About Phyllis Erck

Dobro player and singer

IBMA Announces International Bluegrass Music Awards Nominees

This just came out from IBMA…

Dailey & Vincent, Russell Moore, Sam Bush, Michael Cleveland & The Grascals Lead Nominees

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

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

Reigning two-time Entertainers of the Year Dailey & Vincent released an a cappella gospel project, Singing from the Heart, as well as Dailey & Vincent Sing the Statler Brothers, a bluegrass tribute to the legendary country music quartet. The latter CD is distributed solely by Cracker Barrel Old Country Stores, and Dailey & Vincent added a bass singer to the band to present their new material. The group tops the list of nominees with 10 nods for Entertainer of the Year, Vocal Group, Album of the Year and Best Graphic Design (Dailey & Vincent Sing The Statler Brothers), Song of the Year (“Elizabeth”), Recorded Event (“Give This Message to Your Heart” with Larry Stephenson) and Gospel Recorded Event (“Don’t You Wanna Go to Heaven”), along with nominations in the Male Vocalist (Dailey), Bass Player (Vincent) and Best Liner Notes categories (Fred Bartenstein, for the album Singing from the Heart).

Longtime favorites Russell Moore & IIIrd Tyme Out, now signed to the Rural Rhythm label, are catching a career “second wind” and bringing their trademark sound to a new generation of fans. Two-time Male Vocalist of the Year, Moore (1994 & 1997) and his band, IIIrd Tyme Out, are nominated in six categories: Entertainer of the Year, Song of the Year [“Hard Rock Mountain Prison (‘Till I Die)”], Album of the Year (IIIrd Tyme Out), Male Vocalist, Gospel Recorded Performance (“The Eastern Gate”) and Vocal Group of the Year—an award the band received seven times from 1994-2000.

Michael Cleveland & Flamekeeper, Sam Bush and The Grascals racked up five nominations each. Cleveland, the seven-time Fiddle Player of the Year who could match Stuart Duncan’s eight-year record in this category in 2010, leads a band nominated for Entertainer of the Year, Instrumental Group, Bass Player (Marshall Wilborn), Mandolin (Jesse Brock) and Fiddle Player of the Year.

Recognized as the “Father of Newgrass,” Sam Bush returned to his musical roots for his latest album, Circles Around Me, nominated for Album of the Year. Sam and his band are also nominated for Instrumental Group of the Year, Instrumental Recorded Performance (“Blue Mountain”), Mandolin Player of the Year, and Song of the Year for “The Ballad of Stringbean and Estelle”—composed by Bush with Guy Clark and Verlon Thompson about the 1973 murder of Grand Ole Opry star David “Stringbean” Akeman and his wife by burglars in their rural Tennessee home.

The Grascals borrowed a pop song from The Monkees, “Last Train to Clarksville,” and ‘grassed it up as the first radio single and video from their fourth album, The Famous Lefty Flynn’s. They’ve been opening for the Hank Williams “Rowdy Friends” tour along with Jamey Johnson, Eric Church, Gretchen Wilson and Sunny Sweeney, among others. Bocephus also recorded a duet that his father co-wrote with Bill Monroe, “I’m Blue, I’m Lonesome,” for the new Grascals album. The Grascals, nominated for Entertainer and Album of the Year (The Famous Lefty Flynn’s), are also recognized in the Instrumental Recorded Performance and Recorded Event categories with “Blue Rock Slide” and “I’m Blue, I’m Lonesome.” Two-time Banjo Player of the Year, Kristin Scott Benson, is nominated again for the award.

Along with the Grascals/Hank, Jr. collaboration, several interesting cross-genre compositions show up in the IBMA Recorded Event of the Year category: Blue Highway with Americana star Darrell Scott, Larry Stephenson with legendary country music couple Marty Stuart and Connie Smith, and Claire Lynch with singer/songwriter icon Jesse Winchester.

The Gibson Brothers were nominated in four categories; and the Josh Williams Band, Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky Thunder and The Del McCoury Band received three nods each.

