| Musicians from across Appalachia will perform at the 27th
Celebration of Traditional Music Oct. 26-28 at Berea College.
Featuring old-time playing, singing and dancing, the annual
event sponsored by the College's Appalachian Center will also
feature a symposium on "Fiddle Tunes of the Old Frontier" led
by Alan Jabbour, musicologist, fiddler and founding director
of the American Folklife Center in the Library of Congress.
Friday and Saturday evening concerts featuring festival musicians
are key events of the weekend. Both concerts are scheduled
for 7:30 p.m. in Phelps-Stokes Chapel.
Performers include Letcher County banjo master Lee Sexton,
a recipient of the Governor's Award for Lifetime Achievement
in the Arts; traditional singer Ginny Hawker; duo Donovan Cain,
of Knox County and fiddler Tricia Kilby of Ashe County, N.C.;
Ed Cabbell of Morgantown, W. Va; the Haywood County Ramblers,
a North Carolina stringband; sister-trio the Dowden Sisters
from Leister, N.C.; The Last Old Man (Larry Rader, Tracy Schwarz
and Jim Costa), master musicians from West Virginia; Mary Greene,
Cecil Gurganus and Ora Watson of western North Carolina; and
blues guitarist Sparky Rucker from northwest Tennessee. Kentucky
fiddler Art Stamper, who was originally scheduled to perform
at the Celebration, will not be appearing due to illness.
Square dancing, with music by the Haywood County Ramblers,
will follow Friday evening's concert and begin at approximately
10 p.m. in the Woods-Penniman Commons. Following Saturday's
concert, a contra dance is scheduled at the Acton Folk Center.
Activities on Saturday are scheduled in the Woods-Penniman
Commons. Festival musicians will hold individual sessions throughout
the day from 10 a.m. - 3:30, to which musicians are welcome
to bring their instruments and join in the music making. The
symposium is scheduled from 2 - 4 p.m. Capping the afternoon
will be an Open Stage and Jam session at 4 o'clock.
On Sunday morning, at 9 o'clock, participants can take part
in a concluding concert of religious music by festival musicians
and others in Union Church.
Jabbour, who served as American Folklife Center director for
23 years before retiring in 1999, has been researching and
recording instrumental folk music since he was a graduate student
in the 1960s. He has published widely on the subject of folklore
and folklife, and also has been featured on recordings and
in numerous festivals and concerts as a performer on the fiddle. "Fiddle
Tunes of the Old Frontier," explores the history and evolution
of fiddle music and fiddle styles of the Appalachian Mountains
of Virginia - the "old frontier" of America's westward
expansion.
Additional information on Jabbour and the multi-format ethnographic
field collection of the same name can be found at http://rs6.loc.gov/ammem/hrhtml/hrhome.html.
Concert admission Friday and Saturday evenings are $7 for
adults and $3.50 for children and youth ages 10-17. Tickets
can be purchased at the door. All other festival events are
free.
The celebration is made possible in part by a grant from the
Kentucky Arts Council and the National Endowment for the Arts.
For additional information and a complete schedule contact
the Berea College Appalachian Center at 606-985-3140, or email:
.
Festival Musicians for the 2001 Celebration of Traditional
Music
Lee Sexton - Kentucky Banjo player from Line Fork in Letcher
County, Sexton is a recipient of the Governor's Award for Lifetime
Achievement in the Arts. His first CD is due out soon from
June Appal Recordings.
Donavan Cain and Tricia Kilby: Donavan is from Knox County,
KY and plays guitar, banjo, and sings. He has a wide range
of styles and does some great union-organizing songs. Tricia
Kilby is an old-time banjo player from Ashe County, NC.
At age 22 she has one second place in the Galax old-time
banjo
competition among many others.
The Haywood County Ramblers are a lively stringband from Haywood
county, NC and they will be playing the friday night square-dance
in addition to their other scheduled performances.
The Dowden Sisters are a sister-trio act from Leister, NC
and play a range from Celtic folk songs to traditional Appalachian
ballads and hot fiddle tunes.
Ginny Hawker is a very well-known Appalachian Singer who has
performed widely with Kay Justice, Hazel Dickens and her husband
Tracy Schwarz. She does old ballads through Carter family material.
The Last Old Man consists of Larry Rader, Tracy Schwarz, and
Jim Costa, all master West Virginia musicians who play independently
as well as together. Mary Greene, Cecil Gurganus, and Ora Watson
are from Western North Carolina and play together around that
area. Ora is a relative of Doc Watson and in her eighties has
taken up her fiddle again to perform a few shows with her friends.
Ed Cabbell is a tradition-barer who performs traditional African-American
tunes and gospel songs from West Virginia.
Sparky Rucker is a blues guitarist from Northeast Tennessee
who has been one of the most requested musicians playing at
the festival for many years.
Eastern Kentucky fiddler Art Stamper, who was originally scheduled,
will not be performng at this year's celebration because of
illness.
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