Words become Images / Silence becomes Songs

422. Dusty Strings HarpPROSE, POETRY & PROVOLONE AT THE KIMBERLEY KALEIDOSCOPE FESTIVAL, Wednesday August 5, 7:30pm at Studio 64 in Kimberley.

It was the promise of an evening of Harp Music that got me out of the house. But it was the evening of Poetry and Prose that was my unexpected reward. I have never been a great one for poetry and that is probably the fault of my faulty education. In my youth there was a notion that Poetry was a “girly” thing – guys did Literature and the girls did Poetry. Over the years I have tried to overcome that educational deficient but still, to this day, any attempt to read  poetry causes my eyes to glaze over. I can’t seem to invest the written word with any real life. Every now and then that changes when I actually hear some one else evoke images with the spoken word. On this particular night that was very much the case when members of the Kimberley Writers group, Mike Whitney, Lori Craig, Sharla Smith, Bob McWhirter, Jill Christine and Jeff Pew invested their written words with lots of imagery and life. There was a lot to appreciate but my personal favorite was Jill Christine’s Tin Roof. It may have been about her own memories of Scotland and Kimberley that inspired the piece but for me, coming from Australia, the land of the “Corrigated Tin Roof”,  it evoked many images and memories that had largely faded into my past. Jill, I thank you for bringing those images back to me. The icing on the cake was the the poetry and music of Dawna McLennan. Dawna is a performer from Kaslo who writes, sings and plays possibly one of the most magnificent Celtic harps that one is likely to see up close. This beautiful hand crafted instrument was built by Dusty Strings in Seattle and would have looked very much at home in the stately houses and halls of olde Scotland and Ireland. Ever since I attended a concert of Celtic Harp Music in an old church in Australia many, many years ago I have had a soft spot for the folk harp. That concert, although billed as a concert of Celtic Harp music it turned out to be much more than that. The real knockout punch of the evening was delivered by a Chilean refugee who played a huge South American Harp, first as a solo instrument, then in ensemble with Quena, Pan flutes and percussion. To this day I can still hear the lopping bass passages that he used to invest his indigenous melodies with such dance like potential. Unknown to most of us the folk harp was introduced into South America by the missionaries in the early days of the Spanish conquest and to this day it is a major instrument in the indigenous music of the Andes. That’s all bye the bye in a trip down memory lane. Back in the present Dawna’s mission in life is to rock the world with her poetical images and that she did as “Harp Pixie” in her portion of the evening. The images were there and so was her voice in song. I always hesitate to compare contemporary performers to those of the past. I think it does a disservice to the performers own special uniqueness. But having said that there were qualities in Dawna’s vocal performances that reminded me of a young Joni Mitchell. Sorry about that Dawna. You deserve to be accepted on your own terms rather than as a ghost of days from the past. Here are some images of a wonderful evening of poetry, prose, music and song.

106. Lori Craig  104. Mike Whitney  116. Jill Christine124. Dawna McLennan 110. Sharla Smith   128. Dawna McLennan   118. Jeff Pew132. Dawna McLennan   126. Dawna McLennan     134. Dawna McLennan  400. The Dusty Strings Harp

And I almost forgot to mention the wonderful wine, cheese, meats and fruits that was more than a nice touch for the evening of poetry and music. Who ever made the food choices needs to be congratulated.

And here is a bonus from YouTube

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The Dixie Swim Club

The Off Centre Players presents The Dixie Swim Club; a comedy directed by Brigitte Franyo at the Centre 64, May 26 to May 30, 2015

The Dixie Swim Club

THE CAST:

Karen Vold-Oakley ……….. plays Sheree (the less than flavorful cook). 130. SHEREEJoanne Wilkinson ………… plays Dinah (the career woman with a taste for Martinis)

206. DINAHMichelle McCue …………….. plays Lexie (the lady looking for “Mr right” and perpetual youth)102. LEXIE, Michelle McCueMichelle Lemay ……………. plays Jeri ( a nun, ex-nun and eventually a mother)133. JERI          214. JERI

Nola Jean …………. plays Vernadette (forever a lady looking for an accident)114. VERNADETTE, Nola JeanThe Play: The characters in The Dixie Swim Club are portrayed at ages 44, 49, 54 and 77 over a period of 33 years. The action takes place in the living room of a beach cottage on the Outer Banks of North Carolina during a weekend in August.