After celebrating 50 years in the music business with a boxed set of newly recorded favorites, nine-time Entertainer of the Year Del McCoury is still going strong. In addition to touring and recording with Del, brothers Rob & Ronnie McCoury and the band are performing together as “The Travelin’ McCourys,” playing a string of gigs with the Lee Boys—a group that blends R&B, gospel, hip-hop, rock and steel guitar-drenched country. Del’s band also backed up country star Dierks Bentley on a nation-wide tour in support of his new bluegrass/acoustic album, Up on the Ridge.

Award-winning bands like the Infamous Stringdusters continue to evolve and define their own original bluegrass-based sounds, and comedian/movie star Steve Martin took his banjo on the road this year to tour with the Steep Canyon Rangers. Larry Stephenson celebrated 20 years in the business with his most successful album ever, Blue Highway released an impressive 15th anniversary compilation, and both The Gibson Brothers and Junior Sisk gathered new momentum, powered by strong releases on Compass and Rebel Records, respectively.

The bluegrass industry’s highest honors of the year go to the new members of the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame. This year’s inductees are singer/songwriter, banjo and fiddle stylist John Hartford and the pioneering business manager of Flatt & Scruggs, The Earl Scruggs Revue and Earl Scruggs Family & Friends, Louise Scruggs. Hartford passed away in 2001, and we lost Mrs. Scruggs in 2006. To learn more about this year’s Hall of Fame inductees, please click here.

IBMA’s Distinguished Achievement Award is an honor which recognizes individuals, groups and businesses for ground-breaking work and fostering the music’s image and accessibility. This year’s recipients are bluegrass fiddler, songwriter and mentor Benjamin F. “Tex” Logan; long-time radio broadcaster and emcee from Mt. Airy, North Carolina, Sherry Boyd; singer, multi-instrumentalist and band leader Lynn Morris; Bear Family Records’ Richard Weize of Germany, and Pete “Dr. Banjo” Wernick, who served 15 years as IBMA’s president, along with playing banjo in the legendary band Hot Rize and leading scores of instructional camps and workshops around the world. To learn more about this year’s recipients, pleasc

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

The IBMA Awards will be broadcast live on Sirius XM Satellite Radio (Bluegrass Junction, Channel 14) and will also be syndicated to more than 300 U.S. markets and 14 foreign networks thanks to the sponsorship of Martha White, GHS Strings, Sugar Hill Records, Deering Banjos and the International Bluegrass Music Museum. Program directors and station managers may sign up to be affiliates online at www.ibma.org.

The International Bluegrass Music Awards are voted on by the professional membership of the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA), which serves as the trade association for the bluegrass music industry. The IBMA Award Show is the centerpiece of the World of Bluegrass week, including the industry’s Business Conference and Bluegrass Fan Fest, which takes place September 27 – October 3 in Nashville. For a full list of the 2010 nominees, please click here.

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For general information, please contact:
Nancy Cardwell
IBMA
nancyc@ibma.org
615.256.3222

For all media inquiries, including requests for press credentials, please contact:
Kissy Black
Elaine Erteschik
Lotos Nile Media
P.O. Box 90245
Nashville, TN 37209
615.298.1144
kissyblack@lotosnile.com
elaine@lotosnile.com

Shady Grove Bluegrass Festival in Calgary – eh

Shady Grove Bluegrass festival - Calgary

Shady Grove Bluegrass festival - Calgary

Just added a Canadian Bluegrass festival to the calendar.  Check it out:

Ticket Price:

Weekend pass $40 in advance, $45 at the gate; Friday evening $20; Saturday $25; Sunday $15; 17 & under (with paid adult) Free; Weekend camping $25 (pay at gate)

Event Description:

Featuring performances by Shearwater Bluegrass Band, Headwater, Bryan Bowers, The Bix Mix Boys and more.

Also featuring band scramble, workshops, open stage, band clinic, Bluegrass Idol, campground jamming all weekend.  All ages and levels of ability are welcome.

Visit www.foothillsbluegrass.com for a full weekend schedule.

