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7th Annual Brooklyn Folk Festival: April 17th-19th, 2015!

old time

7th Annual Brooklyn Folk Festival: April 17th-19th, 2015!

February 3, 2015 by admin 2 Comments

Hey folks – The 7th Annual Brooklyn Folk Festival is on it’s way!  Get your tickets now!

 

April 17th-19th at our amazing new venue, St. Ann’s Church, centrally located in Brooklyn Heights!  Here’s a photo of the venue:

Complete 30 band lineup below! PLUS! Workshops, film screenings, and the BANJO TOSS competition!


CLICK HERE for tickets
, or visit www.BrooklynFolkFest.com

Brought to you by Down Home Radio Show and the Jalopy Theatre…

SCHEDULE

Friday April 17th:

8:00PM Jackson Lynch – Blues guitar, old time fiddle and banjo breakdowns, songs and ballads
8:45PM Horse Eyed Men – Original folk/country outer-space music
9:30PM Michael Hurley – Legendary folk musician, needs no introduction!
10:15PM Jerron “Blindboy” Paxton – Country blues, fiddle and banjo
11:00PM Terry Waldo’s Rum House Band – Legendary early Jazz and Ragtime pianist with his band
11:45PM Feral Foster and His Band – Excellent songwriting based solidly in Blues, Folk, Gospel and Balkan music

Saturday April 18th: Afternoon Concerts

Posted in: Other Tagged: Banjo, Blues, Brooklyn Folk Fetival, fiddle, Folk Music, jalopy theatre, new york, old time

The Brooklyn Folk Festival Approaches!

March 15, 2013 by admin Leave a Comment
Hello everybody!

Down Home Radio Show Host Eli Smith and The Jalopy Theatre are proud to announce the 5th Annual Brooklyn Folk Festival coming up on Friday, April 19th through Sunday, April 21st!Come out for three days of music at the Bell House, 149 7th Street, in the heart of Brooklyn’s Gowanus neighborhood.

The festival includes performances from more than 30 local and national bands in the fields of old time music, blues, early jazz, country, bluegrass, klezmer, Balkan, Mexican traditional and more! Plus a variety of instrumental and vocal workshops, folk music related film screenings, a family friendly square dance, and the return of the famous banjo toss competition!

All the information including schedule and tickets is at
www.BrooklynFolkFest.com.

Posted in: Other Tagged: Banjo, Brooklyn Folk Festival, Jalopy, old time

Interview with Boo Hanks and Dom Flemons

October 15, 2012 by admin Leave a Comment

On today’s show I speak with Piedmont blues guitarist and singer Boo Hanks and multi-instrumentalist Dom Flemons of the Carolina Chocolate Drops.  They have a new album out on the Music Maker label entitled, “Buffalo Junction” and I caught up with them recently before their show at Joe’s Pub in Manhattan.

I speak with Boo and Dom about their influences, style and collaboration over the last several years.  We delve into Boo Hanks’ early history growing up on the Virginia – North Carolina border, the “Piedmont” area where his distinctive style of guitar comes from and where he was born 84 years ago.  Boo learned guitar from his father but was most attracted the style of Blind Boy Fuller and cites him as his primary musical influence.  Boo has worked as a farmer for his entire life, raising his many children on their family farm, and playing guitar for country dances and functions.  Over the past several years he has toured extensively, performing his excellent country blues music for audiences around the United States and Europe.

We thank our sponsor, the Old Time Herald Magazine – a magazine dedicated to Old Time Music.  Subscribe today at: www.oldtimeherald.org

Posted in: Shows Tagged: boo hanks, carolina chocolate drops, dom flemons, old time, piedmont blues

The Dust Busters CD Release Show… Sept. 6th…

September 3, 2012 by admin Leave a Comment

Brand new on the Smithsonian Folkways label: “Old Man Below”

CD Release Show – Thursday Sept. 6th at the Jalopy Theatre! 

