About Phyllis Erck

Dobro player and singer

Annual Meeting, jam and potluck

Join us this Saturday for the Annual Meeting , jam and potluck.

If you would like to get more involved with this association, now is the time to step up and volunteer to help out on the board. Fun folks to work with for a fun cause, supporting and promoting bluegrass music.

The events start at 2 with potluck dinner at 2. We’ll be providing free pizza. Bring your side dishes.

Jamming will continue all day and into the

Bluegrass Jam in Buffalo, WYO

Excerpts from a nice story on Newwest.net  read the entire story at Wyofiles Wyoming Series

By Brodie Farquhar, WyoFile, 10-19-10

Reborn Occidental Plays Hostess to the Beating Heart of Buffalo, Wyoming

Four years into the jam sessions at the “new” hotel that defines this part of the world, it’s a standing-room-only crowd. But you can still get a dance with Whitey.

Bluegrass jam in Buffalo

Merlin “Whitey” White is 93 years old and never sits down during the weekly four-hour jam sessions. Photo by Dewey Vanderhoff

The beating heart of Buffalo, Wyoming, and arguably of Johnson County, isn’t only found in a school, church, town hall, museum or courthouse.

You’ll also find it in an 1880-vintage hotel and 1908-era saloon, in downtown Buffalo.

Every Thursday night in the Occidental Hotel bar, musicians young and old, local and from far afield, jam together playing bluegrass, folk and country music.

“Most jams among musicians last a month or two, and then they fizzle,” said David Stewart, a professional songwriter and co-founder of the Bluegrass Jam, which celebrated its fourth anniversary on Oct. 15, 2010.

“The first time we got together in a corner of the Occidental Hotel bar, there were maybe five people in the audience,” Stewart said. Now on many Thursdays, the bar is standing-room-only, with people spilling out onto the sidewalk of the historic hotel.

The musicians are loyal. Charlie Firnekas, 75, a Kaycee-area rancher, is the oldest of the original founders of the jam. Every Thursday, he drives 73 miles one way (25 miles on a gravel road) to get to the jam and play guitar. Winter blizzards have never held him back, and he’s missed only a few sessions.

The audience gives back. There are tips, used to help needy families with rent or send an aspiring high school student to college for a music education. There are things people bring from home, like baked goods, fresh country eggs or handmade birdhouses. Everyone in the audience is given a numbered ticket and drawings are held during the jam. Even if a winning ticket isn’t drawn, first-time visitors usually win fresh-baked cookies or other prizes.

ABOUT THAT JAM SESSION

But to get a feel for the town, go to the Thursday night Bluegrass Jam at the Occidental.

What goes on is less of a formal performance and more like a group of musicians playing for and with each other – the entertainment is free, notwithstanding brisk sales at the bar. “The model is the Grand Ol’ Opry, where the musicians would play in a circle backstage,” said David Stewart, the songwriter and co-founder of the jam. “Often, that’s where the best music happens.”

Each Thursday, the jam opens at 7 p.m. with “Will the Circle be Unbroken,” and closes at 11 p.m. with “Amazing Grace.” In between, almost anything can and does happen. Tourists wander in, figure out what’s going on, and dash out to retrieve a guitar, banjo or fiddle from their car and jump right into the jam.

A few weeks ago, a young couple from Ireland asked shyly if they could join in. “They sang an Irish ballad a cappella,” said Occidental owner Dawn Wexo. “You could have heard a pin drop.”

Musicians from Denver, Billings, Rapid City and beyond will drive to northern Wyoming to play in the jam. About the only rule is no instruments that would overwhelm the others, said Lynn Young, another co-founder of the jam. “No drums or electric guitars,” he said. About every kind of stringed instrument is brought to the jam – bass, guitar, dobro, autoharp, mandolin, banjo and fiddle. Oh yeah, and smokin’-hot harmonicas.

Stewart said he hoped no one ever shows up with a Hawaiian ukulele – doesn’t quite fit the whole bluegrass, folk and country thing.

..

“One of the town ministers likes to come hear us play,” said Young. “He said the Bluegrass Jam was a church, more than most churches.”’

Jerry Swofford & Jim Swigert banjos for sale

this just in from from Greg Boyd’s House of Fine Instruments…

The “House of Fine Instruments” has 3 fine banjos in stock that were owned by well-known area players who were very active in MRBA and local music scene over the years.

These banjos are on our website, but we thought that we should point them out to those of you in our area bluegrass community who might not otherwise know they are for sale.

Thanks, Greg Boyd

2003 Huber Kalamazoo Banjo

Jerry Swofford's 2003 Huber Kalamazoo Banjo

c.1963/64 Gibson RB-250 w/ RB-800 Neck Banjo

John Swigert's c.1963/64 Gibson RB-250 w/ RB-800 Neck Banjo

1997 Gibson Earl Scruggs Standard w/ especially nice Maple Banjo

John Swigert's 1997 Gibson Earl Scruggs Standard w/ especially nice Maple Banjo

click image to see full details on Greg Boyd’s House of Fine Instruments

new UofM Prez a picker

Royce Engstrom, UofM President and bluegrass guitar player

Royce Engstrom, UofM President and bluegrass guitar player

Just read n interesting tidbit about new University of Montana President, Royce Engstrom.  He’s a a picker.

quoted from UM’s Engstrom a renaissance man by CHELSI MOY Missoulian The Billings Gazette

..Jack Williams, dean of the college of health sciences at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn., is a longtime friend.