August events added to the Calendar

We just added a bunch of great bluegrass events happening in August to the MRBA online Calendar.  The Calendar is available under the new tab on the website MRBA Calendar

Aug 6-8

  • MRBA Annual Campout at Forrest Flats
  • Bluewaters BG Festival
  • Portneuf BG Festival

Aug 23-25 Joy Kills Sorrow Montana Tour

  • 23 – Missoula
  • 24 – Bozeman
  • 25 – W Yellowstone

Aug 28 & 29 River City Roots Festival

Saturday

  • 12:30 – 2:00  Mike Bader BandMike Bader Band
  • 2:30 – 4:00  MilkDrive MilkDrive
  • 4:30 – 6:00  Amanda Shaw & the Cute Boys Amanda Shaw & the Cute Boys
  • 6:30 – 8:00  The Infamous Stringdusters The Infamous Stringdusters
  • 8:30 – 10:30  Robert Earl KeenRobert Earl Keen

Sunday

  • 11:15 – 12:30  Broken Valley Road Show
  • 1:00 – 2:30  Tom Catmull
  • 3:00 – 4:30  Sol Driven Train
  • 5:00 – 7:00  The Gourds

Conroy’s Memorial Day Campout Reminder

This just in from Mike & Tari,

hope you can come to our 14th annual memorial weekend bluegrass campout next weekend…  as always..we will have heated wall tents for jamming and potluck suppers at 6pm each night… lots of free camping spots, beautiful scenery, campfires etc.. bring your 4 wheeler if you got one

PS— the new MRBA festival cd is done and will be available at the campout.. ya’ll come mike and tari

see this post for directions and maps

Butte Folk Festival 2010

Bluegrass at the 2010 Butte Folk Festival will be

Michael Cleveland & Flamekeeper

Whitetop Mountain Band – Old time

This article just came out in the Montana Standard

Folk Fest names complete performers’ list

 The National Folk Festival organizers are pleased to announce nine new additions to the previously released list of performers for the 72nd National Folk Festival in Butte, Montana July 9-11, 2010. This completes the line-up for the festival’s six music performance stages that run continuously throughout the weekend. Admission to all three days of the festival is free.

“We’ve held a few surprises until the end,” said Julia Olin, Executive Director of the National Council for the Traditional Arts, “With the addition of Moroccan Gnawa legend Hassan Hakmoun, the superb Mexican trio Los Tres Reyes, and the “Blues Legends & Legacies” sessions featuring three masters of southern blues, the 72nd National Folk Festival in Butte is shaping up to be the fitting culmination of a magical three year run in Montana. Not only is the lineup completely fresh, but 13 of the featured musical genres this year are new – different from any presented over the past two years. ”

The final group of performers now confirmed for the 72nd National Folk Festival includes:

Hassan Hakmoun

Moroccan Gnawa

New York, New York

The Gnawa people of Morocco are descendants of sub-Saharan Africans originally brought to Morocco as slaves in the 16th century. In their devotional music of the same name, pre-Islamic African traditions mix with mystical Sufism; hypnotic call-and-response rhythms entwine with the sinuous vocals of Islamic devotional chant. In the spell of Moroccan musical legend Hassan Hakmoun, listeners are transported to the square in Marrakech. Incorporating jazz and rock as he takes lyrical as well as literal leaps, Hakmoun responds with acrobatic dancing to the pulsing, soaring trance music that is Gnawa.

The Legendary Singing Stars

gospel

Brooklyn, New York and Bamberg, South Carolina

The American gospel music tradition is endlessly rich. Among its many treasures are astonishingly talented groups not often heard outside the gospel circuit. For over 40 years, the gospel music road-warriors the Legendary Singing Stars have been bringing their unique blend

of tight vocal harmonies, blazing guitars, and classic soul-style choreographed stage moves to congregations around the country. Just as they did numerous times at Harlem’s Apollo Theatre in the 1960s, they will surely bring the house down at the 72nd National Folk Festival.

Elizabeth LaPrelle

Appalachian ballads and songs

Rural Retreat, Virginia

Representing the next generation of powerful ballad singers from Southwest, Virginia, this young singer is exceptional in her devotion to, and mastery of, this deep Appalachian tradition. As Virginia State Folklorist Jon Lohman says, “One gets the feeling… that she is accessing those aspects of these songs that transcend place and historical time and speak directly to the heart.”