With an opening performance by Blind Boy Paxton

Details:
Showtime 8:30pm
Cover $10
Jalopy Theatre
Brooklyn, NY
 www.Jalopy.biz

Posted in: Other Tagged: John Cohen, old time, Smithsonian Folkways, The Dust Busters

Washington Square Park Folk Fest 2012

September 2, 2012 by admin Leave a Comment

Come check out the festival – It’s free and open to the public, out in Washington Square Park in New York’s own Greenwhich Village!


Saturday Sept. 15th

2pm Jackson Lynch – Blues and old-time singer, multi-instrumentalist
3pm Randy Burns – Songwriter
4pm Ian Link – Songwriter
5pm Stephanie Coleman – Old-time fiddler
6pm Banjorama – Banjo oriented jug band
7pm Whiskey Spitters – Blues and old-time stringband

Sunday Sept. 16th
1pm Mamie Minch and Tamar Korn – Blues and jazz singers
2pm Piedmont Bluz – Country blues duet
3pm Unnamed Hillbilly Orchestra w/ John Cohen
4pm Ginny Hawker and Tracy Schwarz – Old-time and country duet
5pm Blind Boy Paxton – Country blues guitarist
6pm 4 O’Clock Flowers – Folk duet
7pm Feral Foster – Songwriter

* The stage is located just East of the central plaza/fountain area of the park.  Seating will be provided.

Here’s what happened last year at the inaugural 2011 festival!


[Banner by C. Cassano]

Hello everybody, just letting you know about the upcoming Washington Square Park Folk Festival.  I got hired by the Parks Department to produce the first ever folk festival in Washington Square Park.  Gonna be fun!

The festival is FREE and open to the public!

Its gonna be an excellent two days of music, with 9 of my very favorite groups (including my own) gracing the stage and myself on hand to serve as your MC.  Hope to see you there!

Saturday Sept 17th, 2011:

2pm The Calamity Janes – old time string band
3pm Feral Foster – original songs and blues
4pm East River String Band – country blues & old time
5pm Whiskey Spitters – country blues & old time

Sunday Sept 18th, 2011:

2pm Bob Malenky – country blues
2:45pm Brotherhood of the Jug Band Blues – jug band music
3:40 Frank Fairfield – Old Time songs and fiddle tunes
4:15pm The Dust Busters with John Cohen – old time string band
5:10pm Willy Gantrim & the Phantoms – original songs, country & blues
6pm Peter Stampfel and the Ether Frolic Mob – make a wish for a potato

Proudly sponsored by:

http://www.milliontreesnyc.org/images/misc/parks_logo.jpg

2011 also marks the 50th anniversary of the 1961 “Washington Square Folk Music Riot” when the City tried to revoke the permit for folk musicians to play and sing on Sundays in the park.  They needed to clear undesirable people out so that they could  satisfy local real estate interests and I heard possibly enact a crazy plan to extend 5th ave. through the park!  Luckily folkies resisted the attempt by the police to kick them out of their public space, resulting in the “riot,” and the planned extension of 5th ave never materialized. There’s been a film made about the “riot” and the film will be screened at the festival.

Coverage of the so called riot has been offered by The Indypendent and NPR.

Posted in: Other Tagged: Blues, folk festival, music, old time, washington square park

Roots of Woody Guthrie: Celebrating Woody at 100

July 3, 2012 by admin 3 Comments
http://downhomeradioshow.com/ShowMp3s2012/DHRGuthrie100.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download


July 14th, 2012 will mark the 100th birthday of the great songwriter, author and artist Woody Guthrie.  On today’s show we’ll honor Guthrie by playing a number of his songs and taking a look at some of the sources for the melodies he used and influences on the style in which he played and sang.

Guthrie is best known as author of “This Land Is Your Land,” but in fact wrote thousands of songs, as well as autobiographical novels, poetry, and humorous op-ed news pieces.  He was also a fine visual artist as well as a rambling man, having traveled through out the United States and also Europe and Africa during in his time in the Merchant Marines during WWII.

There have been a number of books about his life and a film based on his book “Bound for Glory,” numerous reissues of his recordings, tribute albums and cover versions of his songs in a number of styles, but I’ve found that the least explored area of his work are his actual musical sources and style.

