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OCTOBER 2008

VOL 33 • NO 3

Third Annual Austin String Band
Festival, Coming October 17-18-19!
Freight Hoppers to Headline Saturday Night
AFTM

is hosting our third
string band festival October 17th,
18th and 19th at Camp Ben
McCulloch across from the Salt
Lick. This is a beautiful campground with shade trees, a creek,
and all the facilities for a magical
time. Gates open at noon on Friday, October 17.
The Freight Hoppers are headlining this year. Witness the infectious groove of fiddle and banjo
driven by David Bass and Frank
Lee. These guys set a new benchmark on the circuit back in the mid
'90s. When the band took a rest in
2002 many wondered if that hallmark sound would be heard again.
Now, Lee and Bass are back
and have brought in Thomas Bailey
on guitar and vocals and Isaac
Deal on upright bass and vocals.
With the two original members reunited and joined by Bailey, whose
powerhouse baritone vocal range
enriches the sound, and Deal,
whose ardent high lead and tenor
voice holds the line and traverses
the music's authentic spirit, a string
band has been created to rival the
best that ever kicked up dust.

We're also hosting the muchheralded young fiddling phenomenon, Ruby Jane Our festival
wouldn't be complete without multiinstrumental virtuoso Sarah Jarosz
playing and singing her unique blend
of hot picking and sensitive tunes
We've also got a bunch more great
Texas talent to play and conduct
workshops for you.
We want everyone to bring
their banjos, guitars, fiddles, mandolins and other instruments - sit
under the trees and jam, sing,
dance, eat, and otherwise live it up.
We've got some great musicians
on stage, but we want everyone
to get in on the act! We'll have
some kind of fun for everyone.
The festival will help ensure that
traditional string band music prospers as a vibrant form of musical
expression from one generation to
the next.
–continued on page 4

For admission information,
directions, and a complete schedule
of performances and workshops,
see pages 3-4.
The Freight Hoppers

�Don’t Miss This
Traditional Art &amp; Music
Show
Saturday Oct. 4th, 2008
Central Market (North)
Bouree Texane 5-6 pm
Rising GorgeBoys 6:30-7:30 pm
Lost &amp; NamelessOrchestra 8-9 pm
AFTM and Central Market are
hosting a traditional music and art
show on October 4, 2008, at Central Market's North location at 4001
North Lamar (between 38th and
45th streets) in the café area. This
will be a great show with three
great bands and several unique artists. The art will be hung on October 2nd and will be for sale. The
line-up is:
Bouree Texane (5:30 to 6:30) French folk music from southern
and central France, Brittany, Quebec and Louisiana.
Rising Gorge Boys (7 to 8:00)
- Old time, country and blues. Rocking tunes and haunting ballads.
Lost &amp; Nameless Orchestra
(8:30 to 9:30) - Blazing fiddling,
great picking, tunes and songs from
all over with infectious energy.
This is AFTM's thank you to
these bands for playing in our midwinter benefit festival, so help us
show our appreciation by coming
out and enjoying their music!

Authentic Gypsy Music:
KAL at Cactus Oct. 13

Fiddling Poet Ken
Waldman Plays Oct. 9th

KAL is a 7-piece Serbian Rom
(Gypsy) band which is on a month
long tour of the U.S., put together
by Sani Rifati and the Voice of
Roma – who brought us Yuri
Yunakov last year and Esma
Redzhepova a few years ago.
They will be at the International
Accordion Festival in San Antonio
on Sat &amp; Sun, Oct. 11-12 and here
in Austin at the Cactus Cafe on
Monday Oct. 13 at 8pm. Admission $10.
Please come out to support
these great musicians to encourage
more great Balkan music coming
to Central Texas.
–Bob Leibman

Ken Waldman, Alaska’s Fiddling Poet, will will bring his unique
musical and spoken word show to
Austin on Thursday, Oct. 9th. The
show will take place from 8-9:30pm
at Beerland, downtown in the Red
River music district. Local musi-

Sign-Up for Reel Times
E-Letter
If you want to help us save
money and save trees, sign up at
our website - www.aftm.us - and
we'll email this newsletter in .pdf
format rather than sending it by
U.S. mail.
If you're not a member of
AFTM, please consider becoming
one. Join AFTM and support traditional music and dance.

cian JerryHagins will accompany.
(see two of Ken’s poems page 7)

Clickety Cloggers
Upcoming Schedule
Our next set of beginning lessons
will start on Feb. 26th and run
through May 7th, 2009. Please
see www.clicketycloggers.com
for current schedule and shows.
Saturday, October 4, 2008
12 - 12:30 p.m.
Fredericksburg Oktoberfest
(Kinder Halle)
Saturday, October 25, 2008
2 - 2:30 p.m.
Palm Valley Lutheran Church Fall
Festival

AFTM Officers/Board 2008/2009

REEL TIMES is published by Austin

President • Elizabeth Pittman
Vice-President • Angie Wooten, Jerry Hagins, Bernard Molberg
Secretary • Ellen Briggs Stansell
Treasurer • Dale Rempert
Newsletter Editor • Tim Wooten
Dance Liaison • Keith Tuxhorn
Events Coordinator• Jeanne DeFriese
Web &amp; Technology • Sharon Rempert
Membership • Steve Zielnickie
Music Outreach • Will Walden, Chris Peterson

Friends of Traditional Music (AFTM), a nonprofit
organization (est. 1974) dedicated to encouraging
the performance and appreciation of all genres of
traditional music and dance. Copyright 2007 by
AFTM. PO Box 49608, Austin, Texas 78765
AFTM email: aftm@yahoogroups.com
Web: www.aftm.us

2

October 2008

�Austin String Band Festival
Performance Schedule
Friday,
6 pm
7 pm
8 pm
9 pm
10 pm

October 17, 2008
512 - Great local Bluegrass band
The Gray Sky Boys - Old-Style Bluegrass picking and singing
The Ruby Jane Show - Young Fiddling Phenom
Zydeco Blanco - Zydeco! We can dance!
The Lost Pines - County/Folk/Bluegrass

All times and performances
subject to change – Current
Program provided at the gate

Saturday, October 18, 2008 – Primary Schedule
2 pm
The Fundamentalists - Spirited Gospel Bluegrass
3 pm
Lost and Nameless Orchestra - High Energy Americana
4 pm
The Evergreens Rockin’ old-time string band from East Texas
5 pm
Twangzilla - Bluegrass Classics and Originals
6 pm
Double Eagle String Band - Soulful Old Time Ballads/High Energy Breakdowns
7 pm
Cory McCauley and His Evangeline Aces - Authentic Cajun - More dancing!
8 pm
Sarah Jarosz - Bluegrass/Old Time/Originals From a Virtuoso With Soul
9 pm
The Freight Hoppers - The Best Old Time String Band Around
Sunday, October 19, 2008
10 am - Noon. Gospel Sing

Workshop Schedule
Saturday, 11:30 am -12:15 pm:
1. Lap Dulcimer: Beginning and Intermediate - Margaret and Lloyd Wright of the Evergreens
2. Tearin' It Up On Mandolin - Silas Lowe of The Fundamentalists
3. Kids' Music Time - Laura Freeman
Saturday, 12:30 -1:15 pm:
1. Advanced Fiddle - David Bass of the Freight Hoppers
2. Writing Original Tunes in Traditional Genres - Chris Peterson, Jenny Parrott, Howard Rains
3. Intermediate Bluegrass Jam - Cory Hicks of Twangzilla
Saturday, 1:30 -2:15 pm:
1. Advanced Old Time Banjo - Frank Lee of the Freight Hoppers
2. Finding Your Voice -- LZ Love
3. Civil War Music - Phil McDonald, Bernard and Mallissa Mollberg, Elliott and Janice Rogers
4. Intermediate Celtic Jam - Michael McCullough and Vanessa Gordon Lenz
Saturday, 2:30 -3:15 pm:
1. Balkan Singing - Christy Foster and others
2. Traditional Music Slow Jam - Mark Gilston
3. Intermediate Old Time Jam - Michael McCullough
October 2008

3

�–continued from page 1

Come hungry! A dedicated
group of volunteers will offer up
some of the best festival food in
central Texas: frito pie, hot dogs,
soup, and fresh sandwiches.
This year we will have brisket
and sausage for Saturday prepared
by our local BBQ experts- Seth and
Beki Laird. Vegetarians and
vegans are welcome at our table;
we will have veggie burgers, vegetarian frito pie, veggie hot dogs,
and vegetarian blue plate specials.
You can even count on us to
provide coffee and goodies for
breakfast on Saturday and Sunday.
We also welcome back local coffee purveyors- Katz Coffee- to provide us with local, organic, and fair
trade coffee (both hot and iced)
throughout the weekend.
In the Austin spirit, we use organic and local ingredients when
available and prepare most of our
fare from scratch. The "mess hall"
will be serving meals on Friday
night, all day Saturday, and Sunday
morning. Remember- we don't sell
alcohol (BYOB) but we'll have all
the usual non-alcoholic beverages.
Want to get in free?
We depend on our faithful volunteers to make this festival a success. Most shifts are 3-4 hours depending on the task and you will
enjoy spending time with the other
volunteers under the big shade trees
at Camp Ben.
To get more details on jobs
available and fill out our volunteer
application go to our website at
www.aftm.us or email us at
aftm@yahoogroups.com.

DIRECTIONS
From I-35: take Loop 4 to downtown Buda. Head west on Farm Road 967
for 11 miles, then turn left on FM 1826 for 1/2 mile — Camp Ben McCulloch
is on the left.
From Mopac: Take Mopac/Loop 1 south all the way to the end. Before it
ends it becomes Highway 45. Keep going to the end. Then turn left on 1826.
Camp Ben is a few miles further. The trip is about 20 minutes from Central
Austin.

Camp Ben
is about
20 minutes
southwest of
downtown
Austin

central
AUSTIN

1

360

71E
71w

I-35
I-35

1
290

45

Dripping Springs
N

1826
12

Salt
Lick

Buda

Camp
Ben

map not
to scale

150
Wimberley
Kyle

ADMISSION
Friday only ............................................................ $15
Saturday only ....................................................... $25 ($20 AFTM Members)
Weekend .............................................................. $35 ($30 AFTM Members)
Children under ..................................................... 18 Free
College student, w/ID, Friday only ....................... $5
College student, w/ID, Saturday only ................... $20
College student, w/ID, Weekend ......................... $25
Primitive Camping, per tent, per night ................. $10 extra
Camping w/electricity, per tent, per night ............ $15 extra

4

October 2008

�Dance News
Third Saturday Contra - Join us
on Saturday, October 18th, for a
double dose of dancing fun.
Dwayne Johnson returns to Austin
to call a Double Dance with Roy,
Stewart and Max providing live
music. There will be an advanced
dance in the afternoon followed by
our regular dance in the evening.
Dwayne is actually one of the
early callers who helped get the
Austin contra group started. He has
been calling for about 20 years and
now lives in Louisville, Kentucky.
His instructions are clear and concise and he enjoys calling a variety
of dances for all levels of dancers.
In the band Roy, Stewart and
Max, Roy Wilhite and Stewart Rose
supply robust harmonies and
rhythms on guitar, bass and mandolin. Max Cappleman provides the
melodies on fiddle and mandolin that
are dynamic and delightful.
By the way, Max credits
Dwayne with teaching him to how
to dance. Thanks Dwayne!
Location: St. Paul Lutheran
Church, In the Fellowship Hall,
3501 Red River, Austin, Texas
Schedule: Advanced Contra Dance
2-5pm; Regular Contra Dance 811pm (with the usual beginners'
session 7:30 - 8:00pm.)

Upcoming Third Sat. Schedule
Saturday, November 15 Keith
Tuxhorn (Austin) Mockingbird
(Austin)
Saturday, December 20 Rich Goss
(Portland, OR) Rising Gorge Boys
(Austin)
To find out more, call (512) 4538936 or visit austincontradance.org
The Austin Barn Dancers (every Wednesday, 7:30 - 10:00 pm),
Hancock Recreation Center, 811 E
41st (corner of Red River). Come
out and contra dance or join the fun
by playing in the great pick-up band!
Contact: Dale Rempert, (512) 4534225, drempert@ix.netcom.com
First Friday Contra Dance (8 11 pm) - Carpenter's Hall, 400
Josephine St. one block N and one
block W of the corner of Barton
Springs and S. Lamar. Optional
beginner's session is from 7:30- 8
pm, dancing til 11 pm. (discount for
AFTM members and newcomers
are free). All dances taught, no experience needed, bring friends!
October 3rd - Mockingbird will be
playing as Carol Barry calls.
November 7th - Lost and Nameless Orchestra will play with Keith
Tuxhorn calling.
Contact: Nana Lopez, (512) 9704919, sealantsby5@aol.com

Second Friday English Country
Dancing - On Friday, October 10,
Carol Barry from Oklahoma will
call the Second Friday English
Country Dance. Music will be provided by ECO (English Country
Orchestra, consisting of Rowena
Caldwell on piano, Terri Neubert on
violin, Dave Neubert on various
string instruments, and John Hunt
on concertina). The dance starts at
7:30 pm, ending at 10:30 pm, in
Howson Hall at the First Unitarian
Church at 4700 Grover Ave. The
cost is $6. For more information
contact Ann McCracken at
ann@mccr.org or 266-9949.
The next English Country
Dancing will be held Sunday, October 12, from 7:30-10:30 pm in
Howson Hall at the First Unitarian
Church at 4700 Grover Ave. We
will have a special dance with Carol
Barry from Oklahoma calling with
live music by ECO (English Country Orchestra). The cost is $6. All
dances are called and you do not
need to bring a partner. For more
information
contact
Ann
McCracken at ann@mccr.org or
266-9949. Note: This dance is
fragrance free.

Admission: $5 afternoon, $8
evening, $13 both - with discounts
for new dancers, students and
AFTM or HATDS members.
Every dance taught and called.
Bring a friend or come by yourself.
Everyone is welcome. If you can
walk...you can contra dance. Everyone changes partners for each
dance. If you're having fun you're
doing it right!
October 2008

5

�Fire Ant Frolic
Almost Here
Austin's 12th Annual Fire Ant
Frolic will be held October 31-November 2, 2008, at the Texas Federation of Women's Clubs Grand
Ballroom. This will be a great event
with Ray Polhemus (Washington)
and Out of the Wood (Idaho). On
Saturday afternoon we’ll have a
special second band and caller:
Austin's Lost &amp; Nameless Orchestra with Rich MacMath calling.
Full information about the event
is available through our website,
www.fireantfrolic.com. There you
can read about all of our wonderful
talent, see our preliminary schedule of dance sessions, workshops,
special events throughout the
weekend (hambo workshop, skirt
and top swap, Halloween night
dance, and afterparties), and register online via PayPal.
You can obtain information
about registering for the event by
picking up a flier at one of the many
dance events in Austin, or from the
website. The deadline for early registration is October 1, so make sure
your registration is postmarked on
or before that date. Hospitality requests should go to Brenda Shawn
(brenda_shawn@yahoo.com), and
volunteer assistance should be offered to board@fireantfrolic.com or
to any committee member.
FAF committee members are
Richard Letts (president), John
Kulas (vice president), Ann
McCracken (secretary/treasurer),
Marianne Letts (registration), Stuart
Spates (front desk), Mary Lynn
Ellingson (food), Brenda Shawn
(hospitality), Linda Byers (band liaison), and Josh White (water
wrangler). If you would like to serve
on next year's board, please contact the FAF board at
board@fireantfrolic.com.
See you on the dance floor!
6

October 2008

Central Texas Bluegrass
Association’s 30th
Anniversary Celebration
Bearfoot at the Cactus Cafe,
November 15th
The CTBA was born at an initial membership convention on
January 22, 1978 (at what is now
the County Line restaurant on the
hill) making this our 30th anniversary year and we have decided that
we'd better commemorate it before
the year is over. For this special
occasion, we decided to do something different. We're bringing
Bearfoot, an exciting young fivepiece band fromAlaska, to the Cactus Cafe on Saturday evening, November 15. CTBA members get in
free!
Bearfoot was formed in Anchorage in 1999, when the six members were just teenagers. In 2001,
they won the Telluride band contest, and you may have seen them
last spring at the Old Settlers Music Festival. I saw them play a
couple of years ago at the Folk Alliance convention here in Austin,
and along with the Biscuit Burners,
they were the highlight of the meeting. Although the band hails from
Alaska, they spend most of the year
touring in the lower 48. On October 11, they'll be at the Kennedy
Center in Washington, DC and next
year, they're booked at Wintergrass.
We're lucky to have them here.
With twin fiddles, mandolin,
guitar and bass, and with vocals
mostly featuring the women in the
group, Bearfoot covers swing,
singer-songwriter, bluegrass and
Americana. Look in the dictionary
under the entry for "sultry bluegrass
torch singer," and you'll find a picture of fiddler Annalisa Tornfelt. If
they do "Won't Be Long" at the
concert, you'll see what I mean.

Angela Oudean is the other fiddler.
She's studied at East Tennessee
State University, where she played
with the Everybodyfields. Kate
Hamre is a fiddler, too, but she plays
bass in the band and is the band
manager. Jason Norris has been
picking the mandolin since he was
9 years old and it shows in his playing. He also plays guitar, fiddle, and
bass. Mike Mickelson is the
flatpicker, playing a 1948 vintage D18. Mike's style is deft, reminding
me of several other young, really
accomplished pickers like Chris
Eldredge or Andy Falco.
Bearfoot has released three
CDs: "Only Time Knows" (2001),
"Back Home" (2003), and "Follow
Me" (2006). I've got the last two,
and can testify you'll want to pick
up copies at the show. Check the
band's web page for sound clips.
Members of the general public
will be admitted with a low admission fee. See you there!
Web sites:
www.bearfootbluegrass.com
www.myspace.com/bearfootband
www.utexas.edu/txunion/
–Ken Brown

�Two Poems by Ken Waldman
The Caller
Fiddle Contest, Haines Fair
3 p.m. Saturday, ticket sellers busy
making change despite the weather –
a typical mid-August chill
and mist that fogged the Chilkat Range,
Haines’ official drizzle of fall –
more than two hundred people
crammed beneath the tent while others
lingered outside as the fine rain
precipitated a bit harder –
what non-Alaskans term downpour.
The emcee, I stepped up to the mike,
scraped a couple of old-time tunes
best I could solo, then called
in turn the nine competitors,
who each performed five-minute sets
accompanied by choice of guitar,
piano, banjo, mandolin, washboard,
one even backed by a clogger
whose stomps delighted the crowd
more than any contestant’s bowing.

A contra or square dance without caller?
Couples mill the floor, overfill the odd set
or wavy line as band members suggest
mutiny, until some brave soul hollers
for the man to bow to his own, swing her
once and go on to the next, don’t forget
a great big old bow to the one now met,
swing her high, swing her low, and allow her,
gent, to go back to her own, you the same
as you balance that original dame,
swing her quick and promenade her home, home,
promenade her home, then you leave your own,
go on to the next. So back to place, all.
(Callers stir the music that stirs the hall.)

Afterwards, a judge took me aside:
they’d voted a champ the Juneau fiddler
who’d attacked those Cajun numbers
as Dewey Balfa once had. And you,
she grinned, were a perfect lead-off –
anyone out there would have thought
they could jump up and play.
Backstage, I gathered the musicians,
announced the result. The winner
split first prize money ten ways.

Hellebores &amp; Daffodils
The Victorian and modern writings of Thomas Hardy and Paul
Evans (Nature watch, The Guardian) will be performed at the Texas
Book Festival on Saturday, Nov. 1,
at 11 am.
Presented by Darrel Mayers,
and featuring Thom the World Poet,
with folk music of the day by Nigel
Jacobs, Jim Carpetas in Bucolics
Anonymous.
Comments Darrel Mayers:
"This program was inspired by the
two part series by Doug Wixson on
the music associated with Thomas
Hardy that appeared in Reel Times
a few years back. Bucolics Anony-

mous is ever grateful to the AFTM
for fanning the embers of historic
folk music."
For more details, see
www.texasbookfestival.org

October 2008

7

�Austin Friends of Traditional Music
PO Box 49608
Austin, Texas 78765

RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED

AFTM Jam Session: Every Second Sunday, 2 pm • Artz Ribhouse on South Lamar
Next Jam Sessions: Sunday Oct. 12, 2008 &amp; Sunday Nov. 9, 2008 • Bring Instruments &amp; Voices!
Member Meetings before the session • All Welcome!

AUSTIN FRIENDS OF TRADITIONAL MUSIC
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
Name _____________________________________________ Phone ________________ Date____________
Address__________________________________________________________________________________
City____________________________________________________ State_______ Zip___________________
Email____________________________________________________________________________________
___$15 Individual

___$20 Family

___$30 Patron

___$50 Business/Sustaining

___Renewal

Total enclosed: $________. Please make check payable to Austin Friends of Traditional Music
and mail to: PO Box 49608, Austin, TX 78765. Thank you!
For more information email AFTM at aftm@yahoogroups.com or visit us on the web at: www.aftm.us

8

October 2008

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                    <text>EEL IMES

JANUARY 2009

VOL 34 • NO 1

Midwinter Traditional Music
Festival, Coming Sunday Feb. 15!
THE AFTM MIDWINTER FESTIVAL
is set for Sunday afternoon and
evening February 15, 2009 at
Dougherty Arts Center, 1110
Barton Springs Road,Austin, Texas.
The doors will open at 11:50 a.m.
If you like great traditional music
rom talented local bands, this is the
place to be. We've got a top-notch
lineup of bands, many workshops
and delicious food. You'll hear a
smorgasbord of music from the
U.S. and around the world!
Break out of the winter doldrums, hear some fantastic music
and attend a broad array of workshops at no additional charge. The
bands and workshop leaders are
donating their time and talent to
support the Austin Friends of Traditional Music. Please come out
and give us your support!
The workshops include History
of Texas Fiddling, Irish Fiddle, Appalachian Clogging, Bluegrass Vocal Harmonies, Jug Band music,
playing the Upright Bass, and more!
The first band kicks off at 12:15
pm. Check our website at
www.aftm.us for more details and
schedule updates.

Here's the stage line up (subject to change):
Blazing Bows - these kids are the
hot fiddlers of tomorrow
1001 Nights Orchestra - entrancing Middle Eastern Music exotic instruments and exotic
sounds
Sarah Elizabeth Campbell heartfelt ballads from an Austin favorite
Brennan Leigh - stirring bluegrass
and country gospel led by the true
high lonesome vocals of Ms. Leigh

Electric Mountain Rotten Apple
Gang - bluegrass and old-time music with an attitude
Javier and Eclectic Combo - romantic Latin music from a great
Austin band
Big Jug Band - a great big rollicking bunch of musicians play
jazzy old-time favorites with vaudevillian flair

Workshops
Jug Band Music - Westen
Borghesi, John Stansell, Ryan Gould

Rumbullion - travel to a French
bistro and enjoy a bottle of wine with
this great French jazz trio

Playing Bass - Ryan Gould

Heather Gilmer/Jeff Moore Celtic fiddle and guitar duo spin
beautiful bewitching jigs and reels
from the Emerald Isle and elsewhere

History of Texas Fiddling - Dan
Foster

Rattletree Marimba - pulsing, joyful, hypnotic Zimbabwean dance
music on a stunning array of marimbas and other percussion instruments.

Appalachian Fiddle - Wolf
Cartusciello

RR12 With Alan Munde - authentic bluegrass from a local master

Bluegrass Banjo-Matt Downing

Irish Fiddle - Heather Gilmer
Kids Slow Jam - Vanessa Gordon

Playing the Concertina - Dan
Worrall (&amp; Mary Worrall)

The Music of John Clay-John
Clay, Leo, Christy Foster, Dan Foster
Clogging - The Clickety Cloggers

�AFTM Board Elections
Coming in April - would
YOU like to serve on the
Board?
The following Board members are
willing to serve in their current positions for another year:
President: Elizabeth Pittman
Vice President: Angie Wooten
Treasurer: Dale Rempert
Dance Liaison: Keith Tuxhorn
Events Coordinator: Jeanne
DeFriese
Website/Membership Manager:
Sharon Rempert
Newsletter Editor: Tim Wooten
The Board decided to combine
Web Site Manager and Membership Manager into one board position, with Sharon Rempert agreeing to do both. Both Sharon Isaac
and Howard Rains have expressed
an interest and willingness to serve
on the board. We have a board position open for Secretary, and
Christy Foster has volunteered to
run for that office.
In addition to the positions noted
above, the board may have up to
four additional members, who may
be asked to take on specific tasks
before or after being elected to the
board.

.The board meetings occur on
the 2nd Sunday each month at 12:30
pm, and currently the meeting location is the back room at Artz
Ribhouse. Board members are
expected to attend at least 10 of
the 12 meetings, and to appoint a
proxy for any meeting they cannot
attend. Board members are expected to help to put on AFTM
events. Any AFTM member of six
month's duration or more and who
is willing to work is qualified to serve
on the board.
Nominations from the board
and the floor will be made and
closed at the meeting on March 8.
The list of nominees will be emailed
to the membership via the Yahoo
group, and also will be published on

the website. The election will take
place this year on April 12. Every
current member is eligible to vote,
and must be present at the meeting
to cast a vote.

Spring House Concerts
See great musicians up close!
Watch the AFTM web site for more
information
Wed., March 25
Rafe and Clelia Stefanini
southern style old time music
Friday,April 24
Woods Tea Co.
Vermont string band

Phineas Cloudship's Flying Folk Festival
Friday, February 6th at Flipnotics at the Triangle 4600 Guadalupe
Twangzilla – 10:30-11:15 pm
Fat Man &amp; Little Boy (the Atomic Duo) – 9:45-10:30 pm
The Austin Balkan Singers – 9:00-9:45 pm
Hogeye – 8:15-9:00 pm
This will be another great traditional music show so come on out!

AFTM Officers/Board 2008/2009

REEL TIMES is published by Austin

President • Elizabeth Pittman
Vice-President • Angie Wooten, Jerry Hagins, Bernard Molberg
Secretary • Ellen Briggs Stansell
Treasurer • Dale Rempert
Newsletter Editor • Tim Wooten
Dance Liaison • Keith Tuxhorn
Events Coordinator• Jeanne DeFriese
Web &amp; Technology • Sharon Rempert
Membership • Steve Zielnickie
Music Outreach • Will Walden, Chris Peterson

Friends of Traditional Music (AFTM), a nonprofit
organization (est. 1974) dedicated to encouraging
the performance and appreciation of all genres of
traditional music and dance. Copyright 2009 by
AFTM. PO Box 49608, Austin, Texas 78765
AFTM email: aftm@yahoogroups.com
Web: www.aftm.us

2

January 2009

�AFTM Bylaws Amendments Proposed
Article IX of the AFTM bylaws
requires that:
1. Amendments to these bylaws
shall be introduced at a business
meeting, published in the following
newsletter, and voted upon at the
business meeting following issuance
of that newsletter.
2. Amendments shall be passed by
a 2/3 vote of members present and
voting at that meeting.
The following proposed bylaws
amendments were circulated to the
board members by e-mail and introduced at the board meeting of
January 11, 2009. The intent of
these amendments is to redefine the
number of board members necessary for a quorum, redefine the
number of board member votes
necessary to approve urgent business between board meetings, emphasize the importance of board
attendance, and to establish the
midwinter festival as an on-going
project of AFTM. We encourage
all AFTM members to attend the
board meeting on February 8, 2009
at 12:30 p.m. at Artz Ribhouse on
South Lamar to vote on the proposed amendments. You may review a complete copy of the bylaws at our website: www.aftm.us.
New language is underlined and
deleted language is lined-out.
Article V. Meetings
1. The Board shall schedule one
business meeting per month, and an
optional second business meeting at
the discretion of the President. Any
dues-paid member is welcome and
entitled to express opinions at business meetings.
2. Business may only be conducted
in the presence of a quorum, which

shall be defined as three fourths
one-half of the elected directors.
Actions taken by the organization
must have the approval of a simple
majority of the directors present.
Any director may introduce new
business.
3. Any urgent business which arises
between business meetings may be
acted upon by the directors. Any
action taken between business
meetings must have the approval
of three-fourths a simple majority
of the directors.
4. Directors are expected to attend
board meetings either in person or
by appointing a proxy. The proxy
must be a member of the organization and may vote and otherwise
act as a director for the duration of
the meeting.

a maximum amount of expenditures, an approximate breakdown
of expenditures, and anticipated
revenues. Upon approval of such
a proposal, a copy of this budget
must be furnished to the Treasurer.
Upon completion of the project, a
file including all documentation and
a financial report must be placed in
the archive. All concerts and festivals will be handled in this manner
with the exception of the annual
midwinter benefit festival which
shall be an ongoing project of the
organization.
Editor's Note: Items will be renumbered as necessary to accommodate any changes approved by
the members. The order of certain
items has been changed to improve
the logical flow of the bylaws.

Editor's Note: The above item replaces Article VI(1).
5. Directors who do not attend or
appoint a proxy for more than two
board meetings during any twelve
month period shall be subject to removal from the board by a simple
majority vote of the directors
present.
6. The Board shall schedule regular social meetings for the purpose
of sharing music and disseminating
information.
Article VI. Procedural Rules
and Business Policies
1.Any director may appoint a proxy
to act in his/her absence. The
proxy must be a member of the organization.
2. Any member having a project
proposal which he/she would like
undertaken by the organization must
present that proposal at a business
meeting with a budget consisting of

What's in Your CD
Player?
For this issue, Jeanne DeFriese
asked Robert Griffith, guitar player
and singer with Double Eagle String
Band and the Grey Sky Boys, to let
us in on what he's listening to these
days.
His answer: "In the car are
Arias, Madrigals &amp; Laments of
Sigismondo D'India and in the house
player Viol pieces of Marais and
Sainte-Colombe."
Inspiring!

January 2009

3

�Dance News
Dance in the Park!
The Austin Barn Dancers host their
12th annual Dance in the Park on
Sunday, March 22 from 1 to 5 pm
on the stage at Zilker park. This
year we will be dancing to the hot
tunes of the Flaming Celts and the
Lost and Nameless Orchestra.
Come early and picnic! Invite your
friends and make a day of it! This
dance is sponsored by AFTM and
the City of Austin. Any questions?
Call Dale at 453-4225 or check
http://austinbarndancers.org.

First Friday Contra
Dancing
The next First Friday contra dance
is February 6, at Carpenter's Hall,
400 Josephine, one block North and
one block West of the corner of
Barton Springs and South Lamar.
The band will be Josephine's Secret (Roy and friends) and the caller
is Marc Airhart. The beginner's
session is from 7:30 - 8, with dancing going until 11. The cost is $8
(with a discount for AFTM members and newcomers). Contact
Nana Lopez at 970-4919 or
sealantsby5@aol.com for more information.

Third Saturday
Double Dance
Come join us for a special double
dance on Saturday, February 21,
in Howson Hall at St. Paul's
Lutheran Church at 3501 Red River
featuring English country dancing
from 2-5 p.m. (cost is $6) and the
regular contra dance in the evening
(cost is $7 for AFTM members, $8
4

January 2009

for non-members and $5 for students). Note: Second Friday English
Country Dancing will not occur at
its regular time, day, or location this
month. The English session will feature local callers with live music by
ECO. For more information, contact Ann McCracken at
ann@mccr.org or 266-9949. Stick
around after the English dance for
a contra dance at the same hall
from 8-11 pm (beginners' session
at 7:30). Caller TBA with ECO, $8
(discounts for AFTM members and
students). All dances are called, and
you do not need to bring a partner.
For more information, contact
Chuck Roth at croth@austin.rr.com
or (512) 453-8936. Note: All dances
are fragrance free. St. Paul
Lutheran Church, 3501 Red River
St.

Set for Spring English
Dance Weekend
Celebrate springtime with our Set
for Spring English dance weekend,
April 3-5, 2009! The bluebonnets
should just be blooming, and you can
dance away those winter blues to
the energetic tunes of Goldcrest and
the smooth and joyful calling of Joseph Pimentel, in the Fed (Texas
Federation of Women's Clubs), a
location reminiscent of yesteryear
with its antique-filled drawing
rooms.

Joseph Pimentel (pictured) is
a New England native recently
settled in Houston, Texas. As a
popular caller at dance events
throughout the country, he draws
on a broad repertoire of contra,
English country, and community
dances. His calling combines clear
teaching, discriminating taste in
dances, and respect for tradition.
One of the foremost English country bands in the U.S., Goldcrest features fiddler Daron Douglas, multiinstrumentalist virtuoso Paul Oorts,
and pianist Dave Wiesler, all seasoned musicians of national reputation. The combination of Joseph
and Goldcrest promises to be "not
your great-grandmother's English
dance weekend."
Full information about the event
is available on our website,
www.setforspring.org. The early
registration deadline is March 1.
You can register via Paypal or by
picking up a registration flyer at one
of our many Austin dances. The
committee can use your help on
setup, cleanup, food, and hospitality. For more information or to offer assistance, please contact
info@setforspring.org.
See you on the dance floor!

�Third Saturday
Special Events
Feb. 7. Jacqueline Schwab
teaching English Country Dance
in San Antonio, 2 to 5 pm at the
Incarnate Word Retirement
Community, Christus Heritage
Hall, 4707 Broadway; $10. More
ECD led by Jacqueline at the
regular 1st Saturday San Antonio
ECD. Info: Jimmy Drury 210541-0760.
Feb. 13-15. Bayou Bedlam
contra dance weekend in Houston
featuring Shawn Brenneman
calling with Notorious.
www.hatds.org/bayoubedlam
April 3-5. Set for Spring
English Country Dance Weekend at the "Fed" in Austin,
featuring Joseph Pimentel calling
to the music of Goldcrest.
www.setforspring.org (see article
previous page).
April 24-26. When in Doubt
Swing contra dance weekend in
Dallas featuring Lynn Ackerson
calling with the Moving Violations. http://www.geocities.com/
nttds/wids.html For further
information, contact Chuck Roth
512-453-8936, or send e-mail to
croth@austin.rr.com.

You can find more info
about Austin contra dancing at
www.austincontradance.org
Austin contra dancers
now have a group on
Facebook: http://
www.facebook.com/
group.php?gid=10253242826
or search for "Austin
contra dancers." You'll
need a Facebook account
(free) to join.

Introducing – Celtaire
String Band

Sign-Up for Reel Times
E-Letter

Celtaire String Band performs historical Texas music at festivals,
events and schools all across Texas.
The band was selected as members of the Texas Touring Roster
for the Texas Commission on the
Arts (TCA's link below). They
have performed for many years at
The Alamo, Texas Renaissance
festival, San Jacinto Memorial and
other historical events throughout
Texas.
Celtaire String Band's performances bring LIFE and a great atmosphere to festivals and gatherings.

If you want to help us save
money and save trees, sign up at
our website - www.aftm.us - and
we'll email this newsletter in .pdf
format rather than sending it by
U.S. mail.
If you're not a member of
AFTM, please consider becoming
one. Join AFTM and support traditional music and dance.

Upcoming events:
Feb. 28 Glory of The Alamo
(renactment) San Antonio, TX
Mar.7-8 Fall of The Alamo
(renactment) San Antonio, TX
Apr. 16 Texas Historical
Commission Conference Austin,
TX
Apr. 25 San Jacinto Memorial
Annual Festival La Porte, TX
official website:
www.celtairestringband.biz
281-460-1100
Texas Commission on the Arts
http://www.arts.state.tx.us

January 2009

5

�Austin Friends of Traditional Music
PO Box 49608
Austin, Texas 78765

RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED

AFTM Jam Session: Every Second Sunday, 2 pm • Artz Ribhouse on South Lamar
Next Jam Sessions: Sunday Feb. 8, 2009 &amp; Sunday March 8, 2009 • Bring Instruments &amp; Voices!
Member Meetings before the session • All Welcome!

