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Posts Tagged ‘Del McCoury’

Floydfest 2011 Lineup

TAJ MAHAL, DEL MCCOURY BAND, DAVID GRISMAN QUINTET,
HOT TUNA, TOUBAB KREWE,
REVEREND PEYTON, PIMPS OF JOYTIME &
MORE


Floydfest 2011

FloydFest, the annual music and arts festival described by one on-line reviewer as a “unicorn in a horse
pasture of music festivals” celebrates it’s 10 year anniversary this July 28-31, 2011. Held in the non-commercial
National Park environs of the beautiful Blue Ridge Parkway, the event site features beautiful wooded camping, as
well as hiking and bike trails. Spanning four full days, and offering 9 unique stages of entertainment, ranging from
the beautifully timber framed Dreaming Creek Main and Hillholler stages to the campy ‘Pink Floyd Garden Stage’ and
the homey ‘Virginia Folklife Workshop Porch,’ FloydFest spans genres and generations to truly create a “something
for everybody” experience.

True to long-standing tradition, FloydFest will offer deep discount holiday ticket packages through December 31,
with 4-day weekend tickets available for under $100. A limited number of special ticket packages, fittingly dubbed
‘X-spot’ packages, include early arrival, primo camping, and on-site parking. Limited number VIP tickets include
backstage catering, parking, on-stage seating, pre- and after-party admission. A family-friendly event, FloydFest
features a centrally-located ‘Children’s Universe,’ Healing Arts Village, Blue Ridge to Bayou Dance Tent,
Sustainability programs, a Beer and Wine Garden featuring local and regional wines and microbrews, over 100 art
and craft vendors, and a ‘Global Village.’

Initial Lineup

Taj Mahal
Del McCoury Band
David Grisman Quintet
Yard Dogs Road Show
Sam Bush Band

Hot Tuna Electric and Acoustic
Cyro Baptista & Beat the Donkey
Toubab Krewe
Donna the
Buffalo
Tony Rice Unit
Pimps of Joytime
Carolina Chocolate Drops
Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn
Band
Peter Rowan’s Bluegrass Band
John Brown’s Body
Boombox
New Monsoon
Baka
Beyond
Larry Keel & Natural Bridge
My Dear Disco
Shane Pruitt Band
DJ Williams Projekt

American Aquarium
and 2010 Under the Radar winners Big Daddy Love


International Bluegrass Awards Announces Nominees

DAILEY & VINCENT; RUSSELL MOORE; MICHAEL CLEVELAND & FLAMEKEEPER; THE
DEL MCCOURY BAND; THE GRASCALS LEAD NOMINEES

IBMA is proud to announce the nominees for the 21st annual International Bluegrass Music Awards,
scheduled for Thursday, September 30, 2010, at Nashville, Tennessee’s historic Ryman Auditorium.

It’s been an interesting year for bluegrass—from Bean Blossom to Bonnaroo—and the 2010 IBMA Award Show
celebrates the strength and popularity of the genre both inside the bluegrass world and beyond, as the nominees
reach out to new audiences with new music and interesting collaborations.

Nominees for entertainer of the year include Dailey & Vincent, Russell Moore & IIIrd Tyme Out,
Michael Cleveland &
Flamekeeper
, The Del
McCoury Band
, and The
Grascals
. Click here to check out a
complete list of nominees for all categories.

Tickets for the IBMA Awards, bluegrass music’s most exciting night of the year, are available at 888-438-4262,
(615) 256-3222 and www.ibma.org. Tickets are also on sale at
the Ryman Auditorium box office.

The IBMA Awards will be broadcast live on Sirius XM Satellite Radio (Bluegrass Junction, Channel 14) and will also be
syndicated to more than 300 U.S. markets and 14 foreign networks.


Dierks Bentley Acoustic on Kimmel

POWER OUTAGE PRODUCES COOL TV MOMENT

For some time Dierks Bentley has been one of the more promising things coming out of mainstream Nashville. His new album Up On The Ridge is a bluegrass dipped affair that finds him playing with the likes of Del McCoury, The Punch Brothers and Kris Kristofferson. During Bentley’s appearance on Jimmy Kimmel’s late night program on Monday night the studio experienced a power outage. The crew jury-rigged a solution and Bentley and his crackin’ band jammed acoustic on the new album’s title track. Give a listen and see if ol’ Dierks doesn’t give Old Crow Medicine Show, David Rawlings and the like a run for their money.

Dierks Bentley Tour Dates :: Dierks Bentley News :: Dierks Bentley Concert Reviews


Memorial Day Weekend Fest Preview

By: Dennis Cook, JamBase Associate
Editor

Summer festival season kicks into high gear this coming weekend with dozens of festivals
around the United States. JamBase takes a look at five of the finest gatherings coming up
and makes a few helpful suggestions beyond the big names at the top of the bills for those
about to rock beneath the stars around this great country.

Summer Camp Festival | Chillicothe, IL

We begin with one of the jewels of the jam world, the
10th Annual Summer
Camp
, taking place Friday, May 28 through Sunday, May 30, with a pre-festival
party on Thursday, May 27 in Chillicothe, IL, at the Three Sisters Park.
Anchored by three days of moe. and Umphrey’s McGee performances, the tenth edition of this festival
also includes headlining sets from The Avett Brothers, Gov’t Mule and
Yonder Mountain
String Band
. Here’s a few acts well worth working into your schedule if you’re
heading to Summer Camp.

1. Backyard Tire
Fire
:: Thursday :: 6:30-7:30 pm :: Starshine Stage

Ed Anderson is one of the few singer-songwriters out there to give Tom Petty and
Springsteen an honest run for their money in the meat ‘n’ taters rock game. With his
stalwart bandmates, Anderson makes music for the day-to-day slog and those sweet moments
away from the grind of it all. Foot stompin’ greatness is all but guaranteed at this set,
which could set your whole weekend at Summer Camp off on just the right foot. BTF also
plays on Saturday from 1:00-2:15 pm on the Sunshine Stage.

2. Split Lip
Rayfield
:: Friday night :: 12:30 am-2:30 am :: Campfire Stage

A great number of top-flight musicians have been seen sporting Split Lip Rayfield t-shirts
over the years. That’s a positive sign right there, and if you dig into their rootsy,
irreverent music you’ll probably want to wear one, too. There’s something intrinsically
right and unpasteurized about Split Lip, a spirit punk rockers and bluegrass lovers can
both vibe on equally. Their Late Night Campfire Jam is likely to have a gravitational
pull to many of the musician fans at Summer Camp, so don’t be too surprised at the
surprises likely to ensue.