  • ACT I : SCENE 1 Twenty two years after college graduation

106. LEXIE   106. SHEREE, Karen Vold-Oakley and LEXIE  110. DINAH, Joanne Wilkinson 112. DINAH    118. VERNADETTE   124. DINAH and VERNADETTE 120 DINAH 126. LEXIE         135. DINAH, JERI AND VERNADETTE

     134. JERI 137. JERI           140. VERNADETTE and JERI   142. It's time    144. Yes it is time.

  • ACT 1 : SCENE 2Five years after that.

200. JERI  202. SHEREE  208. DINAH204. JERI 222. SHEREE, VERNADETTE and DINAH   210. DINAH  224. LEXIE               230. SHEREE  234. JERI  244. VERNADETTE  248. SHEREE254. DINAH and VERNADETTE  255. SHERREE, DINAH and LEXI

  • Act II – Scene 1 – Five years later.

300. JERI  304. VERNADETTE  312. JERI and VERNADETTE  302. JERI  318. LEXIE and DINAH  320. LEXIE and DINAH  322. LEXIE and DINAH 328. LEXIE and DINAH   324. Vernadette 330. JERI  336. DINAH  344. DINAH

  • Act II – Scene 2 – Twenty-three years later

400. VERNADETTE and JERI   402. LEXIE and JERI  404. LEXIE and JERI   408. SHEREE  412. VERNADETTE  406. VERNADETTE

410. LEXIE, SHEREE, VERNADETTE, JERI  414. SHEREE

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Blue Moon Marquee at Studio 64

The Third Concert in the Studio 64 Spring Series – Blue Moon Marquee : Saturday May 23, 2015, 8pm.

100. Blue Moon Marquee

In any story about the blues, the classic blues singer  Ma Rainy explained with a refreshing lack of decorative affectation: “You got the St. Louie Blues, the Chicago blues, the gin house blues, the my-man-done-left-me blues. They all the same song with the same three chords. And you done heard ’em a dozen hundred times from a dozen hundred people. So what makes folks wanna hear it from you?” She was right of course. You can play the same old story but you have to give it a little unique twist to get peoples attention. I think Blue Moon Marquee manages to do just that.The blues is not a complex musical form. Lyrically it is just a three stanza form – a single line repeated then a final variant line. Musically it uses three basic chords. 200. A.W.CardinalSo really there is not much to it and yet here we are 50+ years down the road from the classic era and musicians continue milk inspiration from the blues. Blue Moon Marquee are a couple of young musicians from High River, Alberta that have added their own particular twist to the tradition. A.W. Cardinal is the guitar player and singer with a voice akin to broken glass underfoot in a bar room brawl. Jasmine Colette is “the little white girl 306. Jasmine Colettewith the big fiddle” (or so the aboriginal kids called her in the Yukon on a tour up there last winter). Jasmine or “Jassy” claims to have only recently taken up upright bass and like all bass players she has her own little unique dance going with that big cumbersome instrument. Have you noticed all bass players have a dance thing going on when they perform? Jasmine adds some percussion to the mix with a Hi-hat, pedal brush snare and a bass drum. The result is a surprisingly full sound for just a duo. There is just enough percussion to add accents and make the music interesting. Their theme for the night was “booze and Blues” somewhat inspired by a raucous gig in Nelson the night before. The music was a mixture of originals and some classic tunes such as Charlie Patton’s Shake it and Break It and the ever popular St James Infirmary.  Unlike the deep south  Alberta does not have cotton fields but is does have  pipe lines. As an Alberta boy A.W.  did his share of labor in the the oil patch so it was fitting for him to  perform “Moon” Mulligan’s Pipeliners Blues.  Here are some images from the evening:

212. A.W. Cardinal    218a. A.W. Cardinal  216. A.W. Cardinal302. Jasmine Colette224. A.W. Cardinal254. A.W. Cardinal300a. Jasmine Colette   316. Jasmine Colette   332. Jasmine Colette214. A.W. Cardinal    200a. A.W. Cardinal    218. A.W. Cardinal   266. A.W. Cardinal   322. Jasmine Colette  340. Jasmine Colette  342. Jasmine Colette330. Jasmine Colette

Once again the the organizing committee have hit the jackpot with another amazing concert. They would like to thank the following sponsors and volunteers: The Burrito Grill, Mountain Spirit Resort, “The Bulletin”, Christine, Irma, Ray (for sound and lights) and Rod Wilson (photography). The MC was Keith Nicholas.