Los Tres Reyes

Mexican trío romántico

San Antonio, Texas

With its poetic themes of unrequited love and gorgeous vocal harmonies, layered over dazzling work on guitar and requinto (small classical guitar), the trío romántico style took Mexico by storm starting in the 1940s. Today, it remains one of the most popular of Latin American ensembles. Formed in 1957, with the brothers Gilberto and Raul Puente at its core, Los Tres Reyes rose to prominence during the genre’s heyday, a stunning trio that has honed this beautiful style to near perfection.

Bakaari Wilder & Theo Hill

African American tap dance

District Heights, Maryland

An astounding young practitioner of the uniquely American tradition of improvisational tap dance, Baakari Wilder is no stranger to the stage. Opening for tap legends Sandman Sims, Brenda Bufalino and Harold Nicholas at age 12, he went on to replace Savion Glover in the Broadway production of Bring in Da’ Noise, Bring in Da’ Funk, touring nationally and making numerous television appearances. At this year’s festival Wilder teams with jazz pianist Theo Hill, a classic hoofer duo that is sure to amaze.

Lammam Ensemble

Arabic

Castro Valley, California

From the lush microtones of Arabic maqams to the wild improvisations the music inspires, this accomplished quartet showcases the seductive artistry and diversity of traditional Arabic music. The ensemble is led by Middle Eastern accordionist Elias Lammam, whose virtuosity

has brought the Oriental-style quartertone accordion, customized to handle the microtonal scales of Arabic melody, from the back of the orchestra to the front of the concert stage.

Blues Legends & Legacies with Reverend John Wilkins, Phil Wiggins, and Henry Gray

Country blues guitar, harmonica and piano

Como, Mississippi, Takoma Park, Maryland, and Baton Rouge, Louisiana

This multi-generational exploration of southern blues, one that will span both the geographical and musical roots of the genre, brings together three exceptional American bluesmen: legendary boogie-woogie piano and blues pioneer Henry Gray; Reverend John Wilkins, who continues the

blues-based gospel guitar tradition of his father, pre-war blues legend Reverend Robert Wilkins,

and harmonica wizard Phil Wiggins, who is rooted in the Piedmont blues tradition. A once-in-a-lifetime chance to see these three greats on stage together, as they delve deep into American blues.

Aditya Prakash Ensemble

Carnatic music of South India

Los Angeles, California

At the age of eight, this young singer began studying the art of Carnatic singing, and quickly excelled at learning the compositions and improvisations long revered in this classical Hindu tradition. Along his journey, he has become a young star in the genre, and has performed with many masters of Indian classical music, including Pandit Ravi Shankar, Anoushka Shankar and Karsh Kale.

Apsáalooke Dancers with the Nighthawk Singers

Apsáalooke (Crow) dance and drum

Ashland, Montana

In the early 20th century, when Indian dancing was outlawed, the ancestors of these amazing Crow dancers and singers would travel into remote foothills of the Big Horn Mountains, where thrilling dances were held far from the view of authorities. Today, with elaborate regalia, champion dancers, and Northern Plains drum and song, this multi-generational group honors its ancestors with passion and dedication. The group’s name “Apsáalooke,” which means “children of the large-beaked bird,” is the original tribal name, long ago mistranslated into English as “Crow.” Many of its members live on the Crow Reservation in south central Montana, home to over 70 percent of the enrolled Crow tribal members.

Previously-announced groups to perform at the 72nd National Folk Festival in 2010:

La Excelencia – salsa dura

Genticorum – Québécois

Michael Cleveland & Flamekeeper – bluegrass

Dale Watson – honky-tonk/country

Geno Delafose & French Rockin’ Boogie – zydeco

Super Chikan – Delta blues

Benedicte Maurseth – Norwegian Hardanger fiddle & song

Alte Kameraden – community brass band

Bua – Irish

Tony Ballog & Roma Nota – Hungarian Gypsy

Stanky & The Coalminers – Eastern-style polka

Whitetop Mountain Band – old-time

Hector Del Curto’s Eternal Tango Quartet – Argentine tango

In addition, festival-goers can polish their moves right before the dancing begins with salsa lessons from expert dance instructor Eileen Torres, and square dance and flatfoot dance instruction with West Virginia dance master Lou Maiuri.