3. The New
Mastersounds
:: Sunday :: 4:00-5:00 pm :: Sunshine Stage

Simply put, if you love soulful, funky music you’re missing out if you don’t check out
England’s New Mastersounds, who possess one of the sharpest, coolest approaches to the
genre going today. There’s just the right mix of rawness and polish to them, and the
quartet’s interplay borders on telepathic.

Summer Camp
Schedule

Summer Camp
Directions

Summer Camp
website

Continue reading for DelFest…

DelFest | Cumberland, MD

DelFest is a string band mecca
sporting three sets from hosts the Del McCoury Band. This year’s DelFest happens May 27-30 in
Cumberland, MD, and includes performances from Yonder and The Avett Brothers (they do
get around
), Railroad Earth and many more. There’s tremendous overlap and bounteous
collaboration at this festival, which somehow takes the spirit of back porch jamming and
gives it flair and style without losing the essential hominess. Here’s some acts worth
putting on your dance card at DelFest this year.

1. Uncle Earl
:: Friday :: 6:15-7:30 pm :: Grandstand Stage

These crazy talented ladies haven’t been out live much lately, so one should enjoy them
whenever they can. What’s wonderful about Uncle Earl is how they stitch together so many
different threads from string music past and present. There’s a timeless vibe to their
originals and their interplay is pretty spectacular in general. Uncle Earl also performs
on Saturday at DelFest on the Potomac Stage from 12:45-1:45 pm. For more on Uncle Earl,
peep the JamBase feature centered around their last studio release.

2. Dave Rawlings
Machine
:: Sunday :: 10:15-11:55 pm :: Grandstand Stage

Though he’s often the only one standing next to Gillian Welch,
Rawlings is often overshadowed by his longtime partner in crime. She is pretty compelling
but so is this hyper-gifted multi-instrumentalist, singer and songwriter. The longer the
Rawlings Machine trundles along in recent years, the more fascinating it becomes, both in
his own compositions and inspired cover choices.

3. Trampled By
Turtles
:: Saturday :: 5:15-6:15 pm :: Potomac Stage

Singer-guitarist Dave Simonett writes some of the most enduring, resonant songs
coming out of any contemporary string band, and he and the rest of the Turtles breath fire
live, stirring up a ruckus that seems nigh impossible for guys seated onstage. They’ve
also got a tender side that’s genuinely stirring. Young and possessed with a real drive
to show the world what they’ve got, TBT has all the makings of a future headliner at fests
like Del’s and Northwest String Summit. See ‘em now so you can tell your kids about it
when they’re famous. TBT also plays a special Friday Late Night set at 12:15 am – 1:15 am in Delfest Music Hall.

DelFest
Schedule

DelFest Directions

DelFest website

Continue reading for Sasquatch! Festival…

Sasquatch Festival | George, WA

Sasquatch!
returns to The Gorge in
George, WA, May 29-31. If one wants a barometer of the next wave of artists to crest into
cult or even alternative mainstream success, this is the spot to take your readings. With
a finely tuned mixture of emerging and well established acts, Sasquatch! is a vibrant,
fascinating rock microcosm in a fab setting. Headliners My Morning Jacket, Pavement, Massive Attack
and Ween
will undoubtedly deliver the goods, but here’s three acts we’d also like to put on your
radar.

1. Dawes ::
Saturday :: 12:00-12:35 pm :: Bigfoot Stage

After releasing one of the finest rock debuts in ages in 2009, the stunningly resonant
North Hills (JamBase review), this Los Angeles band has pretty much stayed on the road
honing their craft and further fleshing out what were already wonderful songs. Anyone
with a love for The Band, vintage Crosby, Stills & Nash (or especially their respective
early ’70s solo work) or simply beautifully crafted, powerful, well-rooted rock will find
almost too much to adore in Dawes. They are the first band to hit the stage at Sasquatch!
this year but they will likely be one of the best anyone sees.

2. Vetiver ::
Sunday :: 6:25-7:10 pm :: Yeti Stage

Talk about a band that has ALL the fundamentals locked down – strong songcraft,
empathetic, intelligent playing, potent heart and soul – Vetiver pretty much nails the
core things that make a band interesting and worth allowing into one’s life. Bandleader
Andy Cabic pens tunes that hum and skip on the order of folk’s like Nick Drake, Kris
Kristofferson and other prime root sources, and then he and the band take them to places
both rocky and patiently lovely.

3. The Mountain
Goats
:: Monday :: 5:40-6:25 pm :: Bigfoot Stage

If you mixed up Jonathan Richman, Woody Guthrie, Syd Barrett and a traveling holy roller
preacher into one person you might get head Goat John Darnielle.
There’s something strangely moving and off-kilter funny about the Goats’ music, and yet
one has no problem imagining any of the named touchstones pulling up a chair and drinking
in what Darnielle is dishing out.

Sasquatch!
Schedule

Sasquatch!
Directions

Sasquatch! website

Continue reading for Furthur Festival…

Furthur Festival | Angels Camp,
CA

There’s likely only one prime destination for lovers of Grateful Dead music over Memorial
Day Weekend, and that’s the Furthur
Festival
in the Sierra Foothills at the Calaveras County Fairgrounds, May 28-30.
Centered around a series of full album presentations (see full details here) by Furthur featuring Phil Lesh and Bob Weir, there’s
more than just Dead to enjoy at this new fest.

1. Mark Karan &
Jemimah Puddleduck
:: Saturday :: Furthur Stage

One of the joys of Puddleduck is it lets Karan’s MANY gifts shine. Largely known for his
ever-tasty guitar work with RatDog, Karan is also a dead good singer-songwriter with a
real knack for picking really satisfying cover material with his own band, including Randy
Newman, Little Feat and other kindred spirits. Puddleduck is a good time starter to the
main stage well worth getting out of your tent in time to catch.

2. The Mother
Hips
:: Sunday :: Further Stage

It’s kind of dangerous to call any band “perfect” but there’s a lot of mounting evidence
over the decades that Northern California’s roots-rock-pop stalwarts The Mother Hips are
just that – freakin’ perfect. For charged, wonderfully executed, guitar heavy rock ‘n’
roll WITH a truly breathtaking catalog and one of the tighest, coolest rhythm sections
ever, well, one would be very hard pressed to find better. Seeing the Hips for the first
time is a conversion experience for most. Don’t be surprised if you go scrambling to hear
every note you can after you experience this set.

3. Dark Hollow Stage :: All Weekend

The small acoustic showcase stage will be curated by Larry Campbell and Teresa
Williams
and will likely be ground zero for some stunning troubadour action. Folks
will be treated to an array of “friends” dropping by, and even if it’s just Campbell and
his missus wooing you with song you won’t go wrong!