AUSTIN FRIENDS OF TRADITIONAL MUSIC
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
Name _____________________________________________ Phone ________________ Date____________
Address__________________________________________________________________________________
City____________________________________________________ State_______ Zip___________________
Email____________________________________________________________________________________
___$15 Individual

___$20 Family

___$30 Patron

___$50 Business/Sustaining

___Renewal

Total enclosed: $________. Please make check payable to Austin Friends of Traditional Music
and mail to: PO Box 49608, Austin, TX 78765. Thank you!
For more information email AFTM at aftm@yahoogroups.com or visit us on the web at: www.aftm.us

6

January 2009

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                    <text>REEL TIMES

SEPTEMBER 2009
3

VOL 34 • NO 2

4th Annual
Austin String Band Festival,
Coming Oct. 16-18!
AFTM is hosting our fourth string
band festival October 16, 17, and
18 at Camp Ben McCulloch across
from the Salt Lick (directions below). Come enjoy great bands, fun
jams, good food and top-notch
workshops at this beautiful campground with shade trees, a creek,
and all the facilities for a magical
time. Gates open at noon on Friday, October 16.
The Austin Lounge Lizards
are the headliners this year. The Lizards' music is a belly laugh at life's
absurdities with a style that features
precise five-part vocal harmonies
and instrumental mastery.
Based in Austin, Texas, the Lizards have honed their music into a
wicked-funny art form. They've
delighted audiences from Texas to
Trafalgar Square with their inventive style of satirical folk, country
and bluegrass. Trademarks of a
Lizards song are highly literate,
sharply pointed lyrics that poke fun
at politics, love, religion and the culture in general.
The Lizards are five-time
award winners at the prestigious
Austin Music Awards, and their
version of the Irving Berlin's "CU-B-A" was used in the Michael
Moore film Sicko. The band has
been featured by NPR's "Morning

Edition" and on the radio programs
"Mountain Stage" and "E-Town."
THE DRUGS I NEED (released
in 2006) is the Lizards' 10th album
and their second on the Houstonbased Blue Corn Music label.
Manuel "Cowboy" Donley
is a featured performer we are
proud to have on the schedule. A
composer, arranger, and performer,
Donley is considered a pioneer of
Tejano music. While he does not
have the mainstream recognition of
some other Tejano musicians many
old timers greet him with the ultimate sign of respect: Maestro.
Donley was born in Durango,
Mexico in 1928. He moved to Austin with his family at the age of
seven and took an early interest in
music, following the lead of his father, a classically trained violinist
who once played with the Durango
Symphony. In 1949, the 21-year-old
Donley formed Los Heartbreakers,
the first Mexican-American band
to play rock &amp; roll and rhythm &amp;
blues in Austin. But it was the
orquesta music of the early Forties that captured Donley and led
him in 1955 to form his own
orquesta, Las Estrellas.
Not content to simply reproduce what had been done before,
Las Estrellas infused Mexican

rancheras, polkas, boleros, and ballads with expressive horn arrangements, influences such as big band,
rock &amp; roll, and rhythm &amp; blues.
Over the years, Manuel has written music and arrangements for
several movies, including Remember the Alamo in 1954, Los
Imigrantes in the late Seventies,
and local filmmaker Hector Galan's
Los Mineros in the Eighties.
We've also got a varied bunch
of other great Texas talent such as
the three generations of talented
musicians in Mariachi Corbetas and
the beautiful dulcimer music of the
Wright family. Unfortunately we
don't have the space to tell you more
about all of them. See below for
the complete lineup.
Bring your banjos, guitars,
fiddles, mandolins and other instruments – sit under the trees and jam,
sing, dance, eat, and make merry.
We've got some great musicians on
stage, but we want everyone to get
in on the act! We'll have some kind
of fun for everyone. Help ensure
that traditional string band music
prospers as a vibrant form of musical expression.
We'll have plenty of food and
soft beverages, but BYOB.
–continued on page 3

�Fire Ant Frolic
Coming Soon!
Austin's 13th Annual Fire Ant Frolic
will be held October 30-November
1, 2009, at the Texas Federation of
Women's Clubs Grand Ballroom.
This will be a great event with Seth
Tepfer (Atlanta) and the Avant Gardeners (Virginia, Kentucky, and
North Carolina). On Saturday
morning we'll have a guest callers'
session with the local band Mesa
Rose (Andrea Katz and Marilyn
Cooper).
Full information about the event
is available through our website,
www.fireantfrolic.com or you can
pick up a flyer at one of the many
dances in Austin. You'll see details
about all of our wonderful talent,
see our preliminary schedule of
dance sessions, workshops, special
events throughout the weekend
(waltz workshop, skirt and top
swap, Halloween night dance, and
after-parties), and register online via
PayPal.
The deadline for early registration is October 1, so make sure your
registration is postmarked on or
before that date. Hospitality requests or offers should be directed
to
Brenda
Shawn
at
hospitality@fireantfrolic.com. We'd
love to have your help! If you can
help with setup, decorations, wrangling water, front desk, or cleanup,

please contact Richard Letts at
volunteer@fireantfrolic.com. If you
would like to help with food, please
contact Paul Hawkins at
food@fireantfrolic.com.
FAF committee members are
Richard Letts (president), John
Kulas (vice president), Ann
McCracken (secretary), Marianne
Letts (treasurer), Stuart Spates
(front desk and design), Mary Miller
(band liaison), Paul Hawkins (food),
and Brenda Shawn (hospitality). If
you would like to serve on next
year's board, please contact:
board@fireantfrolic.com.

AFTM/Central
Market Showcase
Save Saturday evening November
14th on your calendar for a showcase of Austin bands sponsored by
Austin Friends of Traditional Music and Central Market. Bands and
other details will be announced by
e-mail and on the AFTM website.

His boat sailed here for a while,
Then departed for another shore.

Reel Times is available by e-mail.
Save a fast-growth pine by going
to our web site (www.aftm.us) and
signing up for e-mail delivery!

President • Elizabeth Pittman
Vice-President • Angie Wooten
Secretary • Christy Foster
Treasurer • Dale Rempert
Newsletter Editor • Tim Wooten
Dance Liaison • Keith Tuxhorn
Events Coordinator• Jeanne DeFriese
Web &amp; Technology • Sharon Rempert

September 2009

Nigel Russell was a great man, father, builder, musician and a long
time friend of AFTM. He died suddenly in his sleep on August 14.
Born in 1948, Nigel emigrated
from Scotland to Hamilton, Ontario,
Canada with his family in 1952.
Nigel moved to Austin in the early
1980s to build a sailboat and wound
up staying. He quickly became a
part of the music scene. A self
taught and accomplished singer,
guitarist and fiddler he played with
many of us over the years. He was
a member of Ptarmigan and the
Studebakers, with whom he recorded and played many gigs in and
around Austin. Nigel had an innate
and infectious warmth and friendliness that cheered everyone he met.
A formal memorial service was
held on August 22 with a party afterward with lots of music, food,
and joy. This is the way Nigel
wanted to be remembered!

E-Reel Times

AFTM Officers/Board 2008/2009

2

Nigel Russell Passes

REEL TIMES is published by Austin
Friends of Traditional Music (AFTM), a nonprofit
organization (est. 1974) dedicated to encouraging
the performance and appreciation of all genres of
traditional music and dance. Copyright 2009 by
AFTM. PO Box 49608, Austin, Texas 78765
AFTM email: aftm@yahoogroups.com
Web: www.aftm.us

�Directions: Camp Ben McCulloch
is within a few minutes of Austin,
located 11 miles south of Highway
290 West on Farm Road 1826.
From I-35, take Loop 4 to downtown Buda. Head west on Farm
Road 967 for 11 miles, then turn left
on Farm Road 1826 for 1/2 mile -Camp Ben McCulloch is on the left
Program

ternoon. We'll update you by e-mail
and web as the workshop topics and
times become solid. For now:

What's in Your CD
Player?

Mandolin - Billy Bright, Todd
Jagger, Dennis McDaniel, Dennis
Ludicker, and maybe others;

Jeanne DeFries has been asking various musicians around town
what they have in their CD players
(reel to reel, cassette, eight track,
etc.). Here's what Darrel Mayers
had to say:
Here's my music list. Please
note that the Thomas Hardy poetry
and writings are actually on cassette!
Radio Tarifa - 'Rumba Argelina'
The Decembrists - 'The Crane
Wife'
Jeff Moore - 'The Dove's Perch'
Blowzabella - 'Octomento'
Winter Words - Poetry and Personal Writings of Thomas Hardy
Joanna Newsom - 'Ys'
The Waverly Consort: '1492: Music from the Age of Discovery'
Fleet Foxes - 'Fleet Foxes'
Tannahill Weavers - 'Are Ye Sleeping Maggie'
Ingrid Karklins - 'Anima Mundi'
Sufjan Stevens - "Illinois'
Texas Early Music Project:
'Convivencia'
Band of Horses - 'Cease to Begin'
Anne Dudley &amp; Jaz Coleman:
'Songs from the Victorious City'
Larry Unger - 'Waltz Time'

The Fiddling of P.T. Bell and
Thomas Jefferson Wootan,
Early Texas Fiddlers - Dan
Foster and Tim Wooten;
Harmonica - Mike Rubin;

Friday October 16th
6:00 Seiker Band
7:00 Atomic Duo
8:00 Christy and The Plowboys
9:00 Electric Mt. Rotten Apple
Gang
10:00 McMercy Family
Saturday, October 17th
1:00 Charles Thibodeaux and His
Cajun Aces
2:00 Milkdrive
3:00 Double Eagle String band
4:00 Manuel "Cowboy" Donley
5:00 Lost Pines
6:00 The Wrights
7:00 Mariachi Corbetas with
Anthony Ortiz, Jr
8:00 Hays County Burn Band
9:00 Austin Lounge Lizards
10:00 Big Jug Band
Sunday, October 18th
Gospel Sing about 10 a.m. until
noon.
Saturday Workshops
The workshop times have not been
set, and the topics are still in flux
but they will generally be held Saturday in the late morning and af-

Kids Beginner Celtic Fiddle
session with Vanessa Gordon;
Cajun Fiddle - Peter Schwarz;
Cajun Accordion - Charles
Thibodeaux;
Beginner Fiddle - Lisa
Schneider;
Bluegrass Banjo - Rolf Seiker
and others;
Bluegrass Guitar - Tom
Duplissey and others;
Old Time Vocals - Ellen Stansel,
Malissa Mollberg, Elizabeth
Pittman, and Tim Wooten;
Beginning Dulcimer - Margaret
Wright;
Advanced Dulcimer - Lloyd
Wright;
Sacred Harp Singing - Margaret Wright;
Oldtime banjo - Angie Wooten,
Bernard Molberg, Jerry Hagins;
Oldtime Guitar - Sharon
Sandomirsky, Ethan Azarian;
Ask A Geezer (conversations
about all kinds of music in Austin
with long-time Austin musicians)

Friday only ............................................................. $15
Saturday only .......................................................... $25 ($20 AFTM Members)
Weekend ................................................................. $35 ($30 AFTM Members)
Children under 18 ................................................... Free
College student, w/ID, Friday only ........................... $5
College student, w/ID, Saturday only ....................... $20
College student, w/ID, Weekend .............................. $25
Primitive Camping, per tent, per night ....................... $10 extra
Camping w/electricity, per tent, per night ................... $15 extra

Fall House Concerts
See great musicians up close!
Watch the AFTM web site for more
information or call 476-3991 for
details or to reserve space.
Friday, Sept. 25
David Greeley
Cajun fiddle
Saturday., Sept. 26
Joel Mabus
Traditional music of all styles

September 2009

3

�Dance News
Third Saturday Contras
Bring Local and Visiting
Talent Together
This fall the Third Saturday contra
dances will present both homegrown Austin performers and great
talent from other Texas dance communities.
On Sept. 19, Linda Mrokso from
Dallas will be calling. Linda has
called contras and other dance
styles all over Texas for over 20
years. College Station band the
Jalapeno Honeys will make their
Austin dance debut. The six-piece
group features a wide variety of instruments, which offer a unique
sound for dancing. A potluck dinner will be held before the dance,
beginning at 6:30 pm.

First Friday Contra
Dance
The dance is moving to Second Saturday for one month only because
of the ACL festival. Join us on October 10 to dance to Carol Barry
from Oklahoma with the Flaming
Kelts. Optional beginners' session
is from 7:30 to 8 pm, dancing till 11
pm. $8 admission, with discounts
for students and AFTM members,
and newcomers are free. All dances
taught, no experience needed, bring
friends! 8-11 pm, Carpenter's Hall,
400 Josephine St,, with parking at
the back, one block N and one block
W of the corner of Barton Springs
and S. Lamar (behind P.Terry's
Burger Stand). Contact: Nana
Lopez, (512) 970-4919 or
sealantsby5@aol.com.

On October 17, two long-time Dallas favorites will come to perform.
Martha Quigley will make her first
calling appearance in several years,
and Squirrelheads in Gravy will
once again bring their strong oldtime sound to the stage.

Upcoming First Fri. Schedule
Friday, November 6 Chuck Roth
with Mockingbird

On November 21, former Austinite
Rich Goss will visit from his new
home in Portland, Oregon to call
for us. Music will be presented by
the Lost and Nameless Orchestra,
Austin's favorite contra dance band,
featuring Chris Peterson on fiddle.

Second Friday
English Country Dancing
On Friday, October 9, Carol Barry
from Oklahoma will call the Second Friday English Country Dance.
Music will be provided by ECO
(English Country Orchestra, consisting of Rowena Caldwell on piano, Terri Neubert on violin, Dave
Neubert on various string instruments, and John Hunt on
concertina). 7:30-10:30 pm; the location to be announced on the
AFTM Yahoo group email list. Contact:
Ann
McCracken,
ann@mccr.org or 266-9949.

All Dances are taught and called,
and no partner or costume is required. A beginners' session is offered at 7:30, and dances run from
8-11 pm. Admission is $8, $7 for
AFTM members, $5 for students.
First-time dancers will receive a
card for a free admission to their
second dance. Dances are held at
St. Paul's Lutheran Church, 3501
Red River. For more information,
go to: austincontradance.org.
4

September 2009

Friday, December 4 Marc Airhart
with the Home-Grown Contra Band

Interview with
Joel Laviolette of
Rattletree Marimba
By Vanessa Gordon
I really enjoyed hearing Rattletree
Marimba playing at the 2009
AFTM midwinter festival. While
growing up in South Africa, in the
1970's I listened a lot to the music
of Thomas Mapfumo, whom Joel
considers one of his first influences
in this music. So, I was interested
to find out more about how he got
connected with Zimbabwean music and he agreed to do an interview by e-mail for Reel Times.
Vanessa: Joel, could you tell us a
bit about your musical background
and how you first got interested in
Zimbabwean marimba music?
Joel: I first heard the mbira in 1992
while I was living in Taos, New
Mexico. I was sitting next to the
Rio Grande in what you would call
an 'altered state'. I began hearing
music all around me as I sat there.
I was watching the eddies of water circling around and around as I
heard this music make the same
circular motion that the water was
making. There was someone there
playing the mbira. I immediately
knew that I needed to learn how to
play that music, so I asked the person what the instrument was. He
told me it was an mbira. From that
point, my life's course changed and
I began traveling the US and
Canada learning mbira from anyone I could find...oh, and I also went
to UNT for Jazz guitar back in the
90's some time.
Vanessa: For our readers, could
you please explain the difference
between the mbira and marimba. I
noticed you played a little mbira at
the beginning of the set.

�Joel: The mbira is the traditional
instrument played by the Shona
people in Zimbabwe. It is well over
1000 years old. The marimba is a
contemporary (to Zimbabwe) instrument that most resembles a
xylophone.
Vanessa:I heard that you have
traveled to Zimbabwe and studied
there. When were you there ? Who
did you study with?
Joel: I was there in 1998 and 19992001. I traveled all over the country playing and recording many
musicians, but my main teacher is
Newton Gwara-whom I had a band
with there-and Chaka Chawasarira.
Vanessa: What has been most
challenging in learning the music,
and in teaching it here?
Joel: I was meant to play this music, so I think the challenges were
more just finding the music in the
first place. Probably the most challenging thing about teaching this
music is trying to get the idea across
of there being multiple rhythms and
melodies being played simultaneously and there is no "one" that
is more important than any other
point within the cycle - try teaching
that to a drummer!
Vanessa:You sing in Shona, I think?
Is it a difficult language to learn?
Are the songs very old, or more contemporary? What are the lyrics
about?
Joel: Yes, the language is Shona. I
think Shona is a difficult language,
but very beautiful! People spend a
large percentage of their time
speaking in proverbs and using ancient sayings and even old forms
of language, so that is very trickyeven to native speakers. Many of
the songs are over 1,000 years old.
I generally sing what I am thinking
about at the time.

Vanessa: Can one hear music like
this played in Zimbabwe today?
(Or, would it be more likely to be
mixed with electric guitars, keyboards, synthesizers?)
Joel: Mbira music can be played
on any kind of instrument-the instrument doesn't matter - it's the
structure of the music that is important.
Vanessa: In the AFTM gig, you
had a drum kit. Do you ever play
African drums?
Joel: Sure! Mbira is like three
drums at the same time. ;-)
Vanessa: Do you make your own
instruments? Could you tell us
about the process? What type of
wood is used?
Joel: I do build all the instruments.
The soprano keys are usually
Padauk and the baritone and bass
are usually cherry if I have enough
money.
Vanessa: How do you transport
all these large instruments to gigs?
How long does it take to tear down/
set up for a gig?

place within the cycle, but there is
no overall starting point. It's like a
bunch of clocks that are all overlaid on top of each other. There is
no one important time, as long as
they all agree on what time it is.
Vanessa: If you lose it, or drop a
beat, is it difficult at first to come
back in?
Joel: For some people it's difficult
and for others not as difficult-it's
all practice I guess.
Vanessa:How are the marimbas
tuned (e.g. to a western diatonic
scale, or a pentatonic scale or an
African scale?)
Joel:The marimbas are all tuned
to my matepe (the mbira that I play)
It is a seven note scale but is not a
western scale.
Vanessa: Please tell us a bit about
your plans for the future, gigs,
teaching etc.
Joel: My plan is to continue to expand Rattletree with more regional
gigs. It's my job to play this music
and spread the message of this music to as many people as I can.

Joel: We have a trailer. It actually takes us less time than a regular rock band because everyone
helps with all the instruments. We
don't all have to wait around for
one slow guy in the band. ;-)

Vanessa: Thank you so much for
taking the time to play at AFTM
festival. We really enjoyed having
you!

Vanessa: Could you tell us a bit
about the polyrhythms in the music? Is this difficult for most
"westerners' to learn? How many
polyrhythms are going at the same
time?

Joel teaches Marimba classes and
also does workshops and demos.
Please check out the Rattletree
Marimba website and come to a
gig. I am sure you'll enjoy it! (Great
for all ages.)

Joel: There are an infinite number going on. Unfortunately, this is
probably the most difficult thing for
Westerners to grasp. There is no
"one". All the parts have to interlock with each other in a specific

h t t p : / / w w w. m y s p a c e . c o m /
rattletreeband
http://www.rattletree.com

Joel: Thank you!!!

September 2009

5

�Austin Friends of Traditional Music
PO Box 49608
Austin, Texas 78765

RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED

AFTM Jam Session: Every Second Sunday, 2 pm • Artz Ribhouse on South Lamar
Next Jam Sessions: Sunday Sept. 13, 2009 &amp; Sunday Oct. 11, 2009 • Bring Instruments &amp; Voices!
Member Meetings before the session • All Welcome!

AUSTIN FRIENDS OF TRADITIONAL MUSIC
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
Name _____________________________________________ Phone ________________ Date____________
Address__________________________________________________________________________________
City____________________________________________________ State_______ Zip___________________
Email____________________________________________________________________________________
___$15 Individual

___$20 Family

___$30 Patron

___$50 Business/Sustaining

___Renewal

Total enclosed: $________. Please make check payable to Austin Friends of Traditional Music
and mail to: PO Box 49608, Austin, TX 78765. Thank you!
For more information email AFTM at aftm@yahoogroups.com or visit us on the web at: www.aftm.us

6

September 2009

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                    <text>REEL TIMES

JANUARY 2010
3

VOL 35 • NO 1

Midwinter Traditional Music Festival,
Coming Saturday, Jan. 23

T

he AFTM Midwinter Festival
is set for Saturday afternoon
and evening January 23, 2010 at
Dougherty Arts Center, 1110
Barton Springs Road, Austin, Texas.
The doors will open at 11:45 a.m.
If you like great traditional music from talented local bands, this
is the place to be. We've got a topnotch lineup of bands, many workshops and delicious food. You'll hear
a smorgasbord of music from the
U.S. and around the world!
Break out of the winter doldrums, hear some fantastic music
and attend a broad array of workshops at no additional charge. The
bands and workshop leaders are
donating their time and talent to
support the Austin Friends of Traditional Music. Please come out
and give us your support!
The festival also features a
dozen workshops at no additional
charge including jam sessions, kid's
workshops, singing, dance, fiddle,
banjo and ukulele. See below for
details.
The first band kicks off at noon.
Check our website at www.aftm.us
for more details and schedule updates. Here's the stage line up (subject to change):

Raising Jane

12:00 noon - Bucolics Anonymous - Thom the World Poet does
poetry of Thomas Hardy along with
the great music of Bucolics Anonymous.
12:30 p.m. - Balkan Singers - a
cappella and instrumental Balkan
music with a third coast twist.
1:00 p.m. - Billy Bright and
Chojo Jacques - a fresh interpretation of classic fiddle and mandolin tunes and quirky originals with a
virtuosic and engaging stage show
that audiences and promoters have
described as transcendent, hilarious, and one of a kind. They released Texacali Blues in 2009, and
have a new release scheduled for
spring 2010. Find out more at
w w w. r e v e r b n a t i o n . c o m /
chojojacquesandbillybright !

photo by Dale Rempert

2:00 p.m. - Austin Banjo Club plays vintage banjo music from the
early days of American popular
music. You'll hear tunes such as
"Five Foot Two", "Somebody Stole
My Gal" and "Alabama Jubilee".
2:30 p.m. - Rains &amp; Keane - are
a violin and guitar duet featuring
Pete Keane on the guitar and vocals and Howard Rains on the violin and mandolin playing old southern songs and melodies including
blues, rags, breakdowns, waltzes
and various other musical entertainments for dancing or afternoon socials.
3:00 p.m. - Raising Jane - great
Celtic harmony singing accompanied by fiddle, guitar and whistle will
take you across the Atlantic and
back to a time of elves, fairies, broken love and hopeful dreams.
–continued on page 3

�Upcoming Concerts
January 30th
AFTM Music Showcase AFTM and Central Market are
once again sponsoring a great
evening of free music. The concert
will feature Big Jug Band,
Rattletree Marimba and 1001
Nights. The show is at Central
Market North from 5:00 until 9:00
p.m. Big Jug Band is a great big
rollicking bunch of musicians playing jazzy old-time favorites with
vaudevillian flair. Rattletree Marimba plays pulsing, joyful, hypnotic Zimbabwean dance music on
a stunning array of marimbas and
other percussion instruments.
1001 Nights entrances listeners
with Middle Eastern Music - exotic instruments and exotic sounds.
Come on out; you can't beat the
price for such great music!
February 19th
House Concert with Orrin Star,
an award-winning guitarist and
mandolin player who combines hot
picking, cool singing and good humor. Once described as "Arlo
Guthrie meets Doc Watson", he
plays a repertoire that ranges from
bluegrass standards to little-known
folk gems, Celtic fiddle tunes to finger-style blues. 8 - 10 p.m.; sug-

gested donation: $15; downtown
location; for information or reservations: ebpittman@austin.rr.com,
(512) 476 3991. Mandolin workshop at Fiddler's Green, February
21. For more information about
this or other workshops and private lessons by Orrin:
orhay@aol.com or (301) 7736149.
March 23rd
The Stairwell Sisters from San
Francisco will play two sets of
kicking old time music at Ruta
Maya beginning at 8:00 p.m. $15
- general admission; $12 - AFTM
members. “...five women who attack string instruments with a veracity that rivals some of rock's
most venerated fret-burners…
played with a gospel spirit and an
expressive playfulness… rarely
have songs taken from the public
domain sounded so modern and
vital.”- Dallas Observer
April 2nd
Kalimba Showcase at Ruta
Maya - AFTM is sponsoring a 3act kalimba showcase at Ruta
Maya from 7 to 10 p.m. on April
2nd! The concert will feature three
great kalimba players: Daniel
Leonidas, a 72 year old African
refugee from Burundi, Africa;

AFTM Officers/Board 2008/2009
President • Elizabeth Pittman
Vice-President • Angie Wooten
Secretary • Christy Foster
Treasurer • Dale Rempert
Newsletter Editor • Tim Wooten
Dance Liaison • Keith Tuxhorn
Events Coordinator• Jeanne DeFriese
Web &amp; Membership • Sharon Rempert

2

January 2010

Ralph White, local songwriter,
banjo wizard and former Bad
Liver fiddler; and Joel Laviolette,
the leader of the extraordinary
drum band Rattletree Marimba.
The kalimba is a set of tuned keys
or tongues, usually metal, set on a
sound board, gourd or box. The
keys are stroked by the musician's
thumbs and fingers to create mellow and enchanting rhythmic melodies and harmonies. The instrument has many local variations, is
derived from the African Mbira
and has various names in various
cultures. Daniel Leonidas calls his
an "ikembe". He has been playing
for over 50 years and says he plays
to help remember his history. Similar instruments have been in use for
at least 800 years. Don't miss this
show! $10 - general admission;
$8 - AFTM members
April 10th
TBA- Save this date for another
AFTM/Central Market showcase.
Bands to be determined. 5:00 9:00 p.m.

E-Reel Times
Reel Times is available by e-mail.
Save a fast-growth pine by going
to our web site (www.aftm.us) and
signing up for e-mail delivery!

REEL TIMES is published by Austin
Friends of Traditional Music (AFTM), a nonprofit
organization (est. 1974) dedicated to encouraging
the performance and appreciation of all genres of
traditional music and dance. Copyright 2010 by
AFTM. PO Box 49608, Austin, Texas 78765
AFTM email: aftm@yahoogroups.com
Web: www.aftm.us

�–continued from page 1

4:00 p.m. - Slavadillo - Is an outstanding authentic international folk
and dance band, specializing in
Macedonian, Bulgarian, and Russian music. Austin's Balkan dance
band for 25 years! Don Weeda is
joined in his Eastern European folk
music quest by Anne Alexander,
Kathleen McDonagh, and Mike
Revesz. Sonia Seeman also regularly performs with the group.
5:00 p.m. - Steelhead Stringband
- Hot fiddling and great picking from
this cranking old-time Appalachian
string band.
6:00 p.m. - Inside Out Steel
Band - Rhythmic and melodic, this
steel drum band will awe you. Like
many musical traditions in the Western Hemisphere, the history of the
Steel Drum is a merging of elements
from a variety of cultures. The inhabitants of Trinidad and Tobago,
home of the steel drum, have ancestral roots from Europe (England
and France), Africa, India, China,
other islands in the Caribbean, and
Latin America (primarily Venezuela).
7:00 - Dan &amp; Christy Foster Two long-time mainstays of the
Austin music scene bring their airtight harmonies to the evocative
songs of Lost Austin Band founder
John Clay.
7:30 - Sacred Harp - There's no
harp in Sacred Harp singing -- no
instruments at all. Just the power
of voices belting out raw and powerful four-part harmony so solid you
can almost walk on it. The origin of
the music goes back centuries -first in England, then in colonial
New England, then the music migrated south, where it took root.
The Austin Area Sacred Harp Singers began in 1985 with Gaylon
Powell, a fifth generation Sacred
Harp singer, teaching the shapenote singing method to newcomers.

8:00 - Manuel Cowboy
Donley - A composer, arranger, and performer,
Donley is considered a pioneer of Tejano music.
Donley was born in
Durango, Mexico in 1928.
He moved to Austin with his
family at the age of seven
and took an early interest
in music, following the lead
of his father, a classically
trained violinist who once
played with the Durango
Symphony. Over the years,
Manuel has written music
and arrangements for sev- Manuel Cowboy Donley
photo by Dale Rempert
eral movies, including Realong on fun, interactive songs.
member the Alamo in 1954, Los
From decades of researching and
Imigrantes in the late Seventies, and
collecting, Purly's repertoire is
local filmmaker Hector Galan's Los
chock full of gems. Her ability as a
Mineros in the Eighties.
multi-instrumentalist keeps young
9:00 - Side Men for Hire - Hot
minds in awe. Purly Gates is a
Bluegrass from an assortment of
singer/songwriter/educator with a
some of the best local musicians
long and varied career. Currently,
around - tight picking and fiddling
Purly's a regular member The
with the high lonesome sound!
Therapy Sisters. You can catch her
with them every 2nd Friday at
Workshop Line up
Patsy's Cowgirl Cafe on E. Ben
(subject to change):
White.
1:30 - 2:20pm:
Flatfooting with Sharon Isaac.
Old-time Jam with Ellen Briggs
Flatfooting is a type of Appalachian
Stansell. This jam is open to pickstep dance where the feet are kept
ers of all levels, from the newest
close to the ground. Come and
newbies to the crankiest old curlearn the basics! Sharon Isaac has
mudgeons. We'll go around the
taught all levels of clogging, as well
circle when it's your turn, you can
as other traditional Southern Appacall an Old Time (Appalachian)
lachian dance forms including
tune you play and set the tempo, or
Flatfooting, Smooth Mountain
if you like you can pass. Don't be
Dance, Kentucky Running Set and
shy, come and play!
Big Circle Dances.
Traditional Singing Games,
2:30 -3:20pm:
Sing-Alongs &amp; Other Musical
Origins and Founding of the
Cavortings with Purly Gates.
AFTM in 1974 with David
This workshop is especially geared
Polacheck. A workshop/ panel disto children ages 6-12, but all ages
cussion on the "Origins and Foundare welcome! Little feet will be
ing of the AFTM in 1974" lead by
moved by the Traditional American
one of the AFTM founding memPlay-Party songs &amp; dances; hands
bers, David Polacheck
will be clapping and voices singing
January 2010

3

�Animal Songs - Mark Gilston
sings a menagerie of traditional folk
songs featuring critters large and
small, real and imaginary.
Intermediate Fiddle with Trent
Shepherd. Learn about old-time
fiddle playing with Trent Shepherd
of Steelhead Stringband.
3:30 - 4:20pm:
Learn to Waltz with Keith
Tuxhorn. Keith will lead you
through the basics of waltzing accompanied by live music.
Beginner Blue Grass Jam led
by Steve Mangold. Jammin' skills
for Beginners - what you need to
know to start jammin' bluegrassstyle".
Old Folk Ballads - a capella style
with Seymour Snath. "Oh Don't
You Remember Sweet Betsy from
Pike?" We'll take well-known songs
and delve into the mechanics of a
capella ballad singing like choosing
the right key, memorizing lyrics
through visualization, diction/dialect,
timing, dynamics, and vocal ornament. Bring a ballad you'd like to
sing, and we'll have a song swap.
4:30 - 5:30pm:
Intermediate Clawhammer
Banjo with Ellen Briggs
Stansell. This workshop lead by
Ellen Briggs Stansell is for Old Time
banjo players who have learned the
basics of right hand technique and
want to tighten up their rhythm, get
a more driving sound, and work on
drop-thumbing. We'll cover doublethumbing if there's time. Bring your
banjo. Bring a recording device if
you wish.
Sacred Harp Shape Note Singing with Gaylon Powell. In this
workshop, we will look to read
shape notes and the basics of Sacred Harp singing. We will also sing
4

January 2010

some of the different types of Sacred Harp tunes-singing the notes
and the poetry. Gaylon Powell was
raised in a family whose roots run
deep in the Sacred Harp tradition
of Central Texas. He has shared
that tradition to others y teaching
singing schools in Austin for most
of his adult life. He has been recognized as one of Texas Folklife
Resources' Master Traditional Art-

ists, for which he has conducted apprenticeship and education projects.
He has also taught singing schools
in East Texas, Arkansas, and other
areas of the United States.
Beginner Ukulele with Brian
Edward Rise. Brian Rise (Combo
Mahalo band) leads a workshop for
beginners on how to play the ukulele - Hawaiian and Jazz style.

Midwinter Festival Admission prices:
Regular Admission ....................................... $15
AFTM Members .......................................... $12
Student w/ID, 19 or older .............................. $7
Seniors - 65 or older ....................................... $7
Student 12 - 18 ............................................... $5

Dance News
Contra dancers have exciting
events to look forward to in the next
several months!
February 5th - The First Friday
Contra Dance will feature Roy
Wilhite and Josephine's Secret
band and caller Ann Sarmiento.
The March date is Mar 5 with band
and caller TBD. For more information call Nana at 970 4919.
February 21st - The Third Saturday Contra will feature music
by the Lost and Nameless Orchestra, with Keith Tuxhorn calling, at 8 p.m. The March event will
be moved up to the second Saturday. A special added treat will be
Sunday Mar. 14, when nationallyknown group the Great Bear Trio
will play for a dance at La Bahia
Hall in Carmine, TX from 2-5 pm.
March 28th - The Austin Barn
Dancers host their 12th annual
Dance in the Park on Sunday,

March 28 from 1 to 5 pm on the
stage at Zilker park. We will have
two great bands! Come early and
picnic! Invite your friends and
make a day of it! This dance is
sponsored by AFTM and the City
of Austin . Any questions? Call
Dale at 453-4225 or check http://
austinbarndancers.org.
Contra dancing is also held every
Wednesday night at the Hancock
Recreation Center from 7:30-10
pm, and every First Friday at Carpenters' Union Hall, 400 Josephine
St., from 8-11 pm. English Country Dancing is also held at
Carpenter's Hall every second Friday from 7:30-10:30 pm. All dances
are taught and called by a caller,
and no costumes or experience is
required. Well-behaved children are
welcome, and older children who
are interested are welcome to
dance. For more information, go to
austincontradance.org, or call
Chuck Roth at 453-8936.

�Cranky Show
a Must See!
I went to see the Cranky Show a
while back and was hypnotized by
the simple beauty of the handcranked back-lit spool of hand
drawn images, the story/poems and
music. I never thought such a primitive arrangement would be so entertaining! So, I had a conversation with Ethan Azarian to find out
more about it.
Ethan told me that cranky
shows evolved in Europe. The
show consists of a box with two
handles that turn a spool of waxed
paper left to right. The waxed paper is illustrated with a sequence
of hand colored images illustrating
the story, poem, or song that is being performed. The room is darkened and the illustrated waxed paper is back-lit with a 75-watt light
bulb. Waxed paper is used because
of its durability and translucency.
The show requires a narrator, musical accompanists and a person to
turn the crank.

