About Phyllis Erck

Dobro player and singer

14th Annual Montana Fiddle Camp

Fiddle Camp at Montana
by Sive Iver

14th Annual Montana Fiddle Camp sponsored by the Montana State Oldtime Fiddlers Association will have their first week on June 7 to June 12 and the second week will be from June 14 to June 19, 2009. All music lovers coming from different age group will enjoy the camp.

In 1963 a group of musician decided to create a group where musicians had a venue to show their talents and to teach others about their music. This was how MSOTFA (Montana State Oldtime Fiddlers Association) was created. The group provided for activities and educational opportunities that all music lovers can attend regardless of what they were.

Monarch, Montana will be the home for the Montana Fiddle camp. It is a friendly community that is located at the heart of the mining valley of Montana. In the middle of this tranquil and beautiful serene the musicians and students can have a venue to learn more about their music. They will get to experience the big blue skies, crystal clear water and fresh mountain air that the month of June usually brings to the mountains.

The camp will have professional and talented instructors what will give lectures at classes and workshops with venues that are intimate and beautiful. Not only are the instructors talented and qualified to teach but the environment that you will be surround in will greatly help you learn more about music. Music is best learned and created when you are surrounded by the beauty that nature gives us.

The lectures will be of different instruments like the fiddlers, guitar and mandolin players and contra dancing. There will also be different genres or styles of music in the classrooms and workshops. These styles are the Cajun, Celtic, Texas, Canadian, Appalachian, bluegrass, and western swing. The instructors will then organize a nightly concert of their talents and the students music. With all the different styles the camp will provide it might teach you a thing or two about the other genres of music.

About the Author:
Sive Iver has created a business with crafts he made by attended some Montana Craft Shows. Attending some Montana Craft Fairs have added to his income.

Greensky Bluegrass tonight at the Elks

Greensky Bluegrass

Greensky Bluegrass

Greensky Bluegrass at The Elks

Date:  tonight, April 12, Easter Bluegrass Sunday

Location:  Missoula, MT

Time:  7pm

Check out some of their music on their myspace and also some on their website

There’s a pretty cool webpage that shows this bands tour locations on a map here.  After watching this for a while I decided these guys are “tour fools”.  Not sure if the jag off to Peru is a mistake but even without that sidetrip, they are frantically peforming all up and down both coasts.   Lucky for us, they’re stopping off in Missula tonight.

Broken Valley RS host YMusic inaugural Jam-O-Philia

Hey y’all,

Broken Valley Roadshow is excited to host YMusic’s inaugural Jam-O-Philia on Friday, April 24th!

Jam-O-Philia activities will include:
– a band-scramble, in which spontaneous bands are created from a random pool of participants. EVERYone who wants to play and/or sing is invited!
– a performance and Q&A session with Broken Valley Roadshow
– a large, all-inclusive jam facilitated by Broken Valley Roadshow

Mark your calendar because Broken Valley Roadshow wants to jam with YOU!
What: Jam-O-Philia
When: April 24th at 7 pm
Where: Downtown Dance Collective, 121 W Main S, Missoula
Cost: FREE for all YMusic students. $5 for others

What is it? A community jam for all ages, all abilities, all instruments– hosted by the Broken Valley Roadshow. See you there!

BVR

Brazil meets Bluegrass

For 9 months during 2007, MRBA members, Peter and Lori Silcher were host to, Fernando, from Brazil.  Fernando is a horse trainer and worked with the Silchers and their Marchador horses, a special breed from Brazil.  When he arrived, he mentioned to Lori that he loved the old country and bluegrass music.  During his stay in Montana, Fernando, became a part of our Bluegrass family and was a fine picker.  Here are some videos he took at the MRBA Spring Festival 2007.

Colter Coffee hosts music on Thursdays and Fridays

Colter Coffee hosts music on Thursdays and Fridays

Bluegrass and a Cup of Joe on Main Street

visit the Flathead Beacon website to see audio slide show of the Thursday night jam session.
Colter Jam - click to view video

Alex Hogle on Mando - for slide show and audio of jam

Every Thursday night at Colter Coffee, you can hear a century-old conversation that rarely requires words. Except for the singing, of course.

This conversation needs only guitars, banjos and fiddles – maybe a mandolin or two and an acoustic bass. Anybody who’s been part of a traditional picking circle – a term derived from the act of picking on an instrument’s strings – understands this dynamic. Much of the interaction is unspoken and it’s all unplugged.

The players all take cues from each other with eye contact, head nods and ample understanding of both music structure and picking circle etiquette. When one takes the lead, the rest keep the rhythm. Backup vocals are always welcome.

This is the system in which these half dozen or so self-proclaimed “pickers” tell their stories at Colter Coffee. Everybody chips in. And because much of the music is rooted in improvisation, with varying degrees of experience wielding the instruments, mistakes are made. But everybody’s fine with that, including the audience.

“It’s a beautiful, old tradition,” Alex Hogle said of the picking circle. “Playing the good old stuff and rocking it.”

Colter Coffee Roasting has quietly become a cozy bastion for acoustic music since opening its Main Street location in downtown Kalispell two years ago. The company also maintains a roasting and packaging plant near Snappy Sports Senter.