Those wanting an additional day in festival bliss can check out Furthurmore on Monday, May 31, at River Ranch
Campground in Tuolumne, CA. This fine epilogue to the first Furthur Fest features 7 Walkers
featuring Bill Kreutzmann and Papa Mali, Everyone Orchestra
featuring Steve Kimock, Melvin Seals, George Porter Jr, Dan Lebowitz, Aaron Redner, Dave
Brogan, Nat Keefe, Jans Ingber and more, plus the triumphant return of Holy Kimoto with
Steve Kimock, Kyle Hollingsworth, Michael Travis, and Jason Hann.

Furthur Festival Schedule

Furthur Festival Directions

Furthur Festival website

Continue reading for Desert Rocks…

Desert Rocks | Moab, UT

With crowd pleasers like Melvin Seals & JGB, Groundation and The Mother Hips topping the bill and a
unique, stunning setting in the Moab Desert in Utah, this smaller fest is shaping up to be
one of the best annual gatherings of truly talented working bands in the U.S. Without
relying on safe, name brand festival anchor bands, Desert Rocks – taking place this year May 27-30
- has grown each year by the merits of its spirit and good taste in lineups. Here’s three
worthies attendees should check out this year.

1. Lubriphonic
:: Thursday :: 8:00-9:15 pm :: Uncanny Stage

This Chicago-based self-describe “rock & soul stew” has the sophistication and sharp edges
of vintage Steely Dan but a blues soul that’s dusty and rugged as one could want.
Lubriphonic has killer tunes and is a reliable powerhouse live. If you’re headed to
Desert Rocks looking to come home with a new favorite, this band is likely to be a strong
contender for that position.

2. Wisebird ::
Friday :: 7:30-8:45 pm :: Desert Rocks Stage

If you love crankin’ good ol’ rock & roll with the windows down and the white lines flying
past at an alarming pace, then Wisebird is gonna hit your sweet spot like an Everlasting
Gobstopper. There’s a ton of abundant boogie soul to these boys and a little of the
battered denim je ne sais quoi one finds in The Black Crowes and Drive-By Truckers. Pour
some whiskey down your gullet and just dance like your body wants to as Wisebird plays and
things are gonna loosen up for you in a real nice way. Added bonus: the Bow &
Sparrow Aerial Ballet
will join them for this set. Wisebird also performs on Saturday
night, 12:20-1:50 am.

3. David Gans ::
Saturday :: 5:00-6:00 pm :: Desert Rocks Stage

While known for his work around the Grateful Dead both in print and on the radio for
decades, Gans is a damn fine songwriter and performer in his own right. Yes, his
interpretations of Dead numbers are great, but it’s his nose for primo work from other
contemporaries like Railroad Earth and his own songs that increasingly knock one out. And
you gotta have respect for anyone who can hold an audience rapt or make them skip standing
alone with just a guitar on stage, something Gans accomplishes and makes look so natural
it doesn’t seem like work.

Desert Rocks
Schedule

Desert Rocks Directions

Desert Rocks website

For a full list and links to other festivals happening this Memorial Day Weekend,
sure to visit the JamBase Festival
Guide

What are you doing this musical weekend? Add your comments to the Forum linked below.


Telluride Bluegrass Festival: Single Day Schedule

Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros
By Jake Krolick

The 37th Telluride Bluegrass Festival has announced the single-day lineups for this year’s festivities.

Thursday, June 17, 2010
Tim O’Brien Band | Alison Krauss & Union Station featuring Jerry Douglas | Del McCoury Band | Josh Ritter & The Royal City Band | Punch Brothers featuring Chris Thile | Keller & the Keels | Sarah Jarosz

Friday, June 18, 2010
Leftover Salmon | Lyle Lovett | Court Yard Hounds | Hot Rize | Peter Rowan | Cadillac Sky | John Cowan Band | Ben Sollee

Saturday, June 19, 2010
Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros | Sam Bush Band | Bela Fleck, Zakir Hussain & Edgar Meyer | Telluride Troubadour | Yonder Mountain String Band | Imelda May | Jerry Douglas, Omar Hakim & Viktor Krauss | The Hillbenders

Sunday, June 20, 2010
Telluride House Band featuring Sam, Bela, Jerry, Edgar, Bryan & Stuart | Dave Rawlings Machine | Mumford & Sons | Brandi Carlile | Carolina Chocolate Drops | Väsen | The Drepung Monks

Four-day passes, single-day tickets, and camping are available now at shop.bluegrass.com
or 800-624-2422.


DelFest Academy

DelFest 2010 Announces DelFest Academy

Del McCoury Band

For the second consecutive year, DelFest 2010 will be preceded by a Bluegrass Academy. DelFest Academy 2010 will take place May 25-27, 2010 with the festival beginning on 5/27 and ending on 5/30.

The 2010 DelFest Academy will consist of a friendly, encouraging, and intensive three-day learning experience with a group of some of the finest musicians in bluegrass: mandolinist Ronnie McCoury, banjo player Rob McCoury, fiddler Jason Carter, bassist Alan Bartram, and Ronnie Bowman on guitar. As members of the Del McCoury Band, Rob, Ronnie, Alan and Jason have won IBMA’s Entertainer of the Year award nine times.

A Meet & Greet for students, their guests, and instructors will kick off the academic week on Monday evening. Bluegrass Karaoke on Thursday afternoon where the students get to front the Del McCoury Band, as well as a special wrap party that night will conclude the academy.

In intimate classes, students will receive instruction targeted to their individual needs, with plenty of opportunity for one-on-one interaction with their instructors. The overall direction of each class will ultimately be determined by the students’ goals and needs. Students may expect to learn how to lead jams and receive tips on practicing, technique, and accompaniment, and benefit from direct interaction with instructors who can help them achieve their musical objectives.

DelFest 2010, set to kick off on May 27 offers a fantastic lineup for its third year, headlined by the Del McCoury Band (of course), The Avett Brothers, Yonder Mountain String Band, the David Grisman Bluegrass Experience, Railroad Earth and more.

A celebration of the musical heritage of Del McCoury, DelFest is a family-friendly event and takes place at the Allegany County Fairgrounds in Cumberland, MD. Personally chosen by Del, this site is nestled along the Potomac River in the scenic Appalachian Mountains, and it is the perfect location for DelFest and the very first DelFest Academy!


Alison Krauss & Union Station To Play Telluride Bluegrass

ALISON KRAUSS AND UNION STATION TO PLAY TELLURIDE BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

Alison Krauss & Union Station

Planet Bluegrass has announced the addition of Alison Krauss & Union Station featuring Jerry Douglas to the lineup for the 37th Annual Telluride Bluegrass Festival, June 17-20 in Telluride, CO. This festival performance will be one of a very select number of 2010 shows for the band and among their first full-length sets since 2007.