Note: That Studio 64 is the downs stairs room in Centre 64.

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Here is a little taste of what we experienced at the concert – a Youtube video of Sugar Dime   and Driftin’.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GH8FnCFr_DU

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Guy Davis – Blues Maestro at Centre 64

The Second Concert in the Centre 64 Spring Series – Guy Davis – Blues Maestro: Tuesday April 11, 2015, 8pm.

 Guy Davis

Guy Davis is a musician, composer, actor, director, writer and more importantly a blues man. And as such he is a bit of an anachronism, a man outside his time. The classic blues era was in the the 1920s, 30s and 40s. By the late forties black Americans were abandoning their rural roots and moving to the cities for better jobs and better lives and the blues was slowly transitioning to rhythm and blues and eventually rock and roll. At about that same time the classic blues was discovered an appropriated by “rich” white kids (working class and / or college students). The classic example of the cultural take over by white youth is the classic blues performed by the likes of John Hammond and the transformation of the music by the Rolling Stones and The Beatles  generation. The Blues were no longer the  cultural lifeblood of the black community. Black musicians were switching their allegiance to the urban sounds of Soul Music, Hip-Hop and Rap. There is an interesting little interlude in the documentary about the Alabama recording studio Muscle Shoals where the soul singer Wilson Picket was looking out the window of the studio between sessions when he asked “Is that what I think it is?” He was looking at a cotton field and as a young urban black he had never seen a cotton field. That was a far cry from his ancestors experiences.  I think that says it all. There was no longer a direct connection with the rural experiences of the classic blues. Guy Davis should have been part of that disconnect but that is not how it turned out.

Guy Davis is an urban black raised in a middle-class New York suburb and is one of the few blacks of his generation to make a connection with the rural blues tradition. The only other black musicians of his generation that I know of to have the connection is Taj Mahal, Keb Mo’, Eric Bib and more recently the Negro String Band The Carolina Chocolate Drops. In his performances Guy constantly revisits the rural traditions of previous generations. In doing so what he delivers is not a pale imitation of what it might have been but rather a re-interpretation and re-invention of the magnificent strengths of this past tradition. To do this he has an authentic voice and the instrumental chops on guitars and harmonica to make everybody sit up and listen. His strong finger picking with metal picks and slide on the vintage Gibson 12-string guitar and the old Silvertone Arch-top are rock solid. The tuning he uses on the 12-string is an open C (C G C E G C) and it brings to mind the classic 12-string sounds that you are unlikely to hear in this day and age. Most modern players stick to the standard guitar tuning of E A D G B E that sounds, at best, an anemic shadow of the classic sound. So once again Centre 64 has come up with another winner for their spring concert series. There was lots of classic blues, instrumentals, original songs, audience participation and humor. My pick of the night was Guy’s re-interpretation of  Blind Willie McTell’s classic Statesboro Blues. It a song that has seen the light of day many, many times but Guy’s version had a freshness that lifted it to a new level. Here are some images from the evening:

 Guy Davis  Guy Davis  Guy Davis Guy Davis  Guy Davis   Guy Davis12 - string guitar Guy Davis  Guy Davis  Guy DavisGuy Davis  Fake Rose The organizing committee would like to thank the following sponsors and volunteers: The Burrito Grill, Mountain Spirit Resort, “The Bulletin”, Christine, Irma, Ray (for sound and lights) and Rod Wilson (photography). The MC was Keith Nicholas.

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“Nobody likes to be bullied, but………..”

The First Concert in the Centre 64 Spring Series – The Love Bullies: Saturday March 21, 2015.