For the show I saw, Tom
Azarian (Ethan's father) chose the
material, drew the images with a
magic marker, colored them with
acrylic paint and acted as narrator.
Ethan Azarian played banjo and the
show included a guitarist and other
musicians. The show featured
Dangerous Dan McGrew, by Robert W. Service. Ethan says that
examples of other shows they commonly perform are Big Rock Candy
Mountain, John Henry, and Froggy
Went A Courtin'.
If you ever get the chance, go
see this entrancing show!
Note: Tom Azarian (also known
as Tom Banjo) is a well known banjo
player and entertainer from Vermont who has been performing
cranky shows for some thirty years.
You might see him at the Bread and
Puppet Theater in Vermont. Ethan
Azarian is a first-rate artist, old-time
banjo player and guitarist living in
Austin. In addition to performing in
cranky shows he shows his art
regularly and performs with local
old-time bands.
–Tim Wooten

Trent Shepherd

What's in Your CD
Player?
Jeanne DeFries has been asking various musicians around town
what they have in their CD players
and I guess it’s my turn.
I usually listen to my ipod on
“shuffle” for my commute – heavily
oldtime and bluegrass with some
exceptions – but on Thursday mornings I try to remember to tune in to
the Heliocentric Hootenany on
KVRX (91.7, 7-9am) for an electic
take on new and old folk music. At
work though I often throw a CD
on and try to moderate the “dead
guy” oldtime stuff for the sake of
my colleagues. So here’s what’s
been stacked up lately:
The Renegades (Field Recorders
Collective CD of their two cassette
releases)
Freddie King - The Shelter Records
Years
Chip Taylor &amp; Carrie Rodriguez Red Dog Tracks
The Immortal Lester Young
Gram Parsons - Grievous Angel
Velvet Underground - Best of
Ethiopians - Reggae Hit the Town
Rural Alberta Advantage - Hometowns
Bothy Band - 1975
Back Step - Rise and Bloom Again
Jefferson Airplane - Surrealistic
Pillow
Townes Van Zandt - At My Window
Susan Werner - Time Between
Trains
Dexter Gordon - Our Man in Paris
Rachel Eddy - Hand on the Plow
Richard Thompson - Small Town
Romance
Having a Party with Jonathan
Richman
Byrds - Sweetheart of the Rodeo
Bob Dylan Greatest Hits Vol. II
Sam Baker - Pretty World
– Jerry Hagins
January 2010

5

�Austin Friends of Traditional Music
PO Box 49608
Austin, Texas 78765

See you at the AFTM
Midwinter Festival,
Saturday Jan. 23rd!

RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED

AFTM Jam Session: Every Second Sunday, 2 pm • Artz Ribhouse on South Lamar
Next Jam Sessions: Sunday Feb. 14, 2010 &amp; Sunday March 14, 2010 • Bring Instruments &amp; Voices!
Member Meetings before the session • All Welcome!

AUSTIN FRIENDS OF TRADITIONAL MUSIC
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
Name _____________________________________________ Phone ________________ Date____________
Address__________________________________________________________________________________
City____________________________________________________ State_______ Zip___________________
Email____________________________________________________________________________________
___$15 Individual

___$20 Family

___$30 Patron

___$50 Business/Sustaining

___Renewal

Total enclosed: $________. Please make check payable to Austin Friends of Traditional Music
and mail to: PO Box 49608, Austin, TX 78765. Thank you!
For more information email AFTM at aftm@yahoogroups.com or visit us on the web at: www.aftm.us

6

January 2010

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                    <text>REEL TIMES

MARCH 2010

VOL 35 • NO. 2

Great Double Feature March 26th:
The Stairwell Sisters &amp; Freighthoppers!
The Stairwell Sisters
San Francisco's all-gal old-time
teardown, THE STAIRWELL SISTERS, play a deep and rowdy repertoire of timeless tunes plus a solid
standing of smart, original material
that is winning praise on a national
level. The Stairwell Sisters lay
down concerts and square dances
for counter-culturalist s everywhere, infusing the old music with
intoxicating energy and soul. The
stairwell has never sounded better.
Producer Lloyd Maines recalls his
first encounter with the band: "I
happened upon this tribe of women
musicians, playing old-time string
music, with the power and excitement of a great rock band."
http://www.stairwellsisters.com/

Their music turned people on
and trail blazed the way for other
successful string bands to follow
their lead. The reshaped band will
elaborate on their trademark sound
by drawing upon their personal musical rapport to make a sonic hue
that refracts their inspirations and
love of Southern American, gospel,
blues, punk and, folk music. A new
album on Rounder Records is already in production and eagerly a
waited. And so a new chapter begins and The Freight Hoppers ride
again....
To hear a few of The Freight
Hopper's tunes, visit them on the

web at http://www.myspace.com/
thefreighthoppers

When: Friday, March 26th
Time: 8pm - 10pm
Cost: $15 general admission
$12 for AFTM members
Location: Ruta Maya Coffee
House, 3601 South Congress,
Austin
http://rutamaya.net/hourslocation.html

The Freight Hoppers
ride again!
"There are certain string bands that
everyone looks to in setting the bar
high for musicianship, performance
and showmanship and The Freight
Hoppers deliver the goods. Their
infectious high energy and bracing,
uncompromising sound is what I
look for in a band. I know their loyal
and patient fan base including myself is glad they're back and we're
very excited about seeing them perform again." - Jim Roe

The RiceGrass Festival, March 27-28 in nearby Fischer,
TX, will be featuring both these great bands plus Danny Barnes,
Laurie Lewis &amp; Tom Rozum, Alan Munde &amp; Byron Berline, and
many other great bluegrass/oldtime acts. Call Cabin 10 Productions at 830-739-6986 or visit www.cabin10.com/riceGrass.htm for
more information about this new Central Texas music festival.

�John Roberts,
Renowned English
Folksinger and
Concertinist,
Sunday March 28th
Fiddlers Green Music Shop, 1809
W. 35th St., Austin
Sunday March 28th
7 - 8 pm, $10
Regular Irish session follows show
Born in Wales and raised in
Kidderminster, England, John Roberts got involved with the emerging
folk music scene as a teen. When
he came to the States in 1969 to
attend graduate school at Cornell
University, he met Englishman Tony
Barrand and a 35-year singing partnership began. Moving to Vermont
after college, the two became fast
friends with Margaret MacArthur,
a great source of Vermont and
New England songs, thus adding
song treasures from the American
and Canadian branches of British
folk song to their repertoire. Since
then, John and Tony have performed around the country, at pubs,
folk clubs, festivals, coffee houses,
maritime museums, and even art
museums.
John has been on staff at the
Augusta Heritage and Country
Dance and Song Society music and
dance camps. He has also been a
member of Nowell Sing We Clear,
featuring seasonally-themed per-

formances of song and "mumming"
(ritual folk theater). Not content
with that, in the past few years he
has also been performing in a trio
called Ye Mariners All, which performs maritime song, and he has
played for Morris dancing and for
English country dancing. John has
recorded over a dozen CDs with
Tony and the members of Nowell
Sing We Clear, as well as appearing on several other recordings including Ye Mariners All.
This is John Roberts' first trip
to Texas. Please make him welcome!

Rafe Stefanini Workshop &amp;
House Concert March 23-24
Rafe Stefanini, nationally recognized, fabulous old-time fiddler and
banjoist, will offer a fiddle workshop on Tuesday, March 23, 7-9
pm. Cost: $30. On the following day,
Wednesday, March 24, he will perform a house concert from 8-10pm,
suggested honorarium, per seat,
$15. For information &amp; reservations: ebpittman@austin.rr.com or
call 512-476-3991.

Kalimba Showcase at Ruta
Maya - AFTM is sponsoring a 3act kalimba showcase at Ruta
Maya from 7 to 10 p.m. on April
2nd. The concert will feature three
great kalimba players: Daniel
Leonidas, a 72 year old African

AFTM Officers/Board 2008/2009
President • Elizabeth Pittman
Vice-President • Angie Wooten
Secretary • Christy Foster
Treasurer • Dale Rempert
Newsletter Editor • Tim Wooten
Dance Liaison • Keith Tuxhorn
Events Coordinator• Jeanne DeFriese
Web &amp; Membership • Sharon Rempert

2 March 2010

refugee from Burundi, Africa;
Ralph White, local songwriter,
banjo wizard and former Bad
Liver fiddler; and Joel Laviolette,
the leader of the extraordinary
drum band Rattletree Marimba.
$10 - general admission; $8 AFTM members
Robin and Linda
Williams &amp; their fine
group, Tues., April 20th
On Tuesday, April 20 the Supple
Series will present returning favorites Robin and Linda Williams &amp;
their fine group. The show starts at
7:30pm. Tickets are $10 and the
price includes general seat and dessert &amp; coffee post performance.
Robin and Linda Williams have
thrilled folk, bluegrass, and country
audiences throughout America for
thirty years. From their many appearances on "A Prairie Home
Companion" and "The American
Radio Company" to "Austin City
Limits" and "The Grand Old Opry,"
the Williams' music reaches deep
into American traditions and, in the
words of the Richmond Times Dispatch, "encompasses all that's best
in country music."
Location: Price Senior Center,
222 West San Antonio St., San
Marcos, TX 78666-5550.Info at
Fine Arts Texas State University
512-245-2308; Price Center phone
number is (512) 392-3114.

REEL TIMES is published by Austin
Friends of Traditional Music (AFTM), a nonprofit
organization (est. 1974) dedicated to encouraging
the performance and appreciation of all genres of
traditional music and dance. Copyright 2010 by
AFTM. PO Box 49608, Austin, Texas 78765
AFTM email: aftm@yahoogroups.com
Web: www.aftm.us

�AFTM Board Elections
Coming in April - would
YOU like to serve on the
Board?
The following Board members are
willing to serve in their current positions for another year:
Vice President: Angie Wooten
Dance Liaison: Keith Tuxhorn
Events Coordinator: Jeanne
DeFriese
Secretary: Christy Foster
General Duties: Howard Rains
General Duties: Sharon Isaac
In addition, Tim Wooten is willing to serve as President and to continue as editor of Reel Times, Elizabeth Pittman is willing to switch
from President to Treasurer and
Sharon Rempert has agreed to continue managing the website although
she will no longer be on the board.
Dale Rempert is stepping down as
Treasurer and will no longer serve
on the board.
The board meetings occur on
the 2nd Sunday each month at 12:30
pm, and currently the meeting location is the back room at Artz
Ribhouse. Board members are
expected to attend at least 10 of
the 12 meetings, and to appoint a
proxy for any meeting they cannot
attend. Board members are expected to help to put on AFTM
events. Any AFTM member of six
month's duration or more and who
is willing to work is qualified to serve
on the board.
Nominations from the board
and the floor will be made and
closed at the meeting on March
14th. The list of nominees will be
emailed to the membership, and
also will be published on the website. The election will take place this
year on April 11th. Every current
member is eligible to vote, and must
be present at the meeting to vote.

AFTM Bylaws
Amendment Proposed
Article IX of the AFTM bylaws
requires that:
1. Amendments to these bylaws
shall be introduced at a business
meeting, published in the following
newsletter, and voted upon at the
business meeting following issuance
of that newsletter.
2. Amendments shall be passed by
a 2/3 vote of members present and
voting at that meeting.
The following proposed amendment
to our AFTM Bylaws Article III(5)
was introduced at our last board
meeting and circulated to the board
members by e-mail. The intent of
this amendment is to enlarge the
maximum number of board members from eight to twelve. The
board would be permitted but not
required to have twelve members.
We encourage all AFTM members
to attend the board meeting on
March 14, 2010 at 12:30 p.m. at
Artz Ribhouse on South Lamar to
vote on the proposed amendment.
You may review a complete copy
of the bylaws at our website:
www.aftm.us. New language is
underlined and deleted language is
lined-out.
Article III. Board of Directors
The Board of Directors (Board) is
responsible for administering the
affairs of the organization. The
Board shall not be paid a salary but
their authorized expenses, if any,
incurred in connection with the affairs of the organization shall be
reimbursed by the organization.
The elected directors and their duties shall be as follows:
1. President. The President shall
be the chief executive officer, shall
call and conduct all business meet-

ings, shall have the authority to sign
checks, shall oversee the activities
and receive the reports of committees, shall be informed of all current and potential activities of the
organization, and shall appoint committee chairpersons and other necessary functionaries, including a
person to collect, open, sort, and
distribute mail.
2. Vice President. The Vice President shall conduct meetings in the
absence of the President and, in the
event the President is unable to
complete his/her term, shall assume
the office of President for the duration of the term. The Vice President shall have the authority to sign
checks and shall be responsible for
coordinating the social meetings
described in section 6 of Article V.
3. Secretary. The Secretary shall
keep records of the organization,
shall keep minutes of the Board of
Directors meetings, shall have the
authority to sign checks, and shall
carry out necessary general correspondence.
4. Treasurer. The Treasurer shall
keep financial records, shall have
the authority to sign checks, shall
hold and deposit funds, shall pay the
bills, shall prepare monthly and annual financial reports, shall fill out
federal and other tax forms, and
shall oversee the physical assets of
the organization, including its financial archives. The Treasurer must
be bondable.
5. Additional Directors. The Board
may have up to four eight additional
directors. Additional directors shall
have full voting privileges. Their
duties shall be assigned by the
Board and may include, but not be
limited to, fundraising, producing a
newsletter, maintaining records of
membership, maintaining the
organization's archives, and acting
as liaison with other dance, music,
cultural, or community groups.
March 2010

3

�Dance News
English Country Dance News
The next English Country Dance
will be held March 12, from 7:3010:30 at Carpenter's Hall, 400
Josephine, one block North and one
block West of the corner of Barton
Springs and South Lamar. All
dances will be taught and called.
The cost is $6, students $5. For
more information contact Ann
McCracken at ann@mccr.org or
266-9949. Let Ann know if you can
bring a snack to share. This dance
is fragrance free.
Rob Baden will be holding an English Country dance March 26 at
7:30 pm at the Ballroom in the Sky
(private house), 19 N Peak Rd,
Austin (West Lake Hills), $5 donation. Directions: From Mopac, go
West on Bee Caves Rd. (2244) turn
right on Rollingwood, then left on
N. Peak. 19 N Peak is the next to
last house on the right. Contact Rob
at rnbaden@juno.com for more information.
Austin International Folk Dancers present “The Inheritance” on
Saturday, March 27 from 7:3011pm. It will be an evening of international music, dancing and
walkthroughs of traditional Balkan
dances. Location: Hancock Recreation Center, 811 E. 41st St.
Bring your friends. $5 at the door +

4 March 2010

tips for the band. They will also be
teaching Balkan dances in the
weeks leading up to the event so
that people can learn the dances
ahead of time. Details on the web
at: http://aifd.cc
March 28th - The Austin Barn
Dancers host their 12th annual
Dance in the Park on Sunday,
March 28 from 1 to 5 pm on the
stage at Zilker park. We will have
two great bands! Come early and
picnic! Invite your friends and
make a day of it! This dance is
sponsored by AFTM and the City
of Austin . Any questions? Call
Dale at 453-4225 or check http://
austinbarndancers.org.
Contra dancing is also held every
Wednesday night at the Hancock
Recreation Center from 7:30-10
pm, and every First Friday at Carpenters' Union Hall, 400 Josephine
St., from 8-11 pm. English Country Dancing is also held at
Carpenter's Hall every second Friday from 7:30-10:30 pm. All dances
are taught and called by a caller,
and no costumes or experience is
required. Well-behaved children are
welcome, and older children who
are interested are welcome to
dance. For more information, go to
austincontradance.org, or call
Chuck Roth at 453-8936.

Monthly Open Mic
OPEN MIC at Ruta Maya's on
Saturday, March 27, 3 - 6 pm, 3601
South Congress. Come sign up for
your 15 minute slot, all kinds of traditional music welcome!

Old LPs For Sale
Pat Glenn has almost 200 old LPs
and some cassettes of classic bluegrass, Australian bush music and
other favorites at a very low price.
Most of the LPs are still in good
shape. If you are interested, please
contact him at snuffy@gvtc.com.
He will send you a list of the titles
he has available.

E-Reel Times!
Reel Times is available by e-mail.
Save a fast-growth pine by going
to our web site (www.aftm.us) and
signing up for e-mail delivery!

Angeline the Baker

�Free Music at AFTM Showcase!
Chojo Jacques &amp; Billy Bright, Steelhead String Band, Ruby Jane
Perform at Central Market North on April 10th
Come out to a great free 3-act concert at Central Market North on
April 10th. In another collaboration between Central Market and
AFTM we present:
Chojo Jacques and Billy Bright
- 4:30 - 5:30 p.m.
Steelhead Stringband - 6 - 7 p.m.
Ruby Jane - 7:30 - 9 p.m.
Headliner Ruby Jane is one of the
finest fiddlers you'll ever hear (and
she is 15 years old). She is a fastrising star in country and bluegrassAmericana music. With deep familial and cultural ties throughout the
South, especially Mississippi, where
she lived until she was 12 years old.
She now lives in Austin with her
mama when not traveling as a musician, actress, or model.
Ruby Jane exhibited a strong
connection to music as early as age
one and began classical violin instruction at age two. At age eight,
she devoted herself to old-time and
bluegrass music. Subsequently, she
began old-time fiddle lessons, which
included the study of its unique bowing techniques, archaic tunings, and
depth of expression. After only six
fiddle lessons she won first place
in the first fiddle competition she
entered, beginning a run of victories and increasing fame that continues today.
She was granted an apprenticeship by the Mississippi Arts Commission at age eight to apprentice
with Charles T. Smith, one of the
last great Mississippi old-time fiddlers. For the past three years, she
has competed in dozens of prestigious music competitions and per-

formed with many bluegrass and
country greats, including Marty
Stuart, Willie Nelson, Lyle Lovett,
Asleep at the Wheel, Rhonda
Vincent ("The Queen of Bluegrass"), Mike Snider, Jesse
McReynolds, Jim Brock, James
Monroe, Carl Jackson and many
others.
In 2005, at age ten, Ruby Jane
acted in her second film, contributed an original song to a film
soundtrack, performed as the
youngest invited fiddler in the history of the Grand Ole Opry, played
at the Ernest Tubb Record Shop
three times, and won the National
Beginners Fiddle Championship
(which ranked her first nationally
under twelve). Also in 2005, she
won Second Place on the mandolin
in the National Beginner Country
Musician Competition. In October
2005, she won First Place in her
category and then won the FiddleOff at the Mississippi State Fair
Southern Championship Fiddle Contest, establishing her as the Mississippi State Fiddle Champion of 2005
for all age groups. She was the
youngest state champion in the
competition's history.
The Steelhead String Band is
Trent Shepherd on fiddle, Sharon
Sandomirsky playing guitar, Jerry
Hagins on banjo and Brink Melton
on bass. All long-time Austin musicians, these guys spin out the finest oldtime Appalachian fiddle tunes
around. Nothing too fancy, just
straight-ahead oldtime dance music with clawhammer banjo, rock
solid guitar, and driving bass, plus
Trent has a few songs up his sleeve
when his bow arm gets tired.

Trent and Brink were
bandmates for many years in the
popular local band Onion Creek
Crawdaddies, performing at notable
venues near and far. Sharon has
played with many groups over the
years, including the Fuzzy Mountain String Band, the New Rubitonic
Entertainers
(with
Fred
Cockerham), and the Herald Angels. She recently released a critically acclaimed CD Road to Agate
Hill with Alice Gerrard and Gail
Gillespie. Jerry plays with many local bands, including Christy and the
Plowboys, Old Waterloo, and the
Rising Gorge Boys. He has performed and recorded with Ken
Waldman and played for several
years with the Pistol Love Family
Band.
Billy Bright and Wayne
"Chojo" Jacques first met at the
Wings and Strings Music Festival
in Florida in 2001, where Billy was
appearing with "Peter Rowan's
Texas Trio", and Chojo was appearing with the "Waybacks". After many late night motel jams, and
shared gigs over the next few years,
they developed a close musical relationship.
In 2007 they decided to perform as a duo, and after a year of
performing at clubs, house concerts,
and festivals, Billy and Chojo have
released their debut CD "Texacali
Blues", and have developed a reputation for a new and fresh interpretation of classic fiddle and mandolin tunes, quirky originals, and an
engaging stage show that audiences
and promoters have described as
transcendent, hilarious, and one of
a kind.
March 2010

5

�Austin Friends of Traditional Music
PO Box 49608
Austin, Texas 78765

RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED

AFTM Jam Session: Every Second Sunday, 2 pm • Artz Ribhouse on South Lamar
Next Jam Sessions: Sunday March 14, 2010 &amp; Sunday April 11, 2010 • Bring Instruments &amp; Voices!
Member Meetings before the session • All Welcome!

AUSTIN FRIENDS OF TRADITIONAL MUSIC
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
Name _____________________________________________ Phone ________________ Date____________
Address__________________________________________________________________________________
City____________________________________________________ State_______ Zip___________________
Email____________________________________________________________________________________
___$15 Individual

___$20 Family

___$30 Patron

___$50 Business/Sustaining

___Renewal

Total enclosed: $________. Please make check payable to Austin Friends of Traditional Music
and mail to: PO Box 49608, Austin, TX 78765. Thank you!
For more information email AFTM at aftm@yahoogroups.com or visit us on the web at: www.aftm.us

6 March 2010

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                    <text>REEL TIMES

SEPTEMBER 2010

VOL 35 • NO. 3

Dance Till You Drop at
Austin String Band Festival!
AFTM is hosting our fifth string
band festival October 15, 16, and
17 at Camp Ben McCulloch across
from the Salt Lick (directions below). The festival is supported in
part by a grant from the Texas
Commission on the Arts. This year
we feature a Friday night Dance
Till You Drop with Cajun, C&amp;W, and
old-time dancing called by Rich
MacMath. As usual we'll have great
bands, fun jams, good food and topnotch workshops at this beautiful
campground with shade trees, a
creek, and all the facilities for a
magical time. Gates open at noon
on Friday, October 15.
Although this is its fifth year this
festival is still small enough that
everyone can get right up close to
the musicians. And the musicians
are worth a close listen. The line
up features bluegrass, old-time Appalachian, cowboy ballads, Cajun,
and Americana delivered by the best
local string bands and out of state
headliners.
Festival booking agent Jeanne
DeFriese, who booked the music for
Old Settlers when it was a small
bluegrass festival, makes this comparison: "I have a freer hand booking for ASBF. Our audience is very
open-minded and eclectic in their
tastes; they seem quite delighted

with our diverse selections on stage
and in the mini-sets. We book old
time and bluegrass acts but you
might also hear Gospel, traditional
Mexican, Cajun, or retro jazz - anything that hews to regional
stringband music. There are more
spur of the moment jam sessions at
ASBF - everywhere!" Huntsville
fiddle maven Marynell Young says
ASBF has the "most eclectic stage
show East of Los Angeles and the
best jam sessions West of North
Carolina - finger pickin' good!"
This year the Friday night headliner is Foghorn Trio and the Saturday night headliners are the Haints
and Kweskin &amp; Muldaur.
Foghorn Trio is a heralded oldtime string band playing music
deeply rooted in the American folk
tradition. It's a pre-copyright, postbluegrass style, but the Foghorns put
their own stamp on it. Stephen
"Sammy" Lind and Caleb Klauder
draw on their rich history of more
than ten years playing fiddle tunes
and old time country together. They
trade vocals, guitar, fiddle, banjo and
mandolin. Nadine Landry switches
between upright bass and guitar,
bringing in elements of Cajun by
drawing on her French Acadian
roots. It's a sound that could be

coming to you from a big console
radio in a 1930s living room, or an
Appalachian front porch; instead
it's being delivered by a group of
players from the thriving old time
music scene of Portland, Oregon.
They crank out an amazing wave
of great old time dance music for
just three people! Hot local old-time
dance caller Rich MacMath will get
everyone up and dancing.
The Haints is a young trio that favors tunes old, quirky and twisted,
notably the great archaic songs that
have almost been forgotten. With
Erynn Marshall's highly regarded
old-time fiddling leading the pulse,
Jason Romero changes effortlessly
between clawhammer and threefinger banjo, Pharis Romero keeps
the deep groove on the flat-top guitar, and all three sing, from tender
duets to the boisterous call and response songs of early string bands.
Singer and multi-instrumentalist
Carl Jones is also appearing with
the Haints. Erynn, who won first
place in fiddle at the 2008 Clifftop
Appalachian Stringband Festival in
West Virginia, is a fine talent who
plays with power and control.

Continued on page 4

�Fire Ant Frolic
Coming Soon!
Austin's 14th Annual Fire Ant
Frolic will be held October 29-31,
2010, at the Texas Federation of
Women's Clubs. This will be a great
event called by Nils Fredland with
Elixir - a high energy dance band
that blends superb calling, driving
fiddle and guitar playing, and the
rich texture and rhythmic excitement of a full horn section.
We will be dancing in the Grand
Ballroom, the largest of its kind in
central Texas. The polished oak
floor spans over four thousand
square feet (two average houses
could fit inside!) and the ceiling
soars to thirty feet. The room is
dramatically illuminated with vintage bronze and crystal wall
sconces, for a total of seventy
candlelight bulbs and a thousand
sparkling crystal drops!
Full information about the event
is available through our website,
www.fireantfrolic.com or you can
pick up a flyer at one of the many
dances in Austin. You'll see details
about all of our wonderful talent,
see our preliminary schedule of
dance sessions, workshops, special
events throughout the weekend and
register online via PayPal. The
deadline for early registration is
October 1, so make sure your registration is postmarked on or before
that date for a $10 discount.

We'd love to have your help! If
you can help with food, hospitality,
setup, decorations, wrangling water, front desk, or cleanup, please
volunteer through the website
shown above.

The Austin Banjo Club
Needs You!
The Austin Banjo Club has been
very active this fall. In addition to
our regular Monday night practice
sessions at the Lamar Senior Activity Center (29th and North Lamar,
Austin, Texas) we have played four
gigs in September and have three
more lined up for October, so far.
We have been having a great deal
of fun. If you play anything that
poses as a banjo (tenor banjo, plectrum, banjolin, banjo-uke, banjoguitar...even a 5-string!) and love
the great American popular tunes
from the early 1900s to the 1930s,
please join us on a Monday night, 7
- 9 pm! For more information:
www.austinbanjoclub.org

AFTM Officers/Board 2010/2011
President • Tim Wooten
Vice-President • Angie Wooten
Secretary • Christy Foster
Treasurer • Elizabeth Pittman
Newsletter Editor • Tim Wooten
Dance Liaison • Keith Tuxhorn
Events Coordinator• Jeanne DeFriese
Membership • Sharon Isaac
General • Howard Raines, Margaret Valenti

2 September 2010

“Come join me Friday,
Saturday, and Sunday,
October 15th, 16th, and
17th. Bring your fiddle
and your dancing
shoes.”
AFTM/Central Market
Showcase
Save Friday evening November 5th
on your calendar for a showcase
of Austin bands at Central Market
sponsored by Austin Friends of Traditional Music and Central Market.
Bands and other details will be announced by e-mail.

E-Reel Times!
Reel Times is available by e-mail.
Save a fast-growth pine by going
to our web site (www.aftm.us) and
signing up for e-mail delivery!

REEL TIMES is published by Austin
Friends of Traditional Music (AFTM), a nonprofit
organization (est. 1974) dedicated to encouraging
the performance and appreciation of all genres of
traditional music and dance. Copyright 2010 by
AFTM. PO Box 49608, Austin, Texas 78765
AFTM email: aftm@yahoogroups.com
Web: www.aftm.us

�Dance News
Austin 3rd Saturday Contra
Dance, October 16th
We'll be dancing at St. Paul
Lutheran, 3501 Red River, band to
be announced.
Newcomers are encouraged to
arrive at 7:30 for special instruction, and the regular dance goes
from 8 to 11 p.m. Regulars are encouraged to arrive early to greet and
help our newcomers experience the
joys of contra dancing. Please
come fragrance-free to protect our
dancers with allergies.
Regular admission to the dance
is $9, $8 for AFTM members, and
$5 for students. New dancers will
receive a coupon good for free admission to the next dance.
For further information, contact
Chuck Roth 512-453-8936 or send
e-mail to croth@austin.rr.com.
You can find more info about
Austin contra dancing at
www.austincontradance.org
Austin contra dancers now
have a group on Facebook: http://
www.facebook.com/
group.php?gid=10253242826 or
search for "Austin contra dancers."
You'll need a Facebook account
(free) to join.
First Friday Contra Dance,
October 1st
8:00 - 11:00 pm (newcomers session at 7:30) at Carpenter's Hall, 400
Josephine, one block North and one
block West of the corner of Barton
Springs and South Lamar. The
caller will be Luke Donev from
Dallas and the band will be Mockingbird. Admission $8, discounts for
AFTM &amp; newcomers. Contact:
Paul Hawkins first-fridaycontra@googlegroups.co

Second Friday English Country
Dance, Oct. 8th
7:30 - 10:30 pm, Carpenter's Hall,
400 Josephine St. All dances will
be taught and called. This dance is
fragrance free. Admission $6, students $5. Contact: Ann McCracken
ann@mccr.org (512) 266-9949

The Austin Barn Dancers
Every Wednesday, 7:30 - 10:00 pm
Hancock Recreation Center, 811 E
41st St. Music by LOCO (local oncall orchestra). For more information contact: Dale Rempert
drempert@ix.netcom.com
(512) 453-4225

Clickety Cloggers Meet Local Musician
John Arthur Martinez
It was a surprise to the Clickety
Cloggers Exhibition Team members
when they realized that singer John
Arthur Martinez was in the audience as they danced three routines
to his music. Club member Roxie
McCoy had recently choreographed
three of his songs: "Road Trip",
about traveling on Texas Highway
281, "Frijoles Con Arroz", and "A
Girl Named Texas" and all three

were on the program as the group
danced at Horseshoe Bay in Marble
Falls on July 3rd.
"While we didn't get him up
dancing, he did give us an open invitation to come dance to his live
music some time." said dancer Jon
Durbin. The team also danced several patriotic numbers from their
repertoire.

Nancy Benner, Ruth Ann Warren, Hildy Slocum, Jon Durbin, John Arthur
Martinez, Pat Waden, Roxie McCoy, Mary Fran Lumis, and Judy Varga

Austin CLICKETY CLOGGERS: Upcoming Performances:
Saturday, Oct. 2, 2010 - Fredericksburg Oktoberfest - 4:00 - 4:30 p.m. - Main Street Tent
Saturday, Oct. 16, 2010 - Dallas State Fair - 12:00 noon-2:00 pm
Saturday, Nov. 13, 2010 - Brazos Valley Worldfest - College Station - TBA
Saturday, Nov. 27, 2010 - Johnson City, TX. " Lights Spectacular" 5:30- 6:00 p.m.
Saturday, Dec. 4, 2010 - Georgetown Holiday Stroll - TBA
Saturday, Dec. 11, 2010 - Wimberley Trail of Lights - 7:00 - 8:00 p.m.
September 2010

3

�continued from page 1
Jim Kweskin and Geoff
Muldaur are founding members of
the hugely popular 1960s group, Jim
Kweskin's Jug Band (also with
Maria Muldaur, Fritz Richmond, and
Mel Lyman) which is credited with
setting the stage for Jerry Garcia's
first band, Mother McCree's Uptown Jug Champions, and subsequently The Grateful Dead. Geoff
and Jim share a rare chemistry that
was instantly renewed when they
reunited as a duo in Tokyo in 2006.
The distinctive qualities they brought
to the Jug Band - Kweskin's clean,
rhythmic finger picking and
Muldaur's emotional, quavering
voice remain their signature. When
it comes to acoustic folk, blues, and
ragtime, Kweskin and Muldaur are
unparalleled exponents of the best
American music.
Unfortunately we don't have
the space to tell you about all the
bands. See below for the complete
lineup. The full workshop scheducle
with descriptions is on page 5.

But the stage bands are not the
whole story. Camp Ben's grounds
are lovely, with plenty of big old
shade trees, a gurgling creek and
plenty of room for camping and jamming. Some of the best music is
off-stage in sessions lasting till the
wee hours. Bring your banjos, guitars, fiddles, mandolins and other
instruments - sit under the trees and
jam, sing, dance, eat, and make
merry! The admission price gets
you into a huge variety of workshops such as banjo, fiddle, singing
and dancing (see below for more
details). There is also a playground
and a workshop for the youngsters.
Admission fees are a reasonable $40 for weekend general admission with discounts for partial
weekends, students and Austin
Friends of Traditional Music members. Youth 16 and under and volunteers get in free!

Volunteer! For a free day's admission, volunteer by e-mailing
AFTM.Volunteers@gmail.com.
We'll send you a link to a spreadsheet showing the volunteer slots
and you can e-mail us back with
your first and second choices. We
really need your help!
Directions:
Camp Ben
McCulloch is within a few minutes
of Austin, located 11 miles south of
Highway 290 West on Farm Road
1826. From I-35, take Loop 4 to
downtown Buda. Head west on
Farm Road 967 for 11 miles, then
turn left on Farm Road 1826 for 1/
2 mile -- Camp Ben McCulloch is
on the left

Friday October 15th
Dance Till You Drop!
7:00 Jenny and the Corn Ponies
8:00 Cory McCauley and his Evangeline Aces
9:00 Foghorn Trio, with caller Rich MacMath

Admission Fees
General Admission
Friday only .................................$20
Saturday only .............................$30
Weekend ....................................$40

Saturday, October 16th
2:00 The Victor Mourning
3:00 Atomic Duo
4:00 Shotgun Party
5:00 The Carper Family
6:00 The Gillette Brothers
7:00 Ben Hodges Band
8:00 The Haints with Carl Jones
9:00 Jim Kweskin and Geoff Muldaur

Youth (16 and under) .................FREE

Sunday, October 17th
Gospel Sing about 10 a.m. until noon.

Discounts (excludes additional camping fee)
$5 off any price for AFTM members
$5 off any price for early ticket purchase

4 September 2010

Student w/ID (Friday only) ........$10
Student w/ID (Saturday only) ....$20
Student w/ID (Weekend) ...........$25
Camping (Additional Fee) ..........
Primitive, per tent per night ........$10
w/electricity, per tent per night ...$15

�ASBF 2010 Saturday Workshop Schedule
The workshop times and topics are subject to change. This is the current lineup:
11:00 a.m.

Country Duets with Teri Joyce &amp; Roger Wallace

11:00 a.m.

Celtic Jam with Vanessa Gordon

11:00 a.m.

Old Time Survey with the Haints

11:00 a.m.

Big Circle and Square Dance with Sharon Isaac. Learn a big circle and a square dance.

11:00 a.m.

Eight Fiddlers from Kentucky with Gene and Marynelle Young
Eastern Kentucky fiddlers 1985 - 1992. Photos, tunes and anecdotes. Hear tunes of Estill
Bingam, Clyde Davenport, Hiram Stamper and J.P. Fraley.

11:00 a.m.

Getting Started Playing Bluegrass Solos on Mandolin with Ben Hodges
Learn a simplified approach to the basic patterns. Q&amp;A

12:00 noon

Early Roots Gospel Songs with Pharis Romero. Learn the base melodies and harmonies for
several early gospel songs. Come ready to sing!

12:00 noon

Two Strings are the Thing - Mandolin with Carl Jones. Two note chord shapes and how
they "fall" or connect on the neck which leads to "six magic shapes plus one." Basic scale and
chord theory as well as octaves, unisons a tune and a song.

12:00 noon

Beginner Old Time Jam with Elizabeth Pittman; Tim and Angie Wooten

12:00 noon

The Role of the Folk Musician in Contemporary Society with Silas Lowe. What is in
fact the job description of a folk singer in our modern age? Are the politics of courtly love and
relationships his or her only bailiwick? Lively conversation with current examples.