Alison Krauss & Union Station featuring Jerry Douglas has been credited with raising the profile of bluegrass music around the world, bringing modern sophistication to the genre while respecting its traditions.

This 2010 performance marks the group’s 12th appearance at Telluride Bluegrass, beginning with their festival debut in 1989, and Douglas will be celebrating his 26th year on the Telluride stage.

Says Grammy-winning Union Station vocalist Dan Tyminski, “I have spent a lifetime going to festivals and can easily say that no other has the splendor of Telluride.”

Union station bassist Barry Bales agrees, reflecting on the significance of Telluride Bluegrass: “As an aspiring young musician growing up in East Tennessee, it was an almost unattainable goal to even attend the Telluride Bluegrass Festival. So it was truly a monumental moment in my life to experience the festival for the first time not from the audience, but on stage for one of my very first shows upon joining Alison almost 20 years ago.”

37th Telluride Bluegrass Festival Initial Lineup

June 17-20, 2010

Town Park, Telluride, CO

-Alison Krauss & Union Station

- Sam Bush Band

- Bela Fleck, Zakir Hussain, Edgar Meyer

- Yonder Mountain String Band

- Telluride House Band featuring Sam, Bela, Jerry, Edgar, Bryan & Stuart

- Del McCoury Band

- Hot Rize

- Leftover Salmon

- Tim O’Brien

- Jerry Douglas

- Josh Ritter

- Punch Brothers featuring Chris Thile

- Peter Rowan

- Carolina Chocolate Drops

- John Cowan Band

- Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

- Imelda May

- Cadillac Sky

- Mumford and Sons

- The Drepung Monks

- Sarah Jarosz

- The Hillbenders

And many more…

Tickets for Telluride are available here.

For more on Telluride Bluegrass Festival see our 2009 coverage here.


Old Settler’s Fest Initial Lineup

23RD ANNUAL OLD SETTLER’S MUSIC FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES INITIAL 2010 LINEUP

Joe Ely

The four nights of the upcoming and much anticipated Old Settler’s Music Festival, which won an Austin360.com A-List readers poll, promise a bonanza of the acclaimed roots music that has delighted attendees and repeat attendees for 23 years, and will do so again this year. The Austin, TX festival is scheduled for Thursday, April 15, through Sunday, April 18.

Award-winning songwriter-producer-recording artist Joe Ely, a veteran of the road and live performance, headlines Friday. Folk-rock singer-songwriter Patty Griffin – whose duet with Dierks Bentley on his song “Beautiful World” has been nominated this year for a Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals and whose new album, Downtown Church, will be released January 26 – headlines with her band, including Buddy Miller, on Saturday.

Vanguard Records Americana artist Mindy Smith, award-winning banjo virtuoso and independent record label founder Alison Brown with Joe Craven, Alaskan bluegrass band Bearfoot, 7 Walkers featuring Bill Kreutzmann and Papa Mali, The Infamous Stringdusters, Fred Eaglesmith, and Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver are also among the more than 30 acts that are slated to perform on four stages at the Salt Lick Pavilion and Camp Ben McCulloch in the Texas Hill Country south of Austin.

Festival-goers can save as much as 30 percent over at-the-gate prices when they order early-bird wristbands by January 31 here.

Available are 4-day wristbands with campground access (Thursday-Sunday), 3-day wristbands with campground access (Friday-Sunday), 3-day no-camping wristbands and all-inclusive Platinum Passes. Children 12 and younger will be admitted free. Camping access is expected to sell out.

In 23 years, Old Settler’s Music Festival has delivered one of the best roots-music festival experiences in the United States with amazing performers including Joan Osborne, Iris Dement, Michelle Shocked, Bruce Hornsby, Yonder Mountain String Band, Nickel Creek, Alison Krauss, Bela Fleck, Rodney Crowell, Vassar Clements, Del McCoury Band, Kasey Chambers, and local favorites Ray Wylie Hubbard, The Belleville Outfit, Hayes Carll and Sarah Jarosz.


Telluride Bluegrass 2010: Salmon, Yonder, Béla, Bush, More

COLORADO’S SEMINAL MUSIC FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES INITIAL LINE UP FOR 2010

Sam Bush

Planet Bluegrass today announces the preliminary lineup for the 37th annual Telluride Bluegrass Festival; including Sam Bush, Yonder Mountain String Band, Bela Fleck, Zakir Hussain & Edgar Meyer, Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros, and many others. The venerable roots music festival is held the weekend closest to the summer solstice, June 17-20, in the rugged San Juan Mountains of southwestern Colorado. Tickets and camping go on sale at 9 a.m. MST, on Wednesday, December 9 here, or over the phone at 800-624-2422.

Camping passes for the festival’s longest-running campground, Town Park, sold out in November using an online lottery with entries from 47 different US states and many foreign countries. A limited number of holiday-priced 4-day passes ($30 discount) will be available beginning December 9. These discount passes typically sell-out within several weeks.

37th Telluride Bluegrass Festival Initial Lineup

June 17-20, 2010

Town Park, Telluride, CO

- Sam Bush Band

- Bela Fleck, Zakir Hussain, Edgar Meyer

- Yonder Mountain String Band

- Telluride House Band featuring Sam, Bela, Jerry, Edgar, Bryan & Stuart

- Del McCoury Band

- Hot Rize

- Leftover Salmon

- Tim O’Brien

- Jerry Douglas

- Josh Ritter

- Punch Brothers featuring Chris Thile

- Peter Rowan

- Carolina Chocolate Drops

- John Cowan Band

- Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

- Imelda May

- Cadillac Sky

- Mumford and Sons

- The Drepung Monks

- Sarah Jarosz

- The Hillbenders

And many more…


DelFest Initial Lineup YMSB, Avetts, KW, Grisman, RRE

MCCOURY MUSIC & HIGH SIERRA MUSIC ANNOUNCE

INITIAL LINEUP FOR 3rd ANNUAL DELFEST at ALLEGANY COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS, CUMBERLAND, MD

Del McCoury Band

After much anticipation, bluegrass patriarch Del McCoury and WAMU’s Bluegrass Country’s Katy Daley announced the initial lineup for the 3rd Annual DelFest live on air this morning. They then proceeded to take calls from fans and play cuts from the Del McCoury Band’s new album, Family Circle, which hits stores today.

