Posts Tagged ‘MaineFolkMusic.com’

It’s Gathering Time on Peaks Island Tonight!

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

Do this tonight – you won’t regret it..

Take the 5:35 PM Casco Bay Lines ferry to Peaks Island ($8.20 round trip!)

Have dinner at the Cockeyed Gull restaurant or at The Inn at Peaks Island.

Walk (yes walk! It’s NOT going to rain!) to the Fifth Maine Regimental Museum on Seashore Avenue, and get there by 7:30 PM for Phil Daligan’s “Songwriters by the Sea” music series.

You will get the chance to see and hear Gathering Time, a traditional folk trio from Long Island that has perfected two separate but related art forms: three part harmony and having a ball on stage!

(As an added bonus, Gathering Time is sharing the stage tonight on Peaks with Teresa Storch, a wonderful Boston-area singer/songwriter who writes great tunes, in a variety of styles, and has killer performance skills!)

I caught Gathering Time’s set last night at The North Star Music Cafe in Portland, and that’s why I’m recommending that you make the 20-minute voyage across Casco Bay tonight.  These folks put on a wonderful show, with a bunch of original folky tunes, some great covers, and lots of fun banter on stage.

Gathering Time: (l to r) Glen Roethel, Hillary Foxsong, Stuart Markus

Gathering Time: (l to r) Glen Roethel, Hillary Foxsong, Stuart Markus

Gathering Time is Glen Roethel, Stuart Markus, and Hilary Foxsong.  Glen plays a beautiful Gibson guitar, plus electric bass.  Stuart is an excellent guitarist and bassist as well, and Hilary is a skilled percussionist.  They all sing with great enthusiasm, passion, and precision.  When they harmonize, some sort of fundamental, cosmic concordance occurs that makes you very happy that you have ears.

They did some covers by America, Simon and Garfunkel, and the Beatles, and led the crowd in a cozy and heartening communal sing on the Chet Powers 60’s classic “Get Together”.

Their own tunes are gentle, peaceful, hopeful; true, traditional folk music.  There is a place for darkness in music, but this type of  upbeat optimism never fails to inspire me.  Anyone who allows stereotypes about folk music to shut themselves off from this stuff is missing something special.

Opening for Gathering Time was Annie Wenz, a world-traveling, folk and world music artist and  biker chic: a very nice person and extremely talented performer.  She opened with a heart-stopping interlude on a

Annie Wenz

Annie Wenz

native wooden flute with dual tones – very spooky and affecting.  Her set was a mix of funny and clever story songs, political gems, and meaningful folk ballads.  She is a strong woman with a strong voice, and a very talented songwriter.  

Her stories and songs made it clear that she has a wealth of vibrant world experience from which to draw (you need to hear her bungie-jumping song!)  She told me that she would be staying in Maine for the summer (although her gig schedule doesn’t show it!), so hopefully, we’ll get another chance to hear her.

Get over to Peaks Island tonight and see Gathering Time and Teresa Storch!

Dar and Spooner in the Old Port

Monday, June 8th, 2009
The Old Port Crowd - Q97 Stage

The Old Port Crowd - Q97 Stage

First Sunday in June – in Portland that means the Old Port Festival!

Polly and I have been attending this event for five years now, and this was, by far, the most organized and well-run Old Port Festival we’ve seen.  Great, friendly crowd, quality craft booths, interesting food choices, and great music!  Congrats to the Portland Downtown District and all the music stage sponsors!

Everyone mentions the weather when they talk about the Old Port Festival, so I won’t!

Local folk and roots music figured prominently in the festival this year, thanks mainly to the nice folks at WCLZ!

Lara Seaver at the WCLZ Stage at the Old Port Festival

Lara Seaver at the WCLZ Stage at the Old Port Festival

Kudos to the ‘CLZ staff for supporting local music as they do, and for putting together a great Old Port Stage.  A special thanks to Lara Seaver, morning show host and producer and host of “Music from 207″.

We arrived at the ‘CLZ stage at Silver and Fore Streets in time to catch the last few chords from Pete Kilpatrick’s guitar (damn!).  After Pete came a young woman from Toronto – Serena Ryder.  She played a couple of very small acoustic guitars, maybe 0-0-0 size, but the sound that came outta these guys was very big!  Huge energy and emotion, lyrics to match, great guitar chops.  She’s with Atlantic

Serena Ryder on the WCLZ Old Port Festival Stage

Serena Ryder on the WCLZ Old Port Festival Stage

Records – must be doin’ OK!  I bought her new CD, “Is It O.K.”, great music.   Folk? eh, maybe folk/rock… ok maybe rock/folk..  but great tunes!

Spooner was next – Jason Spooner has a new live album out, which is good, because live is the way to hear this guy and this band.  ”The Flame You

Jason Spooner before his Old Port Festival set on the WCLZ stage

Jason Spooner before his Old Port Festival set on the WCLZ stage

Follow” is his last studio album, and it’s great, but there’s so much to enjoy in a live set from these guys.  Reed Chambers on drums, of course, and Adam Frederick on bass (I love to see him play the double bass, but today he had the electric strapped on.)  The three of them play together as if they were networked, so tight and balanced.  Frederick has a great set of harmony vocal pipes – who knew?

To sweeten the deal, they were joined on the last song (Dylan’s “Girl of the North Country) by Maine fiddle ace Ed Howe (who recently and reluctantly had to leave the Dave Rowe Trio for personal reasons.) Oh, yeah, they were also

Ed Howe and Adam Frederick dish it on the WCLZ Old Port Stage

Ed Howe and Adam Frederick dish it on the WCLZ Old Port Stage

had some help on that song from Dar Williams!

spooner_williams_small

Bringing Dar to Portland for the Old Port Festival was a real coup for ‘CLZ.  The crowds at the rock stages were huge, but us folkies gave those rockers a run for their money with Dar.  Fore Street was wall to wall Dar fans as far as the eye could see.

Dar Williams on the WCLZ Old Port Festival Stage

Dar Williams on the WCLZ Old Port Festival Stage

She put on a great set, (The Babysitter, Are You Out There, etc) and the crowd loved her.  Dar has a way of connecting with her live audiences that is different from other folkies who do that well.  Other great performers project their power into the audience.  Dar makes it seem as if she’s out here in the audience with us, watching the show, laughing at her mistakes and her intimate sense of humor right along with us.  It’s as if we’re all at the same party and we’re all entertaining each other.

Let’s see, what else was cool?

I ran into Tin Foil Man (Robert Wilson), a street artist familiar to many Portlanders.  He fashions sculptures out of foil, and he’s won the Phoenix tin_foil_man_smallBest of Portland street art title two years running.  I actually just wrote a song about this guy, and I can’t wait to play it for him.  Rumors were that he left town, but he’s here, and he had some nice pieces of his art with him.

After watching Dar Williams’ set, I walked down the hill to the Portland Coffee Roasters shop, and caught a few minutes of music from Truth About Daisies, one of my favorite local folkie bands.  They are down to three

Truth About Daisies

Truth About Daisies

members now, Ronda Dale, Sheila McKinley, and Doug Swift, but the new sound is clean, simple, and uncomplicated – I like it a lot!  Sheila and Ronda’s harmonies are wonderful, and Doug is a talented multi-instrumentalist.

Guess that’s it – quite a day of music in the great city of Portland, Maine!  One of the reasons I love living here!

Oh, and the weather was GREAT!

Add to FacebookAdd to DiggAdd to Del.icio.usAdd to StumbleuponAdd to RedditAdd to BlinklistAdd to TwitterAdd to TechnoratiAdd to FurlAdd to Newsvine