12:00 noon

Kids Singalong with Laura Freeman. Learn songs from family car trips, girl scouts and
church groups back when people used tosing together. No instruments required.

12:00 noon

Bluegrass Slow Jam with Jami Hampton and Steve Mangold. You will be given a list of
songs that every picker should know, a list of rhythm chords and the order in which you should
learn them and you will learn basic jamming techniques. Then we'll all pick a tune or two.

1:00 p.m.

Old Time Harmony Singing with the Carper Family. Learn how to build different types of
chords, root notes, scales, intervals, phrasing and timing. Then learn a song.

1:00 p.m.

How to Play Dobro with Gary Mortensen. Practice techniques and ideas. Working up tunes
and backing up singers.

1:00 p.m.

Intermediate/Advanced Banjo with Jason Romero, Bernard Mollberg and Jerry Hagins

1:00 p.m.

How to Call a Square Dance with Rich MacMath

1:00 p.m.

Bones Workshop with the Gillette Brothers. Bones history, playing instruction, techniques
and styles for one pair, two pairs and four pairs of bones with musical accompaniment. Bones
available for sale.

1:00 p.m.

The Wonderful World of Fiddle Tunings with Erynn Marshall. Learn about traditional
fiddle tunings and hear them played. Learn an intermediate level tune in a beautiful open tuning.
Jamming anytime!

September 2010

5

�Austin Friends of Traditional Music
PO Box 49608
Austin, Texas 78765

RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED

AFTM Jam Session: Every Second Sunday, 2 pm • Artz Ribhouse on South Lamar
Next Jam Sessions: Sunday October 10, 2010 &amp; Sunday November 14, 2010 • Bring Instruments &amp; Voices!
Member Meetings before the session • All Welcome!

AUSTIN FRIENDS OF TRADITIONAL MUSIC
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
Name _____________________________________________ Phone ________________ Date____________
Address__________________________________________________________________________________
City____________________________________________________ State_______ Zip___________________
Email____________________________________________________________________________________
___$15 Individual

___$20 Family

___$30 Patron

___$50 Business/Sustaining

___Renewal

Total enclosed: $________. Please make check payable to Austin Friends of Traditional Music
and mail to: PO Box 49608, Austin, TX 78765. Thank you!
For more information email AFTM at aftm@yahoogroups.com or visit us on the web at: www.aftm.us

6 September 2010

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                    <text>REEL TIMES

JANUARY 2011

VOL 36 • NO. 1

Midwinter Traditional Music Festival!
To hear some mighty-fine traditional music, and learn how to pick
and sing - come out to our Midwinter Festival on Saturday afternoon
and evening February 5, 2011 at
Dougherty Arts Center, 1110
Barton Springs Road, Austin, Texas.
The doors will open at 11:45 a.m.
What is the Midwinter Festival?
AFTM’s Midwinter Festival is the
perfect chance to shake the winter
doldrums and see old friends, make
new friends and find a vacant spot
to jam. And there’s a lot more:
Great traditional music from talented local bands. We've got a topnotch lineup of bands offering a
smorgasbord of music from the
U.S. and around the world in one
of the best listening spaces in town!
(See tentative line-up below).
Workshops. Choose from a dozen
workshops at no additional charge
including jam sessions, kid's workshops, singing, dance, fiddle, banjo
and harmonica. See below for details.
Delicious food. Great, healthy
food and drink choices served hot
and priced right.
Silent auction. Find an item you
like and make your bid. You may
find a real gem of a CD, instrument
or service.

An opportunity to support traditional music and dance. The
Midwinter Festival is Austin Friends
of Traditional Music's main fund
raiser. The funds go to support
showcases, house concerts, our
Austin Stringband Festival and
other traditional music and dance
events in the Austin area.
The bands, workshop leaders
and many volunteers are donating
their time and talent to support the
Austin Friends of Traditional Music. Please come out and give us
your support!
The first band kicks off at noon.
Check our website at www.aftm.us
for more details and schedule updates. Here's the stage line up (subject to change):
12:00 noon
1pm -1:50
2pm - 2:50

3pm - 3:50
4pm - 4:50
5pm - 5:50
6pm - 6:50
7pm - 7:50
8pm - 8:50
9pm - 9:50

Lost and Nameless
Orchestra
Larry Kirbo
AIO (Annoying
Instrument
Orchestra)
Gospel Jam
David Hamburger
Bourree Texane
Ragged Union
Jeff Moore &amp; Chris
Buckley
Son Armado
Carper Family

Lost and Nameless Orchestra
"Foot stomping, heart racing,
exciting music..." As this fan attests,
there's something about dueling
fiddles, vigorous guitar playing, and
an air-tight rhythm section that
compels your body to move. Tastefully pairing a wide dynamic range
and an intimate connection with the
listeners, the Austin-based fiddledriven folk rock quintet Lost and
Nameless Orchestra gets you out
of your chair and onto the dance
floor.
The band's unique chemistry on
stage creates an intimate atmosphere in the room and draws listeners into the music. As the intensity builds, it is not uncommon to
catch band members dancing on
chairs and fueling the fire of excitement in the room.
After a standing residency at
Flipnotics, a calendar full of shows
all over Texas and Arkansas, and
their first tour under their belt, The
Lost and Nameless Orchestra is
currently in the studio recording
their debut full-length album. The
band's collective goal is to "put on
an insanely great live show," and
anyone who has seen the band will
agree that the Lost and Nameless
Orchestra delivers just that.

– Continued on page 3

�AFTM Board Elections
Coming in April
– would YOU like to serve on the
Board? The following Board
members are willing to serve in
their current positions for another
year:
President: Tim Wooten (also
Newsletter Editor)
Vice President: Angie Wooten
Secretary: Christy Foster
Dance Liaison: Keith Tuxhorn
Events: Jeanne DeFriese
At Large: Maggie Valenti
Website Manager: Sharon Isaac
(also Membership Manager)
The board desperately needs
a Treasurer and a publicity
person. Our heartfelt thanks to
Elizabeth Pittman and Howard
Rains for their wonderful service
in these positions.
In addition to the positions
noted above, the board may have
additional members, who may be
asked to take on specific tasks
before or after being elected to
the board.
The board meetings occur on
the 2nd Sunday each month at
12:30 pm, and currently the
meeting location is the back room
at Artz Ribhouse. Board members are expected to attend at
least 10 of the 12 meetings, and to
appoint a proxy for any meeting

they cannot attend. Board
members are expected to help to
put on AFTM events. Any AFTM
member of six month's duration or
more who is willing to work is
qualified to serve on the board.
Nominations from the board
and the floor will be made and
closed at the meeting on March
13. The list of nominees will be
emailed to the membership via the
Yahoo group, and also will be
published on the web-site. The
election will take place this year
on April 10. Every current
member is eligible to vote, and
must be present at the meeting to
cast a vote.

What's On Your CD
Player?
In every issue board member
Jeanne Defriese ambushes one of
our members with this question.
We love finding out what folks are
listening to!
Here's what Howard Rains has
been listening to: Varise Conner,
Dennis McGee &amp; Sadie Courville,
James Whatley, Library of Congress recordings of Texas fiddle
music, Faren Serrette.

AFTM Officers/Board 2010/2011
President • Tim Wooten
Vice-President • Angie Wooten
Secretary • Christy Foster
Treasurer • Elizabeth Pittman
Newsletter Editor • Tim Wooten
Dance Liaison • Keith Tuxhorn
Events Coordinator• Jeanne DeFriese
Membership • Sharon Isaac
General • Howard Raines, Margaret Valenti

2 January 2011

Double Eagle String
Band performances
2/19 Saturday opening for the
Austin Lounge Lizards, Cactus
Café at Texas Union Theater
3/6
Sunday 11:00 - 1:00
Threadgills North Bluegrass
Brunch
3/18 Friday not SXSW Opal
Divine at Penn Field

E-Reel Times!
Reel Times is available by e-mail.
Save a fast-growth pine by going
to our web site (www.aftm.us) and
signing up for e-mail delivery!

REEL TIMES is published by Austin
Friends of Traditional Music (AFTM), a nonprofit
organization (est. 1974) dedicated to encouraging
the performance and appreciation of all genres of
traditional music and dance. Copyright 2011 by
AFTM. PO Box 49608, Austin, Texas 78765
AFTM email: aftm@yahoogroups.com
Web: www.aftm.us

�– Continued on page 1

Larry Kirbo
Larry was born in Wilson,
Oklahoma in 1949. His earliest
childhood influences were his father, Les Paul, and Merle Travis.
The family moved to Texas when
Larry was 9. He got his first guitar
when he was 11. Since he played
by ear, his folks would buy him
records to learn. If the record had
a skip, he played the skip. After
moving to Austin in 1968, he met
Bill Neely where he worked. Bill
invited Larry to play with him at
Threadgill's along with Mance
Lipscomb and Kenneth Threadgill
and others that wandered in.
Mance called him "little Larry". Bill
and Larry played folk festivals in
several large cities including two
Smithsonian festivals in Washington DC. Their 2- piece band played
for 12 years. A memorial is in place
at the Long Center for the Performing Arts for Bill. Larry says
they never made any money playing, but they had lots of fun. Larry
is an Austin treasure - a finger style
guitar player who can weave a spell
with his fingers and amaze you with
his repertoire of great old tunes.
Remember Chet Atkins? If you like
Chet's music you'll love Larry.
AIO - Annoying Instrument
Orchestra
Several years ago NPR broadcast a segment polling people about
which musical instruments they
thought were the most annoying.
Among the instruments highest on
the list were bagpipes, accordion and
banjo, and others included were
drum, fiddle and whistle. As she listened, Yoshimi Masuo thought to
herself, "I know people who play a
lot of those instruments ... and I
don't think they are so annoying."
And so AIO, The Annoying Instrument Orchestra, was formed to
make pleasant and engaging music

on annoying instruments. AIO
plays world music from all over.
They specialize mostly in roots
music from the Balkans,
Scandinavia, and continental Europe, with the occasional foray into
the Orient and North America
played on fiddle, hurdy-gurdy, recorder, ukulele, vocals, saz,
doumbek, recorder, riqq, zils, hurdygurdy, harmonica, bombarde, clarinet, didgeridoo, harmonium, bassoon, guitar, mandolin, and accordion.
Gospel Jam
Every third Sunday for the last
several years a group of friends has
met at Artz Rib House to share and
sing rare old gospel, sacred and
popular religious songs of late 19th
and early 20th century America.
From Alfred Reed's "Walking in the
Way with Jesus" to Lemon
Jefferson's "Where Shall I Be", the
songs your Grandfather or GreatGrandmother may have cherished
will live again when the Gospel Jam
takes the stage at this year's festival. "Some to the Church-house do
repair not for the sermon but the
music there." --R.E. Clements

David Hamburger
Growing up outside of Boston,
multi-instrumentalist David Hamburger first picked up a guitar at
the age of 12. Through his teens,
Hamburger became interested in
blues and jazz, incorporating the
various styles into his playing. His
interest in blues was further stoked
while attending Wesleyan University when a friend taught him to play
slide. A stint at Manhattan's School
of Music where he was studying
jazz composition didn't last, as Hamburger left the graduate program to
play with a then-unknown Freedy
Johnston. Hamburger was also
playing with an R&amp;B band as well
as performing solo, finally gathering some of his favorite local musicians to help him record King of
the Brooklyn Delta in 1995. Extensive touring helped him to build a
live following around New York and
New England, while he continued
to contribute guitar, dobro, and pedal
steel to the recordings of others.
Indigo Rose, recorded in a little
more than a week, arrived in 1999.
Bourrée Texane
Bourrée Texane plays lively
French folk dances and
songs from Brittany, and
also southern and central
France, Québec and Louisiana. Some of the songs
date back to the Renaissance and the Middle Ages.
Bourrée is the name of an
old French folk dance. The
band, featuring the talented
Serge Laîné, Lisa Whatley
and Heather Gilmer will take
you to older times and distant places with their beautiful music. Heather, returning from Wisconsin especially for the festival, will
also do a workshop on
hurdy-gurdy, cabrette, diaJanuary 2011

3

�tonic accordeon and other French
folk instruments.
Ragged Union
"Ragged Union" (bluegrass) is
a brand new project featuring the
flatpicking, singing and songwriting
of Geoff Union (Two High String
Band). Joined by Chojo Jacques
(fiddle and mandolin), Josh Hoag
(bass) and Christina Mills (backing
vocal), "Ragged Union" is all about
driving guitar-centered original
bluegrass kinda like the picking of
Brian Sutton, with the songwriting
and singing of Norman Blake and
John Hartford. On the web at
w w w. r e v e r b n a t i o n . c o m /
raggedunion.
Jeff Moore and Chris Buckley
Jeff and Chris are two of the
finest proponents of the Celtic
sound anywhere. Jeff Moore specializes in sensitive and beautiful
guitar playing in "DADGAD" tuning while Chris Buckley plays Irish
and other Celtic tunes in his own
rampaging style. Both of these
guys are impeccable musicians individually but together they are out
of this world! You'll want to dance,
you'll want to shed a tear and you
won't want it to end.
Son Armado
Son Armado is a grassroots Son
Jarocho group in Austin working
with the community while supporting local struggles for justice and
the worldwide movimiento
Jaranero. Son Jarocho, a tradition
from the coastal state of Veracruz,
Mexico, is the melding of African,
Spanish &amp; Indigenous cultures during the process of colonization and
the practice of slavery in the Americas. During this time, Son Jarocho
emerged as a form of survival &amp; a
resistance to colonial control. Son
Jarocho is a popular education4 January 2011

based art form centered around
community gatherings &amp; celebrations known as Fandangos. The
Fandango involves music, dancing,
&amp; poetry in the context of a communally created and shared space,
with the tarima (a wooden dance
platform) as the gathering point.
The Carper Family
The Carper Family brings together three of Austin's most talented young country and bluegrass
singers and pickers. Melissa
"Daddy" Carper [vocals, bass],
Beth "Mama" Chrisman [vocals,
fiddle], and Jenn "Little Sister" Miori
[vocals, guitar] each grew up singing and playing music with their
families. This collaboration blends
stunning three part harmonies into
the finest old country, old-time, bluegrass, and swing tunes. Their
boiled-down and intimate renderings of old standards and original
material highlights the quality of their
united and solo voices, as well as
drawing out each player's abilities
with her accompanying instrument.
Already cheered on stages and
street corners from Anchorage to
New Orleans, the Carper Family
looks forward to showing off their
singing and playing for our festival.

Workshops
(subject to change - check latest
schedule at the festival)
Beginner Old-time Jam with
Dan Foster, Jerry Hagins &amp; Mark
Schruben.
This jam is open to pickers of
all levels, from the newest newbies
to the crankiest old curmudgeons.
We'll go around the circle when it's
your turn, you can call an Old Time
(Appalachian) tune you play and set
the tempo, or if you like you can
pass. Don't be shy, come and play!

A Cappella Balkan singing with
Austin Balkan Singers
In this workshop you will learn
two traditional songs from Croatia
and Bulgaria with bone-shaking
harmonies and catchy uneven
rhythms (9/8 anyone?). No prerequisites, we will teach pronunciation and music by ear.
Austin Balkan Singers is a 6 to
10 member women's folk choir that
has been learning and teaching traditional music from eastern Europe
since 1975. We sing often and with
as many harmonies as possible, and
perform occasionally.
Harmonica with Tim Wooten
How to learn an old timey tune
on the harmonica. Bring along your
harmonica in the key of D so we
can all be in the same key. We'll
mainly work on straight-key styles
- playing fiddle tunes on a harmonica in the same key as the tune.
We'll talk about using our tongues,
mouths and lungs. Beginners and
more advanced players are welcome.
Tuvan Throat Singing with Eliot
Stone
Eliot Stone has mastered the
vocal art of throat singing and has
developed a strong interest in the
musical cultures of southern Siberian republics. Throat singing is the
ability for a single singer to produce
multiple pitches simultaneously by
skillfully manipulating harmonic frequencies naturally present in the
fundamental pitch of the voice. The
practice of throat singing comprises
multiple styles and functions as a
symbolic interface with the natural
surroundings of the south Siberian
landscape as well as a unique and
beautiful expressive form.

�Introduction to Old Time Fiddling: The rhythm of the bow is
where it's at - with Damon O'Gan.
We'll focus on one or two tunes,
looking at how the bowing can
make dancers get off their seats.
It'll be casual, we'll have some fun,
and we won't care about what
brand of strings anyone's using! I
hope you'll join us if you have some
interest in the old time fiddling.
Damon O'Gan hails from
northern Wyoming, home of the
obscure, yet fanatic, Big Horn
Mountain style of fiddling. He's a
doctor of horses, and destroyer of
fiddle tunes. Damon's been playing the fiddle for a few years, but
now and then he fools someone into
thinking he actually knows what
he's doing. Like so many admirers
of fine music, Damon loves the
playing of Tommy Jarrell, probably
more than is considered healthy.
Intermediate Clawhammer
Banjo with Bernard Mollberg, Jerry
Hagins and Angie Wooten
Among the three workshop
leaders, Jerry, Bernard &amp; Angie
have wasted over 100 perfectly
good years playing old time
clawhammer style banjo. Primarily
for players who have learned the
basics of right hand technique, an
array of styles and ideas to bring
along your playing. Bring your banjo
for some hands-on playing!
Traditional instruments from
France with Serge Laine, Lisa
Whatley and Heather Gilmer
The musicians of Bourrée
Texane and Faux Paws would like
to introduce the instruments they
use to play traditional music and explain briefly how they work:
ola vielle à roue (French Hurdygurdy)
ol'accordéon diatonique (2-row
French diatonic Accordion)

ole cromorne (Crumhorn, 15th c.
capped double reed)
ola cabrette (Central France bellows-blown bagpipe from
Auvergne)
ole dulcitare (A hybrid combining
guitar body and mountain dulcimer
stringing)
ole violon (Fiddle)
Combinations of these instruments will be illustrated by the musicians playing traditional French
dance tunes and dance songs.
Guitar Workshop with Geoff
Union
Geoff Union's guitar workshop
will focus on strategies for developing licks you can use over basic
changes; making use of the major,
major pentatonic, and blues variations to play over I IV V changes
in the key of…..G!! Some scale
knowledge will be helpful but not
necessary.
Originally from North Carolina,
Geoff has lived in Austin for about
18 years. He started out on the
bass, and then the electric guitar,
and made his way around to bluegrass and flatpicking about 15 years
ago. He was drawn in by the
sounds of Doc Watson, and enjoys
that old style as much if not more
than the space grass. Geoff has
been with the Two High String
Band since 2002, and is just now
am putting together a brand new
project called "Ragged Union" featuring a bunch of original material
and lots of guitar!
Archaic Texas Fiddle Styles by
Howard Rains (with Tim Wooten
&amp; Dan Foster)
Texas is well known for its
fiddle music, and when Texas fiddling is mentioned, most folks think
of Texas Swing or the Texas Contest style. However, there was a
long and extremely diverse history

of Texas fiddling before those styles
were even conceived. Howard
Rains has been investigating these
styles and their regional aspects
and will be teaching about their similarities and differences to other
styles of Southern fiddling and how
some were, over time, transformed
into swing and contest style while
others became virtually extinct.
Howard will present several pieces
in several different styles from
across the state and teach one tune
if time allows. Howard Rains is a
native Texas artist and fiddler living in Austin. He has been painting,
drawing and playing music since his
earliest memory.

Tim Kerr

January 2011

5

�Dance News
Bruce Molsky and
Other Delights:
AFTM members who love to dance
will be treated to a new dance series and special events to welcome
in the spring.
On February 19, internationallyknown fiddler Bruce Molsky will
be leading the band for the Third
Saturday contra dance, at Carpenters' Hall, 500 Joesphine St.,
from 8-11 pm. Molsky will be joined
by local luminaries Howard Rains
on guitar, Jerry Hagins and Angie
Wooten on banjo and maybe others. They'll play for a dance program taught and called by popular
Austin caller Rich McMath. A beginners session will be held at 7:40,
and no costume, partner, or experience is required. Admission is $8
for AFTM members. Molsky
played for an Austin contra weekend over a decade ago, and we've
very excited to have him back.
For those who just don't have
enough regular dances and for musicians who'd like to do more
dance performances--there's
a new opportunity in San
Marcos. A contra dance will
be held every 4th Sunday
at the United Campus Ministry Wesley Building, 501 N.
Guadalupe St., near campus
from 2-5 pm. If you need
more information, or would
like your band to play please
contact Mary Lynn at
maylynnellingson@yahoo.com.
Just in time for spring, the annual Dance in the Park will
be held on the Zilker Park
Theater stage from 1-5 pm,
6 January 2011

tentatively planned for Sunday,
March 27. Music will be by two
of Austin's best contra bands, with
calling shared by the Austin contra
callers corps. The dance is free but
please consider a donation to support the bands.
And English Country dancers will
have additional chances to dance
in the next few months, as Fourth
Friday English dances will be
added to the schedule. They will be
held from 7:30 to 9:45 pm in the
back hall at Hancock Recreation
Center, upstairs. All dances are
taught and called. We may not have
this dance every month, so check
its status at austincontradance.org.
English dance is also held every
second Friday at First Cumberland
Presbyterian Church, 6800
Woodrow, from 7:30-10:30 pm.
Free English Country Dance
Friday, January 28, in the back
dance room at Hancock Recreation
Center at 811 East 41st Street. The
dance will go from 7:30-9:40.

Second Friday English Country
Dance February 11, from 7:3010:30 at the first Cumberland Presbyterian Church Fellowship Hall,
which is at 6800 Woodrow Ave. All
dances will be taught and called.
The cost is $6, students $5. For
more information contact Ann
McCracken at ann@mccr.org.
This dance is fragrance free.
Free English Country Dance
Friday, February 25 in the back
dance room at Hancock Recreation
Center, from 7:30-9:40.
A new contra dance will occur for
the first time on Sunday Jan 23
from 1:30pm til 5pm in San Marcos
at the United Campus Ministry
Wesley Bldg, 510 N. Guadalupe St.
Music by Fluorescense featuring
Max Cappleman, Stewart Rose,
and other wonderful musicians. For
more info, contact Mary Lynn
Ellingson at:
marylynnellingson@yahoo.com.

�AFTM/Pittman Spring
2011 House Concerts
Seating by reservation only, audience limited to 40; downtown Austin location. For information/reservations: ebpittman@austin.rr.com
or 512.476.3991
Orrin Star
2/12 Saturday 8:00 pm, plus workshops, private lessons same weekend.
Orrin Star is an award-winning
guitarist and mandolin player who
combines hot picking, cool singing
and good humor.
Once described as 'Arlo
Guthrie-meets-Doc Watson', he
was the 1976 National Flatpicking
Champion, has appeared on A Prairie Home Companion, and boasts a
repertoire ranging from bluegrass
standards to little-known folk gems,
Celtic fiddle tunes to finger style
blues.
He is also known for his skill
as a music teacher, with two instructional DVDs, a book, and a
column in Flatpicking Guitar magazine to his credit. He has led guitar
&amp; mandolin workshops throughout
the United States and in Europe.
www.orrinstar.com.
Bruce Molsky
2/18 Friday, 8:00 pm, plus workshops, same weekend, and a dance
on 2/19. See stories in this issue of
Reel Times
Evie Ladin
3/25 Friday, 8:00 pm, plus workshops, same weekend.
Evie is a fabulous banjo player,
singer and buck dancer who performs with the Stairwell Sisters,
here in Austin for in a solo show.

Fiddle Wizard
Bruce Molsky To Play
and Teach in Austin
AFTM is hosting Bruce
Molsky to play at a house concert
on February 18 and for a contra
dance on February 19 (read more
about these events and get contact
information for the house concert
in this issue of Reel Times). He'll
also be holding workshops during
the day on the 19th.
Bruce Molsky stands today as
the premier old-time fiddler in the
world, the defining virtuoso of
Appalachia's timeless folk music
traditions. That must feel odd for a
former engineer from the Bronx,
who didn't begin a music career until
he was forty. But folded into those
strange facts is the secret to his
unique genius.
In addition to a prolific solo career, performing on fiddle, guitar,
and banjo, Molsky frequently joins
genre-busting supergroups, like the
Grammy-nominated Fiddlers Four,
and Mozaik, with Hungarian Nikola
Parov, and Celtic giant Donal
Lunny. He was on Nickel Creek's
farewell tour, and performs in a trio
with Scottish fiddler Aly Bain and
Sweden's great Ale Moller.
"Playing in these kinds of
groups is an important part of what
I do," Molsky says. "The more cultures I discover, the more I realize
that folk music performs the same
function for everybody; and therefore is the same thing everywhere
- just spoken with different accents."
Great fiddlers ask him to teach
at their fiddle camps, including
Alasdair Fraser, Jay Ungar, and
Mark O'Connor, who says Molsky
has "a mystical awareness of how
to bring out the new in something
that is old."

"Young people realize this is a
guy who's tapped into the real deep
emotional wellsprings of this music," says Matt Glaser, director of
Berklee's American Roots Program. "He has a way of removing
everything that's unnecessary; and
young people are very hungry for
something real. Bruce has that in
spades."
That personal authenticity
deeply informs his music. Whether
performing an ancient reel from Virginia, a Swedish waltz, or a loping
cowboy ballad, Molsky presents
himself as exactly who he is. Rob
Simons, executive director of the
Cedar Cultural Center in Minneapolis, says that's the key to Molsky's
enormous appeal as a live performer: "He's that unique blend of
virtuoso and humble, nice guy that
is irresistible to audiences."
"I'm still a social musician," he
says, "in the sense that I talk to an
audience the way I talk to people
in my house; and I play for them
just like we're all in the living room
together. I want to present myself
as who I am; and this music as
what it is. The biggest lesson from
changing careers at mid-life is that
you discover the strength is not in
what you do; it's in who you are."
"America's reigning old time fiddler."
- Matt Glaser, fiddler-educator
"The Rembrandt of Appalachian
fiddle." - Darol Anger, fiddler
"There's an incredible power of history and tradition in his vocals." Linda Ronstadt, singer

January 2011

7

�Austin Friends of Traditional Music
PO Box 49608
Austin, Texas 78765

RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED

AFTM Jam Session: Every Second Sunday, 2 pm • Artz Ribhouse on South Lamar
Next Jam Sessions: Sunday Feb. 13, 2011 &amp; Sunday March 13, 2011 • Bring Instruments &amp; Voices!
Member Meetings before the session • All Welcome!

AUSTIN FRIENDS OF TRADITIONAL MUSIC
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
Name _____________________________________________ Phone ________________ Date____________
Address__________________________________________________________________________________
City____________________________________________________ State_______ Zip___________________
Email____________________________________________________________________________________
___$15 Individual

___$20 Family

___$30 Patron

___$50 Business/Sustaining

___Renewal

Total enclosed: $________. Please make check payable to Austin Friends of Traditional Music
and mail to: PO Box 49608, Austin, TX 78765. Thank you!
For more information email AFTM at aftm@yahoogroups.com or visit us on the web at: www.aftm.us

8 January 2011

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                    <text>REEL TIMES
SEPTEMBER 2011

VOL 36 • NO. 2

Austin String Band Festival Approaching!
AFTM is hosting our sixth string
band festival October 14, 15, and
16 at Camp Ben McCulloch across
from the Salt Lick (directions below). Because of its wild success
last year we again feature a Friday night Dance Till You Drop with
polkas, waltzes, two steps and oldtime barn dancing. As usual we'll
have great bands, fun jams, good
food and top-notch workshops at
this beautiful campground with
shade trees, a creek, and all the
facilities for a magical time. Gates
open at noon on Friday, October 14.
Although this is its sixth year
this festival is still small enough that
everyone can get right up close to
the musicians. And the musicians
are worth a close listen. The lineup
features Bluegrass, old-time Appalachian, Cajun, Mariachi, old Texas
fiddle tunes, Polish fiddle music and
Blues delivered by the best local
string bands and out of state headliners.
If you want to hear some great
music that's not in the mainstream,
rarely covered by mass media, but
is the blood of this country, pulsing
now as it ever has, bringing life to
our lives and stirring our bones –
dance music, ballads, and breakdowns – this is the festival for you.
Friday night, dance 'till you drop
to The Pickled Beats, Cajun Country Revival, Brian Marshall and
Foghorn Trio.

The Pickled Beats are a
hard-driving old-time string band
from the Carolinas. Fiddler Rich
Hartness and banjo picker Brett
Riggs evoke the powerhouse handand-glove banjo/fiddle style native
to NW North Carolina and SW Virginia, where they each spent many
formative years with musicianers
of previous generations.
Cajun Country Revival belts
out a fresh blend of Cajun music
with classic Honky Tonk, highlighting the lyrical and instrumental spirit
shared by the two genres. Comprised of multi-talented musicians
from across North America, the
Cajun Country Revival is a powerhouse group that plays their music
with such a joyful spirit the audience can't help but have fun.
Brian Marshall brings back a
unique nineteenth century, Polish/
Texas fiddle style that almost died
out decades ago. "A Houston native with Bremond roots, Marshall
has a fiddle style redolent of the Old
Country while containing elements
of Western swing. The tunes are
nearly all traditional, but they're
more for dancers than folklorists;
these guys are to Texas polka what
Beausoleil is to Cajun music." (John
Morthland, Texas Monthly).
Foghorn Trio features
Stephen "Sammy" Lind's blazing
fiddling and rough-and-tumble singing interlaced with Caleb Klauder's

hard-driving mandolin picking and
dry, dusty voice and adds French
Acadian Nadine Landry on vocals,
upright bass and guitar with intertwining harmonies throughout. The
Foghorn Trio draws from the same
repertoire that has always inspired
their work: the tunes and songs of
the American South, from the
hollers of Appalachia to the bling
of 1950s Nashville.
Saturday features The Carper
Family with Melissa "Daddy"
Carper (vocals, bass), Beth
"Mama" Chrisman (vocals, fiddle),
and Jenn "Little Sister" Miori (vocals, guitar) who each grew up
singing and playing music with their
families. By the time they created
their new "family band", each had
already led her own band and sat
in with some of Austin's finest musicians. But this particular collaboration has blended stunning three
part harmonies into the finest old
country, old-time, bluegrass, and
swing tunes. Their boiled-down and
intimate presentation highlights the
quality of their united and solo
voices, as well as drawing out each
player's abilities with her accompanying instrument.
Also featured is Ginny
Hawker &amp; Tracy Schwarz &amp;
Peter Schwarz. In concert, they
will cover everything from the
beautiful unaccompanied ballads of
the south to early bluegrass duets
– Continued on page 2

�An Evening of Love
Songs With Ojalá
Join us for a magical night of
world music performed in three languages (Persian, Spanish and Arabic). Back by popular demand, in a
rare performance after their last
sold-out show, the Latin-Middle
Eastern group Ojalá presents another unforgettable night of dance
and songs of love and longing from
the Middle East and Latin America.
The band, co-founded and directed by Javier Palacios of
Monterey, Mexico (guitar, vocals),
and Kamran Hooshmand of Tehran,
Iran (oud, cumbus, guitar, vocals),
will be backed by a stellar ensemble
of world music virtuosos from
around the globe performing an
amazing array of instruments and
genres from Persian 6/8 dances and
Arab-Iberian ballads to Venezuelan
horopos and Mexican boleros all
performed bilingually or trilingually
in a romantic setting. The group is
proud to have invited as its guest,
the wonderful Arab singer Julie
Slim-Nassif who will elevate the
night with her gorgeous ornamented
voice.
The ensemble includes:
Anne Alexander - Middle Eastern
percussion
Theodore Bick - Hurdy gurdy
Victor Eijkhout - Bass, recorder
Mike Maddux - Piano, accordion,
bandonéon

Ken Maranian - Clarinet
Lisa Schneider - Violin
Don Weeda - Accordion
Jay Whitley - Latin &amp; Middle
Eastern percussion
Victor Villegas - Venezuelan
cuatro
Hector Chang - Venezuelan
maracas, guitar
Momo's cozy space is a perfect place for this romantic and fun
evening with their full bar and wonderful vibe. Come ready to dance,
listen or otherwise be swept off
your feet!
Saturday,
September
24,
9 p.m. – 11:30 p.m., Momo's Club,
618 W 6th Street
Doors: 8:30 pm, Show: 9 pm.
Cover: $10 General Admission at
the door

AFTM/Central Market
Showcase, Nov. 19th
AFTM and Central Market feature
another great showcase of Austin
bands at Central Market on November 19th at 5 p.m. Great flatpicker
Max Zimmet and band open the
show, followed by the wonderful
vocal and instrumental wizards The
Carper Family, and ending with The
Lost Pines' fresh, driving bluegrass.

AFTM Officers/Board 2011
President • Tim Wooten
Vice-President • Angie Wooten
Secretary • Christy Foster
Treasurer • Cheryl Dehut
Newsletter Editor • Tim Wooten
Events Coordinator• Jeanne DeFriese
Membership &amp; Web • Sharon Isaac
Volunteers • Margaret Valenti
Sponsorships • Barbara Deane

2 September 2011

– String Band Festival from page 1

to the songs of The Carter Family.
You'll hear fiddle tunes, gospel
songs as done in rural families, even
some classic country songs. Every
song they do means something special to them and invites you to join
them in the celebration of your heritage.
Another featured performer,
Steve James, is well-known
among devotees of contemporary
acoustic folk and blues; this notoriety is based on numerous critically
acclaimed recordings, a tireless international tour schedule and a
sheaf of published work including
articles, instruction books and videos. His vocals and instrumental
versatility (on guitar, slide guitar,
mandolin, guitar-banjo) also makes
him a favorite at music camps and
workshop programs. He's been
heard on A Prairie Home Companion, The House Of Blues Network
and many other syndicated programs worldwide.
Unfortunately we don't have
the space to tell you about all the
bands. See below for the complete
lineup.
But the stage bands are not the
whole story. Camp Ben's grounds
are lovely, with plenty of big old
shade trees and lots of room for
camping and jamming. Some of the
best music is off-stage in sessions
lasting till the wee hours. Bring
your banjos, guitars, fiddles, man-

REEL TIMES is published by Austin
Friends of Traditional Music (AFTM), a nonprofit
organization (est. 1974) dedicated to encouraging
the performance and appreciation of all genres of
traditional music and dance. Copyright 2011 by
AFTM. PO Box 49608, Austin, Texas 78765
AFTM email: AFTMTexas@gmail.com
Web: www.aftm.us

�dolins and other instruments – sit
under the trees and jam, sing, dance,
eat, and make merry! The admission price gets you into a huge variety of workshops such as banjo,
fiddle, singing and dancing (see below for more details). There is also
a playground and a ukulele workshop for the youngsters.
Admission fees are a reasonable $45 for weekend general admission with discounts for online
registration, partial weekends, students and Austin Friends of Traditional Music members. Youth 16
and under and volunteers get in free!
See detailed prices below.
Volunteer! For a free day's admission, volunteer by reviewing the
volunteer spreadsheet: http://
aftm.us/events/fall-stringband-festival/2010-volunteer-sign-up/. Then
email margaretevalenti@gmail.com
with the shift of your choice. We
really need your help!
Directions:
Camp Ben
McCulloch is within a few minutes
of Austin, located 11 miles south of
Highway 290 West on Farm Road
1826. From I-35, take Loop 4 to
downtown Buda. Head west on
Farm Road 967 for 11 miles, then
turn left on Farm Road 1826 for 1/
2 mile – Camp Ben McCulloch is
on the left .