The Love BulliesI didn’t really know what to expect. The Love BulliesShantal Vitals (guitar, vocals), Kevin Herring (Telecaster guitar), Joni Brent (Bass guitar, vocals), Caroline Connolly (lead vocals and flute) and Paul Jahn (drums) were completely unknown to me. When I interviewed them in the Green Room my first thought was “they have to be kidding”. The big hair, boots, and the polyester fashion statements from a bye gone era were enough to prompt that thought.  Well, of course, to some extent they were kidding but once on stage their vintage pop music persona and musical chops were enough to make one sit up and take notice. On appearances alone I thought they were going to be a girl vocal  trio doing frothy pop stuff and I suppose that’s what they did except there was a lot more musical muscle in their performance than I expected.  Until they launched into the the old Peggy Lee standard Fever I didn’t realize what a musical treat we were in for. Caroline Connolly’s lead vocal was spot on, Joni Brent’s bass guitar was rock solid, and guitar duo of Shantal Vitalis (well brought up ladies are not supposed to  Guitarbe able to play like that) and Kevin Herring were a solid team. Tucked away in the back Paul Jahn on drums played a superb supporting role for all the action up front. They were not too far into their first set before they had the audience up dancing. The night was a mix of vintage popular music from an era that slightly predates what we know as Classic Rock. Classic covers of the era included These Boots Were Made for Walking (Nancy Sinatra), Shakin’ All Over (the original Canadian cover was by The Guess Who), Stupid Cupid (the Connie Francis hit of 1958), Mr. Perfect, I Love You Baby (covered by just about everybody way back when), Cadillac, UFO, plus a number of original songs that included Bomp, Tunnel, Friday Girl, Twang and Sayonara. None of this music was, or is, of great social significance and it is not meant to be. It doesn’t  change the world but who cares. It just turns out to be great fun. Once again the Centre 64 team has turned up another winner. The down stairs Cabaret venue was sold out (and then some) and the setup was perfect for the audience and the dancers. The next concert in the series on Tuesday, April 21, 2015 will feature Guy Davis and take my word for it he is the real deal and should not be missed. In the meantime here are some images from a fun filled night ……. just ask the dancers.

 Shantal and Kevin  Joni Brent     Caroline Connolly     Kevin and Joni Paul Jahn     Shantal Vitalis     Joni Brent Joni Brent  Stage    Keith    Stage Caroline Connolly  092. Caroline's Boots   090. Joni's Boots  094. Shantall's BootsShantal Vitalis  Joni Brent    Paul Jahn   Joni Brent Joni and Caroline      Shantal VitalisKevin Herring 525. Paul Jahn      Caroline Connolly Dancers     Shantal VitalisCaroline ConnollyShantal Vitalis    Caroline and KevinJoni Brent   Kevin Herring   Caroline Connolly

 

 

 

 

Going for “Baroque” at Centre 64

Centre 64 poster

Somewhere  along the line this music got tagged with the label “Scottish Baroque”. Of course Baroque music it isn’t but the label is a convenient way to distinguish it from the usual run-of-the-mill Celtic pub music. Mind you, it would not be out of place in some low-ceiling inn in the old country. In the ambience of the dance studio in Centre 64 it was right at home. The musicians are from all over the map. Radio broadcaster Bruce 100. Bruce MacGregorMacGregor is from Inverness Scotland and is reputed to be one of Scotland’s finest fiddle players. After hearing him it is not a reputation I would care to dispute. I have added his name to my list of favorite fiddlers that includes the Irish fiddler Martin Hayes and the Irish American Liz Carrol. With them he shares a clean, clear, solid, almost classical tone, a great sense of musical dynamics and a wonderful choice of tunes. Christine Hanson is originally from Edmonton, Alberta but has been resident in Glasgow for the past 15 years. Her prairie roots come though from time to time in her choice of country waltzes. Christine’s instrument of choice at the moment is a handcrafted Carbon Fibre Cello. This came about when an airline company carelessly “dropped kicked” and nearly destroyed her traditional wooden instrument during one of her tours. The Carbon Fibre instrument she is using was probably built by Luis and Clark in Boston – check the link  Luis and Clark Carbon Fibre instruments . There are other manufacturers out there. The German company Mezzo Forte comes to mind but Christine’s instrument has the look of a Luis and Clark. Conservative musicians and patrons may shudder at the concept of a “plastic” instrument but I guess the proof is in “the pudding”. The instruments look and sound wonderful and I suspect as the supply of Andy Hillhouseendangered tone woods become scarce we will see more of them. Beside looking and sounding good Carbon Fibre instruments are more robust than their traditional wooden counter part. For travelling musicians this is a definite plus.The vocalist/guitarist Andy Hillhouse is from Vancouver where he is the manager of the music festival at Harrison Hot Springs. His instrument is a Lowden Guitar from Belfast Ireland. Hand made Lowdens are the instrument of choice of a number of top performers and are pretty rare in North America. Andy only managed to get together with the other musicians for the first time at 4:30 that same afternoon. With that in mind his performance was pretty astounding.