The coffee shop’s picking circle, guided by traditional old-time and bluegrass music, started up in November and is now held every Thursday from 6 to 8 p.m. The public is welcome to attend. Hogle helped organize the event, as much as a picking session can be organized – he put up a flyer and they came.

“A lot of it is just common folks who happen upon this and see the flyer,” Hogle said. “I like to have a circle in a community, especially right here in the center of town.”

On Fridays beginning at 7 p.m., the coffee shop holds concerts for local talent, often showcasing young singer-songwriters like Betty and the Boy. Blue Onion, a blues and jazz-infused band, is also a mainstay, as are names like Porter Creek and Allison Stayer. Colter also holds special shows during First Friday Art Walks.

There are few greater unifying forces than coffee and music. When combined, rare scenarios arise in which high schoolers end up spending their entire evenings watching 50-year-olds pluck on banjos. Colter Coffee owner Lindsay MacDonald and manager Heather Anderson take pride in offering a hotspot where both young and old can gather for music outside of a bar setting.

Located near Flathead High School, Colter has a strong contingent of teenage regulars who arrive right after school or come for the music later.

“A lot of parents have thanked us for having a place close by where they don’t have to worry about them,” Anderson said.

Picking circles – often written as “pickin’ circles” – have long been a part of traditional American music. Today, they’re still widespread, serving as meeting grounds for acoustic music enthusiasts who range from beginners to seasoned flatpickers. Missoula is known for such circles, but they’re also scattered across Northwest Montana.

On Memorial Day, Libby will host a large acoustic gathering that is expected to draw more than 150 musicians from across the nation and Canada. The Colter pickers will be there.

The Colter Coffee crew of musicians has been together in some form for years. Vicki Bodfish, who plays with Porter Creek, said she remembers holding a circle at Avalanche Creek as early as 1999. Later they moved on to the Red Lion. Today, they’re happy with their new home at Colter Coffee.

Jim Crandall, who plays with Bodfish in Porter Creek, said even if the venues have changed, the driving force behind the picking circles hasn’t.

“It’s the love of the music,” Crandall said.

Joe Nickell Article on House Bill 598

Labor law dispute could spell the end of live music in state
andrea-harsell-tbBy JOE NICKELL –

Nightclub operators, concert promoters and musicians around the state are singing the blues over an effort by the Montana Department of Labor and Industry to enforce a seemingly obscure statute that governs the relationship between performers and the people who pay them.

It is a complicated regulatory issue – the kind that most of us would prefer to leave to our accountants.

But the cultural fallout could spill into every bar, bar mitzvah, community center and concert hall in Montana.

Some people involved in the Montana music business say that if the dispute isn’t resolved soon, it could all but spell the end of live concerts in the state.

“I don’t think it would be financially viable for us to do live shows, to be honest,” said Scott McIntyre, co-owner of the Badlander and the Palace Lounge in downtown Missoula.

“These arbitrary regulations will, in effect, put most if not all musicians in this market out of work,” added Jack Souligny, secretary and  treasurer of the Musicians of Western Montana Local 498 of the American Federation of Musicians.

At issue is the seemingly mundane question of whether a musician who receives money for a performance should be considered an employee or an independent contractor.

In 2005, the state of Montana passed a law clarifying that paid workers – from ditch diggers to fishing guides to musicians – are generally presumed to be regular employees of the person or company who pays them, unless those workers have applied for and received an independent contractor exemption certificate from the state of Montana.

If a worker is a regular employee, he or she must be covered under a workers’ compensation insurance policy, which pays medical expenses and lost wages should that person be injured while on the job.

Employers must also withhold state taxes and pay unemployment insurance for all regular employees – even if those employees only worked for one hour of one night in a year, said Keith Messmer, chief of the Workers’ Compensation Regulation Bureau at the Department of Labor and Industry.

Obtaining an independent contractor exemption certificate isn’t trivial, nor is it free. Individuals must prove, via a point system, that they qualify as an independent contractor by the state’s definition; they must also pay a fee of $125 every two years for the certificate.

Therein lies the rub, as far as touring or fledgling bands are concerned, said Colin Hickey, an independent concert promoter who has booked shows at nightclubs in Missoula for several years.

“Trying to get touring bands to apply for something like that just so they can play one or two shows in Montana, that’d be impossible to manage,” said Hickey. “Bands have enough trouble just getting organized enough to practice.”

But if it’s a hassle and expense for musicians to get certified as independent contractors, it is an all-out paperwork nightmare for nightclub owners to keep track of every musician who sets foot on a stage.

For a nightclub that hosts two bands a week, that’s potentially eight or more new “employees” every week – or 416 additional W-2 forms to send out at the end of the year.

“Running a music club is not like a million-dollar business in Montana,” said Nicole Garr, co-owner of the Top Hat Lounge in Missoula. “Anything that’s being taken out of that for workers’ comp or whatever, that’s less for the musicians – who can’t get paid enough as it is.”

