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A March Tribute to Mike Seeger

spacer Our late friend Mike Seeger liked to describe the kind of music rural Southern families played at home with each other as “music from true vine” – songs and sounds which blended hundreds of years of British traditions with equally ancient African traditions to create a music heritage uniquely American.

Author Bill C. Malone has chronicled Seeger’s life and work in his new biography of the Rockingham County native, Music of True Vine: Mike Seeger’s Life and Musical Journey.

The Folklife Program and the Virginia Festival of the Book will host a special evening with Malone with some of Seeger’s friends and favorite musicians on Wednesday evening, March 21. James Leva, Danny Knicely, Aimee Curl, and Elizabeth LaPrelle will be joining Malone and Alexia Smith at The Haven in downtown Charlottesville.

The free program kicks off at 7 pm at The Haven, 112 West Market Street in Charlottesville. An Old Time Jam, hosted by the Charlottesville Friends of Old Time Music and sponsored by RoseWood Village and Davenport and Company, concludes the evening.

  • James Leva and Jon Lohman stopped by WTJU FM’s Walk Right In on March 6th to share some memories and songs they associate with Mike. Listen to the podcast including some recording of Mike from the Prism Coffee House.

We Support In Your Ear on WCVE

spacer In Your Ear is a new series presented by JAMinc and hosted by Tim Timberlake on WCVE Public Radio. For 10 years, the Richmond non-profit JAMinc has brought musical artists to Richmond concert halls and schools. Most of the performances have been within the intimate and acoustically pristine confines of In Your Ear Music and Recording in Shockoe Bottom, where they were carefully recorded on state-of-the-art multi-track equipment. Now many of those performances will gain a wider audience, as WCVE Public Radio will air 13 hour-long sessions of In Your Ear, featuring a compilation of the best of JAMinc’s continuing monthly concert series. Tune in to the show Saturdays at 1:00 p.m on WCVE.

Richmond Folk Festival Recap

What an incredible weekend on the Virginia Folklife Stage at the Richmond Folk Festival! Record crowds watched from the edge of their seats as some of Virginia’s most talented musicians and artists competed in a wide range of folk traditions. This year’s Virginia Folklife Area at the Richmond Folk Festival, curated by the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities’ Virginia Folklife Program, showcased diverse contest traditions from across the Commonwealth.

The contestants were chosen based on their previous success in their field, as well as through years of fieldwork by the Virginia Folklife Program. The results were nothing short of dazzling. Sunday’s Old Time Fiddle contest featured contestants ranging in age from 10 to 87. The Step Competition brought members of six fraternities and sororities from Virginia colleges and universities, who nearly took down the stage with their powerful, athletic, highly coordinated syncopated steps. Oysters were shucked, hot dogs were scarfed down, and turkeys were called. And, as entertaining as these contests were, they weren’t simply exhibitions­—the contestants battled for some serious prizes, including homemade instruments built by some of Virginia’s finest luthiers: Wayne Henderson, Gerald Anderson, and Richmond’s own Don Leister.

Virginia’s material craft traditions were in fine display as well. A colossal quilt show, featuring seven chapters of the Richmond Quilters Guild, invited visitors to offer their “Viewer’s choice.” The Virginia Folklife Area was also home to one of the festival’s greatest attractions, the spectacular homemade Caribbean Carnival Costumes of Earl Blake and his family, which, when paraded around the sunshine of the Tredegar Bluestone on the beautiful RFF waterfront site, stood more than 15 feet high and 25 feet in diameter.

For great coverage on the Virginia Folklife Area and the Richmond Folk Festival, please visit,  The Richmond Folk Festival and the Richmond Times-Dispatch.

Winners of the Virginia Folklife Area Contests were:

Mandolin Contest:
1. Chase Johner, Marion
2. Aaron Williams, Blacksburg
3. Ryan Blevins, Chilhowie

Guitar Contest:
1. Eric Hardin, Jefferson, N.C.
2. Brandon Davis, Independence
3. Aaron Williams, Blacksburg

Step Contest:
1. Delta Sigma Theta, Virginia State University
2. Sigma Gamma Rho, James Madison University
3. Alpha Phi Alpha, Virginia Union University

Fiddle Contest:
1. Nate Leath, Natural Bridge
2. Erika Godfrey, Mt. Airy, N.C.
3. Erynn Marshall, Galax

Viewer’s Choice: Quilt Show
Shelia Harlin, Quilt # 3 titled “Stars Around My Garden,” Hospitality Quilters

Hot Dog Eating Contest:
Bobby Stultz, Mechanicsville – 11 hot dogs

Oyster Shucking Contest:
Deborah Pratt defeated Clementine Macon

Featured Video

Spencer Moore Video

spacer The late Spencer Moore, at home in Chilhowie, Virginia, 2005.

  • Watch the video
  • Listen to Spencer Moore perform Old Jimmy Sutton

 
 
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