The Fiddle / Cello / Guitar combination turned out to be a wonderful vehicle for their selections of  Strathspeys, Airs, Laments, Reels and Waltzes. The guitar provided the rhythm foundation, the cello the bass lines, rhythm and counterpoint to Bruce MacGregor’s fiddle that was over the top of it all. My personal favorites of the evening was the traditional Her Mantle so Green, a tune that Christine picked up in a wee back bar in Ullapool Scotland from the playing of Cathal MacConnell of Boys of the Loch fame. Andy Hillhouse chose some traditional songs to sing and play but the standout was the great narrative song Beeswing by Richard Thompson. This is a song that defines what a great song should be – good melody, a great, great story line and very appropriate accompaniment. From the many, many tunes that Bruce played though out the evening the standout for me was the final set of the evening that included Miss Lyalls Strathspey and The Kings Reel. I have been thoroughly indoctrinated into these tunes by young local fiddle player Angus MacDonald. It is a pity that Angus has gone away to college. He would have enjoyed Bruce’s performance. Besides the wonderful selection of tunes Bruce came to fore with his story telling. His “real job” as a radio broadcaster obviously comes in handy when he launches into tales of J. Scott Skinner. For those that do not know J.Scott Skinner (1843-1927) was the preeminent Scottish Fiddler of the late nineteenth century.  The other story of note was the one about his father’s revenge on a local firm of lawyers. Here are some images from the evening. Sorry about the less than satisfactory quality – the lighting was awful. To get rid of the horrible green tint I had to Photoshop the images down to greytones

Bruce MacGregor     Bruce MacGregor     The Fiddle      The CelloAndy Hillhouse    e MacGregor    Andy HillhouseThis was a wonderfully unique evening of music. The “cabaret” setting was great, the ambience and the audience were perfect. The evening was only marred by the less than perfect lighting.

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The Oars

TheOarsKimberley“The Oars, which consists of songwriter Ilana Cameron on keyboards and vocals, with Kurt Goltz on guitar. Normally Creston’s premier fiddler Karl Sommerfeld tours with the band but unfortunately circumstances prevented him from making the trip. The band was touring the Columbia Basin on a grant from the Columbia Kootenay Cultural Alliance. When asked to describe their music, Cameron said “I’m inspired by a sense of place”. In her teens she studied with renowned Canadian musician Veda Hille but it wasn’t until she began collaborating with Goltz that she really found her musical stride. In recent years they performed at the hike-in-only festival Peppermill, in restaurants, in living rooms and on many stages on the West Coast and in the Kootenays. Their current tour will take them around to different communities in the Columbia Basin region. They are based in Creston and are excited to explore their ‘backyard’ while playing for new audiences and exploring new communities. “

In a nutshell the music is

  • PASTORAL – Portraying Rural Life and the Countryside
  • ETHEREAL – Marked by unusual delicacy, lightness and refinement

The combination of Ilana’s Nord Keyboard and Kurt Goltz’s feather weight acoustic guitar was perfect for the contents and sentiments of the songs. This is not wildly exciting music but rather one more about time, place and old time characters of the region. The Ilana’s Nord keyboard is an interesting instrument that is hand built in Sweden. This is the second one I have heard in a local environment and each time I have been entranced by the combination of sounds available from the instrument. It certainly is a step up and away from the old Fender Rhodes electric piano. Kurt was playing a Blueridge BR60 Dreadnought guitar that had been rehabilitated by Michael Heiden in Creston. Most of the material was composed by Ilana at the keyboard and as a result there were a lot of “guitar unfriendly” keys to challenge Kurt. He has risen to each occasion with some deft use of of very weird open tunings that contributed to the “spacey” feel of the music. Some of Ilana’s song titles include The Harbour, Brave, Tigers, Constellation, Strike, Ruby’s Jam (inspired by an old pioneer novel) , Cabin Song, Bluebell (a mining song – with some very nice lead guitar work), Slow Arrow,   and, of course their namesake The Oars.

The Oars
As part of a budding project Kurt resurrected some songs by a colleague from way back. The original writer, Mark Arden, has since died and his songs only live on in some very bad recordings made some years ago. The long term plan is to collect the songs together and, along with old friends and acquaintances, bring the songs back to life.  