“It isn’t convenient, I would acknowledge that,” allowed Messmer, of the Department of Labor and Industry. “The bookkeeping definitely isn’t easy. … But when it comes to workers’ compensation, if someone gets hurt while they’re playing at a bar, they’ll have medical expenses covered and be eligible for wage reimbursement.”

Sam Porter thought he was doing everything by the books.

For years, his Bozeman-based company, Porterhouse Productions, had produced events around the state, including the Montana Rockies Bioneers Conference and performances by Ani DiFranco, Michael Franti and other entertainers. Porter is no stranger to the complicated contracts and other paperwork challenges involved in running such events.

So when his company was audited last year by the Department of Labor and Industry, Porter felt confident that he wouldn’t run into trouble.

But according to auditors, Porter had failed to demonstrate that each individual musician who received payment from his company was certified as a registered independent contractor with the state.

“This appeared out of the blue for us; we had no idea this was even required,” said Porter.

Porter’s education ultimately proved expensive. Last month, his company received a bill for $1,097.32 from the Department of Labor and Industry. That amount included a $200 fine plus unpaid premiums charged at double their normal rate.

Porter was shocked.

“As far as I have been able to discern, none of the artists I work with – and these are people who tour all over the world – have ever had to deal with this in any other state,” said Porter.

Porter is hardly alone in his confusion and frustration over the issue. Of nearly a dozen musicians, venue operators and concert promoters contacted for this story, none voiced confidence that they fully understood what is expected of them by the state of Montana.
Several voiced outright misperceptions about the laws.

But with stories like Porter’s surfacing around the state, people involved in the music business are worried what they might face. The Department of Labor and Industry can levy fines of up to $1,000 per day against both musicians and the people who hire them, if they are found to be in violation of the laws governing workers’ compensation exemptions.

No fines of that size have been levied so far, said Dallas Cox of the Independent Contractor Central Unit.
But the option remains.

“Our main goal is to get the word out there right now,” said Cox. “Nobody wants to have money taken out of their pockets. But people need to get into compliance.”

Porter, for one, feels that the risks of tripping up on the regulations are too great. He has already significantly scaled back the number of concerts he plans to produce this summer in Montana.

“I think it’s a shame,” Porter said, “because we’re the people taking the risk to keep the arts alive statewide.”

Reporter Joe Nickell can be reached at 523-5358 or at jnickell@missoulian.comThis e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

Holy Bucket Bluegrass Festival in Norris – Memorial Day

Norris Hot Spring

Norris Hot Spring

I just noticed a listing on the Travel Montana website that there is going to be a Bluegrass Festival at Norris Hot Springs on Memorial Day.

Here’s the information (more to follow):

Holy Bucket Bluegrass Festival is an annual Memorial Day music event brought to you by Norris Hot Springs. Fun for the whole family. Traditional bluegrass, psycho-grass, jam grass as well as folk and other acoustic music genres are performed by a talented group of regional professionals.

Montana grass-fed beef and bison burgers on the grill, local brews on tap, and Water of the Gods in the bucket for a relaxing soak.

$15 adults/ kids free 4:00pm – 10:00pm

Activities
Barbecue, Concert, Music, Nature, Outdoor Activity, Swimming, Vegetarian Food, Dining, Entertainment, Festival, Food And Drink, Holiday Event, Local Cuisine

Services and Amenities
Dinner, Parking, Beer/Wine, Cafe, Snack Bar, Water, Music
 
Directions
Norris Hot Springs is located on the south side of Highway 84, one-half mile east of Route 287 in Norris. Just 33 miles west of Bozeman, 88 miles north of West Yellowstone.
 
Event Details
Start date:  Monday, May 25, 2009
 
Contact Information
Holy Bucket Bluegrass Festival
Mailing Address:
PO Box 2933
Norris,  MT 59745
 
Street Address:
Norris Hot Springs
Norris,  MT 59745
 
Phone: 406-685-3303
 
 
Norris Hot Springs

Norris Hot Springs in Google Maps

 

Matt Flinner Trio making a swing through our neck of the woods

Matt Flinner Trio at Bluegrass on the River Festival

Matt Flinner Trio

Compass Records recording artist and mandolin virtuoso Matt Flinner, from Leftover Salmon, Phillips, Grier and Flinner, Sugarbeat and the Judith Edelman Band brings his trio to Missoula to perform “Music du Jour”, music written the day of the show for the night of the show.  This is Matt’s first performance in Missoula in 5 years and is much anticipated.  Progressive bluegrass for all ages.

 

Matt Flinner Trio at Bluegrass on the River Pueblo, CO June 08

Matt Flinner Trio

Shows in our Area

Missoula
Friday, March 27th, 8:00 p.m.
The Downtown Dance Collective
121 W. Main
$13 Advance at Rockin Rudy’s and DDC, $15 Door

Great Falls
Thursday, March 26, 7pm
The First English Lutheran Church
For more info: StoneSoupGreatFalls@yahoo.com

Sun Valley, ID
Saturday, March 28
The Ezra Pound House/Sun Valley Arts Center
Sun Valley, ID
Info: fletcher@fletcherbrock.com or 208-720-4363

Matt’s myspace www.myspace.com/mattflinner 

 

The Modern Mandolin Quartet on Youtube

 

 

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