Woody Guthrie wrote very few original melodies, he took melodies of old time songs, folk and other songs and rewrote them with his own words to make them his own and into the songs we know today.  Most songwriters who claim Guthrie as an influence today do not perform in a style related to Guthrie’s old time style, but instead focus on his lyrics and a some notion of his politics and perform Guthrie’s songs and their own songs in a singer songwriter rock/pop based style.

Woody Guthrie was a great folk singer and had great taste in the songs that he used to base his own songs.  He loved the Carter Family as well as apparently many other old time musicians that made 78rpm records in the years before WWII.  Guthrie is pictured below with J.E. and Wade Mainer of the famous and influential old time string band “Mainer’s Mountaineers.”

By making these juxtapositions of Guthrie’s songs and their sources (probably Guthrie’s favorite pieces) I hope to place Guthrie aesthetically as an old time / “hill billy” musician much like the other performers featured on today’s show.

These are recordings that Woody either enjoyed or I think would have enjoyed, so here’s wishing Woody a happy 100th birthday and I hope you will enjoy the program.

Here is a list of all the tracks played on today’s show.  Each Guthrie song is followed by its source:

Intro music: Cowboy Waltz (Guthrie on fiddle)
1. This Land is Your Land – Woody Guthrie
2. When the World’s On Fire – The Carter Family
3. So Long, Its Been Good to Know Yuh – Woody Guthrie
4.  Billy the Kid – Vernon Dalhart
5. Pretty Boy Floyd – Woody Guthrie
6. Utah Carroll – Cartwright Brothers
7. 1913 Massacre – Woody Guthrie
8. Irish Soldier and the English Lady – Neil Morris
9. The Ludlow Massacre – Woody Guthrie
10. East Virginia Blues – The Carter Family
11. Ramblin’ Round – Woody Guthrie
12. Goodnight Irene – Leadbelly
13. Do Re Mi – Woody Guthrie
14. Hang Out the Front Door Key – The Blue Sky Boys
15. Two Good Men (Sacco and Vanzetti) – Woody Guthrie
16. Poor Howard – Leadbelly
17. I’ve Got to Know – – Woody Guthrie
18. Farther Along – Roy Acuff
19. Phildelphia Lawyer (Reno Blues) – Woody Guthrie
20. The Jealous Lover – The Stanley Brothers
21. The Sinking of the Reuben James – Woody Guthrie
22. Wildwood Flower – The Carter Family
23. Union Maid (Live Excerpt) – Woody Guthrie
24. Redwing – Riley Puckett
Outro Music – Wildwest Rambler by the Crowder Brothers. Once while speaking with the great folklorist Archie Green, he asked me to name examples of old records the prefigured Guthrie’s style.  This is one, sounds like Woody and Cisco to me.

P.S. I realized that I should have included “Pastures of Plenty” in this program, which is based on the melody of the folk song “Pretty Polly.”  And how could I forget “Tom Joad” based on the melody of “John Hardy!”  There are probably others that I missed too!

P.P.S.  Don’t forget to check out:

Woody Guthrie on live on WNYC with Leadbelly in 1940

The program was produced for WNYC in 1940 by Down Home Radio co-founder Henrietta Yurchenco.  The recording of the broadcast was discovered in 2006, at which time I went down to the archives and picked up a CD dub of it from archivist Andy Lanset.  Down Home Radio rebroadcast it for the first time in 67 year in 2007 with commentary by Yurchenco.


l to r: Eugene Rector, Woody Guthrie, Fred Smith, J.E. Mainer, Cisco Houston, Wade Mainer, at the BBC Studios New York. September 11, 1944.

More Thoughts on Woody Guthrie:

The scope of Guthrie’s work identifies him as a Popular Front era public intellectual and his influence on generations of artists, mostly song writers, continues to this day.  Woody Guthrie was incredibly prolific, especially considering the brevity of his career, cut short by the hereditary Huntington’s Disease that disabled him by the mid 1950’s and took his life in 1967.