The only cover song of the evening was Flight – a song originally done by a band called Grizzly Bear whose home base, ironically, is Brooklyn, USA

 Ilana Cameron           Kurt Goltz   Kurt Goltz          lana Cameron  The Oars  The Nord Keyboard

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The “Reel” Deal – Caladh Nua

Caladh-Nua-Web

This is the real deal – check the  Caladh Nua Documentary
and the YOUTUBE clips The Cruel Lowland MaidThe Templehouse Reels,  The Banks of the Lee, and Richard Thompson’s Beeswing
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 Stage set
The East Kootenays are not exactly the center of the Celtic universe, and yet, over the years we have been treated to some of the finest Celtic musicians that the planet has to  Lisa's fiddleoffer. We have seen the likes of Andy Irvine (a legend in Irish music), Ron Kavana, the Irish bands Dervish, Four Men and a Dog, and Danu ; the Alberta band Celtara; The Harbour Trio (with Don Ross) from down east; Cape Breton fiddlers Natalie McMasters, and in a week or so, Ashley MacIsaac. This list does not include those musicians that have a little bit of green in their repertoires and performance styles. The ones who immediately come to mind are Dehli to Dublin (D2D) and that incredible acoustic guitarist  Martin Simpson. Now we can add to the list the band that has just performed at Centre 64 – Caladh Nua (“new harbour” or “new sheltered place”). This quintet of musicians include Lisa Butler (vocals and fiddle), Paddy Tutty (fiddle, viola and bodhran), Derek Morrissey (button accordion), Colm O’Caoimh (playing a beautiful cedar top Lowden guitar) and on Irish tenor banjo and Irish whistle, probably one of the tallest Irish speaking men on the planet, Eoin O’Meachair. Just to set the mood and get the feet tapping the band kicked off a night of brilliant music with a set of reels followed by a set of jigs. For the first traditional song of the evening Colm provided some light opening guitar textures for The Cruel Lowland Maid  followed by Eoin joining in with some nice chugging banjo rhythm behind Lisa Butler’s vocal. Colm’s guitar playing threw me for a bit. At the beginning I thought he may have been using an open tuning. As it turns out he plays in standard tuning and uses an unorthodox “baseball bat grip” technique that guitar teachers warn you against. They claim it is awkward and inefficient. Yet it works well for Colm and his playing is a study in how to add magnificent bass lines to highly rhythmic accompaniments.  By the way, Lisa’s voice is very reminiscent of Dervish’s Cathy Jordan and Eoin’s banjo playing brings back echoes of the legendary Dubliners. That pretty well set the pattern for the evening. Lots of dance sets, solo pieces and great songs scattered in between. For me the standout performances of the evening were the reworking of Bill Monroe’s The Goldrush coupled with the tune Terry Teagan; My choice of the vocals was Lisa’s The Banks of the Lee and Colm O’Caoimh’s outstanding outstanding interpretation of Richard Thompson great narrative song Beeswing.
Lisa Butler   Paddy Tutty    Lisa Butler   Eoin O'Meachair   Derek Morrissey   Paddy Tutty   Colm O'Caoimh  Eoin O'Meachair  Paddy Tutty   Lisa Butler
For the last set of dance tunes the band offered a free CD for the best dance performance in front of the band area. A young dancer responded with a spontaneous performance that was out standing. I only know her as “Joe the Plumber’s Daughter”. I always hope for at least one “Money Shot” from each performance I cover. Here it is for the Caladh Nua concert and an outstanding shot it is, if I do say so myself.
Joe the Plumbers DaughterHere are some more images from the evening.
 Eoin O'Meachair    Lisa Butler   Derek Morrissey Paddy Tutty Eoin O'Meachair 308. Paddy Tutty 430. Derek Morrissey     Derek Morrissey and Colm O'Caoimh    Joe the Plumber's Daughter   Colm O'Caoimh
Thanks should go, first of all to the musicians, then the volunteers and staff of Centre 64 and the Kimberly Arts Council. Thanks to the sponsors Pedal and Tap for feeding the musicians and Mountain Spirit  for the accommodations. Thanks to Terry for the lights and thanks to Ray and Marty for the sound and also to Keith Nicolas for the being the MC and chief organizer.
Keith Nicolas       Eoin's banjo      Paddy's fiddle  Bodhran       Lisa Butler   Paddy Tutty Derek Morrissey and Colm O'Caoimh   Paddy Tutty   Derek Morrissey  Colm O'Caimh   Joe the Plumber's Daughter  Colm O'Caoimh
After Thoughts: Have you ever wondered why Bluegrass, Old-Timey and Celtic musicians, while reworking essentially the same common ore body of traditional material, come up with such distinctly different outcomes? Some of it has to do with the instrumental configurations employed. Bluegrass with its standard instrumentation of guitar / banjo / dobro / standup bass/ mandolin and fiddle approach the music in a different way to the Celtic reliance on fiddle / accordion / flute / Irish Bouzouki / bodhran combinations. In fact there is no standard Celtic configuration. Often musicians just take what is available and blend  or bend it into the notion at hand. Even the guitar (not a traditional Celtic instrument) is approached in a different way with the use of odd open tunings ( DADGAD, Dropped D or open G) that enable accompaniments that would not work in a Bluegrass setting. The banjo in Celtic music is an entirely a different beast to its American cousins. It’s a four string instrument tuned like a mandolin (GDAE) and played with a plectrum to duplicate or enhance the melody line of the tune. Old-timey music is closer to the Bluegrass tradition in material and temperament than to its Celtic roots. The vocal traditions are similar but, of course, reflect their own specific cultural and geographical conditions. I think the big difference is how each tradition handles the instrumental music. Celtic music is more emphatically dance music  so therefore there is a tendency to string together a whole “swack” of tunes to keep the dance momentum going and that imposes a different set of conditions. Bluegrass and Old-timey music tends to stay with a single tune that allows for the performers to indulge in more significant variations and solo opportunities. The end result is that the these traditions favor more “open” tunes with lots of space in the melodies for altering the melodic line and a reliance on standard chordal cadences (IV-V7-I) to keep everybody on track. In Celtic music the melody is king and very few Celtic musicians will tamper with the melody on the fly. The only musicians who immediately comes to mind who willing favor melodic variations are the American fiddler Liz Carroll and Cape Breton’s Ashley MacIssac. Because of the harmonic modal nature of Celtic music the standard IV-V7-I cadences may not work (a dominant 7th chord may lead you in the wrong direction). As I said melody is king in Celtic music so that it is imperative that the performers know the tunes inside out so that when one melody ends the new melody is picked up immediately. There is no reliance on the chordal cadence to keep you on track. The secret of a good performance lies in how smooth the transitions from one tune to the next is a accomplished. It can be so smooth that the audience may not be aware or it can be like a racing car shifting gears. Maybe that’s what drives the dancers.
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Anja / Dan / Hannah at Centre 64