Rounding out the 2010 festival program are a number of performers in the Family Area and Montana Folklife Area, which will be announced in the coming weeks.

About The National Folk Festival

Since 1934, the National Folk Festival has celebrated the roots, richness and variety of American culture through music, dance, traditional craft, storytelling and food. It is the oldest celebration of traditional arts in the country. This “moveable feast of deeply traditional folk arts” has been held in 26 communities around the country, and in 2008, began a three-year tenure in Butte, Montana.

The FREE 72nd National Folk Festival in Butte, Montana July 9-11, 2010 will feature 250 performers and craftspeople with music and dance performances on six stages, workshops, children’s activities, folklife demonstrations, a festival marketplace and ethnic and regional foods. For more details about what to expect at the National Folk Festival, visit http://www.nationalfolkfestival.com/.

The 70th, 71st, and 72nd National Folk Festivals in Butte, Montana, 2008-2010, are produced in partnership by the National Council for the Traditional Arts, Mainstreet Uptown Butte, Butte-Silver Bow County and Imagine Butte in cooperation with Travel Montana of the Montana Department of Commerce, Gold West Country, Butte Convention and Visitors Bureau, Grant-Kohrs National Historic Site and the National Park Service.

Western Montana Fair – free gig app

This just in regarding solicitation for acts for Western Montana Fair

Dear Community Group,  

The Western Montana Fair is currently seeking free entertainment acts for the West Lawn Stage under the Party Time Tent during the 2010 Western Montana Fair, August 10-15th.  The stage performances begin at 11 a.m. and conclude at 9 p.m. 

The fair theme is “Wild & Wooly” with the sheep being the icon animal this year.  Each day the free stage lineup will be determined based on the West Lawn events and night show entertainment. 

We would like to invite you to be a part of Montana’s summertime tradition since 1879.  The free stage is designed to showcase the local talent within Western Montana. Performers will not be compensated. Space is limited and applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis starting May 15, 2010. 

If your group is interested in performing please send an email to my attention (fairintern1@co.missoula.mt.us) along with your completed application and a sample of your talent.  You can reach me via phone at (406) 721-3247 for further details.   Please friend us on Facebook and visit our website at www.westernmontanafair.com.

Sincerely,
Austin Duncan
Entertainment Coordinator
Western Montana Fair
(406) 721-3247
fairintern1@co.missoula.mt.us

Free Stage Application

Targhee Bluegrass Camp

This just in from Thomas Sneed

Hello,

My name is Thomas Sneed and I’ve taken over some of the promotional activities for the 5th Annual Grand Targhee Bluegrass Camp in Alta, Wyoming, which will be held this summer August 10-13 before the 23rd Annual Grand Targhee Bluegrass Festival. Last year you may have been contacted by Anne Sibley and she most likely asked you to help us get the word out, which is my request today. We are very excited about this years Bluegrass Camp and would like to have your help promoting our unique event.

Would you be willing to list our event in your calendar of events? Could we please send you a handful of postcards or a poster to display or distribute in your area or at your store.

This year’s camp will be the best yet with world class instructors (including Tyler Grant, Molly O’Brien, Mike Marshall, Danny Barnes, Carl Jones, Ivan Rosenberg, Brian Wicklund, Eric Thorin and camp directors Ben Winship and Thomas Sneed) in the world class setting of the Grand Targhee Resort in the Tetons of Western Wyoming.

Please send me the correct address to send you postcards or posters. Attached to this email are copies of the postcard and poster.

I can be contacted at
targheebluegrasscamp@gmail.com

or
thomas sneed 307-413-1947

the website for the camp is
http://www.grandtarghee.com/summer/music-festivals/music-camp.php

We would very much appreciate your response.
Sincerely,
Thomas Sneed

Help spread the word with attached posters and postcards

Targhee Bluegrass Camp 2010 Poster

Targhee Bluegrass Camp 2010 Postcard