Along with the Del McCoury Band and Del’s sons’ spinoff, The Travelin’ McCourys, next year’s featured artists include Yonder Mountain String Band, The Avett Brothers, Keller Williams and Friends featuring Jeff Austin and Keith Moseley, David Grisman Bluegrass Experience, Railroad Earth, Dailey and Vincent and others (see below for full list). “While there will be many more acts added, we are proud to announce this first round of artists — many who are friends of ours,” says Ronnie McCoury of the announcement.

DelFest will be held Thursday, May 27 through Sunday, May 30, 2010 at the Allegany County Fairgrounds in Cumberland, MD (2.5 hrs from Baltimore and DC). It originated from the desire to create a family-friendly music festival celebrating the rich legacy of McCoury music while creating a forum for world-class musical collaborations and to showcase fresh new talent with a down-home feeling. Produced in association with High Sierra Music, the 3rd Annual DelFest will again offer a quality festival experience stamped with the unique McCoury touch. Personally chosen by Del, the Allegany County Fairgrounds in Cumberland, MD serves as the perfect location for DelFest. Nestled along the Potomac River in the scenic Appalachian Mountains, the Fairgrounds are convenient to four major airports and easily reached by rail or road.

In addition to traditional stage sets by these world-class artists, attendees can again expect to see one-of-a-kind collaborations, special guest sit-ins, various tributes to Del McCoury and his musical legacy, intimate appearances, both at unique “playshops” — informal workshops where the emphasis will be on performance rather than instruction — and in late night indoor performances and picking sessions. DelFest will also include a band competition, with the winners invited to return for a regular set at the following year’s gathering, and for the second year, DelFest will be immediately preceded by a 3-day Music Academy hosted by The Travelin’ McCourys, where all levels of musicians can learn from their heroes (the Academy will take place May 25, 26, and 27).

A limited number of early bird passes are on sale now, as well as DELuxe Experience (VIP) packages and RV passes. For detailed information and to purchase tickets, visit www.delfest.com.

AT A GLANCE:

3rd Annual DelFest

May 27 – 30, 2010

Allegany County Fairgrounds, Cumberland, MD

Featuring:

The Del McCoury Band (three performances over the weekend)

Yonder Mountain String Band

The Avett Brothers

Keller Williams & Friends featuring Jeff Austin and Keith Moseley

David Grisman Bluegrass Experience

Railroad Earth

Dailey & Vincent

The Travelin’ McCourys

Mountain Heart

Joe Craven

Larry Keel & Natural Bridge

Greensky Bluegrass

The Hillbilly Gypsies


Many more to be announced!

Tickets on sale now at delfest.com

$110 4-day pass; $99 3-day pass (prices good through January 11, 2010)


Leftover Salmon: 20 Years Down River

By: Nancy Dunham

Editor’s Note:

In honor of Leftover Salmon’s historic 20th anniversary, we’re working with the band to offer fans a unique look back at their legendary career. Pop in an old tape (yup, we’ve still got our Maxells), catch the band at a festivaaaaaal, or take a look around JamBase and Leftover Salmon’s influence on the live music scene(s) we cover and care for so deeply is clear and present. In fact, we’re proud to say that Leftover Salmon helped water the very soil that JamBase has grown out of. Maybe you feel the same way.

Yet, as we celebrate what Salmon has given the music world, they want to give us just a little bit more. Leftover Salmon is well aware that they’d never be celebrating 20 years if it weren’t for the fans and they want to say thank you. We’re honored to partner up with them on this opportunity to bring you two albums worth (28 tracks total) of mostly never-before released live Leftover Salmon that covers the band’s entire career. It’s packed with special guests, classics, covers, and it tells as much of the band’s story as the words you’re about to read. And they’re all free, like a proper thank you should be. At the end of this story you’ll find a track listing, link and more info on Part 1 of our four part free live album download, but you can get started and Download Leftover Salmon Celebrating 20 Years Disc 1 now. You can also stream the first installment with the nifty little audio player to the right. And keep an eye out for the second batch of songs coming soon.


Leftover Salmon vintage press shot
Emmitt, Vann, Garrison, Herman, McKay, Martinez

Ben Kaufmann‘s life was changed by Leftover Salmon. The Yonder Mountain String Band bass player knew he wanted to be a musician, but it wasn’t until he was 19 and saw the Boulder-based “Polyethnic Cajun Slamgrass” band at The Wetlands in New York that he had a view of what musical path to take.

“From the minute they took the stage, their music blew me away,” said Kaufmann. “I never heard anything like them before. As soon as the show ended, I went over to the VW bus with the merch table and bought the CD and listened to it and said, ‘Where does this music come from?’ That’s what encouraged me to move to Boulder.”

Stories about how Leftover Salmon affected various lives abound in all quarters of the music community. Kaufmann recalls that once YMSB formed, Leftover Salmon was instrumental in getting them gigs in the Denver area.

The impact of Salmon is even more interesting when you consider the fact that when the band formed in 1989 – when members of the Salmon Heads joined forces with the Left Hand String Band – it occurred by happenstance.

“Last night I watched [Martin Scorsese's film about The Rolling Stones] Shine A Light and those guys are so much like us,” said Leftover Salmon co-founder Drew Emmitt, the group’s mandolin player. “It’s not that we’re like The Rolling Stone but they’re just a ragtag bunch of maniacs like us.”

In the film, Mick Jagger talks about forming the band in 1962 and thinking he’d try it one year and see if it worked out. If so, Jagger said he’d re-up for another year. Of course, the band is still going strong.

“That’s just like us,” said Emmitt. “There was no preconceived notion. We never thought we’d go out and play and travel the country. We just wanted to go out and play and have fun.”

Looking Back On Leftover Salmon

“Their music is unique. It just makes you feel good,” said Wavy Gravy, an activist, comic and all around friend to musicians since the 1960s. “There is nothing like them, with their incredible buoyancy and joy. That’s what they do – they make joy.”

Drew Emitt & Vince Herman – Leftover Salmon by Eric Abramson

That joy must have been what the fates had in mind when they brought the core of the band together.

Drew Emmitt grew up in Tennessee just outside Nashville. Although his family was musical and artistic – his dad was a writer, his mom a playwright – the family feared that Emmitt wouldn’t be able to make a living in music. But Emmitt was hooked from a young age, having grown up on influences that ranged from Gordon Lightfoot to Muddy Water to The Allman Brothers Band and Black Sabbath.

“I was exposed to classic music, rock & roll, and the blues. It was coming from all sides,” Emmitt said of his parents and siblings.

At about the same time, Vince Herman was growing up in Pittsburgh where Motown and doo-wop sounds prevailed.

“My first influence, though, was actually polka,” said Herman. “I was convinced you couldn’t get married without an accordion. I still have a weakness for the accordion.”