Anja McCloskey poster.These three musicians are definitely CFAs (“Come from Away”). The fact they kept  their outside jackets on for the sound check should have been the first clue. Anja McCloskey (vocals, pianio and accordion) is a German American girl originally from Des  Hannah, Dan and AnjaMoines, Iowa, now resident in Hamburg Germany; Dan Whitehouse (vocals and guitar) is a singer song writer from Birmingham; Hannah Moulette (cello, vocals and guitar) is from Sommerset, England. How these three CFAs originally got  together is probably a story worth telling but it suffices to say that this tour was probably thrown together on a whim. Anja has a brother in Vancouver and the only way she could make the trip was to tie it in with a concert tour. So she trolled through her musical friends and managed to line up Dan and, at the last minute, Hannah to commit to an off the cuff tour of Canada in ……. January!! What were they thinking? They say ignorance is bliss and it could not be more true than in this case. They landed in Canada, rented a cello and guitar for fifty bucks, borrowed Anja and Hannahan accordion, rented a vehicle with all- season radials and hit the road. On mentioning the all-season radials you could hear an almost inaudible gasp from the audience. So far they have been to Banff, Calgary, Pincher Creek, Kimberley and are heading further west for the rest of the tour – snow, ice and avalanches be dammed. So far no problems. As I said “ignorance is bliss”. Appropriately, Hannah and Anja kicked off their portion of the evening with Songbird, a charming vocal duet about traveling. Hannah, with her impish looks and demeanor  could have stepped  out of  a J.R.R.Tolkein novel. The red cape picked up at thrift store en route Hannah, Dan, and Anjawas an inspired touch. The on stage persona she projected well suited her musical style. Hannah continued the show with a number of solo pieces that included The Night is Young (“and there is plenty of rum”), Devil of Mine, Circle Song, and Blood and Thunder. Anja returned to the stage for an accordion/cello instrumental entitled Seven and continued with Too Many Words, Italian Song, and, with piano accompaniment, Cross the Seas. The trio, Dan, Hannah and Anja, came together for The Calm and Instigated. The final selections of the evening featured Dan’s songs including A Light, The Fire of Lust (“an Ode to Testosterone”), Three Bodies (about tourist photographs), Born to Run, Somebody Loves You, Sleeping and probably the strongest song of the evening Why Don’t We Dance. That last mentioned song deserves a view of the YouTube version. Here are some images from an evening of music that was definitely “outside the box”.

