program participants), and includes admission to all festival events. Room and board options range from $200 to $385.

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FIDDLE CONTACT INFO

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

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