In high school, Herman became a fan of Southern rock and bluegrass, and those influences deepened when he was in college in Morgantown, West Virginia, where he got into the “bluegrass and old timey scene.”

Vince Herman – Leftover Salmon by Eric Abramson

“That really made me want to do that for a living,” said Herman, who put his dream on hold after he got married. “I did every kind of work imaginable, from working on fishing boats to construction. I tried the real jobs but they just weren’t for me.”

Emmitt, whose family moved to Boulder when he was about 10, also tried various jobs – most notably working with children in a daycare center, which he enjoyed – but found himself more and more caught up in the city’s music scene.

“In Boulder in the ’70s, it was a little more folk. Pure Prairie League, Stephen Stills, and Dan Fogelberg were always around,” said Emmitt. “But it was when I saw Hot Rize that everything totally changed for me. I was totally bit by the bluegrass bug.”

Although he was in garage bands in high school, the atmosphere surrounding the bluegrass scene was a strong pull for Emmitt.

“I realized there was a whole culture attached to it,” he said. “I loved that whole scene of people getting together around the campfire and playing. That’s what really got me.”

The first time Herman was fully exposed to the bluegrass scene was in about 1977 at a festival at the University of Pittsburgh.

“I had been playing music for years at that point but that’s really when I found my musical niche,” said Herman. “What a great way to socialize and enjoy music.”

Continue reading for more on Leftover Salmon…

 


Their music is unique. It just makes you feel good. There is nothing like them, with their incredible buoyancy and joy. That’s what they do – they make joy.

-Wavy Gravy

 

The Right Place

Drew Emmitt – LoS by Abramson

Musical aspirations and intentions are one thing, making it big quite another. Both Emmitt and Herman said that there are large doses of luck that factor into the equation.

“It has to be the right people for sure,” said Emmitt. “We happened upon it. There are so many great musicians in the world that really deserve to be famous [but don't make it]. It’s all about timing and finding the right people.”

Sam Bush remembers watching the young band when they were first performing as Leftover Salmon.

“One of the things that kind of set them apart was their versatility,” said Bush, “to be able to play electric music [with] fiddle, mandolin. It’s not surprising they found such a large audience. I love all their influences – the newgrass, the rock, the reggae. It really caught my attention.”

Herman said the deep roots of Leftover Salmon can be traced to the musical experimentation he and the other members of the band have explored since they were young.

“Getting your brain wrapped around one thing allows you to speak the language, and once you speak the language it is kind of like entering a culture,” he said. “In Boulder there was a player named Buck who was instrumental in uniting people. He called this thing he put together – before the Internet – Buck’s List, and there were probably 100 people on it. If you wanted to have a picking party or throw together a band, that’s where you started.”

Of course following a musical dream isn’t that easy to do when you have bills to pay. Herman remembers all to well the struggles he faced while working his way up in the business.

“It requires a lot of faith,” he said. “I have a 22-year-old who’s now trying to decide what to do, and I’d hate to see him live as close to poverty for as long as I did. But if that’s what leads to happiness, that’s the way you have to go.”

Emmitt recalls how his parents both fretted about his musical aspirations.

Mark Vann by Abramson

“They always wanted me to have something to fall back on. Unfortunately, they passed away before they got to see me do this,” Emmitt said. “That’s a big regret in my life. They’d be so surprised to see the kind of life I lead.”

Of course that didn’t happen right away. After years of kicking around in music scenes, fate took hold in 1985. That’s when Herman left West Virginia to move to Colorado influenced, like Emmitt, by Hot Rize.

“I was looking for a place to move that had different bluegrass,” said Herman. “I drove to Boulder, walked into a bar that said bluegrass was playing, and that’s where I first met Drew. It’s kind of weird to get out of your car, walk into a place, and find someone you will play with the next 25 years.”

That friendship deepened as they got to know each other through the Boulder music scene. Then, fate stepped in again one year at the Telluride Bluegrass Festival when Herman’s band, The Salmon Heads, was playing. Emmitt was at the fest just hanging out, walking through the compound when he heard “just incredible banjo playing and walked over.” That’s when he met banjo player Mark Vann, who eventually became the third co-founder of Leftover Salmon. The three formed a fast friendship at Telluride while continuing to play in their own bands and competing in a series of silly contests.

“Mark and I were in two different bands. Vince and I definitely had a chemistry going,” said Emmitt. “I thought something cool would happen.”

After the festival ended the three new friends walked up to Bear Creek Falls and sat on a cliff talking until the sun rose.

“You could feel the energy among the three of us,” said Emmitt. “You could really feel it going on.”

As the sun rose in all its splendor, Vann suddenly yelled, “Down in front,” referring to a large mountain that partially obscured their view. All three men started laughing.

“That was what sealed the deal for me,” said Herman. “That was great.”

Starting Leftover Salmon

Figuring out their new band’s name was pretty easy. The three new friends and their buddies who would fill out the group just started playing with the names of the two main bands they were in, and Herman finally coined Leftover Salmon.

Deciding on what music to play was almost as simple.

Leftover Salmon at Telluride Bluegrass Fest by Abramson

“We really just said, ‘Let’s take bluegrass, crank it up, add drums, and that will be Leftover Salmon,’” said Emmitt.

“I really thought it’d last one gig,” quipped Herman.

Not only has it lasted 20 years and counting, but that first gig will be celebrated on December 28 when the band plays The Eldo, the site of their first show. They’ll follow with shows at the Boulder Theater on December 30 and New Year’s Eve.

“It’s not a very large place; I think it seats about 225 people,” said Emmitt of The Eldo, “but after all we’ve done, all the large venues, it’s a way to come full circle.”

In a way, that small club filled with friends from the area is what gave Leftover Salmon the all-important push it needed to launch its career.

“You pick up energy from the audience,” said Emmitt. “You discover people really want you to succeed, and you take that energy and you run with it. You stop worrying about it and you get up there and do your thing and give out energy and get it back.”

The energy Leftover Salmon found reached higher levels the more old string band tunes they added.

“Those would get people really fired up,” said Herman. “It was what really struck a chord with the whole slamgrass thing. People got real rowdy.”

Both Emmitt and Herman admitted to being more than a bit concerned when slamgrass first began, but they say people weren’t overly aggressive, just fun loving. That’s almost the same way the signature sound of Leftover Salmon developed.

Continue reading for more on Leftover Salmon…

 


One of the things that kind of set them apart was their versatility, to be able to play electric music [with] fiddle, mandolin. It’s not surprising they found such a large audience. I love all their influences – the newgrass, the rock, the reggae. It really caught my attention.

-Sam Bush

 

“We took a few different influences and put them all together,” said Herman. “That’s how we called it Polyethnic Cajun Slamgrass. We took all our favorite influences, mixed them together, and that’s what it became.”