Admission Fees
If you take advantage of our online
registration you will save another
$5 on every ticket price! See our
website, www.aftm.us for online
registration.
General Admission
Friday only ................... $25
($20 for AFTM Member)
Saturday only ................... $35
($30 for AFTM Member)
Weekend .......................... $45
($40 for AFTM Member)
Youth (16 and under) ... FREE

Student w/ID
Friday only ....................... $15
($10 for AFTM Member)
Student Saturday only ...... $25
($20 for AFTM Member)
Student Weekend ............. $30
($25 for AFTM Member)
Camping is an additional fee:
Primitive Site ........... $15/night
Site with electric ..... $20/night
Note: Camping space is available
on first come first served basis.

ASBF Event Listing
Friday Evening, October 14th,
“Dance 'Til You Drop”
7 p.m. – Rich Hartness &amp; the Pickled Beats (Old-time barn dancing)
8 p.m. – Cajun Country Revival
(Cajun of course)
9 p.m. – Brian Marshall (Texas Polish Music - polkas, waltzes and twosteps)
10 p.m. – Foghorn Trio - (More
old-time barn dancing)
Saturday, October 15th
11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Workshops
2 p.m. Rains &amp; Keane
3 p.m. Double Eagle String
Band
4 p.m. The Lost Pines
5 p.m. Mariachi Corbetas
6:30 p.m. The Carper Family
7:30 p.m. Ginny Hawker &amp; Tracy
Schwarz &amp; Peter
Schwarz
8:30 p.m. Steve James
9:30 p.m. Rich Hartness &amp; The
Pickled Beats
Sunday, October 16th
10:30am - Gospel Sing Along led
by Ginny Hawker

ASBF 2011 Saturday
Workshops
The workshop topics are subject to
change. When the times are set
they will be posted on our website,
www.aftm.us. This is the current
lineup:
Intermediate banjo - Brett Riggs
and Rich Hartness (fiddle), Round
Peak style
Beginning
Ukulele
For
Ukesters of All Ages - Jessica
Leigh Graves - how to tune your
ukulele, how to hold your ukulele
when seated and standing, basic
strumming patterns, 3 to 5 chords
and how to read a chord chart, and
a whole song! Bring your own uke.
Fiddle (lead and 2nd fiddle, cajun
duets) - Tracy and Peter Schwarz
Singing from the Heart - Ginny
Hawker
Mandolin-guitar, rags and more Brian Schmiel (mandolin) and Rich
Hartness (guitar)
Dobro - Gary Mortenson
Texas Fiddle tunes - Howard
Rains and Peter Keane
Bluegrass jam - Talia Brice
Mountain dulcimer - Mark
Gilston
Fiddle Tunes for Banjo - Chuck
Middleton and Dan Foster. Fairly
basic level.
Celtic Jam - Leader to be announced
Old Time Jam - Jerry Hagins and
Dan Foster
The following workshops are still
tentative:
Blues guitar - Steve James
Shape note singing
Clogging dance workshop
Mance Lipscomb style guitar and
stories - Gary Smith
Jamming anytime!

September 2011

3

�Dance News
Contra Dance Events
Regular dances on First Fridays,
Second Saturdays and every
Wednesday. See the website
www.taada.us for details.
Special Events:
Sept. 30: Special Contra Dance
featuring the Noteboys (formerly
the Wiretappers) from the Midwest
8 pm at Carpenter's Hall.
Oct. 28-30: Fire Ant Frolic contra
dance weekend at the Federation
of Women's Clubs Grand Ballroom
in Austin . Beth Molaro calling
with Giant Robot Dance. http://
www.fireantfrolic.com
English Country Dance
Events Spring 2012
Save the date - March 23-25,
2012. Austin will be hosting the next
Set for Spring English dance weekend at the Texas Federation of
Women's Clubs, Grand Ballroom.
We will have calling by Scott Higgs
and music by Foxfire (Daron Douglas and Karen Axelrod).
Watch for more information on
this event as we get closer, including requests for help. If you know
you will want to help with this event,
contact Chuck Roth, or one of the
other English Dance Committee
members. Also, check the website
www.setforspring.org as more information will be posted as it becomes available.
English Dancing in Austin
The Austin English Country Dance
group typically dances 7:30 to 10:30
pm on the second Friday of the
month at the First Cumberland
Presbyterian Church Fellowship
Hall, which is at 6800 Woodrow
Ave (one block South of Justin
Lane). Note: The entrance into the
Fellowship Hall is from the parking
4 September 2011

lot in the back of the complex.
• All dances will be taught and
called by our local Austin English
callers.
• The cost is $6 when we have recorded music and $9 when we
have a live band. Discounts are
offered for TAADA members and
students. For more information
contact Ann McCracken at
ann@mccr.org.
• There will be an English Country
Dance in the back dance room at
Hancock Recreation Center on
September 23. This is a free dance.
Note: There will not be 4th Friday
English dances October - December, due to the holidays and other
conflicts, but these dances will resume after the first of the year.
• Please do not wear fragrances to
our dances to be considerate of
dancers with allergies.

Clickety Cloggers
www.clicketycloggers.com
Up-coming exhibition team performances:
Saturday, October 15, 2011 –
State Fair (Dallas) 12 - 2 p.m.
Saturday, November 12, 2011–
Brazos Valley Worldfest (College
Station) – time TBA
Beginning Clogging Lessons:
Let us introduce you to a style of
dance that is a unique American
tradition!
• You do not need a partner or any
previous dancing experience.
• You'll learn the eight basic clogging movements that form the foundation for most clogging steps.
• You'll learn several clogging line
dances and get cue sheets and a
music CD.
• You will receive information about
the history of clogging and work-

shop information for Austin,Texas,
and the U.S.
• Come and visit us to see if this
form of dance, which is also great
aerobic exercise, is for you.
Cost is $60 for a set of 10 to 12
lessons. (What a deal!) Family discounts are available.
Thursdays, 6:3 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Fall lessons will run from September 15th to December 8th, 2011.
We dance at the D'Ette Dance Studio, 1807 Slaughter Lane, Suite 325,
Austin, TX. 78748.

Lone Star Swing Band
Brings All-Star Lineup
to San Marcos
The Supple Folk Music series hosts
the Lone Star Swing band playing
in the LBJ Ballroom on Sept 30th
from 7:30-10 p.m. at the Texas
State University-San Marcos campus.
Lone Star Swing, from Austin,
Texas, plays an energetic blend of
western swing, jazz, and traditional
country music that will have you
tapping your toes and twirling
around the dance floor. The band
includes an all-star lineup of musicians who have performed throughout North America and Europe with
some of the biggest names in music.
Johnny Gimble (fiddle and mandolin) was a regular member of the
legendary Bob Wills and His Texas
Playboys. Gimble has also performed and recorded with Merle
Haggard, Willie Nelson, George
Strait, and numerous other country
stars.
Rick McRae (guitar and vocals) and Terry Hale (bass) are
regular members of country superstar George Strait's Ace in the Hole

�Band, and they have performed and
recorded with numerous other
prominent artists.
Paul Glasse (mandolin and vocals) has performed with Willie
Nelson, Lyle Lovett, Asleep at the
Wheel, Kelly Willis, Joe Ely, Ray
Price, Hank Thompson, and others.
Billy Curtis (fiddle, saxophone,
and vocals) has played with
Houston's popular Wild River Band,
as well as with western swing legends Johnny Gimble and Herb
Remington.
Gary Hartman (rhythm guitar
and vocals) has performed throughout the United States and Europe,
sharing the stage with such popular artists as Johnny Rodriguez,
Stoney LaRue, Herb Remington,
and Johnny Gimble.
Herb Remington (steel guitar)
was a regular member of Bob Wills
and His Texas Playboys and has
performed with many other prominent artists.
Ramona Reed (vocalist) was
a regular member of Bob Wills and
His Texas Playboys and also has
had a very successful solo career.
Floyd Domino (keyboards) is a
multiple Grammy Award winner
who has performed with George
Strait, Waylon Jennings, Merle
Haggard, and Asleep at the Wheel.
Cindy Cashdollar (steel guitar)
is also a multiple Grammy Award
winner who has worked with Bob
Dylan, Van Morrison, Rod Stewart,
Asleep at the Wheel, and others.
Wes Starr (drums) has performed with Chuck Berry, Delbert
McClinton, Stevie Ray Vaughan,
Marcia Ball, and Asleep at the
Wheel.
For more information contact
Liz McDonald at (512) 245-3501
or on the web at http://
www.encoreseries.txstate.edu/
fall_events.html

Swannanoa Gathering
Too Good to be True
(Almost)
Picture this: a week of old time
music and dancing set in the lush
rolling mountains of Appalachia,
where there's a jam around every
corner and everybody knows your
name.
Sounds too good to be true,
right? I got to experience this state
of bliss for the first time in July,
when I joined fellow AFTM members Sharon Isaac, Jeannie
DeFriese, Barbara Deane, and
Howard Rains for the Old Time
Week of the Swannanoa Gathering of Friends.
The Old Time Gathering is part
of a four-week summer series of
music workshops held at Warren
Wilson College, a small liberal arts
college just outside of Asheville,
NC. For the last twenty summers,
like-minded old time enthusiasts
have made the pilgrimage from
around the world to immerse themselves in the culture and arts of Appalachia.
The week is structured so that
there is literally something going on
every hour of the day. Students
have the option of selecting up to
three daily workshops taught by
amazing musicians including Dirk
Powell, Rayna Gellert, John
Herrmann, Paul Brown, and Alice
Gerard, just to name a few. The
time between these classes is spent
at onsite concerts and dining on
scrumptious food from the college's
organic farm. Once you factor into
this timeframe the non-stop jamming taking place all over the college campus, you can pretty much
forget about sleeping for the week.
Needless to say, my first time
at Swannanoa was overwhelmingly
positive. From the minute I stepped
off the plane, I saw more banjos at

the Asheville airport alone than I
had ever seen before in one place!
The 300 other participants were
among some of the nicest people I
have ever met, and it was truly inspiring to meet such kindred spirits
– all of whom were just as excited
to be there as I was – united by a
shared passion for music.
While my main reason for attending Swannanoa was to study
banjo, I left with a full course in the
old time tradition. Spending a week
immersed day and night in the tunes
had a real impact on my understanding and relationship to the music. I
found the real beauty of old time
music lies in its down-to-earth nature that never takes itself too seriously. This message really hit home
when John Herrmann, banjo player
extraordinaire and my teacher for
the week, shared with our class the
secret to playing old time music. "If
all else fails and you don't know the
tune," he said, "just play CottonEyed Joe! And then when the song
ends, ask yourself how that tune
was different from Cotton-Eyed
Joe…"
After a week in North Carolina, coming home to Austin was
rough. I suffered from bouts of
fiddle withdrawal and had to come
up with answers every time my
well-meaning coworkers asked,
"How was band camp?" I've resigned myself to the fact that few
things in life will be as fun as
Swannanoa. Guess that means I'll
have to go to Clifftop next summer,
too!

– Sara Cottingham

September 2011

5

�Austin Friends of Traditional Music
PO Box 49608
Austin, Texas 78765
Jam Sessions!
Celtic Jam Session
First Saturday of each month
Canyon Grill Restaurant/Icehouse
3799 E. Hwy. 290 West
Dripping Springs, TX
canyongrillicehouse.com
Old Time Jam
Second Sunday of each month,
Austin Friends of Traditional Music
2 p.m. – 5 p.m.
Artz Ribhouse (South Lamar) - upper
room, www.aftm.us

RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED

AFTM Jam Session: Every Second Sunday, 2 pm • Artz Ribhouse on South Lamar
Next Jam Sessions: Sunday Oct. 9, 2011 &amp; Sunday Nov. 13, 2011 • Bring Instruments &amp; Voices!
Member Meetings before the session • All Welcome!

AUSTIN FRIENDS OF TRADITIONAL MUSIC
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
Name _____________________________________________ Phone ________________ Date____________
Address__________________________________________________________________________________
City____________________________________________________ State_______ Zip___________________
Email____________________________________________________________________________________
___$15 Student ___$20 Individual

___$25 Family ___$50 Business ___ $25 Band/Dance Group

___$80 5-year/Individual ___$100 5-year/Family

___$300 Lifetime

___Renewal

Total enclosed: $________. Please make check payable to Austin Friends of Traditional Music
and mail to: PO Box 49608, Austin, TX 78765. Paypal accepted on our website at www.aftm.us
For more information email AFTM at AFTMTexas@gmail.com or visit us on the web at: www.aftm.us
6 September 2011

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                    <text>REEL TIMES

JANUARY 2012

VOL 37 • NO. 1

AFTM Midwinter Festival Sat. Jan. 28!
To hear some mighty-fine traditional music, and learn how to pick
and sing – come out to our Midwinter Festival on Saturday afternoon and evening January 28, 2012
at Dougherty Arts Center, 1110
Barton Springs Road, Austin,
Texas. The doors will open at
11:45 a.m. and the last band will be
done at 10:00 p.m.
What is the AFTM Midwinter
Festival?
• Great traditional music from talented local bands. We've got a topnotch lineup of bands offering a
smorgasbord of music from the
U.S. and around the world in one
of the best listening spaces in town!
(See tentative line-up below).
• Workshops. Choose from several workshops at no additional
charge including a kid's workshop,
singing, dance, fiddle, banjo and
mandolin.

12 pm
1 pm
2 pm
3 pm
4 pm
5 pm
6 pm
7 pm
8 pm
9 pm

• Delicious food. Great, healthy
food and drink choices served hot
and priced right.
• A chance to see old friends, make
new friends and find a vacant spot
to jam.
• A silent auction. Find an item you
like and make your bid. You may
find a real gem of a CD, instrument
or service.
• An opportunity to support traditional music and dance. The Midwinter Festival is Austin Friends of
Traditional Music's main fund
raiser. The funds go to support
showcases, house concerts, our
Austin Stringband Festival and
other traditional music and dance
events in the Austin area.
The bands, workshop leaders
and many volunteers are donating
their time and talent to support the
Austin Friends of Traditional Music. Please come out and give us
your support!

Austin Mandolin Orchestra
Blue Buckskin Whinchers (traditional folk)
Yuan Li Chang (Guzheng/Ancient Chinese Harp)
Agbadza Sogo (African drummers)
Hem &amp; Haw (vintage honky tonk/bluegrass)
Fiddlisa (International and American)
Third Rail (bluegrass)
Square Dance! to the Good Old Timers &amp; caller Rich McMath
Hays County Gals &amp; Pals (old time country and cowboy)
Reed Island Rounders (Appalachian old time)

The first band kicks off at noon.
Check our website at www.aftm.us
for more details and schedule updates. Here's a description of the
stage bands:
Austin Mandolin Orchestra is a
community orchestra directed by
Joel Hobbs (see story about his CD
release in this issue). The orchestra includes over 20 members playing mandolin family instruments mandolin, mandola, and mandocello.
Blue Buckskin Whinchers are
musicians who specialize in traditional music, songs &amp; folk tales
from the USA, British Isle, around
the world and across the centuries.
The music played is traditional and
represents styles from Medieval,
Renaissance,15th-16th centuries
and contemporary periods.
Yuanli Chang is from Taiwan and
plays the Chinese Harp/Zither or
Guzheng, as it is called in China.
The Guzheng is the ancestor of several Asian zither instruments, it is a
26-stringed instrument with movable bridges. It has a very soft and
beautiful sound. Yunali specializes
in ancient Chinese instruments - she
also plays the Yanggin (Chinese piano) and the Erhu (Chinese violin).
Yuanli has been playing these ancient Chinese classical instruments
– Festival lineup continued on page 2

�Upcoming AFTM
Board Elections
AFTM Board Elections Coming in
April - would YOU like to serve on
the Board?
The following Board members
are willing to serve in their current
positions for another year:
President: Tim Wooten (also
Newsletter Editor)
Vice President: Angie Wooten
Secretary: Christy Foster
Treasurer: Cheryl Dehut
Events: Jeanne DeFriese
Volunteers: Maggie Valenti
Sponsorships: Barbara Dean
Sharon Isaac is resigning from
the board but will continue to manage the website and membership.
In addition to the positions noted
above, the board may have additional members, who may be asked
to take on specific tasks before or
after being elected to the board.
Please let us know if you would like
to be on our board or otherwise be
more involved!
The board meetings are on the
2nd Sunday each month at 12:30
pm, and currently the meeting location is the back room at Artz
Ribhouse. Board members are
expected to attend at least 10 of
the 12 meetings, and to appoint a
proxy for any meeting they cannot
attend. Board members are expected to help to put on AFTM

events. Any AFTM member of six
month's duration or more who is
willing to work is qualified to serve
on the board.
Nominations from the board
and the floor will be made and
closed at the meeting on March 11.
The list of nominees will be emailed
to the membership via the Yahoo
group, and also will be published on
the web-site. The election will take
place this year on April 8. Every
current member is eligible to vote,
and must be present at the meeting
to cast a vote.

New CD from Joel Hobbs
Longstanding AFTM supporter
Joel Hobbs released a new CD!
Good Dogs Always Eat is a delightful instrumental journey of North
and South American influenced
original music. Joel wrote and arranged all twelve 12 tunes including swing tunes, waltzes, a bossa, a
bolero, a blues, a lament, a kwela
and other genre-bending tunes. He
plays all the instruments (including
mandolin, mandola and mandocello)
on some tunes but for most of the
record is joined by Bret Boyer on
guitar and Sean Kelly on upright
bass.
Joel will be performing with the
Austin Mandolin Orchestra at the
AFTM Midwinter Festival (see
story this issue). Come out and hear
Joel and pick up a CD.

AFTM Officers/Board 2011/2012
President • Tim Wooten
Vice-President • Angie Wooten
Secretary • Christy Foster
Treasurer • Cheryl Dehut
Newsletter Editor • Tim Wooten
Dance Liaison • Keith Tuxhorn
Events Coordinator• Jeanne DeFriese
Membership • Sharon Isaac
Volunteers • Margaret Valenti
Sponsorships • Barbara Dean
2 January 2012

– Festival lineup continued from page 1

since she was 12 years old. She
has played in the Chinese Symphony and placed in Chinese Chamber Orchestra competitions in her
home town of Kaohsiung City, Taiwan.
Agbadza Sogo – Agbadza is a
very popular recreational dance.
The name itself means something
like "for everybody". If you ever get
a chance to attend a traditional Ewe
event, even you, a foreign visitor,
will be expected to dance It entertains people at funerals, weddings
and any other get-together or party.
The drummers like to go on for
hours! But don't think that's boring
or monotonous. When Africans play
drum, more is going on than we
think.
In almost all West African
drumming ensembles, there is a lead
drum or master drum which leads
the group. To keep the excitement
up, a skillful Master Drummer will
introduce a new beat and song at
just the right moment. He can even
blend in other rhythms (like Agbekor
or Ageshe) that sound very similar.
The master drummer tells the ensemble when to play and when to
stop. He also plays signals telling
the other players to change the
tempo or the drumming pattern.
In Ewe drumming, the term
master drum is not limited to one

REEL TIMES is published by Austin
Friends of Traditional Music (AFTM), a nonprofit
organization (est. 1974) dedicated to encouraging
the performance and appreciation of all genres of
traditional music and dance. Copyright 2012 by
AFTM. PO Box 49608, Austin, Texas 78765
AFTM email: aftm@yahoogroups.com
Web: www.aftm.us

�particular type of drum. A master
drum can be an atsimevu, sogo,
kroboto, totodzi, or an agboba. Different master drums are used in
different pieces. For example, if a
group is playing "Agbadza", the
master drummer will be playing the
sogo.
Hem &amp; Haw is Austin's newest
acoustic duo of Jenn Miori and Ben
Hodges. With their mandolin and
guitar and singing true-to-form harmony, they give tasteful re-workings of the South's most beautiful
music. Ben Hodges grew up playing blues guitar in Memphis, and as
a youth traveled the country, finally
settling in Texas. His high tenor falsetto is known to melt hearts! Jenn
Miori developed her angelic voice
and sense of harmony in her
family's Houston church, and
learned guitar from her pastor father. Miori now co-fronts Austin
country trio The Carper Family, and
is quickly becoming known as one
of Austin's finest country vocalists.
With soul and style that enraptures
the audience, Hem and Haw transports the listener to a place where
country, bluegrass and old time meet
their modern makers at their best.
Fiddlisa &amp; Friends features local Austin fiddler, Lisa Schneider,
performing a variety of American
and International folk tunes with a
stellar line-up of "friends" including
the ubiquitous Jerry Hagins, the
fabulous Theo Bick (hurdy-gurdy),
Celtic whistle-player extraordinaire,
Jim Carpetas, Eric Vormelker,
Genevieve Kent (drum) &amp; a lot of
her wonderful fiddle students! They
will be performing both traditional
and original pieces including some
from Lisa's debut solo CD,
"Milkwood Thistle Promenade."
Third Rail was founded in July of
2010, when mandolinist JP Shafer

(Youngest Texas State Mandolin
Champion) and bassist Susannah
Armstrong met at Camp Bluegrass.
Their repertoire includes bluegrass,
classic country duets, and swing/
jazz standards, among other things.
Susannah and J.P. are both 16years old.
"If you're after some fast paced
hot licks, check out the kids from
Third Rail. They blend traditional
bluegrass with a new wave infusion that is all grown up. Hot on the
coat-tails of the great Monroe, Flatt
and Scruggs, these young musicians
have seen fit to bring a fresh ring
to their sound courtesy of the likes
of Chris Thile and the science
project sounds of Ricky Skaggs. It's
bluegrass with hints of the blues,
folk, and gypsy jazz." - Judd Strom
The Good Old Timers play old
time music the old time way, nothing too fancy, just a fiddle, banjo,
guitar and a bass. They play rare
traditional tunes that have been
passed down from friends, family,
and old recordings. The type of
music the Good Old Timers play is
always lead by the fiddle playing
the melody and supported by the
other instruments. It creates a driving rhythm that is fun for listening
and great for dancing.
Hays County Gals and Pals
formed in 1986 to help celebrate
the Texas Sesquicentennial. After
playing old cowboy songs locally for
a few years, the band recorded a
CD in 1992 and started performing
at cowboy gatherings around the
country. A latter version of the
group, including Jill Jones (rhythm
guitar and award winning yodeler),
Ginger Evans (upright bass) and
Greg Lowry (instrumentalist
extraordinaire) recorded another
CD and performed till the late
1990s. They are now doing a rare
reunion set for the AFTM Mid-Win-

ter festival with old traditional cowboy songs, hits from the silver
screen era, and contemporary songs
about cowboys.
Reed Island Rounders are
known for their variety of music.
From the foot-stomping dance tunes
of the Blue Ridge to romantic
waltzes, and beyond to dark and
lonesome mountain tunes or a chilling ballad, they evoke the soul of
Appalachian life.
Workshops (subject to change –
check latest schedule at the festival)
1:30 pm - 2:15 pm:
Room A. J.P. Fraley - Tall Tales
and Tunes of a Mountain Fiddler
Billy Cornette and Betty Vornbrock
shared a long friendship with Kentucky musicians J.P &amp; Annadeene
Fraley. Come listen to their legacy
of fiddle tunes and songs, with a
good J.P. story (-- or is it a lie?) or
two thrown in.
Room B. Clawhammer Banjo
Basics, Jerry Hagins
Jerry will demonstrate basic
clawhammer techniques and
tunings, and discuss tips for learning tunes and playing with others.
2:30 pm - 3:15 pm:
Room A. Old Time Fiddling of
the Appalachian Mountains,
Betty Vornbrock
Betty will discuss &amp; play the styles
of her Kentucky, West Virginia, and
Blue Ridge favorite fiddlers. Enjoy
tunes from Melvin Wine, Wilson
Douglas, Clyde Davenport, Emmet
Lundy, Paul Smith, and J.P. Fraley.
Billy Cornette will join her on guitar.
January 2012

3

�Room B. Pentatonic Mandolin,
Joel Hobbs
Whether you want to learn to pick
simple tunes by ear or you want to
better improvise and play up the
neck, pentatonic scales are essential. In this workshop for all mandolin players, you will learn a closed
position pentatonic scale that you
can use to easily play familiar melodies like Amazing Grace by ear in
any key. You'll also learn how to
use this scale for improvising your
own solos.
Room C. Dances, Play Parties &amp;
Singing Games, Malissa
Mollberg
Malissa introduces five musical
activities that can be enjoyed by
children in party, school and camp
settings, as well as family gatherings. Each activity involves singing
and movement. The context is
simple. They are traditional games
that children and young people have

enjoyed for generations. This is an
interactive workshop, come prepared to play! A handout will be
available for you to take home.

A few pairs of bones will be available (and for sale) for this workshop. If you have some already,
please bring them along.

3:30 pm - 4:15 pm:

4:30 pm - 5:15 pm:

Room B. New Dimensions in
Clawhammer Banjo - Dave
Polacheck
New Dimensions in Clawhammer
Banjo will cover a range of songs
and tunes from various sources, not
usually played on the five string
banjo in clawhammer style. We will
also explore a recent innovation in
the design of the instrument.

Room B. Back-up Guitar, Ethan
Azarian
Ethan will demonstrate and talk
about some of the bass runs that
can be used and how to keep the
rhythm steady for the fiddlers and
banjo players.

Room C. Bones workshop, Rich
MacMath
Rich learned to play the bones from
Percy Danforth and the class will
be learning with a pair of Danforth
Bones. We will learn how to hold
the bones and play bone basics, the
tap and the triplet, and maybe more.

Room C. Square Dancing for Beginners, Rich MacMath
No dance experience and no partner required. Come and have fun
learning do si do, allemande left and
big ball of yarn. There will be a
square dance on stage later in the
evening where you will get the opportunity to try out what you
learned in class.

Dance News
Community Dance
Feb
eb.. 25th!
AFTM is pleased to announce a
community dance at Carpenter's
Union Hall, 400 Josephine Street
(near the intersection of Lamar
Blvd. and Barton Springs Road,
behind P. Terry's Burger Stand) on
February 25th, 2012 from 7:30 to
11:30 p.m. Two callers, two bands,
unlimited fun!
The dance will focus on square
dances and include circles, a waltz
or two and whatever the callers
throw in. Great local caller Rich
MacMath will call first backed by
Double Eagle String Band and then
Michael Ismerio will call backed by
Steelhead Stringband. Prices will be
low and all are welcome! Michael
4 January 2012

is a popular square dance caller, fiddler and community organizer from
the Portland area who has called
dances across the USA. He will
also be teaching fiddle workshops
and a square dance calling
workshop.Check our website
(www.aftm.us) for further details.

First Friday Contra
Dances
Come join us to contra dance each
first Friday of the month at
Carpenter's Union Hall, 400
Josephine Street (near the intersection of Lamar Blvd. and Barton
Springs Road, behind P. Terry's
Burger Stand). The hall opens at
7pm, and the dance begins at 7:30
pm with a walk-through of the ba-

sic moves. There is a break after
9pm, and the dance continues until
11:00 pm. Regular admission $9,
TAADA members $8, Students $5
Please note that this is a fragrancefree dance.
There is ample parking, reserved for the dance, in the unpaved
parking lot directly behind
Carpenter's Union Hall, where
you'll see the silver trailer for Flip
Happy Crepes. From the parking
lot, the dance hall is in the larger
building on the left side, and you can
enter the building through the side
door on the right side of that building.
Questions? Send an e-mail to
John Kulas or call 512-296-1029.
Our dance events are also listed on

�MeetUp.com: www.meetup.com/
Austin-Contra-Dancers/

English Country Dance
It's fun, it's elegant, it's easy to learn
– it's English Country dancing! If
you've enjoyed contra dancing, you
should have a lot of fun with this
style. It's not as vigorous as a contra dance, but some of the dances
can move quite quickly. The music
and the dances emphasize a playful yet elegant dance style. All
dances are fragrance-free.
We usually dance on the 2nd
Friday at First Cumberland Presbyterian Church. Admission is $6
(students and TAADA members
pay $5), $9 and $8 when we have
live music. In addition, we often
have a 4th Friday English dance
(with free admission) in the back
room at Hancock Rec Center.
Upcoming English Country
Dances:
Jan. 27, 7:30 - 9:45 pm Hancock
Feb. 10, 7:30 - 10:30 pm
Cumberland ($6/$5 admission)
Feb. 24, 7:30 - 9:45 pm Hancock
First Cumberland Presbyterian
Church is at 6800 Woodrow Ave.
Hancock Rec Center is at 811 E.
41st St.

Third Saturday Contra
Dances
Come join us each month at: St.
Paul Lutheran School 3501 Red
River, in Austin. The dance begins
at 7:30 pm with a walk-through of
the basic moves, and continues until 11:00 pm. Regular admission $9,
TAADA members $8, Students $5.
Please note that this is a fragrancefree dance.
For more info call Chuck Roth
at (512) 453-8936. Our dance
events are also listed on
MeetUp.com: www.meetup.com/
Austin-Contra-Dancers/

Wednesday Night Contra Dance
The Austin Barn Dancers originated
when AFTM started a jam session
at Hancock Recreation Center over
30 years ago. Somebody (the name
was lost in time) said "Hey, this is a
good dance floor so let's dance!"
and thus the dancing started. The
dancing went through several variations and around 1990 became predominately contra dance.
To this day the Wednesday
night dance at HRC is still a community dance with around 40-60
dancers dancing to the music of
LOCO (Local On-Call Orchestra)
– an open band of 3-10+ members
with many excellent musicians,
where anyone is welcome to come
and play. The callers call a variety
of dances, whether it be contras,
squares, circles, or whatever. This
is a free dance courtesy of the City
of Austin and Austin Parks and
Recreation Department.
The Austin Barn Dancers meet
every Wednesday night at Hancock
Recreation Center from 7:30 until
9:45 pm. For more information call
contact Dale Rempert at 512/4534225, drempert@ix.netcom.com
Special Dance Events
• Bayou Bedlam Feb. 17-19
Contra dance weekend in Houston. David Kaynor calling to the
Retrospectacles.
• Set for Spring March 23-25
English Country Dance weekend
at the Texas Federation of
Women's Clubs Grand Ballroom
in Austin. Scott Higgs calling with
music by Foxfire.
• When in Doubt, Swing! April
20-22. Contra dance weekend in
Dallas. Nils Fredland calling to
Elixir.

What Are You
Listening To?
In every issue board member
Jeanne Defriese ambushes one of
our members with this question.
This time she was ambushed! We
love finding out what folks are listening to!
Jeanne says that in the car she's
listening to Tom, Brad, &amp; Alice
"We'll Die in the Pigpen Fighting" ;
Allison's Sacred Harp Singers
"Heaven's My Home, 1927-1928";
John Langstaff's Christmas Revels
: "Wassail Wassail- Early American
Christmas Music" (has the Chicken
Chokers and Jean Ritchie), "Allons
Boire un Coup, A Collection of
Cajun &amp; Creole Drinking Songs"
(various artists Ann Savoy, Steve
Riley, Feufollet, Pine Leaf Ramblers, Linzay Young, etc);
LinzayYoung &amp; Joel Savoy a 2009
Valcour release.
In the house, "Oh, Yaille!"
Mamou Prairie Band (her
dishwashing/housecleaning music);
"A Winter's Night- Christmas in the
Great Hall" Ensemble Galilei; "Ancient Noels" Ensemble Galilei;
"Weathers - The Boggy Creek
Farm Sessions" Bucolics Anonymous. (Yes, she's still listening to
Christmas music).
She looks/listens to a lot of oldtime music on YouTube from festivals, house concerts, individuals or
groups just picking, also sacred harp
and square dancing.
Radio: at home and work, she
listens to KMFA, occasionally KUT
Sunday Folkways and KOOP
Strictly Bluegrass
Fudge factor - if she hadn't
loaned it out, she'd be listening to
"All These Other Fine Things" by
Sheila Kay Adams - in the car, every day (old time, sacred harp, ballads).

January 2012

5

�Austin Friends of Traditional Music
PO Box 49608
Austin, Texas 78765

Away With Funeral Music
AWAY with funeral music - set
The pipe to powerful lips The cup of life's for him that drinks
And not for him that sips.
– Robert Louis Stevenson

AFTM Jam Session: Every Second Sunday, 2 pm • Artz Ribhouse on South Lamar
Next Jam Sessions: Sunday Feb. 12, 2012 &amp; Sunday March 11, 2012 • Bring Instruments &amp; Voices!
Member Meetings before the session • All Welcome!

AUSTIN FRIENDS OF TRADITIONAL MUSIC
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
Name ____________________________________ Phone ________________ Date_________
Address______________________________________________________________________
City_________________________________________ State_______ Zip___________________
Email________________________________________________________________________

I’d like to receive the Reel Times newsletter by US mail
$15 Student

$20 Individual

$80 5-year/Individual
Donation $___________

$25 Family

I’d like to volunteer

$50 Business

$100 5-year/Family

$300 Lifetime

$25 Band/Dance Group
Renewal

Your donation is tax deductible as AFTM is a 501(c)(3) organization

Total enclosed: $___________. Please make check payable to Austin Friends of Traditional Music
and mail to: PO Box 49608, Austin, TX 78765. Paypal accepted on our website at www.aftm.us
6 January 2012

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                    <text>REEL TIMES
JANUARY 2013

VOL. 37 NO.2

Midwinter Traditional Music Festival 2013
The winter wind may be blowing
outside, but inside at the
Midwinter fest there will be plenty
of warmth and music. Come to
listen, dance and play traditional
music. Learn how to pick and sing come out to our Midwinter Festival
on Saturday afternoon and evening
February 2, 2013 at Dougherty
Arts Center, 1110 Barton Springs
Road, Austin, Texas. The doors
will open at 11:45 a.m. and the last
band will finish at 9 p.m.
The bands, workshop leaders and
many volunteers are donating their
time and talent to support the
Austin Friends of Traditional
Music. Please come out and give us
your support!

1 pm
2 pm
3 pm
4 pm
5 pm
6 pm
7 pm
8 pm
9 pm

Gumbo Ce Soir
Austin Balkan Singers
Tayebeh &amp; Ali Reza
Mundi
Jitterbug Vipers
Big Jug Band
Gray Sky Boys
Aidan
Djembabes
Barn Owls

The first act begins at 1pm. Check
our website at www.aftm.us for
more details and schedule
updates.
What is the Midwinter Festival?
The Midwinter Festival is Austin
Friends of Traditional Music’s
main fund raiser. The funds go to
support
showcases,
house
concerts, our Austin String band
Festival and other traditional
music and dance events in the
Austin area.
Great traditional music in one of
the best listening spaces in town!
We have a fine quality of bands
offering an assortment of music
from the U.S. and around the
world.

A Great Place to Get Started or
Improve Your Playing
Workshops. Choose from several
workshops at no additional
charge. See below for details.
Delicious Healthy food and drink
choices served fresh and priced
right.
A chance to see old friends, make
new friends and find a vacant
spot to jam.
A silent auction. You may find a
hand made craft, a CD, an
instrument or a service you
would like to make a bid.

Music from Great Bands All Day Long
Young Cajun musicians from the Texas side.
Eastern European harmonies.
Persian singing and setar
World Music for a new world.
Everybody's favorite Jitterbug Swing band
Sweet Novelties and Jug Band Music from a cast of thousands.
Bluegrass as it is meant to be.
Irish music, up to tempo and up for the crack.
African Drumming and Singing, dedicated to pure joy.
Old Time String Band music from the Violet Crown of the Hills.