The families’ kids grew up together. Engstrom and Williams both served as Cub Scout leaders for their sons’ troop, and the men would take their daughters on annual camping trips. The families attended the same church.

Engstrom and Williams both worked at the University of South Dakota and still share a passion for building wooden canoes. Their wives chat often.

Yet seven years of friendship passed before Williams learned that Engstrom played a musical instrument.

“Royce is not one to really talk too much about himself and brag,” Williams said. “I wasn’t active in music, but, with his encouragement, he got me playing again.”

Now, some of Williams’ most fond memories are of the two sitting around a campfire, swapping stories and playing folk and bluegrass music, Engstrom on the guitar and Williams on the standup bass.

A 1904 Morris canoe and the wooden frame of a kayak await completion in the large shop next to the Engstroms’ upper Miller Creek home. Engstrom has built 10 wooden boats, including a rowboat for Mary as an anniversary gift….

4th Annual Bozeman Bluegrass Festival this weekend

4th Annual Bozeman Bluegrass Festival

4th Annual Bozeman Bluegrass Festival

From Matt Broughton, Bridger Creek Boys

I hope you can attend the 4th Annual Bozeman Bluegrass Festival…Saturday Oct. 16th @ the Emerson Ballroom
This years lineup is sure to impress:
The Growling Old Men (John Lowell, Ben Winship, and Dave Thompson)
Broken Valley Roadshow-6 piece traditional from Missoula
The Lil’ Smokies-6 piece newgrass from Missloula
The Bridger Creek Boys-4 piece from Bozeman
There will be food by LaTinga and Bozeman Brewing Co. beer available.
Tickets are available at Cactus Records for $13 and $15 at the door.  Doors open at 5 and the show starts 6ish.
Feel free to contact me with any questions
Your Friend in Music
Matt Broughton
The Bridger Creek Boys

Missoula Manor Jam

The jam that used to be in the senior housing behind the Good Food Store has moved to the Missoula Manor.

Description:  All acoustic bluegrass jam

Where:  Missoula Manor 909 W Central Ave (old Carousel building)

Time:  6-8pm

Day:  Mondays (except Oct 18, Nov 22, & Dec 20)

2010 IBMA Award Winners

THE RECIPIENTS of the 2010 INTERNATIONAL BLUEGRASS MUSIC AWARDS

Click Here to Read Full Press Release

BLUEGRASS HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES

John Hartford
Louise Scruggs

ENTERTAINER OF THE YEAR

Dailey & Vincent

VOCAL GROUP OF THE YEAR

Dailey & Vincent

INSTRUMENTAL GROUP OF THE YEAR

Michael Cleveland & Flamekeeper


MALE VOCALIST OF THE YEAR

Russell Moore

FEMALE VOCALIST OF THE YEAR
Claire Lynch

SONG OF THE YEAR

“Ring The Bell”, The Gibson Brothers (artists), Chet O’Keefe (songwriter)

ALBUM OF THE YEAR

Dailey & Vincent Sing The Statler Brothers; Dailey & Vincent (artists & producers); Cracker Barrel/Rounder

RECORDED EVENT OF THE YEAR

“Give This Message To Your Heart”, Larry Stephenson featuring Dailey & Vincent (artists), Ben Surratt & Larry Stephenson (producers), Whysper Dream

INSTRUMENTAL RECORDED PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR

“Durang’s Hornpipe” by Adam Steffey (artist), Barry Bales & Gary Paczosa (producers)

GOSPEL RECORDED PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR

“Ring The Bell”, The Gibson Brothers (artists & producers), Chet O’Keefe (songwriter), Compass Records

EMERGING ARTIST OF THE YEAR

Josh Williams Band
INSTRUMENTAL PERFORMERS OF THE YEAR

BANJO – Kristin Scott Benson

BASS – Marshall Wilborn

FIDDLE – Michael Cleveland

DOBRO – Rob Ickes

GUITAR – Josh Williams

MANDOLIN – Adam Steffey


Distinguished Achievement Award Recipients

Benjamin “Tex” Logan
Sherry Boyd
Lynn Morris
Richard Weize
Pete Wernick

Bluegrass Broadcaster of the Year:

Kyle Cantrell; Sirius XM Satellite Radio

Print Media Person of the Year:

Eddie Dean & Dr. Ralph Stanley, authors of Man of Constant Sorrow: My Life and Times (Gotham Books)

Best Liner Notes for a Recorded Project:

Dr. Ted Olson (writer), Appalachia Music from Home, Various Artists, Lonesome Records (label)

Best Graphic Design for a Recorded Project:

Julie Craig, Cracker Barrel (designer); Dailey & Vincent; Dailey & Vincent Sing The Statler Brothers; Cracker Barrel/Rounder (label)

Bluegrass Event of the Year Award:

14th Annual Podunk Bluegrass Music Festival; East Hartford, CT