Guthrie came from a middle class family in what was then the young state of Oklahoma , having been

Posted in: Shows Tagged: beat generation, carter family, fiddle, influences, jack kerouac, old time, popular front, roots, sources, This Land Is Your Land, Woody Guthrie

Farewell to Doc Watson (1923-2012)

May 30, 2012 by admin 1 Comment

Arthel “Doc” Watson has died at the age of 89.  Doc along with Pete Seeger are to my mind the most important folk singers and folk popularizers of the later 20th century.  Doc Watson was a consummate old time string band musician, best known for his guitar picking, but also a great banjo, harmonica and mandolin player and a wonderful singer.

Doc spent his early years playing regionally near his home in Western North Carolina.  Then with the help of several New York musician/folklorist/enthusiasts Doc, already nearing 40 years old in the early 1960’s, emerged full blown on the national scene.   Although he disliked being away from home he toured very hard for years, all the more difficult because he was blind.  In terms of his style, repertoire and generation, Doc was a very interesting mix, bridging the territory between regional “authentic” traditional musician and self conscious “folk singer” putting his take on folk and other songs.   Doc won fans everywhere that he played, won the National Medal of Arts in 1997 and was a great inspiration for many musicians.

Doc’s guitar work was rooted in the old time guitar picking of Riley Puckett, the Delmore Brothers and others, but he took it to an even more impressive level of musicianship.  His artistry and technical virtuosity on the acoustic guitar may never be equaled.  I was lucky to see him in concert a number of times and several of his albums are among my very favorites.

Here is an obituary from the New York Times:
www.nytimes.com/2012/05/30/arts/music/doc-watson-folk-musician-dies-at-89



I recommend checking out some of his early work:

Doc Watson [Doc’s first album]

Original Folkways Recordings of Doc Watson and Clarence Ashley, 1960-1962

The Watson Family

http://www.clarenceashley.com/images/gallery/images/recording.jpg
[Doc Watson performs live with Clarence Ashley and band – early 1960’s]

And some great live material:

Jean Ritchie and Doc Watson at Folk City

Doc Watson at Gerdes Folk City  [Great material from Doc’s first solos shows in NYC, 1962-’63 – recorded and released by Peter K. Siegel at Henry Street Folklore .]

Bill Monroe and Doc Watson: Live Recordings 1963-1980 [Great album of duets with Bill Monroe!]

Friends of Old Time Music box set

Video:
Doc Watson on Pete Seeger’s 60’s TV show “Rainbow Quest.”


[photo by John Cohen 1961]

Here is a link to audio from the collection at Appalachian State University in Boone, NC – the first recording of Doc Watson, at age 18 in 1941 singing “Precious Jewel” at the Boone Fiddlers Convention.  Field recorded by W. Amos Abrams.

 

Posted in: Articles Tagged: Doc Watson, obituary, old time

Brooklyn Folk Festival Fund Drive!

March 27, 2012 by admin Leave a Comment

Hey Everybody –

We’re doing a fund drive to help produce this year’s Brooklyn Folk Festival.  Please check out the awesome silent movie (above) produced by the Jalopy Theatre for this special event!  We really need your support to help make this years festival happen.  Donations can be made through our page on Kickstarter: CLICK HERE.

Your donation gets you a variety of special items, including tickets to the festival and other special premiums!  See below for details…

Thank you.  Your host,

– Eli

Here’s all the information:

Four years ago, Eli Smith of Down Home Radio Show and Jalopy Theatre and School of Music teamed up to present the Brooklyn Folk Festival. A three-day event showcasing folk music of all styles, the festival highlights local Brooklyn musicians as well as bringing in folk music from around the world.

By the second year, there were lines down the block with sold out performances every night and it was time to expand. The festival was moved from Jalopy Theatre to the Brooklyn Waterfront Artist’s Coalition in Red Hook for the third year.

An unexpected loss of venue this year sent us searching for a new home. The 4th Annual Brooklyn Folk Festival will be held at 345 Jay Street in Downtown Brooklyn. Your donation will help us transform this raw space into a venue worthy of the Jalopy name!