�Make Your Own Music: Festival Workshops
Old-Time Banjo, Molly Johnson
Molly will help beginner oldtime banjo
players to improve their basic rightclawhammer
technique.
hand
Intermediate players can benefit from
Alexander technique-based ideas about
how to sit, support their instrument,
and use their arms to improve
accuracy, tone, and physical comfort.
We will also discuss how to learn and
progress as a banjo player at any skill
level.
Old-Time Fiddle, Trent Shepherd
Begin with the basics of old-time
Appalachian fiddle -- emphasis on
beginner bow strokes and simple crosstuning in the key of A.
CloggingWorkshop, Steve Wiswell
Focusing on the basics steps of
Appalachian clogging and how these
steps are used to dance to old time and
bluegrass music. Everyone is welcome.
Starting with easy step-rock-steps, you
will be dancing to live music by the end
of the workshop.
Concertina, Dave Polacheck
Members of the Austin Concertina
Gathering will present the story of this
unique instrument along with
descriptions and demonstrations of theEnglish, Anglo German and Duet
systems.

Rag Fiddle, Dan Foster
The origins and history of string rag
music. Tips on learning tunes played
by the Georgia Yellow Hammers,
Stripling Brothers, Lowe Stokes,
East Texas Serenaders, and others.
Rag chord progressions, bowing, the
"scary" keys, getting up the neck
(and back down again) before
learning a tune of choice.
How to play the JUG! Craig High
Craig High and other members of the
local jug band scene will offer a
history and instructional session on
the art of musical jug blowing for all
ages. Jugs will be provided!
Autoharp, Lindsay Haisley
An introduction to the autoharp,
covering maintenance, tuning and
traditional and modern techniques
and styles. Information on autoharp
festivals, sources for parts and tools,
and online resources for people
interested in the instrument.
Learn to Play the Bones, Rich
McMath
Learn how to hold the bones and
play bone basics, the tap and the
triplet, and maybe more. If you have
some already, please bring along.

Guitar -Irish Music Accompaniment,
Jeff Moore
Jeff's workshop will demonstrate the
fundamentals of accompanying Irish
tunes, the musical structure of jigs,
reels and hornpipes as well as
strumming techniques and their
relationship to texture. Chords for
Dropped-D and DADGAD tuning
will be demonstrated. Jeff will also
discuss the importance of Irish Tune
Session etiquette.
Singing with Poise, Molly Johnson
Using principles of the Alexander
Technique,
Molly
will
teach
participants how to be more
conscious of the way head and body
poise impacts their voice and how
doing less instead of more is the key
to singing with ease.
International Folk Dancing,
Genevieve Kent
Learn international folk dances with
live music by Kolorash. Dance to
traditional music from Bulgaria,
Moldavia, Russia, and Croatia, and
compare and contrast with Old-Time
American music and styles of
movement as we make our way
across Europe. No experience or
partner necessary.

�Austin Friends of Traditional Music: Young Musician's Grant
Whether it's Roundpeak banjo,
Swing
guitar, Piedmont blues,
Bluegrass fiddle, or Old-time
mandolin, the best way to learn
traditional music is from someone
who knows how.
The music has come down to us in
an unbroken chain from one
generation to the next, by hand and
in person. That is still the best way
to learn. The Austin Friends of
Traditional Music is dedicated to
helping keep the chain unbroken
and preserving musical traditions
as they evolve among those who
still do know how!

In cooperation with Warren Wilson
College of North Carolina, the
AFTM is proud to announce its
Young Musician's Grant program
for 2013. Anyone in the Austin
area under the age of 26 may apply.
Musicians will be selected from the
entries to attend master classes at
the annual Swannanoa Gathering in
Asheville, North Carolina, tuition
and lodging-free.
Swannanoa
offers a rich variety of hands-on
classes with masters of several
different instruments and styles.
The grant will cover the cost of
tuition and board for classes
offered during one of several weeks
during the year.

For more information on Warren
Wilson College's Swannanoa
Gathering, visit
www.swangathering.com.
To apply for the grant, please
submit a description of your
interest in traditional music,
background, and why you think
you ought to be chosen for a
chance to learn from the masters.
The deadline for registration is
February 8, 2013.
Austin Friends of Traditional
Music, P.O. Box 49608, Austin,
TX 78765.
For complete information, visit
www.aftm.us

Join Us!
Become A Member of AFTM
Membership is open to everyone. In order to
carry out its goals,
AFTM needs the support of interested persons,
organizations, and businesses through taxdeductible donations. But donations are not all
that maintain the vitality of AFTM.
New and involved members, volunteers, and
willing helpers are the lifeblood of the
organization. We invite you to join us, to
participate, and to give of your time, energy,
and resources in the important task of bringing
and supporting traditional / folk music and
dance in the Austin community.

Your membership helps support the presence
and preservation of traditional music in Austin.
Benefits include:
• Subscription to Reel Times Newsletter
• Discounts at AFTM events
• Free classified ads on our website
• Eligibility to serve on the Board
MEMBERSHIP LEVELS
$15 - Student 1-year
$20 - Individual 1-year
$25 - Family 1-year
$25 - Band or Dance Group 1-year
$50 - Business 1-year
$80 - Individual 5-year
$100 - Family 5-year
$300+ Lifetime Membership

Helping the next generation to learn the music, not so much as a way to make a living as to make
life itself worth living.

�AFTM Board Elections Coming in April …
How would YOU like to serve on the Board?
The current Board members
listed below are willing to
serve in their current
positions for another year,
unless you'd rather have the
job!
Sharon Isaac continues to
manage the website and
membership. Thanks
Sharon!!
In addition to the positions
noted above, the board may
have additional members,
who may be asked to take on
specific tasks before or after
being elected to the board.
Please let us know if you
would like to be on our board
or otherwise be more
involved!
The Board meetings are on
the 2nd Sunday each month
at 12:30 pm, and currently
the meeting location is the
“snug” room at Tom’s
Tabooley. Board members
are expected to attend at
least 10 of the 12 meetings,
and to appoint a proxy for
any meeting they cannot
attend.

. Board members are expected
to help to put on AFTM
events. Any AFTM member of
six month’s duration or more
who is willing to work is
qualified to serve on the board
The Deadline for nominations
is February 10th. The list of
nominees will be emailed to
the membership via the Yahoo
group, and also will be
published on the web-site. The
election will take place this
year on March 10th. Every
current member is eligible to
vote, and must be present at
the meeting to cast a vote.
President
Vice President
Secretary
Treasurer
Events
Volunteers
Sponsorships
Newsletter Editor
Publicity/PR

REEL TIMES is published by Austin
Friends of Traditional Music (AFTM),
a nonprofit organization (est. 1974)
dedicated to encouraging the
performance and appreciation of all
genres of traditional music and dance.
Copyright 2012 by
AFTM. PO Box 49608,
Austin, Texas 78765
AFTM email:
aftm@yahoogroups.com
Web: www.aftm.us

Tim Wooten
Angie Wooten
Christy Foster
Cheryl Dehut
Jeanne DeFriese
Barbara Deane
Robin Butter

Ongoing Events
AFTM Jam Session
2nd Sunday of each month at
2pm at Tom’s Tabooley.
AFTM Open Mic
3rd Sunday of each month at 2pm
at Tom’s Tabooley (get there
early to sign up).
The Austin Banjo Club meets on
Mondays, 7 - 9 pm at the Senior
Activity Center, 29th and Lamar.
Traditional American pop and
jazz from late 1800s to the 1930s.
All varieties of "banjo" welcome!
Visit: www.austinbanjoclub.org
The Austin Balkan Singers is a
singing group interested in
preserving traditional folk songs
of Eastern Europe. The group,
which has been together over 30
years, gathers once a week (most
of the time) and welcomes new
members interested in harmony,
polyphonic vocalizations and
group yells! Performs
occasionally. Look for us on
Facebook or contact
christyfoster@earthlink.net

�UPCOMING DANCE EVENTS
Austin Barn Dancers
Community-style contradancing
for young and old alike, with the
feeling of a town hall social dance.
Contras, squares, and circle mixers
to live traditional music provided
by
LOCO
(Local
On-Call
Orchestra). Meets at Hancock
Recreation Center on Wednesdays
at 7:30-10 PM. 811 E 41st (corner
of Red River). Contact Dale
Rempert
at
drempert@ix.netcom.com
or
phone 512/453-4225.

Austin Contra Dancing
Wednesdays:
Hancock Rec Center
811 East 41st St.
FirstFridays:
Carpenters Hall
400 Josephine St.
3rd Saturdays:
St Paul’s Lutheran Church
3501 Red River

Third Saturday Contra
3rd Saturday:
St. Paul Lutheran School (3501
Red River). Beginners at 7:30
regular dance from 8 to 11 PM. $8
admission with discounts for
AFTM members. Students $5.
First-time dancers receive a "dance
for free" coupon

No experience or partners necessary.
Call Chuck Roth at (512)453-8936 or
e-mail info@austincontradance.org
for more information.
First Friday Contra Dances
8:00 - 11:00 pm (beginners' session
from 7:30 - 8), on the first Friday of
each month, featuring local callers
and musicians. $8 admission to the
dance (discounts for AFTM members
-- newcomers are free) with everyone
welcome. No experience or partners
necessary, all dances taught. The
dances will be held at Carpenters
Hall at 400 Josephine St., just west
of Lamar, between Barton Springs
Road and Riverside Drive in south
Austin. Contact: Nana Lopez at
512/970-4919,
email
sealantsby5@aol.com. Or see the 1st
Friday Contra Dance Facebook page.
English Country Dancing
Is held on the 2nd Friday of each
month, from 7:30pm-10:30, at the
First
Cumberland
Presbyterian
Church Fellowship Hall, 6800
Woodrow Ave (one block South of
Justin Lane). The cost is $8 when we
have live music, $6 otherwise, and $5
for students all the time. All dances
are taught and called. Beginners are
welcome. Please note this dance is
fragrance free. For more information
contact
Ann
McCracken
at
ann@mccr.org or 266-9949.
Or
check the Austin English Country
Dance Facebook page.

Clickety Cloggers of Austin
Is a 30-year-old nonprofit dance
group dedicated to preserving
the clogging heritage and
promoting the art of clog
dancing--has a mission to help
keep a slice of Americana alive.
We dance every Thursday night
from 6:30 to 9:00 p.m. at the
D'ette Dance Studio, 1807
Slaughter Lane, Suite #325,
Austin,
TX
78748.
For
information about dancing with
the club or taking lessons,
Contact Virginia Pohlmeier at
virginiadale@att.net or (512)
441-7422.
International Folk Dancing
International Folk Dancing
meets almost every Saturday
night at Hancock Recreation
Center on 41st Street (between
Red River and Duval). Or visit
the AIFD Facebook Page.
Austin Scottish Country Dance
Society
Features weekly socials and
classes. For information call or
email Sarah Harriman at 3272869 sarah@austinscd.org.

�Austin Friends of Traditional Music
PO Box 49608
Austin, Texas 78765

AFTM Jam Session: Every Second Sunday, 2 pm • Tom’s Tabooley on Guadalupe St.
Next Jam Sessions: Sunday February 10, 2013 • Bring Instruments &amp; Voices!
Member Meetings before the session • All Welcome!
AUSTIN FRIENDS OF TRADITIONAL MUSIC
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
Name ____________________________________ Phone ________________ Date_________
Address______________________________________________________________________
City_________________________________________ State_______ Zip___________________
Email________________________________________________________________________
⃝ I’d like to receive the Reel Times newsletter by US mail
⃝ I’d like to volunteer
⃝ $15 Student ⃝ $20 Individual ⃝ $25 Family ⃝ $50 Business ⃝ $25 Band/Dance Group
⃝ $80 5-year/Individual ⃝ $100 5-year/Family ⃝ $300 Lifetime ⃝ Renewal
Donation $___________ Your donation is tax deductible as AFTM is a 501(c)(3) organization
Total enclosed: $___________. Please make check payable to Austin Friends of Traditional Music
and mail to: PO Box 49608, Austin, TX 78765. Paypal accepted on our website at www.aftm.us

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                    <text>REEL TIMES

OCTOBER 2013

VOL 38 • NO. 2

Austin String Band Festival Is Rapidly Approaching!
Austin Friends of Traditional Music is hosting our eight annual string band festival October 18, 19, and 20 at
Camp Ben McCulloch across from the Salt Lick (directions below). As usual we'll have impressive bands, fun
jams, good food, vendors and first-rate workshops at this beautiful campground with shade trees, a creek, and
all the facilities for a delightful time. Gates open at noon on Friday, October 18th.
A bit of History: The term "old-time" With its origins in traditional music of Europe and Africa, old-time
music represents perhaps the oldest form of North American traditional music other than Native American
music, and thus the term "old-time" is an appropriate one. As a label, however, it dates back only to 1923.
Fiddlin' John Carson made some of the first commercial recordings of traditional American country music
for the Okeh label. These recordings became hits. Okeh, which had previously coined the terms "hillbilly
music" to describe Appalachian and Southern fiddle-based and religious music and "race recording" to describe
the music of black recording artists, began using "old-time music" as a term to describe the music made by
artists of Carson's style. The term, thus, originated as a euphemism, but proved a suitable replacement for
other terms that were considered disparaging by many inhabitants of these regions. It remains the term
preferred by performers and listeners of the music. It is sometimes referred to as "old-timey" or "mountain
music" by long-time practitioners.
By the early 19th century, the banjo (an instrument of West African origin originally played only by people
of African descent, both enslaved and free had become an essential partner to the fiddle, particularly in the
southern United States. The banjo, originally a fretless instrument and frequently made from a gourd, played
the same melody as the fiddle (though in a lower register), while simultaneously providing a rhythmic accompaniment incorporating a high drone provided by the instrument's short "drone string." The banjo used in oldtime music is typically a 5-string model with an open back (i.e., without the resonator found on most bluegrass
banjos).
Today old-time banjo players most commonly utilize the clawhammer style, but there were originally
several other styles, most of which are still in use, loosely grouped by region. The major styles were
clawhammer (which also went by a number of regional names), two-finger index lead (also called "North
Carolina picking"), two-finger thumb lead (Kentucky and East Tennessee), and a three-finger "fiddle style"
that seems to have been influenced in part by late-19th century urban classical style. Generally, a young player
would learn whatever style a parent or older sibling favored. This style of having a fiddle play the lead melody
and a banjo play a rhythmic accompaniment is the most basic form of Appalachian old-time music, and is the
instrumentation most Appalachian old-time musicians consider to be "classic."

FESTIVAL TICKET PRICES
3-Day F/S/S
Friday
Saturday
Non-AFTM Members
$45
$25
$35
AFTM members ($5 discount)
$40
$20
$30
Students with ID ($10 disc)
$35
$15
$25
Children under 16 are free (must be accompanied by an adult)

�Camping fees are separate from the ticket price: Camping Fees are per night and will be collected at the
ticket table. Fees for camping are: $15 per night for a tent or camper without electricity and $20 per night for
a unit WITH electricity. Campers who arrive before the festival starts should come by the ticket table after it
opens at noon on Friday to pay their camping fees and get their wristbands.
The festival officially ends at noon Sunday after the Gospel Sing. Anyone purchasing a Saturday (or weekend)
ticket and paying their camping fee can stay over for the Sunday Gospel Sing and breakfast in the food area.
There is no separate ticket for Sunday.
DOG OWNERS PLEASE READ - OUR POLICY HAS CHANGED
Dogs are strictly prohibited from the Austin String Band Festival.
If you are traveling with your dog, please get in touch with one of the kennels
in the area.
Stay and Play Pet Ranch: (512) 894-7387
Hallmark Kennel: (512) 288-0515
Driftwood Kennels: (512) 894-0003
NOTE: Trained assistance dogs are welcome
Directions: Camp Ben McCulloch is within a few minutes of Austin, located 11 miles south of Highway 290
West on Farm Road 1826. From I-35, take Loop 4 to downtown Buda. Head west on Farm Road 967 for 11
miles, then turn left on Farm Road 1826 for 1/2 mile -- Camp Ben McCulloch is on the left.

The Entertainment Line Up
• Hoppin' Jenny
• Brad Leftwich and Linda Higginbotham
• Carper Family
• Charles Thibodeaux&amp; Austin Cajun Aces
• Conjunto Los Pinkys
• The Barn Owls
• Christy &amp; the Plowboys
• Sawmill Vagrants
• Spencer &amp; Rains
• The Prime Time Ramblers
• Jenny &amp; The Corn Ponies
• Forked Deers

AFTM Officers/Board 2013
President • Tim Wooten
Vice-President • Angie Wooten
Secretary • Christy Foster
Treasurer • Cheryl Dehut
Newsletter Editor • Robin Butterr
Dance Liaison • open
Events Coordinator• Jeanne DeFriese
Volunteers • Ken Tweedy
Sponsorships • Barbara Dean
Membership • Mike Savercool
2

October 2013

REEL TIMES is published by Austin
Friends of Traditional Music (AFTM), a nonprofit
organization (est. 1974) dedicated to encouraging
the performance and appreciation of all genres of
traditional music and dance. Copyright 2013 by
AFTM. PO Box 49608, Austin, Texas 78765
AFTM email: aftm@yahoogroups.com
Web: www.aftm.us

�Hoppin' Jenny
Hopping Jenny brings together current and
former members of the Macrae Sisters and
Foghorn Stringband. Fiddler and banjo player
Sophie Vitells Enloe and Gabrielle Macrae, have
been playing music together for over ten years.
Their long history of shared musicianship is
reflected in their tightly locked playing and
effortless harmony singing. Sophie and Gabrielle
are joined in Hopping Jenny by the driving
rhythmic force of Kevin Sandri on guitar and
Brian Bagdonas on bass.
Brad Leftwich and Linda Higginbotham
Brad Leftwich is a prominent American old-time
fiddle and banjo player and teacher. He is
originally from Oklahoma. Leftwich was a
founding member of the Plank Road String Band
in the mid-1970s. He has recorded for the
Rounder, County, Copper Creek, and Marimac
labels. He has written a book on the Round Peak
clawhammer banjo style that is published by Mel
Bay, and has released two old-time fiddle instructional videos. Leftwich is joined by his wife Linda
Higginbotham on banjo-uke, guitar and vocals.
Carper Family
The Carper Family is a family band like no other,
spinning out the effortless harmonies of a bornfamily with the range and diversity of a madefamily... Whatever the bloodline, the music hits
the ear with both depth and simplicity, capturing
the essence of true country music. The Austinbased trio of Melissa Carper [upright bass], Beth
Chrisman [fiddle], and Jenn Miori [guitar] applies
their signature, stunning three-part harmonies to
bluegrass, old-time, country and swing tunes of
the standard and original variety, pushing and
honoring American musical traditions at every
step.
Charles Thibodeaux and Austin Cajun Aces
Authentic Cajun French Music
Charles Ray Thibodeaux - Accordion and Vocals
Peter Schwarz -Fiddle and Vocals
Steve Doerr - Rythym Guitar and Vocals
Dale Dougay - Drums
http://www.austincajunaces.com
Conjunto Los Pinkys
Conjunto Los Pinkys play traditional, TexasMexican style dance music known as "conjunto

music".The instrumentation features the button
accordion and bajo sexto. Many international and
regional musical styles are represented in conjunto
music, including the influence of the Spanish,
German, Polish and Czech, American popular
music, Mexican-Norteño ranchera, Colombian
cumbia, waltz, redova, shottishe, huapango, bolero,
mambo and country two-step.
The Barn Owls
The Barn Owls play Old-Time music from the
Appalachian region of the US, circa late 1800's
and early 1900's. These fiddle-based tunes were
heavy influences on the bluegrass, folk and acoustic scene of the mid-1900's. The tunes were often
the backbone of a community square dance, where
a 'stringband' would provide the music for a dance
caller to coach the to and fro. Additionally, the
tunes lived and breathed in the remote areas of the
Eastern United States and were passed down
through generations by ear, before recording
technology existed.
Christy and the Plowboys
Christy and the Plowboys play old-time, country,
bluegrass and hillbilly music for your enjoyment
here in our home town of Austin, Texas - and
wherever music lovers enjoy old sentimental songs,
new sentimental songs, snappy rags, crooked
breakdowns, or more claw-hammered dancetunes. Christy Palumbo Foster, guitar, banjulele,
vocals, Dan Foster, fiddle, guitar, banjo, mandolin,
vocals, Jerry Hagins, banjo and fiddle and Katie
Morrison, cello. We will feature some of our
favorite songs of local legendary songwriter, John
Clay.
Sawmill Vagrants
Ol' Time Music - from Kennard, Texas
Lloyd Vagrant-fiddle
Bobby Vagrant-banjo
Hollis Vagrant-banjo uke, mandolin
James Vagrant-guitar
Marc Vagrant-stumph fiddle, washboard, other
odds and ends
Porkchop Vagrant-washtub bass
Race Vagrant-promotion, sound, and all around go
to guy, our official stunt driver, builder of the
stumphs, and owner of the cool car
Check them out on FaceBook!

October 2013

3

�Spencer and Raines
Tricia Spencer and Howard Rains hail from
Kansas and Texas respectively and play old time
fiddle tunes and sing songs in the style of their
home while also exploring other American regional
styles of fiddling including Appalachian, lower
south and all the way up the east. Both multiinstrumentalists deeply absorbed in traditional
music, Howard and Tricia preserve and present
old time music while at the same time making it
their own.
The Prime Time Ramblers
Deeply rooted in southern fiddle stylings, Ben
Sanders and the band will take you on a refreshing
musical tour of early American country music.
From the early commercial fiddling of Doc Roberts and Arthur Smith, to Bill Monroe and his
Bluegrass Boys, to the sophisticated country music
of Nashville in the 40?s and 50?s, Ben's performances bring the authentic excitement of the early
Grand Ole' Opry

Jenny and the Corn Ponies
Country, Honky Tonk, Rockabilly, Western Swing
Jenn Miori - Singin and Strummin
Mark Smoot - Drums
James Logan - Upright Bass
Joe Jerkins - Telecaster
Beth Chrisman - Fiddle.
Check them out on Face Book
Forked Deers
Old-time String Band
Will Webster, banjo, fiddle, guitar
Jerry Hagins, banjo, fiddle
Joe Dobbs, guitar, banjo
J.T. Harechmak, washtub bass

SCHEDULE OF ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY NIGHT - DANCE 'TIL YOU DROP
7-8PM Forked Deer. Old-Time String Band with square dance caller Sharon Isaac
8:15-9:15PM Charles Thibodeaux &amp; Austin Cajun Aces. Cajun dancing.
9:30pm- ?? Hopping Jenny. Old-Time String Band with square dance caller Michael Ismerio
SATURDAY
1PM Christy &amp; The Plowboys
2PM The Primetime Ramblers
3PM The Carper Family
4PM The Sawmill Vagrants
5PM Spencer&amp; Rains
6PM The Barn Owls with square dance caller Sharon Isaac
7PM Conjunto Los Pinkys for conjunto dancing
8PM Brad Leftwich &amp; Linda Higginbotham
9PM Jenny &amp; The Corn Ponies for country dancing
10PM Hopping Jenny
SUNDAY
10:30AM-12PM Gospel Sing led by The Rudiments

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October 2013

�WORKSHOPS
11 am - 12 pm

12:15 - 1:15 pm

Area A Demystifying the Claw Hammer Banjo, O.J.
Laier and D.Lee Thomas
Basic right hand and left hand tips, tricks, licks, and
"secrets" on how to get good....fast. Also, where to
find quality input for free, and...learn a tune or two.

Area A Old-Time Fiddle, with Brad
Leftwich
Simple old-time tunes and techniques,
taught by ear, for beginning-and intermediate fiddlers.

B How to Play in a Stringband, Hopping Jenny
A "stringband" workshop, for fiddle, guitar, banjo and
bass players. All workshop attendees split up by
instrument and are taught the same tune, then all come
back together and play the tune as one band.

B How to Play in a Stringband, Hopping
Jenny
(continued)

C Fundamentals of Country Dancing, Jenn MioriGreg Kohler
We'll start at the beginning... with the song! Country
music songs are specifically built for dancing and
based on simple Twos and Threes... Our major focus
will end up being partner Two-steps [Texas and
Cajun] and Country [Cajun] waltzing, but we'll paint
those forms into a bigger picture that help our dancers
cut loose and enjoy everything from flatfooting and
square dancing to swing and blues.

C. no workshop

D Old-time Country Rags, Dan Foster and Will
Webster
A gentle introduction to the joy of playing rags on
fiddle, mandolin, banjo and guitar. Will share some
tips to help you get started playing them funny tunes in
those other keys. We'll talk a little about style, technique and repertoire - and learn a rag to play together
(at least one) before we go.

D. Mountain Dulcimer, Lloyd Wright
Teaching old time tunes on the Mountain
dulcimer. This will be an intermediate to
advanced class.

E Exploring Clawhammer Ukulele - Tim Keough
Discover the old timey style of clawhammer banjo on
the ukulele! Take your ukulele playing to the next level
with this unique and enjoyable way to play. If you play
banjo, this workshop will open doors on the ukulele
that you didn't think possible. We'll also try out some
favorite old time tunes arranged especially for
clawhammer ukulele.

E Beginning Square Dance Class
with Sharon Isaac (Michael Ismerio on
fiddle, Joe Dobbs, banjo)
In this workshop we will learn the basics of
Old-Time Appalachian square dancing. You
will also learn one or two square dances
that will be called on Saturday night. Learn
to do-si-do, see-saw, right and left grand,
ball of yarn, turkey wing turn and many
more cool square dance moves to impress
your friends! No experience or partner
needed and school-aged kids are welcome.
October 2013

5

�11 am - 12 pm

12:15 - 1:15 pm

F Clogging, Erica Braverman
Clogging is a form of Appalachian percussive
dancing that is fun to do and a great workout!
In this workshop, you will learn the basic
clogging step and how to vary this step to make
your own rhythms. Please wear comfortable
clothing and shoes with a smooth, flat, hard
sole. Tap shoes and tennis shoes are fine but no
flip-flops or boots please. Also, you may want
to bring a water bottle and a smartphone/video
recorder so that you can tape what we learn.

F Singing is Fun! Kids Workshop, The Carper
Family
In this fun-filled workshop for kids K-5, The
Carper Family will share the joy of singing by
teaching folk and country songs that have been
passed down through generations of singers. We
will explore some simple stretching and posture
exercises, harmony basics, tips for better stage
presence, and will introduce beginner vocal technique for young singers. Come ready to sing and
have fun!

G Bluegrass and Old-Time Guitar, -Eddie
Collins
Eddie Collins, author of numerous instruction
courses on the art of flatpicking guitar, will
present a guitar workshop along with some
special guests. Many elements of bluegrass and
old-time guitar will be presented from playing
Carter Style solos to picking fiddle tunes and
playing solid back-up in the style of Doc
Watson.

G Jarana Jarocha: A Mexican Folk Experience,
Son Armado
Centered around the tarima and sustained by the
strum of the jarana Jarocha, Son Jarocho fandango
is a grass roots cultural form from Veracruz,
Mexico, often used in the context of political
organizing and social justice causes in Mexico and
the US. It draws on the traditions of the converging
cultures in Veracruz: African, Spanish, and Indigenous. We will move through the basic chords and
rhythms of the 2 major instruments of the Son
Jarocho fandango, the jarana (strings) and the
tarima (percussion).

H. Oldtime fiddle chording and bow rhythms,
Tricia Spencer and Howard Rains
Kansas fiddler Tricia Spencer will teach advanced old-time fiddle techniques including
pulses, bow rhythms, and chording. Old-time
fiddle tunes will be taught according to interest.
Howard Rains will make wise cracks, accompany on guitar, and try to learn something from
Tricia, too.

H Bluegrass jam (beginner-intermediate), Eddie
Collins
All are welcome to participate in this open jam led
by Eddie Collins.

Area A - Acorn Hill Area
Area B - Fiddle Area
Area C - Pavilion
Area D - Old-Time Area
Area E - Shady Grove Area
Area F - Prison Yard Area
Area G - Guitar, Etc. Area
Area H - Big Tree Area

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October 2013

�Do you want to become a
member of AFTM? Check our
website for more information
http://www.aftm.us/join-aftm/ or
see below the benefits of becoming a member.
Join AFTM
Membership is open to everyone.
In order to carry out its goals,
AFTM needs the support of
interested persons, organizations,
and businesses through taxdeductible donations. But donations are not all that maintain the
vitality of AFTM. New and
involved members, volunteers,
and willing helpers are the
lifeblood of the organization. We
invite you to join us, to participate,
and to give of your time, energy,
and resources in the important
task of bringing and supporting
traditional / folk music and dance
in the Austin community.
Benefits include:
• Subscription to Reel Times
newsletter
• Discounts at AFTM-sponsored
concerts, dances, and events
• Free classified ads on our
website
• Eligibility to serve on the Board
and help shape the future of
AFTM
MEMBERSHIP LEVELS
$15 - Student 1-year
$20 - Individual 1-year
$25 - Family 1-year
$25 - Band or Dance Group 1year
$50 - Business 1-year
$80 - Individual 5-year
$100 - Family 5-year
$300 (or more) - Lifetime Membership

Special Thanks to our Sponsors and Friends:
Blackerby Violin shop, Central Tx
Bluegrass Assoc., Coldshower
Design, Don's Automotive,
Fiddler's Green Music Shop,
KOOP 91.7 FM, Lakeview
Hearing Center, Mollberg Piano
Restoration, Quiet Austin Yoga
and Massage, Reilly Realtors,
Tom's Tabooley, and Violins Etc.

The Austin Banjo Club: meets
on Mondays, 7 - 9 pm at the
Senior Activity Center, 29th and
Lamar. Traditional American pop
and jazz from late 1800s to the
1930s. All varieties of "banjo" are
welcome (tenor, 5-string, banjouke, banjolins, etc) Please join
us! www.austinbanjoclub.org
for more info.
The Austin Balkan Singers: A
singing group comprised of
women interested in preserving
traditional folk songs of Eastern
Europe. The group has been
together over 30 years, gather
once a week (most of the time)
and welcomes new members
interested in harmony, polyphonic
vocalizations and group yells!
Perform occasionally. Look for
us on Facebook!

Phil McDonald, old time fiddler
known and admired by many in
this area, passed away October
2, 2013. He was in his early 60's
and is survived by his wife Annie
McDonald of Dripping Springs.
Phil loved all the roots and
branches of traditional music,
was at home playing old time
style, bluegrass, western swing,

playing in fiddle contests.
For years he played with his
many friends around Wimberley,
and the monthly music jam at
Pearl, TX. He brought a fine
focus of energy and joy as he
spun out the old time tunes, and
made them his own. Phil played
like he meant it, he will be
missed.

October 2013

7

�HERE IS WHERE WE MAKE FUN OF OURSELVES!!!
FROM THE PUBLICATION BLUEGRASS NATION.
The Music
Old Time and Celtic songs
are about whiskey, food and
struggle. Bluegrass songs are
about God, mother and the girl
who did me wrong. If the girl isn't
dead by the third verse, it ain't
Bluegrass. If everyone dies, it's
Celtic.
Old Time and Celtic bands
have nonsense names like
"Flogging Molly', "Fruit Jar
Drinkers' and "Skillet Lickers"
while Bluegrass bands have
serious gender-specific name like
"Bluegrass Boys,' "Clinch Mountain Boys' and "Backwoods
Babes."
The most common Old Time
keys are major and minor with
only 5 notes (modal). Bluegrass
uses these, plus Mixolydian and
Dorian modes, and a Celtic band
adds Lydian and Phrygian modes.
A Bluegrass band has
between 1 and 3 singers who are
all singing about an octave above
their natural vocal range. Some
Old Time and Celtic bands have
no singers at all. If a Celtic band
has a singer, it is usually either a
bewhiskered ex-sailor, or a petite
soprano. A Bluegrass band has a
vocal arranger who arranges
three-part harmonies. In an Old
Time band, anyone who feels like
it can sing or make comments
during the performance.
In a Celtic band, anyone who
speaks during a performance gets
"the look', and songs are preceded
by a call for silence and a detailed
explanation of their cultural
significance. Bluegrass tunes &amp;
songs last 3 minutes. Old Time
and Celtic tunes &amp; songs can be
any length, and sometimes last all
night.
8

October 2013

The Instruments
Banjo
A Celtic banjo is small and
quiet. An Old Time banjo is openbacked, with an old towel (probably never washed) stuffed in the
back to dampen sound. A Bluegrass banjo has bell bronze
mastertone ring and a resonator
to make it louder.
A Celtic banjo weighs 4
pounds, an Old Time banjo weighs
5 pounds, towel included and a
Bluegrass banjo weighs 40
pounds. A Celtic banjo has only 4
strings. A Bluegrass banjo has
five strings and needs 24 frets.
An Old Time banjo needs no
more than 5 frets, and some don't
need any. A Bluegrass banjo
player has had spinal fusion
surgery on all his vertebrae, and
therefore stands very straight. If
an Old Time banjo player stands,
he slouches. A Celtic banjo player
has a brace to relieve his carpal
tunnel syndrome and remains
seated to maintain stability while
cross-picking as fast as possible
after several pints. An Old Time
banjo player can lose 3 right-hand
fingers and 2 left-hand fingers in
an industrial accident without
affecting his performance. A
Celtic banjo player flat picks
everything. A Bluegrass banjo
player puts jewelry on his fingertips to play. An Old Time banjo
player puts super glue on his
fingernails to strengthen them.
Never shake hands with an Old
Time banjo player while he's
fussing with his nails.
Fiddle
The Bluegrass fiddler paid
$10,000 for his fiddle at the Violin
Shop in Nashville. The Celtic

fiddler inherited his fiddle from his
mothers 2nd cousin in County
Clare. The Old Time fiddler got
theirs for $15 at a yard sale.
Celtic and Bluegrass fiddles are
tuned GDAE. An Old Time fiddle
can be in a hundred different
tunings. Old Time fiddlers seldom
use more than two fingers of their
left hand, and use tunings that
maximize the number of open
strings played. Celtic and Bluegrass fiddlers study 7th position
fingering patterns with Isaac
Stern, and take pride in never
playing an open string. An Old
Time fiddle player can make dogs
howl &amp; incapacitate people
suffering from sciatic nerve
damage. An Old Time fiddle
player only uses 1/8 of his bow.
The rest is just there for show.
Guitar
An Old Time guitarist knows
the major chords in G and C, and
owns a capo for A and D. A
Bluegrass guitarist can play in Eflat without a capo. The fanciest
chord an Old Time guitarist needs
is an A to insert between the G
and the D7 chord. A Bluegrass or
Celtic guitarist needs to know
C#aug+7-4. A Celtic guitarist
keeps his picks in his pocket. Old
Time guitarists stash extra picks
under a rubber band around the
top of the peg head. Bluegrass
guitarists would never cover any
part of the peg head that might
obscure the gilded label of their
$3,000 guitar.
Mandolin
It's possible to have an Old
Time or Celtic band without a
mandolin. However, it is impossible to have a true Bluegrass
band without one. Mandolin
players spend half their time
tuning their mandolin and the
other half of their time playing

�their mandolin out of tune. Old
Time and Celtic mandolin players
use "A' model instruments (pearshaped) by obscure makers.
Bluegrass mandolin players use
"F' model Gibson that cost $100
per decibel.
Bass
A Celtic band never has a
bass, while a Bluegrass band
always has a bass. An old, Old
Time band doesn't have a bass,
but new time Old Time bands
seem to need one for reasons that
are unclear. A Bluegrass bass
starts playing with the band on the
first note. An Old Time bass, if
present, starts sometime after the
rest of the band has run through
the tune once depending on the
player's blood alcohol content. A
Bluegrass bass is polished and
shiny. An Old Time bass is often
used as yard furniture.
Other Instruments
It is not possible to have a
Celtic band without a tin whistle
or Bodhran (hand drum) if not
several, usually too many of each.
Old Time and Bluegrass bands
never have either. A Bluegrass
band might have a Dobro. An Old
Time band might have anything
that makes noise including: a
tambourine, jaw harp, didgeridoo,
harmonica, conga, wash tub bass,
miscellaneous rattles &amp;shakers, a
1-gallon jug (empty), or a lap
(mountain) dulcimer or a hammered dulcimer. In a Celtic band,
it's the musicians that are hammered.
Instrumentation
Except for the guitar, all the
instruments in a Celtic band play
the melody all the time. In an Old
Time band, anyone can play either
melody or accompaniment at any
time. In Bluegrass bands, one

instrument at a time solos, and
every else plays accompaniment.
Bluegrass bands have carefully
mapped-out choreography due to
the need for solo breaks. If Old
Time and Celtic band members
move around, they tend to run into
each other. Because of this
problem (and whiskey) Old Time
and Celtic often sit down when
performing, while a Bluegrass
band always stands. Because
they're sitting, Old Time and
Celtic bands have the stamina to
play the same tune for 20 minutes
for a square or contra dance. The
audience claps after each Bluegrass solo break. If anyone talks
or claps near an Old Time or
Celtic band, it confuses them,
even after the tune is over.
Personalities and Stage Presence
Bluegrass band members
wear uniforms, such as blue
polyester suits with gray Stetson
hats. Old Time bands wear jeans,
sandals, work shirts and caps
from seed companies. Celtic
bands wear tour tee-shirts with
plaid touring caps. All this head
wear covers bald spots. Women
in Bluegrass bands have big hair
and Kevlar undergarments.
Women in Old Time bands jiggle
nicely under their overalls. There
are no Women in Celtic bands,
only Lassies with long skirts and
lacy, high collars and Wenches in
apple-dumplings-on-a-shelf
bodices and leather mini-skirts. A
Bluegrass band tells terrible jokes
while tuning. An Old Time band
tells terrible jokes without bothering to tune. Bluegrass band
members never smile. Old Time
band members will smile if you
give them a drink. A Celtic band
is too busy drinking to smile, tune
or tell jokes. Celtic musicians eat
fish and chips, Bluegrass musi-

cians eat barbecue ribs, and Old
Time musicians eat tofu and miso
soup. Bluegrass musicians have
mild high frequency hearing loss
from standing near the banjo
player. Old Time musicians have
moderate high frequency hearing
loss from sitting near the fiddler.
Celtic musicians have advanced
hearing loss from playing in small
pubs with all those fiddles, banjos,
tin whistles and bodhrans.
Festivals and Transportation
A Celtic band travels in an
actual Greyhound bus with
marginal air conditioning and then
catches a ride from the bus stop
to the festival any way they can.
A Bluegrass band travels in an old
converted Greyhound bus that
idles in the parking lot all weekend with the air conditioner
running full blast, fumigating the
county with diesel exhaust. An
Old Time band travels in a rustedout 1965 VW microbus that blows
an engine in North Nowhere,
Nebraska. They don't have an
Easy-Up, and it's pretty evident
that their vehicles don't have air
conditioning. Bluegrass players
stay on the bus and Celtic musicians stay at the nearest Motel 6,
while Old Time musicians camp in
the parking lot. The Celtic Band
has their name on their instrument
cases and a banner for their
Easy-Up. The bluegrass band's
name and Inspirational Statement
are painted on both the side and
front of the bus in script lettering.
Bluegrass bumper stickers are in
red, white and blue and have stars
and/or stripes on them. Celtic
bumper stickers display fancy
knotwork borders, banners, and
slogans from the old country. Old
Time bumper stickers don't make
any sense ("Gid is My Co-Pilot').