 Anja McCloskey  Hannah Moulette   Dan and Anja Hannah Moulette  Anja and Dan  Dan and Anja Anja McCloskey  Dan Whitehouse   Hannah Moulette  Dan Whitehouse Anja McCloskey  Anja   Hannah Moulette Anja McCloskey  Hannah Moulette  Anja McCloskey  Hannah Moulette  134. Anja McCloskey  Hannah Moulette   Anja McCloskey  Hannah Moulette   Anja McCloskey  Hannah Moulette  Dan Whitehouse.  Anja McCloskey   Dan Whitehouse

Special thanks should go to the opening act Daze of Grace (Sharon Routley, Jubal Routley and guest percussionist, yours truly, Rod Wilson); sound techs Ray and Marty; Terry on lights; the MC Keith Nicholas, and all the staff and volunteers of the Kimberley Arts Council. Also extra special thanks should go to the corporate sponsors The Burrito Grill for feeding the musicians and Mountain Spirits for provide accommodation for the CFA musicians.

 Keith Nicholas  the critics

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Home Grown Coffee House – the first of the season

Home Grown Coffee House, Saturday October 19, 2013, 8pm at Centre 64 in Kimberley.For over 30 years Kimberley’s Home Grown Music Society has presented regular Coffee House performances at Centre 64 during the winter season. Once again the season kicked off with a batch of local performers most of whom can be called Local (more than 10 years residency in the area) and most of whom have performed on this stage in the past. The line up for the evening  Alphonse Josephincluded Alphonse Joseph (Vocals and Guitar),Terry Mackam (Vocals and Piano), Sound Principle (Barbershop Quartet), Jim Marshall (Guitar and Vocals), Bill Renwick (Guitar and Vocals), Emilio Regina (Piano and Vocals), Karly Ross (Spoken Word, Vocals and Guitar) and Alex Buterman  (Vocals and Guitar). To start the evening Alphonse broke with his usual blues inflected material to perform an original “down home” Cape Breton piece called Spirits of the Coal, followed by the Dobie Grey Terry Mackhamstandard  Drift Away, and the two originals Tell Me that You Love Me  and Just Your Fool. Following a technical glitch Terry Mackham abandoned his electric keyboard in favor of the old upright. He performed a Neil Young classic, also an arrangement of Christina Rosetti’s Who Has Seen the Wind and some “anti-devil” music the Gospel tune And Glory Shone Around. The Barbershop Quartet (Michael, Gert, Joel and Rolly) started their set with Hi Neighbour, followed by a medley of Gospel Tunes, a song from way back when cowboys were cowboys (1890) Ragtime Sound PrincipleCowboy Joe, and the two final songs, Once Upon a Time  and An Irish Blessing. Jim Marshall appears to have moved back to this area on a more permanent basis. Permanent enough to invest in the renovation of a music room  Jim Marshallin his house. In this new comfort zone he has been hard at work writing and practicing such tunes as  Light Cafe, Anticipation, Bill RenwickMy I-Phone, and Hard Times all for our enjoyment on this fall evening at the Home Grown Coffee House. Bill Renwick has an affection for the songs of John Prine and Neill Young so John’s comic piece Please Don’t Bury Me was an appropriate opening song, followed by Neil Young’s classic Old Man. As evidenced by the songs Hold me in Your Arms Tonight  and Baby You’re the One Bill also writes some pretty strong material. He finished his set with an original blues called  I’m Gone, Gone. Emilio Regina did covers of Bruce Springsteen’s One Step , Two Emilio ReginaSteps Back and also a Bob Dylan tune. Karly Ross is neither black, urban or anti- feminine so I guess her opening piece could not be called rap music. It was a spoken word performance more in keeping Alex Butermanwith “the slam poets”. The piece was untitled so I have taken it upon my self to dub (no pun intended, well maybe yes it is intended) to title the piece The Dating Game.  She followed this marvelous piece of rhetoric with a couple of original songs. Alex Buterman was the closing act of the evening with Ain’t no Sunshine when she’s Gone, 60 Days, Listen to the Music, and a Bluegrass original entitled Bubbly Water.

Karly RossSo ends another fine night of music. The Next Home Grown Coffee House will Be November 30, 2013. Tickets are available from the Snowdrift Cafe and Centre 64.