Del McCoury, Bush, Emmitt, Vann by Abramson

And other musicians and fans loved it, packing Leftover Salmon’s shows and clamoring for more. One of the early devotes was Paul Barrere of Little Feat.

“Vince and Drew were two of the best young bluegrass pickers I heard in a long time,” said Barrere. “The way that they incorporated rock & roll into the music was just brilliant. Their impact on the jam band scene is huge.”

Musician Ronnie McCoury had first seen the band at Telluride in the early 1990s and was hooked by the eclectic sound and the members’ energy.

“No one really does what they do,” said McCoury. “Personally, I don’t even know how they create that sound, but that’s why they have such a great following that will stick with them forever.”

There were certainly disbelievers, though, when the band started. Emmitt remembers one friend telling him the newly purchased electric mandolin was “cool but all those electric mandolins went out in the ’70s.” Still, the bandmates wouldn’t be dissuaded.

“It really seemed like the smartest thing to do [to develop our sound],” said Emmitt. “You had bluegrass and you had rock, and in that respect there wasn’t much happening. You had the [Nitty Gritty] Dirt Band and others with drums and stuff, but they were more country. We took it to a different place. We played with a lot more abandon.”

Herman talks about the television show America’s Got Talent and the parade of genres and categories showcased.

“I watch that and think we could be contenders in all the categories,” he said. “We saw a window of opportunity and we combined all those categories.”

Losing A Brother

Mark Vann by Abramson

The band was rolling along and life was sweet when suddenly everything changed. Mark Vann, the brilliant banjo player, became ill and was diagnosed with cancer. He died on March 4, 2002.

The time of his diagnosis was an odd time for the entire country because it occurred just prior to the September 11 terrorist attacks. Not only was the band without Mark but they also played a few gigs without a drummer because Jose Martinez was in Seattle. A native of Venezuela, he was concerned about trying to get on a commercial airline flight so soon after the attacks, so he rode a Greyhound bus from Seattle to Texas to rejoin the band.

“Walking onstage that first time without Mark was one of the toughest things I’ve ever done in my life,” said Emmitt.

The pain didn’t ease for years. Even now, raw emotion floods the voices of Emmitt and Herman when they discuss their former bandmate.

“It absolutely devastated us,” said Herman. “It was hard to consider going on and playing again after he passed, but that’s what we do. We would have loved to have canned the whole thing. Drew and Mark and I together, it was a spiritual thing that led it along. But none of us had savings accounts and we had to keep going. And we did. It was definitely one of the hardest things I have ever done. Playing music is so spiritually connected with well being and to go onstage and look at the empty spot where Mark used to stand was brutal.”

Friends, including Sam Bush and banjo player Reverend Jeff Mosier, played with the band and helped ease some of the pain.

Herman & Vann – Leftover Salmon by Eric Abramson

“The Rev. Mosier was really the perfect person to go out with us as the first banjo player,” said Emmitt. “He is a very witty, very funny, very energetic person, and also very spiritual, and it made sense to have someone who was called Reverend be with us at that point. He made us laugh at a time when it was really hard to find laughter anywhere.”

In a way, music became a salvation for the band members. Playing, which had been a pure joy, became a form of healing for them.

“The music is going to be different but the music comes out of you and you need to express it just as much,” said Herman. “Those gigs were really hard but they were also incredibly therapeutic. Music goes on.”

At the end of 2004, the band announced it would take a hiatus. Until they reunited in 2007, many doubted they would ever return.

“I think we were like a three-legged beast walking on two,” said Herman. “We had never quite gotten that balance back, and it was a struggle just changing personnel. We had never taken a break after he passed and we just said at one point it was time to give it a rest. It was too spiritually taxing. It had run its course.”

When the band reunited in 2007 for performances at High Sierra Music Festival, All Good Festival, and, of course, the Telluride Bluegrass Festival, Herman and Emmitt were quick to dismiss notions that Leftover Salmon was back. Yet when they were announced at Telluride as “Drew Emmitt and Vince Herman and Friends,” Jeff Austin of Yonder Mountain String Band said, “We all know what’s going on here.”

Leftover Salmon 2009

It is true? Is Leftover Salmon really back?

“We are in an interesting place,” said Emmitt. “We were a reunion band at that time and we’ve done reunion shows and festivals. It’s hard to say where we are, but it really works well this way. It is awesome. One of the greatest things that ever happened to me personally is putting this band back together because it’s very fresh and enriched because of our solo work.”

Emmitt, Herman, and the other members each support the other’s solo projects that allow them to reach into needed creative areas, knowing they can always return to Leftover Salmon.

“It’s comfortable to be back in this place,” said Herman. “It’s a great repertoire of music and it’s very comfortable to dive back in. I don’t know where it will go but we’ll keep playing music and having fun.”

That, said Bush, is really all their friends and family should ask right now.

“It left a big heartbreaking hole for them to lose Mark,” Bush said. “They really loved Mark; we all did. If anything, since Mark’s demise we are all thankful that they are back and pickin’ together again. If anything maybe helps them all, it’s that they played somewhat separately for a time. That gives them – and us – an appreciation to get them back.”

Continue reading to download the first part of our free Leftover Salmon live double-album…

As part of celebrating Leftover Salmon’s 20 year anniversary, we’re giving away a double-album full of 28 live tracks starting in 1991 and taking us right up to 2009. Selecting, mastering and organizing the material fell largely on the shoulders of Leftover Salmon manger John Joy, who along with band archivist Chad Staehly and Eric Abramson, who did the Leftover Salmon Years In Your Ears DVD, narrowed it down from hundreds – if not thousands – of songs to bring this live compilation to life. Special thanks is also due to James Tuttle who mastered the final selections at Airshow Mastering.

“It sure has been a trip!” said Vince Herman about listening back to the first eight songs we’re offering, all from 1991-1994. Surprised by how rock & roll the young band sounded, Herman explained that, “It just seemed like the places we were playing and the crowds we were playing to, it was more of a rock & roll kind of crowd in the early days, and bluegrass was something kind of new to ‘em, in the bar scene anyways. So I guess we probably leaned a bit more towards the rock & roll than straight ahead bluegrass like we played in the Left Hand String Band or the jug band and the Cajun stuff of the Salmon Heads.”

Vince Herman was interviewed about the 20 Year compilation by Cal Roach.

You can download Part 1 of the Leftover Salmon Celebrating 20 Years Sampler HERE.