October 2013

9

�Dance News
Austin Barn Dancers
Community-style contradancing
for young and old alike, with the
feeling of a town hall social
dance. Contras, squares, and
circle mixers to live traditional
music provided by LOCO (Local
On-Call Orchestra). Meets at
Hancock Recreation Center on
Wednesdays at 7:30-9:45 PM. 811
E 41st (corner of Red River).
Contact Dale Rempert at
drempert@ix.netcom.com or
phone 512/453-4225.
Austin Contra Dancing
Contra Dance Schedule is the
following.
Every Wednesday
Balance Dance Studios, located near
4544 South Lamar Blvd
First Friday's
Balance Dance Studios, located near
4544 South Lamar Blvd
Third Saturday's
Balance Dance Studios, located near
4544 South Lamar Blvd
Directions and schedule or
location changes can be found at
taada.us (Traditional Austin Area
Dance Association). Also check
out the Facebook page Austin
Contra Dancers.
Third Saturday Contra
The 3rd Saturday contra dances
are held at the Balance Dance
Studios, located near 4544 South
Lamar Blvd in a business park,
which is on the other side of Hwy
290W from the Westgate Shopping Center. Beginners session at
7:30 PM, regular dance from 8 to
11 PM. $9 admission with discounts for AFTM members.
Students $5. First-time dancers
10

October 2013

Or check the Austin English
Country Dance Facebook page.

receive a "dance for free"
coupon. No experience or
partners are necessary, and all
dances are taught. Call Chuck
Roth at (512) 453-8936 or e-mail
info@austincontradance.org for
more information.

Fire Ant Frolic
Austin's 17th Annual Fire Ant
Frolic Contradance weekend will
be held November 1-3, 2013, at
the Texas Federation of Women's
Clubs Grand Ballroom. Music will
be by Contrajazz and Ladies at
Play with callers Diane Silver and
Keith Tuxhorn . Full information
about the event is available
through our website,
www.fireantfrolic.com.

First Friday Contra Dances
Dances taught, no experience
needed, bring all your friends.
Holds dances from 8:00 - 11:00
pm (beginners' session from 7:30
- 8), on the first Friday of each
month, featuring local callers and
musicians. $9 admission to the
dance (discounts for AFTM
members -- newcomers are free)
with everyone welcome. No
experience or partners necessary,
all dances taught. Questions?
Send an e-mail to John Kulas or
call 512-296-1029.

Clickety Cloggers of Austin
Is a 30-year-old nonprofit dance
group dedicated to preserving the
clogging heritage and promoting
the art of clog dancing--has a
mission to help keep a slice of
Americana alive. We dance every
Thursday night from 6:30 to 9:00
p.m. at the D'ette Dance Studio,
1807 Slaughter Lane, Suite #325,
Austin, TX 78748. For information about dancing with the club
or taking lessons, Contact Virginia
Pohlmeier virginiadale@att.net or
(512) 441-7422.

English Country Dancing
Is held on the 2nd Friday of each
month, from 7:30pm-10:30, at the
First Cumberland Presbyterian
Church Fellowship Hall, 6800
Woodrow Ave (one block South
of Justin Lane). The cost is $8
when we have live music, $6
otherwise, and $5 for students all
the time. All dances are taught
and called. Beginners are welcome. Please note this dance is
fragrance free. For more information contact Ann McCracken
at ann@mccr.org or 266-9949.

International Folk Dancing
International Folk Dancing meets
almost every Saturday night at
Hancock Recreation Center on
41st Street (between Red River
and Duval). Or visit the IFD
Facebook Page.
Austin Scottish Country
Dance Society Features weekly
socials and classes. For information call or email Sarah Harriman
at 327-2869 sarah@austinscd.org.

�Tuesday, October 8th at 8 p.m.

AFTM to host a very special musical experience featuring author,
musician, and 2013-Grammy nominee Stephen Wade
For one night only Stephen
Wade will explore through live
music-making, projected images,
and his wonderful narrative the
stories behind The Beautiful
Music All Around Us: Field
Recordings and the American
Experience (University of Illinois
Press, 2012). Wade's landmark
book explores thirteen iconic
folksong performances captured
on Library of Congress field
recordings between 1934 and
1942. In this compellingly narrated, multimedia, musical performance, Wade threads the music
with its largely unknown yet
surprisingly influential creators. A
book signing follows the performance.
Stephen Wade grew up in
Chicago, where, as a youngster
exposed to a number of musicians
who hailed from the Mississippi
Delta and the Southern Appalachians, he developed a passion for
traditional music and American
folklore. In the early 1970s,
inspired by the legendary Library
of Congress series of folk music
field recordings, Wade began
travelling to the communities
where these recordings originated, seeking out surviving

musicians and immersing himself
in their surroundings. That contact
led to his first stage show, Banjo
Dancing, which opened in Chicago in May 1979. It ran sold-out
for thirteen months, and merited
national attention, including an
invited performance at the White
House. In January 1981, he came
to Washington, D.C.'s Arena
Stage, where his engagement,
initially booked for three weeks,
extended into a ten-year run. In
1989, On the Way Home, Wade's
second critically acclaimed
production, opened at Arena.

Following those runs, he toured
both shows nationally including
repeat engagements in Dallas, Ft.
Worth, and Austin. In 1994 he
also launched in Texas his work
on the book, a research process
that extended over the next
eighteen years. In the wake of its
publication in September 2012, he
has been named 2013-2014
Resident Artist/Scholar at George
Washington University, as well as
2013 George A. Miller Visiting
Scholar, Center for Advanced
Study, University of Illinois.
Wade's essays, reviews, and
articles have appeared in numerous publications. He also edited
and annotated the Rounder CD
collection that gave rise to this
book, A Tr easur y of Libr ar y of
Congr ess Field Recor dings.
Since 1996 his occasional commentaries on folksongs and
traditional tunes have appeared on
National Public Radio's All Things
Considered and Morning Edition.
He has recorded and/or produced
over a dozen albums, the most
recent of which is the 2013
Grammy-nominated Banjo Diary:
Lessons from Tradition.

More information on The Beautiful Music All Around Us can be found at: http://www.press.uillinois.edu/
books/catalog/55qpr7zm9780252036880.html

Who: Stephen Wade
When: Tuesday, October, 8, 2013, Doors open at 7 pm, show starts at 8 pm
Why: Concert presentation/book-signing
Where: Violins Etc, 6013 Burnet Road, Austin, TX
Cost: $20, $15 for AFTM members (advanced reservations at www.aftm.us)

October 2013

11

�Austin Friends of Traditional Music
PO Box 49608
Austin, Texas 78765

AFTM Jam Session: Every Second Sunday, 2 pm • Tom’s Tabooley on Guadalupe
AFTM Open Mic: Every Third Sunday, 2 pm • Bring Instruments &amp; Voices!

AUSTIN FRIENDS OF TRADITIONAL MUSIC
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
Name ____________________________________ Phone ________________ Date_________
Address______________________________________________________________________
City_________________________________________ State_______ Zip___________________
Email________________________________________________________________________

I’d like to receive the Reel Times newsletter by US mail
$15 Student

$20 Individual

$80 5-year/Individual
Donation $___________

$25 Family

I’d like to volunteer

$50 Business

$100 5-year/Family

$300 Lifetime

$25 Band/Dance Group
Renewal

Your donation is tax deductible as AFTM is a 501(c)(3) organization

Total enclosed: $___________. Please make check payable to Austin Friends of Traditional Music
and mail to: PO Box 49608, Austin, TX 78765. Paypal accepted on our website at www.aftm.us
12

October 2013

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                    <text>Volume 40 #1 JANUARY 2014

Reel Times
AFTM TURNS 40!
Austin Friends of Traditional Music (AFTM) has its origins in the autumn of 1974 when a group of
musicians gathered in an Austin living room with a special purpose in mind: to produce a traditional
music convention with competition for pickers and singers. By November of that year, the first
convention was held. It was financed on a shoestring budget and the only publicity was free publicity.
And its producers wondered if there would be enough interest for the convention to last until noon. But by
midnight, their fears had dissolved. Living room pickers from all over the area attended, competed, and
got to know each other and AFTM was on its way.
AFTM is a 501(c)3 organization, founded in 1974 and dedicated to the promotion of traditional music.
We present 2 yearly music festivals highlighting the central Texas music community and featuring local,
national, and international folk musicians. Our Mid-Winter Festival is held in early February and features
local and nationally known traditional bands. The Austin String Band Festival held in the Fall, combines
old-time, bluegrass, conjunto, cajun and other ethnic performances. One of our main goals is to pass
along traditional music to the next generation of enthusiastic musicians. We also host house concerts, jam
sessions, and dances. AFTM serves as an educational and informative resource through its newsletter,
web page, and local musician's registry.

Midwinter Traditional Music Festival
Saturday, February 8, 2014
What is the Midwinter Festival? The Midwinter Festival is Austin Friends of Traditional Music’s main
fund raiser. The funds go to support showcases, house concerts, our Austin String band Festival and other
traditional music and dance events in the Austin area. Great traditional music in one of the best listening
spaces in town! We have a top-notch variety of bands offering an assortment of music from the U.S. and
around the world.

Dougherty Arts Center 1110 Barton Springs Rd., Austin, TX 512.974.4000
1

�PARKING: Parking lot at the High Road on Dawson (formerly the Elks Lodge), 700
Dawson Road, Austin, TX 78704 will be available to Mid Winter festival attendees at
$5.00 for the day.
DOORS OPEN AT 12:30PM / ON STAGE PERFORMANCES: 1PM – 9PM
TICKETS:
GENERAL ADMISSION: $25
AFTM MEMBERS: $20
12 YRS AND UNDER: FREE

Make Your Own Music: Festival Workshops
ROOM "A”
1:30 pm – OPEN
ROOM “B”
1:30 pm - 2:15 pm - Fingerstyle and Clawhammer Ukulele, Tim Keough
2:30 pm - 3:15 pm - Sing, Dance and Play! Malissa Mollberg
3:30 pm - 4:15 pm - Survey of Old Time Guitar Backup Styles, Jon Polacheck
4:30 pm - 5:15 pm - Clawhammer Banjo overview, Jerry Hagins
5:30 pm - 6:15 pm - Acoustic Instrument Tinkering, Dr. Pat Nolan
ROOM “C”
1:30 pm - 2:15 pm - Jaw Harp - Hand to Mouth Basics, Bernard Mollberg
2:30 pm - 3:15 pm - Clogging with Erica Braverman
3:30 pm - 4:15 pm - Fiddle tune origins, Mark Seale
4:30 pm - 5:15 pm - Gospel Singing with The Rudiments
5:30 pm - 6:15 pm - Flat pick Guitar, Jeff Robertson
PERFORMANCES
1-1:45 Mark Gilston and friends
2-2:45 Annoying Instruments Orch.
3-3:45 David Hamburger Trio
4-4:45 Double Eagle String Band
5-5:45 Peter Keane
6-6:45 The Rudiments with T Jarrod Bonta
7-7:45 Ayan Hall dancing to Irish flute of
Jonathan Milton
8-8:45 Los Jankies/Silas Lowe, Ben Hodges, et. al.
2

�*please check our website (aftm.us) or look for their Facebook pages for more information
on these wonderful musicians and dancers.

Austin Friends of Traditional Music
Young Musician's Grant for the
2014 Swannanoa Old Time Gathering

To do this, you got to know how...
Whether it's Round Peak banjo, flat pick guitar, Piedmont fiddle, ukulele, shape note singing or Old-time
mandolin, the best way to learn traditional music is from someone who knows how.
The music has come down to us in an unbroken chain from one generation to the next, by hand and in
person. That is still the best way to learn. The Austin Friends of Traditional Music is dedicated to helping
keep the chain unbroken and preserving musical traditions as they evolve among those who still do know
how!
In cooperation with Warren Wilson Warren College of North Carolina, the AFTM is proud to announce
its Young Musician's Grant program for 2014. Anyone in the Austin area under the age of 26 may apply.
Two musicians will be selected from the entries to attend master classes at the annual Swannanoa
Gathering in Asheville, North Carolina. Swannanoa offers a rich variety of hands-on classes with masters
of various acoustic instruments, playing styles, singing, story-telling, and traditional dance.
The grant will cover the cost of tuition ($500) and board ($395) for classes offered during
OLD TIME WEEK. July 20-26, 2014 (here’s a description from last year):
Old-Time Music &amp; Dance Week at the Swannanoa Gathering explores the rich music, dance, and singing
traditions of the southern Appalachian region through a wide variety of classes taught by an experienced
and supportive staff. The many diverse offerings enable students to explore new areas; fiddlers sing,
singers dance, and dancers learn to play instruments. New this year, the Teen Gathering is a class
specifically for teenagers. Students enroll in as many as three regular classes during the week, and each
afternoon a variety of short workshop topics are offered during the Potluck Sessions. The daily
Communal Gathering features master musicians, singers, and dancers from across the Appalachian
region. Evening activities include jam sessions, singing, square dances, clogging, concerts, and the
popular Late-Night Honky-Tonk Dance! For those students bringing their families, we also offer a
program for kids, but space is limited. Our Children's Program for ages 6-12 features kids' activities
scheduled during all the daytime class sessions, and evening childcare for ages 3-12 is provided at no
additional cost.
Although the 2014 course catalog won't be available until open registration in March, and classes fill
quickly, scholarship students will be given the old time classes of their choice.
3

�NOTE: Students under the age of 16 must be accompanied by an adult chaperone to attend camp.
For more information on Warren Wilson College's Swannanoa Gathering, visit www.swangathering.com
To apply for the grant, please submit the following:



A brief written explanation of the applicant’s interest in traditional music, current musical skill
level, and why you think he or she should be chosen for a chance to learn from the masters. .
Proof that the applicant is under 26 years of age.

Travel expenses, and any other costs associated with attendance are the sole responsibility of the selected
applicant.
With the exception of proof of age, this information may be e-mailed. Please send a scanned copy of a
birth certificate, a drivers license or other appropriate I.D. as proof of age via U.S. mail.
Submit your entry for the AFTM grant by April 1, 2014, to:
Austin Friends of Traditional Music, P.O. Box 49608, Austin, TX 78765.
email to AFTMTexas@gmail.com
Helping the next generation to learn the music, not so much as a way to make a living as to make life
itself worth living.
CONTACT: Jeanne DeFriese, AFTMTexas@gmail.com, www.aftm.us
**********************************

Do you want to become a member of AFTM? Check our website for more information
http://www.aftm.us/join-aftm/ or see below the benefits of becoming a member.
Join AFTM
Membership is open to everyone. In order to carry out its goals, AFTM needs the support of interested persons,
organizations, and businesses through tax-deductible donations. But donations are not all that maintain the vitality
of AFTM. New and involved members, volunteers, and willing helpers are the lifeblood of the organization.
AFTM festivals, dances and house concerts are the main driver of spreading the word of traditional music.
Members contribute to this end by performing, playing in jams, attending local events, etc. Our membership also
provides the funding for one of our greatest assets, providing scholarships to our youth. These scholarships send
very talented and grateful kids to a traditional music camp at the annual Swannanoa Gathering in Asheville, NC.
For more information on how to apply, please see below.
We invite you to join us, to participate, and to give of your time, energy, and resources in the important task of
bringing and supporting traditional / folk music and dance in the Austin community.

Benefits include:


Subscription to Reel Times newsletter



Discounts at AFTM-sponsored concerts, dances, and events
4

�

Free classified ads on our website



Eligibility to serve on the Board and help shape the future of AFTM

MEMBERSHIP LEVELS
$15 - Student 1-year
$20 - Individual 1-year
$25 - Family 1-year
$25 - Band or Dance Group 1-year
$50 - Business 1-year
$80 - Individual 5-year
$100 - Family 5-year
$300 (or more) - Lifetime Membership

AFTM Board Elections Coming in April
The Deadline for nominations is February 10th. The list of nominees will be emailed to the membership
via the Yahoo group, and also will be published on the web-site. The election will take place this year on
March 10th. Every current member is eligible to vote, and must be present at the meeting to cast a vote.

AFTM monthly meetings and jams (2nd Sunday of the month) have moved to
El Mercado 1302 S 1st St. Jam begins at 2pm. Show up early and enjoy great Tex Mex
food and the finest service in Austin.
Next meeting: February 9, 2014.
NO MORE OPEN MIKES

At this time, we have suspended the open mikes.
Ongoing clubs you can join!
The Austin Banjo Club: meets on Mondays, 7 - 9 pm at the Senior Activity Center, 29th and Lamar. Traditional
American pop and jazz from late 1800s to the 1930s. All varieties of "banjo" are welcome (tenor, 5-string, banjouke, banjolins, etc) Please join us! www.austinbanjoclub.org for more info.
The Austin Balkan Singers: A singing group comprised of women interested in preserving traditional folk songs
of Eastern Europe. The group has been together over 30 years, gather once a week (most of the time) and welcomes
5

�new members interested in harmony, polyphonic vocalizations and group yells! Perform occasionally. Look for us
on Facebook!

Upcoming Dance Events
Austin Barn Dancers
Community-style contradancing for young and old alike, with the feeling of a town hall social dance. Contras,
squares, and circle mixers to live traditional music provided by LOCO (Local On-Call Orchestra). Meets at
Hancock Recreation Center on Wednesdays at 7:30-9:45 PM. 811 E 41st (corner of Red River). Contact Dale
Rempert at drempert@ix.netcom.com or phone 512/453-4225.
Austin Contra Dancing
Contra Dance Schedule is the following.
Every Wednesday

Balance Dance Studios, located near 4544 South Lamar Blvd

First Friday’s

Balance Dance Studios, located near 4544 South Lamar Blvd

Third Saturday’s

Balance Dance Studios, located near 4544 South Lamar Blvd

Directions and schedule or location changes can be found at taada.us (Traditional Austin Area Dance Association).
Also check out the Facebook page Austin Contra Dancers.
Third Saturday Contra
The 3rd Saturday contra dances are held at the Balance Dance Studios, located near 4544 South Lamar Blvd in a
business park, which is on the other side of Hwy 290W from the Westgate Shopping Center. Beginners session at
7:30 PM, regular dance from 8 to 11 PM. $9 admission with discounts for AFTM members. Students $5. First-time
dancers receive a "dance for free" coupon. No experience or partners are necessary, and all dances are taught. Call
Chuck Roth at (512) 453-8936 or e-mail info@austincontradance.org for more information.
First Friday Contra Dances
Dances taught, no experience needed, bring all your friends. Holds dances from 8:00 - 11:00 pm (beginners' session
from 7:30 - 8), on the first Friday of each month, featuring local callers and musicians. $9 admission to the dance
(discounts for AFTM members -- newcomers are free) with everyone welcome. No experience or partners
necessary, all dances taught. Questions? Send an e-mail to John Kulas or call 512-296-1029.
English Country Dancing
Held on the 2nd Friday of each month, from 7:30pm-10:30, at the First Cumberland Presbyterian Church
Fellowship Hall, 6800 Woodrow Ave (one block South of Justin Lane). The cost is $8 when we have live music,
$6 otherwise, and $5 for students all the time. All dances are taught and called. Beginners are welcome. Please note
this dance is fragrance free. For more information contact Ann McCracken at ann@mccr.org or 266-9949. Or
check the Austin English Country Dance Facebook page.

6

�Fire Ant Frolic
Austin's 17th Annual Fire Ant Frolic Contradance weekend will be held November 1-3, 2013, at the Texas
Federation of Women's Clubs Grand Ballroom. Music will be by Contrajazz and Ladies at Play with callers Diane
Silver and Keith Tuxhorn . Full information about the event is available through our website,
www.fireantfrolic.com.

Clickety Cloggers of Austin
Is a 30-year-old nonprofit dance
clogging heritage and promoting the
help keep a slice of Americana alive. We
9:00 p.m. at the D'ette Dance Studio, 1807
78748. For information about dancing
Virginia Pohlmeier virginiadale@att.net

group dedicated to preserving the
art of clog dancing--has a mission to
dance every Thursday night from 6:30 to
Slaughter Lane, Suite #325, Austin, TX
with the club or taking lessons, Contact
or (512) 441-7422.

International Folk Dancing
International Folk Dancing meets almost every Saturday night at Hancock Recreation Center on 41st Street
(between Red River and Duval). Or visit the AIFD Facebook Page.

Austin Scottish Country Dance Society Features weekly socials and classes. For information call or email Sarah
Harriman at 327-2869 sarah@austinscd.org.

REEL TIMES is published by
Austin Friends of Traditional Music (AFTM), a nonprofit organization (est. 1974) dedicated to encouraging
the performance and appreciation of all genres of traditional music and dance. Copyright 2014 by
Editor, Robin Butter
Contributers, Christy and Dan Foster
Austin Friends of Traditional Music
PO Box 49608,
Austin, Texas 78765
AFTM email: AFTMTexas@gmail.com
Web: www.aftm.us

7

�Austin Friends of Traditional Music
P.O. Box 49608
Austin, TX 78765

RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED

8

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                    <text>Reel Times
Newsletter of the
Austin Friends of Traditional Music
Spring 2017

Britt Irick’s fiddling leads the Rio Rita Old Time Jam!

Welcome to Our New Reel Times!

�We haven’t published Reel Times in a long while and are
excited to bring you news about what’s going on in
traditional music around Austin. We intend to publish this
newsletter quarterly in an on-line edition. Please send
articles, upcoming events and ideas to our editor; Gary
Mortensen, gary.hipster@gmail.com. This is your
newsletter and we need you to help decide what to put in
it.
For starters, we will introduce you to the board members
in this and future editions by printing a brief interview with
each of them. Your board members are: Elise Bright,
Barbara Deane, Jeanne DeFriese, Cheryl DeHut, Dan
Foster, Britt Irick, Joanne Saucedo, Mike Savercool,
Kenny Tweedy, Angie Wooten, Tim Wooten. Your
webmaster is Terry SoRelle, and your Reel Times editor
is Gary Mortensen.
Join AFTM, click here!
Austin String Band Festival: October 20–22, 2017 –
Save the Date
The Austin Friends of Traditional Music present their annual
Austin String Band Festival on October 20-22, 2017, at
beautiful Camp Ben McCulloch in Driftwood, Texas.
This annual camping festival features the very best of local and
national performers of old-time, bluegrass, blues, vintage
country, and ethnic American music.
2

�Whether you come for the day or camp out for the weekend,
there will be music everywhere - on the stage, at the
workshops, in the picnic areas, in the campgrounds, all day and
well into the night. Delicious local and organic food will be
available for sale at the festival. Great string band music,
workshops, and lots of family fun provide something for
everyone.
Friday, October 20 starts off this full weekend with Dance ‘Til
You Drop Night featuring great live music and several kinds of
dancing. Come out and dance or just listen and watch.
Saturday, October 21 will be a full day of great music and music
related activities. Music workshops are offered in the morning
and early afternoon (free with admission). Stage performances
begin in the early afternoon and continue until 10pm; mini-sets
are held in a nearby performance area during stage set
changes to keep the music rolling continuously. Sunday
October 22 is the Gospel Jam, an open morning gospel sing
that wraps up a fun and music-filled weekend!
We’ll occasionally ask AFTM members to share their current musical listening
choices. This issue, we’ve asked Fiddlin’ Dan Foster for his current favorites,
and here they are:

The Goodbye Waltz - Front Porch Fiddling: Matt Wyatt and Justin Branum,
Fiddlesong Records
Sandy River - Gordon Freeman, Silver Circle Productions
Solomon Family - Three Generations of Champion Texas Fiddlers 1929-1969
: Old Blue Records
Art of the Texas Breakdown: Orville Burns, Hodgson Records
50 Old-time Fiddle Gems: Pete McMahan, Voyager Records
3

�MAMMIE’S BANJO
by sharon isaac

The Old Banjo
Was in its’ place
In the front room
Behind Mammie’s threadbare couch
Safe from where we little children would never ever
Dare to touch the precious thing
But the temptation was extraordinary
We knew while Mammie cooked in the kitchen
She couldn’t see us
We laid on the hard, cold, bare floor beside the couch
And beheld and admired
And yearned to touch
Arms and fingers stretching
Imagining the feel, the sensation, the vibration
But never ever, ever
Did we children cross that forbidden line.
Time happens and people pass
Mammie took the bus to another world
The Old Banjo moved to Uncle Basil’s house.
I grew older and I found a banjo muse
“Let me take that old banjo”
“No” was all he ever said
I often visited The Old Banjo and I let it ring and I let it sing
Time happens and people pass
Uncle Basil took the bus to another world
Then a strange thing happened
Aunt Hilda cut down all his treasured trees in the front yard
And gave away his little black dog
Then she put that Old Banjo on my knee
The Old Banjo moved to my house and I let it ring and I let it sing.
4

�The Tuesday Night Rio Rita Old Time Jam

Rio Rita, on Austin’s east side, calls itself a “Mild mannered coffee shop by day, swanky lounge
by night.” True enough but, on Tuesday nights, a transformation of sorts occurs and Rio Rita
becomes the home of a weekly Old Time music jam!
Britt Irick has been attending for years and is the de facto leader of the jam, arriving early each
Tuesday and staying late.
Britt, whose day job is teaching art at a middle school in Kyle, has learned to play fiddle by
attending this jam for the past five years. He’s particularly pleased with Rio Rita’s new location
at 1203 Chicon Street, after spending many years on East Sixth Street. The Old Time Jam has
been at the Chicon Street location since the start of this year and, weather permitting, takes
place on the roomy outdoor patio.
Though Britt arrives early every Tuesday, the official start time is 7:30 and the jam runs as late
as needed, nearly ‘til midnight some evenings. Typically, eight to ten pickers participate sometimes more, sometimes less.
The Rio Rita Old Time Jam is open to players at all levels, and the musicians make a point of
making newcomers feel welcome!
More Rio Rita jam photos
5

�Sara Weber, AFTM Volunteer

If you’ve attended any of the Austin String Band Festivals over the past eleven years, you’ve
likely enjoyed the delicious food available in the “Café” at Camp Ben. The person responsible
for these tasty offerings is Sara Weber, who has run the food service from the beginning and
was instrumental in making the String Band Festival a reality back in 2005.
Sara’s interest in traditional music is through contra dancing. Although she enjoyed the
performance-based activities the AFTM had been presenting, she and others felt a festival
event would encourage a more diverse and younger audience. As the inaugural String Band
Festival was being planned in 2005, Sara’s culinary skills prompted her to volunteer to take on
the food service responsibility. She’s been running the Café at the String Band Festival ever
since!
From the beginning, Sara wanted to provide a complete meal service so that people could
attend the festival and eat all their meals at the Café. The menus show an emphasis on quality
and fresh ingredients with some concessions to high quality “comfort food” as well. The menus
accommodate as many dietary restrictions as possible.
Like all the tasks involved in putting on the String Band Festival, Sara’s work is 100% a
volunteer effort and she depends on a volunteer staff to help with food preparation, order
taking, and all the tasks involved with running the food service.
Sara feels that many festival attendees may not be aware that the food service is not a for-profit
venture, but is strictly a volunteer effort and that all the proceeds go to the AFTM. Often, she
needs more volunteers than are available, which creates an unnecessarily stressful situation.
Hopefully, the 2017 Austin String Band Festival will see an increase in the number of
volunteers. Sara welcomes volunteers with no food service experience. Many volunteers have
commented that working at the Café is a great way to see old friends and meet new AFTM
members.
6

�Dan Foster at his home in Austin

The Hornpipe in Southern Fiddling
Dan Foster
Among hobbyists of the violin there is a certain bunch noted for its relatively harmless
predilection to regard the obscurity of a fiddle tune as a serious mark of distinction in itself. The
tendency toward this little personal excess is not without benefit in general. Indeed it has
secured the rescue of more than a few charming and wonderful melodies from oblivion and
helped to foster the survival of many a good tune that might otherwise have been lost. But
among that cadre is a distinct faction exhibiting a more extreme form of this tendency: The
hornpipe fiddler. To this odd sort not only the origin, but the melody and the very title of the
tune itself must exhibit a certain affinity for the peculiar. Tunes with names like The Hiawatha
Hornpipe, The Dominion Hornpipe or Good For the Tongue find a favored place in the hornpipe
fancier’s tune-list, and each lives up to its name. Sometimes charming, often obtuse and ever
pursuing novelty in all aspects, the hornpipe is at home among the inscrutable. As
Pennsylvania fiddler, Jehile Kirkhuff is heard to have chuckled before launching off into The All
American Hornpipe: “Here’s a baffler…”
Now, reels and breakdowns predominate any regular gathering of fiddle players. A polka, the
waltz, or even an occasional jig is admitted. But the appearance of a hornpipe on the scene, at
7

�least one in its full plumage, is apt to bring the groove of a good jam to a dead halt. Good
breeding and a moderate sense of discretion generally serve to keep this from happening too
often and the fiddler with a bad case of the hornpipes may be welcome or at least tolerated
while the symptoms are under control. Forbearance is an essential if difficult virtue for the
hornpipe fiddler, at least for the one who cares to maintain both reputation and friendships in
the community at large. Fisher’s Hornpipe is usually a safe bet, Durang’s, Rickett’s or even
Harvest Home, but the looks to be expected after finishing even a commendable execution of
The Acrobat or The Bee’s Wing in Bb will almost certainly be quizzical at best
So what is a hornpipe? The description typically offered (not infrequently with a trace of
disdain) involves likening the sound of it to that of an oddly constructed form of musical
calisthenics, notey with interminable arpeggios, a somewhat stilted meter, melodic accidentals,
and a propensity for quaintness. A recommendation may also be offered that the form is best
executed in solitude. Still, for that plucky segment of the fiddling community with an ear for
such business, the form is magical fun. Most fiddling is centered around dance rhythms.
Breakdowns, polkas, and waltzes are common across the South and account for the main part
of the fiddler's repertoire. Among the many now largely extinct dance forms for which tunes
once filled the floor there were the quadrille, lancers, the redova, cotillion, mazurka, galop, clog,
walk-around, essence, strathspey, Schottische, and others. The hornpipe might have been
counted among these, at least in the earliest days. There is considerable disagreement about
the origin and nature of the hornpipe, at least among those who enjoy disagreeing about such
things. Like the Schottische, which Alan Jabbour has described as "the Continent's idea about
the way that the English thought the Scottish people danced like", the origin of hornpipe is
fittingly conjectural.
Most often associated in origin with northern England, the earliest references to the form come
from 17th century compositions with various settings of the word “hornpipe” in the title. Some
older varieties were in 3/2 time signature and were perhaps related to an earlier and
unfortunately named English dance form, the “maggot”. There are 17th and 18th century
references, even tune books from the period such as Thomas Marsden's Original Lancashire
Hornpipes, Old and New, published by Henry Playford in 1705. The familiar Fisher's Hornpipe
was first published in 1780 and attributed to one James A. Fishar, a dancer, musical director
and ballet master at Covent Garden during the 1770's. It is included as Hornpipe #1 in Fishar’s
Sixteen Cotillons Sixteen Minuets Twelve Allemands and Twelve Hornpipes, 1773. Another
well-known title is the Sailor's Hornpipe, first printed as the College Hornpipe in 1797 or 1798
by J. Dale of London, but now days more often associated with vintage Pop-Eye the Sailor TV
cartoons. There appears to be little truth to the commonly held idea that the dance was made
popular by virtue of having been performed on board 17th century sailing vessels by the crews
of same.
Whatever its origin, the hornpipe has persisted as a common tune form in Great Britain and
among American fiddlers both North and South since time out of mind. Highly regarded
versions of Durang’s Hornpipe are still popular among old-time, Bluegrass and Texas Style
fiddlers alike. It is the namesake of John Durang who lived 1768 to 1822, a native-born
American widely known as a dancer. Said to have been George Washington's favorite
performer, he was noted particularly for his nimble execution of the hornpipe. During the 19th
century, the hornpipe was popular among fiddlers of all types, but particularly favored by the
“gentleman fiddlers” of both genders capable of extracting challenging specimens from tunebooks like Elias Howe’s Ryan’s Mamouth Collection and later Cole’s 1000 Fiddle Tunes. The
first recorded musical rendition of Durang’s Hornpipe is from Don Richardson made for
8

�Columbia Records, 1916. Jasper Bisbee recorded The College Hornpipe for Edison Records in
1923
Nowadays, the old-time music scene ungrudgingly concedes Rickett’s Hornpipe, The
Cincinnati, and others like John Sharp’s or The Grand Hornpipe which are typically played more
like break-downs anyway. One common aspect of almost all state-side renditions of the
hornpipe is avoidance of the “dotted-rhythm” that is perhaps its most identifiable characteristic
in Great Britain, Canada, sometimes the American northeast and at Irish sessions everywhere.
In musical notation the sound of the breakdown style is represented predominately by
measures of evenly played eighth-notes, while the old-school hornpipe rhythm is cast by
measures of dotted eighth notes followed by sixteenth-notes.
British style

American style

It may be possible that this was a conscious result of the need for cultural differentiation
sometime after the effects of the War of 1812 (a conflict with deeper and more significant
impact than is typically understood). You can hear the difference between the head-strong,
hard-charging four-square American style and the more lilting nature of the older form by
comparing the sound of two recordings of The Liverpool Hornpipe. The British“dotted-rhytm”
version by the fiddler Tom Anderson from the distant Shetland Islands followed by the American
style by Willaim B. Houtchens who was recorded fiddling the tune in 1924 in Indiana for Gennett
Records.
Examples (audio links):
Liverpool Hornpipe – Tom Anderson (Shetland Islands – 1970s?)
www.fostersplace.com/sounds/LiverpoolHornpipe-TomAnderson.mp3

Liverpool Hornpipe –Wm Houtchens (Indiana 1924)
www.fostersplace.com/sounds/LiverpoolHornpipe-WBHoutchens.mp3

Although, Emmet Lundy’s version of Fisher’s Hornpipe features a degree of the older rhythmic
style, the virtual absence of the dotted-rhythm across most available historic recordings from
the U.S. is compelling evidence that this was a practice most likely adopted early in our history,
though the evidence of audio examples essential to posing such a guess is lacking for any
period before the early 1920s.
This American style of rendering the hornpipe is echoed in many strong, traditionally sourced
White fiddlers such as Emmet Lundy, Henry Reed, Luther Strong, Marcus Martin and John
Salyer up to more “modern” artists from Clayton McMichen to Howdy Forrester. Considering
the foundational influence of Black fiddlers on the American tradition, it should be noted that
from the few early recordings in existence we might infer the same approach to the hornpipe
rhythm, perhaps even the origin of that approach. In the 1940s Fisher’s Hornpipe was recorded
from the playing of Black fiddler Frank Patterson and banjoist Nathan Frazier by John Work in
Tennessee. That version is characteristically “un-dotted” in its rhythm. The same can be said
9

�for a version of Wagoner’s played by fiddler John Lusk and banjoist Murphy Gribble. Lusk,
Gribble, and guitarist Albert York from Campaign Tennessee, were recorded by Robert "Stu"
Jamieson for the Library of Congress in 1946. Jamieson noted that the three were "The most
popular dance band for black and white dances in six counties".
A relatively few number of hornpipes show up in most of the known repertoires for Southern
fiddlers, over and over. But in the case of our hornpipe fiddler, his repertoire might include a
goodly number of choice and well-developed representatives of the species under
consideration. Ernie Hodges was a fiddler born in 1907 near Banner Elk, N.C. He learned to
read music before he started attending school. His father, who was an old-time singer and
music teacher, inspired in him an early love of music. By the time he was 12, Hodges, with the
help of his grandfather, had built his first banjo out of a gourd with horse hair strings. He went
on to become a much admired fiddler across the region. His actual tune-list may have included
any number of hornpipes, but among the handful that happen to have survived in recorded form
there are Deer Walk and Hanna’s Hornpipe.
Hanna’s Hornpipe
Ernie Hodges
(Transcribed by Frank Maloy, The Devils Box – Vol. 2 No. 4 Dec 1, 1978. Used by
permission.)