The festival is set to be better than ever with over 30+ bands, vocal and instrument workshops, film screenings, a square dance, a special program celebrating Woody Guthrie’s 100th birthday year – as well as the return of the much loved “Banjo Toss” of 2011.

Jalopy and Down Home Radio Show are committed to respectfully compensating our artists while keeping the festival tickets at an accessible price range for the public. We are also inviting 100 local students to attend the festival free of charge as an educational outreach to the community. Thus, we are raising funds to help cover artist fees, advertising, space transformation, and staff.

We believe in the power of folk music to forge community. We’ve seen it happen here at Jalopy and want to expand our reach to as many people as want to listen. Your donation will greatly help us get the word out about the festival and keep folk music alive and thriving in Brooklyn for many years to come.

Thank you so much.

See you at the Folk Fest!

– The Organizers

Pledge $10 or more

Brooklyn Folk Festival postcard, pre-stamped to send to a friend!

Pledge $25 or more

1-Day ticket to the festival + poster OR a Jalopy Theatre T-shirt!

Pledge $45 or more

2-Day ticket to the festival + poster OR a Jalopy Theatre Sweatshirt!

Pledge $60 or more

3-Day ticket to the festival + poster!

Pledge $100 or more

1 VIP Weekend Pass to the festival + poster (Includes access to private pre-festival cocktail party Friday evening, May 18th, at the venue!)

Pledge $150 or more

2 VIP Weekend Passes to the festival + posters (includes access for two to pre-festival cocktail party!)

Pledge $250 or more

1 VIP Weekend Pass to the festival PLUS entrance to one show a month at Jalopy for a year!

Pledge $500 or more

2 VIP Weekend Passes (The $150 reward) PLUS free entrance for both of you to one show a month at Jalopy for a year!

Pledge $2,000 or more

2 VIP Weekend Passes to the festival + a 4-hour open bar event rental of Jalopy Theatre! (to be redeemed within the year)

Posted in: Other, Video Tagged: Blues, Brooklyn Folk Festival, fund drive, Jalopy, old time

Brooklyn Folk Festival 2012: Preview Concert and Benefit!

March 8, 2012 by admin Leave a Comment
The Brooklyn Folk Festival is brought to you in part by our friends at:
Posted in: Other Tagged: Blues, Brooklyn, Brooklyn Folk Festival, Jalopy, old time, theater

Joe Thompson (1918-2012)

February 29, 2012 by admin Leave a Comment


[Photo by E. Smith, June 2010.]

On Monday February 20th, Joe Thompson passed away at the age of 93.  He was considered to be the last living traditionally schooled African-American fiddler.

On a beautiful day in early June of 2010 my band The Dust Busters paid a visit to the home of Joe and Polly Thompson.  Joe Thompson lived outside of Mebane, NC.  He started playing fiddle at 5 years old, way back in 1923.  Joe was a World War II veteran and was long retired from his job at a furniture factory.  He continued to play music until very recently at home and at gigs including taking his music to Carnegie Hall in New York City, the National Folk Festival and the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., and the International Music Festival in Brisbane, Australia.  In 2007 Joe Thompson was honored with the National Heritage Fellowship award from the National Endowment for the Arts.  The Carolina Chocolate Drops have spent a lot of time with Joe and have learned a lot from him.  They continue to present many of his tunes in their performances.  Joe Thompson was a wonderful man and a very fine musician and singer, the likes of whom we will not see again.

His recordings are available.  Here are a few:

Joe Thompson: Family Tradition
Black Banjo Songsters of N Carolina & Virginia
Carolina Chocolate Drops & Joe Thompson

Click Here for the recording and interview I did with Joe Thompson in June of 2010 when we visited him at his home.

Here is a link to a nice obituary:
Joe Thompson, 1918-2012: County treasure, irreplaceable artist left lasting legacy

And clips from a film made about Joe:

Posted in: Articles, Shows Tagged: Fiddler, interview, Joe Thompson, North Carolina, old time
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