Track Listing for Part 1 of the Leftover Salmon Celebrating 20 Years Sampler

1. Blister in the Sun 3:59 – 05/04/1991 McCabe’s Boulder, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Gerry Cavagnaro, Michael Wooten, Rob Galloway

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Violent Femmes

2. Just Before The Evening 4:02 – 05/04/1991 McCabe’s Boulder, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Gerry Cavagnaro, Michael Wooten, Rob Galloway
Songwriter/Composer Credits: Drew Emmitt – Leftover Salmon

3. Whiskey Before Breakfast/Over The Waterfall 3:47 – 05/04/1991 McCabe’s – Boulder, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Gerry Cavagnaro, Michael Wooten, Rob Galloway

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Traditionally arranged by Leftover Salmon

4. Who Stole My Monkey 4:42 – 05/25/1991 Stage Stop – Rollinsville, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Gerry Cavagnaro, Michael Wooten, Rob Galloway

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Zachary Richard

5. Mystery 4:19 – 10/02/1993 – Fox Theater – Boulder, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Michael Wooten, Tye North, Joe Jogerst

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Mark Hallman

6. Weights 3:53 10/02/1993 – Fox Theater – Boulder, CO

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Michael Wooten, Tye North, Joe Jogerst

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Drew Emmitt – Leftover Salmon

7. Dance On Your Head 4:12 – 10/19/1994 Music Farm – Charleston, SC

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Michael Wooten, Tye North

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Vince Herman / Mark Vann – Leftover Salmon

8. Head Bag 5:34 10/19/1994 Music Farm – Charleston, SC

Band: Vince Herman, Drew Emmitt, Mark Vann, Michael Wooten, Tye North

Songwriter/Composer Credits: Vince Herman – Leftover Salmon

Check back for Part 2 of our Leftover Salmon 20 Year Celebration featuring a bunch more free music!

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Friday Playlist

THE WEEKEND’S COME
TIME TO THROW YOUR TROUBLES AWAY

This week’s Playlist is all about the longing in various forms – longing to connect and dance with some that makes us smile, longing to shine where so often we feel a touch dull. Richard and Linda Thomposon start things off with the high hopes of “I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight,” followed the equally daydream rich “When I Paint My Masterpiece,” Dylan and The Band’s classic worked over nicely by Tim O’Brien and Del McCoury. Then, a couple quality bands from the “H” section of the alphabet, Hoots & Hellmouth and the Hackensaw Boys with “The Good I Know You Know” and “Stranger’s Waltz,” respectively. This is followed by nu-folk-innovators Fire On Fire‘s “Liberty Unknown,” Elton John‘s shimmering cover of Lesley Duncan’s cult favorite “Love Song” and finally Chris Thile‘s “Ready For Anything” from his superb solo album Deciever. May your weekend find all your hopes fulfilled, kids!

And check out last week’s U.K. rich Playlist with The Cribs, Muse, The Smiths and more!

Playlist assembled by JamBase Associate Editor Dennis Cook, who is generally just about as easy as Sunday morningÂ…


Northwest String Summit: The Weekend at Horning’s Hideout

Northwest String Summit at Horning’s Hideout

Northwest String Summit 2008 by B. Ball

Returning to Horning’s Hideout for the 8th year running, the Northwest String Summit has established itself as one of the few festivals to remain at this unique and beautiful venue, 20 miles west of Portland, Oregon. Fans can spend a weekend at Horning’s Hideout simply to bask in a living green world of rainforest and rivers, adding the playful verve of bluegrass music to the 300-acre peacock farm creates a weekend that offers rejuvenation to city eyes, reminding them of the smell of sunrise before morning traffic; the weight of air after lightning storms. Yonder Mountain String Band, headlining two full sets each night with special guest Danny Barnes, invites a troupe of fresh talent, melding the bluegrass genre into new shapes, as well as classic musicians, like the Del McCoury Band, that laid the foundation for the music now being stretched over a larger canvas.

Each year YMSB leads the exploration, expanding the bounds their unique breed of American roots music can seep into and still be labeled, “Bluegrass.” Drawing from a full spectrum of musical influences, they delve into rocked out, acoustic, collaborative performances of traditional instruments and old-timey origins tossed to a bedlam of improvised monster jams: whole songs swallowed, classic bluegrass threads and musical lines devoured, in the framework of something entirely new where music is King, the strings its army, and that’s all the labeling necessary.

This year will host music on Thursday night for the first time with Pete Kartsounes & Friends playing for early-bird arrivals anxious to jumpstart the 3-Day festivities. The String Summit officially begins Friday afternoon, July 17, with a band competition for newcomers vying to earn a slot in the 2010 lineup. Darol Anger, who’s been the unofficial fifth member of YMSB at the festival in past years, returns on the fiddle playing in Strings For Industry, as well as with Sweden’s premier acoustic trio, Väsen. Mike Marshall will be playing as a guest with them as well. A cast of other return performers from years past include: Tye North, Scott Law, Bryn Davies, Sharon Gilchrest, Benny “Burle” Galloway, Greensky Bluegrass and more, mixing on stage in new and old amalgams of musical creations. All of the performances contributing a symphony of strings to the barreling momentum of YMSB building music over a weekend to play the wind through the trees, carrying the blue air of feet stomping, heart-palpating, skirt-liftin’ music between cracks of Horning’s Hideout’s lush green landscape to play each leaf and blade of grass, with a little color.

Discounted tickets are still available up to July 16 with additional multi-ticket discounts available on the day of the festival. Visit the website: www.stringsummit.com for more information.

NWSS Schedule

Friday, July 17
Band Competition 4:45-5:45pm
Greensky Bluegrass 6:00-7:15pm
Bad Livers 7:45-9:30pm
Yonder Mountain String Band w/ Danny Barnes 10:00-1:00am

Saturday, July 18
Jessica Kilroy with Head for the Hills 11:30-12:15pm
Taarka 12:30-1:30pm
P. Whipped (Bryn Davies, Sharon Gilchrist & Megan McCormick) 1:45-2:45pm
Infamous Stringdusters 3:00-4:15pm
Kid’s Parade Meet at kid’s tent by 4:15pm

Mike Marshall & Darol Anger w/ Väsen 4:45-6:00pm
Del McCoury and the Traveling McCourys 6:30-8:00pm
Yonder Mountain String Band w/ Danny Barnes 8:15-11:15pm
Strings for Industry (LATENIGHT) 11:45-1:00am

Sunday, July 19
2009 Band Competition Winner 11:00-11:45am
Hickster 12:00-1:00pm
Abalone Dots 1:15-2:30pm
String Summit Superjam
(hosted by Danny Barnes & Rob & Ronnie McCoury) 2:45-4:00pm
Yonder Mountain String Band 4:30-7:30pm

Check our coverage of NWSS 2008 here.