This tune comes from the Davis Unlimited LP entitled North Carolina Fiddling" (DU 33031) 1976
Hodges entered fiddle contests and picked up classical tunes and traditional melodies while
traveling throughout the Southeast with bands. At the peak of his playing, he was heard on 72
radio stations across the South. Other Appalachian fiddlers were also known for their
hornpipes. Roscoe Parrish (1897-1984) of Galax, Virginia played tunes like The Oyster River
Hornpipe, Colberth’s, and the Portsmouth Hornpipe. George Hawkins (1904-1991) from Bath
County, Kentucky is known for the many hornpipes in his repertoire including Big Indian,
Holmes Hornpipe, The High Level, Randall’s, The Rocky Mountain, The Thunder Hornpipe,
Good For the Tongue and others.
10

�The fiddling tradition in the Midwest is particularly hornpipe heavy. There appear to have once
been a great number and diversity of unique hornpipes common among fiddlers in Illinois,
Missouri, Iowa, Nebraska and Indiana. Known as the “Missouri Valley” fiddle style, the tradition
is characterized by clean, notey playing of complex hornpipes and reels, many of which can be
traced to Cole's 1000 Fiddle Tunes or Ryan's Mammoth Collection and other 19th century fiddle
tune books. The legendary fiddler William Anderson “Bill” Driver (1881-1985) of Pleasant Hill
Missouri is noted for his version of Marmaduke’s Hornpipe. Left handed fiddler Cyril Stinnett
(1912 – 1986) from the northwest corner of Missouri played Hooker’s Hornpipe and the
Dubuque Hornpipe, a tune which he performed more like a standard breakdown and as such
may have entered the modern old-time repertoire where it is now known simply as Dubuque.
The tune appears first in Elias Howe's collection as The Village Hornpipe. It was also played by
Missouri Valley fiddlers Casey Jones, Art Galbraith, and Ron Hughey. Lonnie Robertson
(1908-1981) from Springfield, Missouri is known for his renditions of The Champion and
Adrian’s Hornpipe. The succeeding generation of Missouri fiddlers include those like Vesta
Johnson who was born in 1922 in North-central Missouri and has been an important influence
on young musicians in the region. Vesta, Charlie Walden and Chirps Smith among others are
helping to ensure that the Missouri Valley tradition continues for yet a while.
Another important Midwest fiddler known for his hornpipes was Bob Walters (1889-1960) of
Nebraska who reportedly won practically every contest he entered in the region. His version of
The Thunderbolt is to this day unequaled. Walters was recorded in the 1940s by fiddler and
tune-collector R. P. Christeson and by Iowa fiddler Dwight Lamb throughout the 1950s. Among
the many remarkable tunes associated with “Uncle Bob” Walters are The High Level Hornpipe,
St. Joe, Woodchopper’s Hornpipe and The Constitution. Other notable hornpipe recordings
from the R. P. Christeson collection are The Hunter’s Hornpipe from George Morris, Aunt
Mary’s Hornpipe from Vee Latty, and Effie’s Hornpipe performed by Christeson himself.
Another noted Midwest fiddler was Lotus Dickey (1911-1989) from Southern Indiana whose
repertoire included The New Century Hornpipe, the truly charming Peck O’Mant Hornpipe and
others.
Among Bluegrass fiddlers, the old chestnuts are strongly favored with many innovative versions
of Fisher’s, Sailor’s Hornpipe, Durang’s, and Rickett’s. Several notable new hornpipes have
been written by Bluegrass musicians, including Byron Berline’s Huckleberry Hornpipe and Bill’s
Monroe Hornpipe. Kenny Baker is known for Doc Harris’Hornpipe, Bobby Vann’s and the Ball
and Chain Hornpipe. Most Bluegrass renditions are almost indistinguishable from breakdowns
and played at a pretty good clip. While not favored much by 5-string banjo pickers of the
classic era, more contemporary banjoists like Bob Black, Bill Keith and Alan Munde have all
featured noteworthy hornpipes in their performances and recordings.
Here in Texas, I remember listening to the late Bill Northcutt, a much loved old-time Texas
fiddler from Houston, play The Cottage Hornpipe and The Lamplighter’s. Bill was widely known
not only for his solid breakdown fiddling, but for the choice, out-of-the-ordinary tunes he played
with such good-natured talent. His version of The Hiawatha Hornpipe, along with any number
of other unnamed gems were a pure delight to hear. Many folks around the Austin area can still
recall the inventive precision (and accompanying high-pitched chuckle) of the late Gordon
Starrett as he ran through any number of often outlandish and unnamed hornpipes. Bill and
Gordon were both among the inheritors of that venerable part of the fiddling tradition that
favored the thrill of measured expertise if not outright acrobatics best practiced in the confines
of the hornpipe. Favoring single-note playing, precision and clarity, they took delight in closed
flat-keys, and the keys of C and F which are common for the form. Though less often heard
11

�these days in old-time circles, hornpipe playing was once the mark of an accomplished fiddler.
Lowe Stokes is reputed to have said of Alabama Fiddler, Joe Lee – “He could just set and play
pretty all day and all night. Play all them ol’ hornpipes, and he could really play ‘em too.”
Texas Style fiddlers have a special place for hornpipes in their repertoire. While some of the
more common tunes like Uncle Herman’s Hornpipe, Wagoner’s, or Randall’s Hornpipe are
played in the contest setting, in the context of the informal jam many others like The Oriole, The
Butterfly, Dew Drop or Dominion Hornpipe may be heard. Texans render the hornpipe not in
the dotted rhythm but according to the steady Texas pace made so popular by fiddlers like
Major Franklin, Red Steeley and Howard “Bus” Westmorland and their stalwart guitar players.
Norman Solomon’s setting of General Lee’s Hornpipe is marked by a relentless freight-train
rhythm that has all the drive of the breakdown but maintains the unique aspect of the hornpipe
done up Texas Style.
So, I hope I have piqued some interest in learning more about hornpipe fiddling. It is true that
spending time learning this rather demanding form will not in itself guarantee your continued
popularity at the local jam. But if you are the type that enjoys untangling musical puzzles and
can derive sufficient joy from fiddling for its own sake, then you might be just the kind of artist
cut out to encounter the hornpipe on its own terms on a regular basis. There are added
benefits, though. Making the effort to learn these weird tunes does have a salubrious effect on
fiddling technique in general. You may find that the skills you develop in hornpipe fiddling do
serve in some measure to transfer better clarity, control and precision to anything you play. It
may well be that a significant portion of what sets the modern Texas Style of fiddling apart is
attributable to concentration on the bowing necessary to execute the hornpipe form. This is
purely conjecture on my part, but taking into account the sheer number and extensive variety of
hornpipes associated with the playing of Benny Thomasson and his singular effect on modern
fiddle technique, it does not seem unreasonable to suspect that his time spent working through
hornpipes like Forrester’s, Blanchard’s and Tooly’s had something to do with it all. The unique
and fascinating musical requirements involved in learning how to play a good hornpipe are after
all a satisfying and special kind of fun - and good for you, too!.

Sources:
The Devil's Box, periodical Vol 29 No. 3 Fall 1995
The Traditional Tune Archive (http://tunearch.org)
The Country Dance Book - Beth Tolman, &amp; Ralph Page,. Countryman Press; 1937
With Fiddle and Well-Rosined Bow: Old-Time Alabama Fiddling – Joyce H. Cauthen, University of Alabama Press, 1989
Southern Fiddlers and Fiddle Contests – Chris Goertzen, Universtiy Press of Mississippi, 2008
Play Me Something Quick and Devlish: Old Time Fiddler’s in Missouri – Howard Wright Marshall, Univ. of Missouri Press, 2012
Old-time Kentucky Fiddle Tunes --Jeff Todd Titon, University Press of Kentucky, 2001
The Beautiful Music all Around Us – Stephen Wade, University of Illinois Press. 2012
The Devil’s Box-Masters of Southern Fiddling – Charles Wolfe, Vanderbilt University Press. 1997
The Old-Time Fiddler's Repertory: 245 Traditional Tunes - R.P. Christeson, University of Missouri 1973
David Allen
Gary Lee Moore
Dan Stewart
Charlie Walden
Olaf Riewe

12

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Newsletter of

The Austin Friends of Traditional Music

Summer 2017

Reel Times visits the Stone Soup Jam!

Dave Polacheck and family celebrate his 70th Birthday
at the Stone Soup Jam in April

�Christy Foster sings and plays a tune at the Stone Soup Jam

The Austin, Texas area is blessed with
several ongoing acoustic jams, many of
them held every week. The AFTM
website lists weekly jams for Cajun, old
time, bluegrass, Scandinavian, Irish and
other traditional music forms.
On the third Sunday of the month,
however, there’s a jam that welcomes all
these genres, as well as any form of
traditional music. It’s the Stone Soup Jam
at the Texas Music Museum, organized
by Dave Polacheck.
Dave grew up in a family where folk
music was played regularly, and he took
up the banjo at an early age. His
childhood was split between New York
City, Los Angeles and San Francisco, so
Dave’s been around!
Dave moved to Texas in the early 1970’s,
and has fond memories of the early days
of the Austin music scene, listening to
Janis Joplin, John Clay and the Lost

Austin Band, and many others. It’s
Dave’s intention to keep the spirit of
those days alive with a diverse, allinclusive jam.
At the March, 2017 Stone Soup Jam, one
could hear fiddle tunes, unaccompanied
ballad singing, blues music, old country
songs, and other traditional genres. The
March gathering was a particularly
special event; Dave Polacheck
celebrated his 70th birthday, surround by
family and friends!
This fine jam takes place on the third
Sunday of the month at the Texas Music
Museum, 1009 E 11th St, Austin, TX
78702; things get rolling around 2:00 PM!

Page 2

Click here to see more photos of
The Stone Soup Jam!

�2017 Austin String Band Festival Preview
The Austin String Band Festival is one of the best-kept secrets in
Texas, a music festival with small crowds, a lovely natural setting
and close-in parking.
Come discover the Austin String Band Festival out at Camp Ben
McCulloch (right by the Salt Lick) in Driftwood.TX. Dance all night on
Friday, then attend hands-on music and dance workshops under the
trees early on Saturday, then kick back for a day and night of
nonstop fiddles, banjos and guitars as more than two dozen bands
take the stage. Sunday wraps it up with a gospel jam. Camping at its
finest along Onion Creek. October 20 - 22.

The campground jamming at the ASBF is some of the best to be
found anywhere, as demonstrated by these four AFTM stalwarts!
Go to the next page to see this year's featured performers.
Page 3

�Molsky's Mountain Drifters
Introducing Bruce Molsky’s brand new
trio with Allison de Groot and Stash
Wyslouch - Tradition steeped in
possibility.
Molsky's Mountain Drifters packs a punch
with three of the most captivating
performers in the most recent generation
of Old-Time and American Roots music.
The band features Bruce Molsky,
(Grammy nominated, revered Old-Time
music ambassador and Berklee College of
Music Visiting Scholar) along with guitar
genre bender Stash Wyslouch (of the
Deadly Gentlemen) on guitar and vocals
and master of the clawhammer banjo,

Allison de Groot (of The Goodbye Girls).
These striking musicians have come
together for a new sound within the
traditional music genre through their
audacious approach. “I was looking for a
new voice,” says Molsky, “a new avenue of
expression using old time mountain music
as the jumping-off point, but not being
constrained by hard core traditionalism.
Allison and Stash are showing me the
way, just where the music is headed, in
directions I never would have imagined
when I started my own journey into the
mountains a long time ago.”

Page 4

�Austin area favorites Spencer and Rains
Tricia Spencer is a Kansas
fiddler who grew up learning the
tradition of old time music from
her Grandparents.
Howard Rains is a native Texas
artist and a fourth generation
fiddler.
Together, Spencer &amp; Rains have
performed and taught nationally
and internationally, preserving
and building upon the traditions of
their region. The husband and
wife duo are known for their twin

fiddle harmony, which is a product
of the influence of midwestern
Scandinavian fiddlers Tricia heard
as a child. At the same time,
Howard’s distinct repertoire
reintroduces listeners to the precontest styles of Texas fiddling.
That same sense of harmony is in
their vocals, as well, which they
pull from all manner of American
folk music. Both multiinstrumentalists, they are steeped
in tradition and are dedicated to
the preservation, performance,
and teaching of old time music.

Page 5

�"Rabbit" Sanchez and Lorenzo Martinez
Ramon “Rabbit” Sanchez (bajo sexto) and Lorenzo Martinez (accordion) are legendary musicians
as well as some of the most versatile to come out of the conjunto homeland of South Texas.
Together they have forged a sound that combines old school traditional conjunto with a
progressive sensibility.

Rodney Clay Sutton is a
dance performer and teacher
of Appalachian step dance –
both flatfoot and clogging.
He calls square dances and
contra dances, and is a
storyteller and ballad singer.
Rodney offers workshops,
lectures, and demonstrations
catered for a range of age
groups, including youth,
seniors, and corporate
gatherings. He is also a
concert and festival producer,
emcee, and stage manager.

Rodney Sutton
Page 6

�Missy Beth and The Morning Afters

Beth Chrisman steps away from her usual role as side player, picks up the
guitar and sings center stage, mixing in her original songs with gems from her
favorite songwriters and heroes (Hazel Dickens, Loretta Lynn, Wanda
Jackson, Ola Belle Reed).
The Morning Afters are a rotating crew of Austin's finest country pickers, will
lay down a collection of lonesome honkytonk and rockin oldtime tunes sure to
get your feet on the dance floor.

The Barn Owls, with Sharon Isaac, Caller
The Barn Owls are an oldtime string band specializing in having a good time. Fiddler Trent
Shepherd grew up in Austin but his family roots are in West Virginia. He and bassist Brink Melton
are alumni of the Onion Creek Crawdaddies, a beergrass band that had a large and loyal
following for several years. Guitarist Joe Dobbs is a librarian by day and tune collector all the time.
Some of the band's more unusual tunes were unearthed by Joe. Banjoist Jerry Hagins has been
on the Austin scene for quite a while, teaching banjo and playing in any band that will have him.
Square dances are a Barn Owls specialty, and they'll be teaming up with Kentucky-raised dance
caller Sharon Issac.
Page 7

�How many strings on Dave's banjo?

Clawhammer Picking on a Seven String Banjo
by David Polacheck

I’ve been playing clawhammer style
banjo for more than fifty years, and
over that time, I have often been
frustrated by the fact that many
tunes require notes that are below
the customary low note on the fourth
string of D or C. Of course, there
are tunings that tak

section an octave higher was
unsatisfying to me because I liked
the low pitch sound.

Last year, I was offered a chance to
“banjo sit” a six string banjo by Mike
Ramsey. Now this was not a guitar
banjo, but basically a five string
banjo with an extra bass string
e the fourth string down to a lower
between the standard fourth and
note, but this is often inconvenient
fifth. Gold Tone has made some
and can make difficulties in left hand instruments like this under the
fingering for some tunes. The option model name “LoJo”.
of playing the whole piece or low

Page 8

�I tuned the extra bass string initially to
a G an octave below the third string in
standard G tuning and tried it out.
Since I now had a string an octave
below the fiddlers’ fourth string in
standard tuning, it gave me the option
of playing the low notes for pieces like
“Wild Rose of the Mountain”, “Frosty
Morning” and “Loftus Jones”. It also
gave me a nice low pitched sound on
chords.
This got me to thinking about what a
seven string banjo could provide in
picking possibilities, since an extra
bass string below the low G I was
now playing, pitched an octave below
the standard fourth string would allow
me to play many tunes an octave
lower than the standard way of
playing them. This creates the
possibility of playing tunes in the cello
banjo range, like a Gold Tone CEB-5,
but also having the standard banjo
range and way of approaching the
tune. The extra low bass string would
also enhance the sounds of chords
used for emphasis during the
rendition.

requested that they switch out the rim
for their version of the Whyte Laydie
style tone ring from the MM-150
model.) They also modified the bridge
and I doubled up on two of the posts
on the tailpiece. The YouTube videos
I subsequently made show how well
the repurposing worked out. One
unusual feature of this design is the
drone or thumb string which has the
same scale length as the other strings
instead of the traditional shorter
length terminating in a “fifth string
peg”. To bring the pitch of the drone
string to its normal note, I used
detachable fifth string capos of
various designs, ultimately settling on
having model railroad spikes
installed. Now I don’t have to worry
about sticking my thumb on the short
end of the thumb string.

Two other aftermarket changes
included a seven string tailpiece from
Thomas Saffell’s Infinity banjos and a
custom made bridge by Bart Veerman
allowing for the radiused fingerboard
of the neck. I also chose to use a
Shubb twelve string guitar capo,
which works well. I am very happy
I really like playing a banjo with a
with the results, especially at the
Whyte Laydie tone ring, and since I
price, considerably lower than a “from
knew that Gold Tone made a version
scratch” instrument from a small shop
of this design, I consulted with Wayne
banjo maker would have been.
Rogers about modifying one of their
12 string guitar banjos (the GT 1200) There are at least two other makers
by regrooving the nut to accept seven of this type of instrument that I know
strings. Only seven of the twelve
of*, and it is also being used for
tuning machines were used although classical style (Michael Nix has a
all twelve remain in place. (I
nylon string seven string instrument,
Page 9

�which you can view on YouTube) as
well as bluegrass style picking.
The additional sounds and ways of
playing the traditional songs and tunes I
love has made me a enthusiastic fan of
the modern seven string banjo!
(Tunings I have used include
gDGDGBD, gDGDGBbD, gDGDGCD,
aDADF#AD, aDADFAD, gCGCGBD and
gCGCGCD.)
*Henning Von Ploetz of Germany and
Thomas Saffell’s Infinity Banjos from
Tennessee. These instruments both
feature a traditional short drone string
design.

Page 10

7 string banjo bridge
made by Bart Veerman

�The Reel Times is published quarterly by the Austin Friends of
Traditional Music, a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt Texas nonprofit corporation.
Contributions are deductible as charitable and educational donations.

AFTM Board of Directors
Tim Wooten, President
Angie Wooten, Vice President
Cheryl Dehut, Treasurer
Ken Tweedy, Secretary and Volunteer Coordinator
Jeanne DeFriese, Events Coordinator
Brit Irick, Outreach Coordinator
Barbara Deane, Sponsorships Coordinator
Mike Savercool, Membership Coordinator
Joanna Saucedo, Social Media Coordinator
Dan Foster, At Large

Volunteers
Terry SoRelle, Webmaster
Gary Mortensen, Reel Times Editor
Austin Friends of Traditional Music
P.O. Box 49608

Click here to
volunteer at the
String Band Festival

Click
here for the
AFTM website

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                    <text>Reel Times
Newsletter of

The Austin Friends of Traditional Music

Vol. 43, Number 03, Fall 2017

The 2017 Austin String Band Festival
October 20 - 22, Camp Ben McCulloch

Jenny and the Corn Ponies
at last year's Austin String Band Festival

�Chris Brashear and Peter McLaughlin in Austin, October 7!

Austin area fans of bluegrass and traditional string band music are in for a rare treat on
Saturday, October 7 when The Hillside House Concerts hosts the brilliant acoustic duo,
Chris Brashear and Peter McLaughlin.
Chris and Peter are first-rate pickers and singers, and have been touring nationally as a
duo for twenty years. They’ve released two duo CD’s: “Canyoneers” and “So Long
Arizona”. In the early 2000’s they both played in the fine bluegrass band, The Perfect
Strangers.
Chris Brashear plays guitar, fiddle and mandolin and sings with a gorgeous tenor voice.
He toured with Robin and Linda Williams and Their Fine Group for six years, and
presently plays with the fine string band, the Piedmont Melody Makers.
Peter is a uniquely gifted guitarist who has won the National Flatpick Guitar
Championship at Winfield, Kansas as well as the Telluride Bluegrass Guitar
Championship. He toured for six years with the Laurie Lewis Band.
Seeing Peter and Chris at a festival is always a treat and to see them up close in the
intimate setting of the Hillside House Concert is an opportunity not to be missed!
The Austin Friends of Traditional Music is proud to sponsor this house concert at 7:30
PM on Saturday, October 7! The Hillside House Concerts are held in an elegant north
Austin location, and reservations can be made at: musicgirl3205@gmail.com

Page 2

�Campground picking at its finest!
Doc Hamilton, Tim Wilson, Jeff Large and Robert Griffith
picking in the shade at the Austin String Band Festival!
Come discover the Austin String Band Festival out at Camp Ben McCulloch (right by the
Salt Lick) in Driftwood, TX. Dance all night on Friday, then attend hands-on music and
dance workshops under the trees early on Saturday, then kick back for a day and night of
nonstop fiddles, banjos and guitars as more than two dozen bands take the
stage. Sunday wraps it up with a gospel jam. Camping at its finest along Onion Creek.
Presented by the Austin Friends of Traditional Music, this festival celebrates all kinds of
"string band" music with lots of live performances, workshops, jams, old time square
dancing, contra dancing and great food.
Camping is available on a first come, first served basis. Electricity is available at most
locations in the campground. Camping permits, with or without electricity, are sold in the
festival ticket booth beginning at noon on Friday.
October is beautiful in the Texas hill country. Not too hot, not too cold. Just right.
Tickets will be available at the festival admissions gate beginning at 12:00 noon on Friday,
October 20th, 2017. When online ticket sales have ended, you can still purchase tickets at
the festival.
For more information, and to see the festival lineup, visit the Austin Friends of Traditional
Music website at http://aftm.us/
To support us and enjoy membership benefits, visit http://aftm.us/index.php/join-aftm
Page 3

�Austin String Band Festival 2017

Molsky's Mountain Drifters
Bruce Molsky, “one of America’s premier
fiddling talents” (Mother Jones) and
Grammy-nominated artist on fiddle, banjo,
guitar and song is delighted to bring his
new group to the 2017 Austin String
Band Festival! Bruce’s previous
collaborations, with Anonymous 4, 1865 –
Songs of Hope and Home from the
American Civil War, was released to rave
reviews and was on the top 10 Billboard
charts for weeks. He is also a special
guest on legendary guitarist Mark
Knopfler’s latest CD, Tracker and is
working on his 3rd album with Andy Irvine
&amp; Donal Lunny’s supergroup Mozaik.
Allison de Groot combines wide-ranging

virtuosity and passion for old-time music.
With her own bands The Goodbye Girls
and Oh My Darling, she has played
Trafalgar Square in London, Newport Folk
Festival, Stockholm Folk Festival the
Winnipeg Folk Festival, and Tønder
Festival in Denmark.
Boston-based Stash Wyslouch is one of
bluegrass’ great young genre-bending
pioneers. He got his start as a guitarist in
metal bands before immersing himself in
roots music as a member of The Deadly
Gentlemen. Stash is a veteran festival
performer, having played at Grey Fox
Bluegrass Festival, Rockygrass, Merlefest,
Savannah Music Festival and others.

Page 4

�Austin String Band Festival 2017

Austin area favorites Spencer and Rains
Together, Spencer &amp; Rains have performed and taught
nationally and internationally, preserving and building upon the
traditions of their region. The husband and wife duo are known
for their twin fiddle harmony, which is a product of the influence
of midwestern Scandinavian fiddlers Tricia heard as a child. At
the same time, Howard’s distinct repertoire reintroduces
listeners to the pre-contest styles of Texas fiddling. That same
sense of harmony is in their vocals, as well, which they pull
from all manner of American folk music. Both multiinstrumentalists, they are steeped in tradition and are
dedicated to the preservation, performance, and teaching of
old time music.
Page 5

�Austin String Band Festival 2017

Missy Beth and The Morning Afters
Beth Chrisman steps away from her usual role as side player,
picks up the guitar and sings center stage, mixing in her
original songs with gems from her favorite songwriters and
heroes (Hazel Dickens, Loretta Lynn, Wanda Jackson, Ola
Belle Reed).
The Morning Afters - a rotating crew of Austin's finest
country pickers, will lay down a collection of lonesome
honkytonk and rockin oldtime tunes sure to get your feet on
the dance floor.
Page 6

�Austin String Band Festival 2017

"Rabbit" Sanchez and Lorenzo Martinez
Ramon “Rabbit” Sanchez (bajo sexto) and Lorenzo Martinez
(accordion) are legendary musicians as well as some of the
most versatile to come out of the conjunto homeland of South
Texas. Together they have forged a sound that combines old
school traditional conjunto with a progressive sensibility.
Rodney Clay Sutton is a dance
performer and teacher of
Appalachian step dance – both
flatfoot and clogging. He calls
square dances and contra
dances, and is a storyteller and
ballad singer. Rodney offers
workshops, lectures, and
demonstrations catered for a
range of age groups, including
youth, seniors, and corporate
gatherings. He is also a
concert and festival producer,
emcee, and stage manager.

Rodney Sutton
Page 7

�Austin String Band Festival 2017

The Barn Owls, with Sharon Isaac, Caller
The Barn Owls are an oldtime string band specializing in having a good
time. Fiddler Trent Shepherd grew up in Austin but his family roots are in
West Virginia. He and bassist Brink Melton are alumni of the Onion Creek
Crawdaddies, a beergrass band that had a large and loyal following for
several years. Guitarist Joe Dobbs is a librarian by day and tune collector
all the time. Some of the band's more unusual tunes were unearthed by
Joe. Banjoist Jerry Hagins has been on the Austin scene for quite a
while, teaching banjo and playing in any band that will have him. Square
dances are a Barn Owls specialty, and they'll be teaming up with
Kentucky-raised dance caller Sharon Issac.

Page 8

�Austin String Band Festival 2017

Up Around the Sun
Austin legends Tim Kerr and Jerry Hagins’ new project of old time music is
called Up Around the Sun.
Take old time tunes played on a banjo, claw hammer style …. add an open
tuned guitar… playing a loose Irish style ….. sprinkle in some harmonica and
fiddle , and you get Up Around The Sun.

Also performing at this years' Austin String Band Festival

The Mar-A-Lago Stragglers
The Mar-A-Lago Stragglers are Dom Fisher (Wood and Wire) on guitar and lead
vocals, Amanda Jo Chisholm (Frauleins) on upright bass, Matt Downing (Matt
Downing) on banjo and sweet, buttery harmonies, and Silas Lowe (Silas Lowe) on
mandolin. MALS play a mix of early trad grass all the way up to more modern
compositions by folks like Larry Sparks. A favorite featured act at highbrow south
Austin celebrations of Easter and Mother's Day, MALS is sure to provide as close an
approximation of bluegrass music as they can muster!

Jesse Lege, Peter Schwarz &amp; Cajun Ramble
Cajun Ramble is the new project of accordionist Jesse Lege, a
member of the Cajun Music Hall of Fame and Peter Schwarz, a
protégé of master fiddler Dewey Balfa.

Catching Up the Slack
Catching up the Slack is a new Texas band, with Britt Irick from Austin, and Margaret,
April and Lloyd Wright from Kennard. Their caller is Rodney Sutton.

Page 9

�Austin String Band Festival 2017

The Coffee Man returns to the Austin String Band Festival!

"The Morning Dew" at the Telluride Bluegrass Festival June, 2016
After an evening of dancing, picking, and
other indulgences, many campers at the
ASBF wake up needing a cup of coffee more
than anything else. Fortunately, Richard
Moore has a “passion for filling the need”.
Richard is “The Coffee Man” who offers
gallons and gallons of free coffee to campers
at the ASBF, as well as six other acoustic
music festivals throughout the year!
This all started back in ’06 or ’07 when
Richard was camping at the Telluride
Bluegrass Festival and realized one morning
that his neighbor in the campsite had no
coffee. Richard was happy to share, and
enjoyed that experience so much that he
expanded on the idea and created the
Meadow Park Coffee Cooperative, a one-man
operation that runs the Morning Dew
community supported coffee shop at various
festivals around the country.
Richard admits to enjoying being “the center
of attention” and has found that “it’s more fun
being generous than being selfish”.
So, Richard gets up early and makes twenty
to twenty-five gallons of coffee each morning

and makes it available to campers on a selfserve basis from 7:00 AM until 9:00 AM or so.
The coffee is absolutely free, but coffee
drinkers need to supply their own cups. Real
coffee cups are the best, of course, but
recyclable paper cups are OK, also.
Richard does put out a tip jar, but all the
proceeds go to the festival organizers,
Richard doesn’t collect a cent!
Tent campers are usually in greater need of
coffee than campers in RV’s, so Richard
prefers to set up his operation near the
tenters. At ASBF this year, he plans to set up
near the playground area, convenient to the
tent campers along Onion Creek.
In addition to providing coffee to all comers,
Richard works a volunteer shift at the front
gate and has been particularly successful in
selling AFTM memberships to festival
attendees!
So, at the Austin String Band Festival in
October, be sure to stop by the Morning Dew
Coffee Shop and thank Richard for his
generosity. While you’re there, pour yourself a
cup of coffee, it’s on the house!

Page 10

�A Panoply of Pickers at
Sam's Town Point

Sam’s Town Point is the new location for the AFTM Monthly Meeting &amp;
Jam, and the August and September meetings have already taken place
there! This monthly meeting and jam take place outdoors, weather
permitting, and there’s plenty of room inside when the weather doesn’t
cooperate. Sam’s Town Point is a wonderful neighborhood bar and
music venue, located at 2115 Allred Drive in Austin, just off Slaughter
Lane near Manchaca. Singer/songwriter Ramsey Midwood is a coowner of Sam's, and live music is featured most nights.
The monthly AFTM meeting and jam takes place on the second Sunday
of each month; the meeting starts at 12:30 PM and the jam gets going
around 2:00. October 8 will the next date!
Page 11

�A New Home for the AFTM Midwinter Festival!
The beloved AFTM Midwinter Festival, which sadly didn’t happen
in 2017, has found a new home for 2018 - Life In The City UMC at
205 E Monroe St in Austin!
The fact that the AFTM was unable to present its annual
Midwinter Festival in 2017 was very sad news for Austin's
traditional music community, and the AFTM board set to work to
find a new venue, to insure that the Midwinter Festival would
resume in 2018.
Joanna Saucedo, the AFTM Social Media Coordinator,
discovered the Life In The City UMC, and was able to secure the
date of Saturday, February 10 for the 2018 Midwinter Festival.
So, save the date, mark your calendars, cancel travel plans, etc.,
the AFTM Midwinter Festival is back!

Page 12

�The Reel Times is published quarterly by the Austin Friends of
Traditional Music, a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt Texas nonprofit corporation.
Contributions are deductible as charitable and educational donations.

AFTM Board of Directors
Tim Wooten, President
Angie Wooten, Vice President
Cheryl Dehut, Treasurer
Ken Tweedy, Secretary and Volunteer Coordinator
Jeanne DeFriese, Events Coordinator
Brit Irick, Outreach Coordinator
Barbara Deane, Sponsorships Coordinator
Mike Savercool, Membership Coordinator
Joanna Saucedo, Social Media Coordinator
Dan Foster, At Large

Volunteers
Terry SoRelle, Webmaster
Gary Mortensen, Reel Times Editor
Austin Friends of Traditional Music
P.O. Box 49608

Click
here for AFTM
website

https://www.flickr.com/photos/aftm/albums/72157680161933664

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              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1183">
                <text>Gary Mortenson</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1184">
                <text>Reel Times - Volume 43, Number 3</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1412">
                <text>Gary Mortenson</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
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