July 2014
Old-time lineup features Dwight Lamb with Fiddler Nelson on August Festival main stage p. 5 In this issue: Charlie Hoffman p. 9 | New brew for Coffee Grounds cafe p. 16 | Phil Nusbaum p. 21 | Calendar p. 23 | Coming Up p. 24
MBOTMA Hot Line
July 2014 Vol. 40 No. 7 Newsstand: $2.50 Subscription: $30
(to subscribe and for other information) 612-285-9133 or 800-635-3037 info@minnesotabluegrass.org P.O. Box 16408, Minneapolis, MN 55416 www.minnesotabluegrass.org Twitter: @mnbluegrass Facebook: minnesotabluegrass
MBOTMA Board of Directors
President: Gary Cobus, 763-428-2394, garycobi@charter.net Vice President: Jana Metge, 952-996-6490, singdancesavetheworld@gmail.com Treasurer: Peter Albrecht Secretary: Mary DuShane Board Members: Term expires 2014: Alan Jesperson, Philip Nusbaum, David Smith Term expires 2013: Marilyn Bergum, Gary Germond, Greg Landkamer, Sandi Pidel Youth Representative: Catie Jo Pidel For meeting minutes and other Board business, go to: minnesotabluegrass.org/as_Board
MBOTMA Staff
Executive Director: Jed Malischke, 715-635-2479 Administrative Assistant: Bea Flaming, 612-285-9133
Minnesota Bluegrass
Editor: JoAnne Makela, editor@minnesotabluegrass.org Contributors: Peter Albrecht, Mary Dushane, Ann Iijima, Alex Lodner, Jed Malischke, Phil Nusbaum Coming Up: Loretta Simonet, Rick Swanson Wordmark: Katryn Conlin Photography: Kevin Atkins, Martin Chvatal, John Fellman, Cindy Gentling, Kristal Leebrick, Jerry Wetteland Cover photo: Mette Bebe Juel Submit content or request advertising guidelines at: editor@minnesotabluegrass.org. Minnesota Bluegrass is published monthly by The Minnesota Bluegrass & Old-Time Music Association™, a Minnesota nonprofit corporation, P.O. Box 16408, Minneapolis, MN 55416. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without written permission from the publisher. The publisher is not responsible for the loss or return of unsolicited photos, recordings, or manuscripts. Š2013 Minnesota Bluegrass. All rights reserved. ISBN 0891-0537.
Thank you, MBOTMA members Patrons: Tony & Barbie Andreason Lenny & Colleen Baltus Art & Teresa Blackburn Ron & Kathy Blade Kenneth Bloch Doug Chasar Paul Christianson Laura Cooper Bob & Marilyn Dodd William Fancher Jerry Frank Daniel & Maggie Freese Darrell & Marilyn Fuhr Jon & Sharon Garon Gary & Jae Germond Michael & Paula Hildebrandt
Howie & Maggie Jorgenson Linda Kjerland Maxine Larson Richard Luckeroth Rolf & Lisa Lund Rodger McBride & Mabel Houle David Rogers Tom & Cathy Schaefer Thomas & Barbara Schommer Penelope Scialla Carri Scott & Bryan Trappe Jane & Dobson West Jim Whitney John Wilcox
Sustaining: Rod & Barb Anderson Mary Arntson Lee Bjorndal Ann Crawford Brooks & Barry Brooks Bill & Ann Bushnell Dan & Marilyn Cook Brian Cornell Bob & Vicki Dalager Hal Davis Mary DuShane Garry & Linda Elfstrand Jim Franczyk Art Geffen Warren Gumeson Timothy & Ginger Haaland James Helig Dick & Sue Hopperstad
Ann Iijima & Myles Bakke Alan & Geriann Kagan Jim Lally Lloyd & Beverly LaPlant Jim Miller Ben Monk James Natwick Dominic Orrico / Rhapsody Design Bob Ostlund Leo & Ann Rosenstein Marty & Carol Schirber Wendy Schoen Tom & Margaret Schuveiller Howell Smith Roger Sweet David & Bonnie Warner Mark & Danelle Wolf
Membership as of December 1, 2013: 962 Funding provided in part by a grant from the Minnesota State Arts Board, through an appropriation by the Minnesota State Legislature, a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, and private donors.
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Consider membership
From the editor
The Minnesota Bluegrass & Old-Time Music Association is open to everyone. Our members include people who love to listen to music and people who love to make music. As a member, you’ll be invited to participate in bluegrass and old-time music events and celebrations. You’ll receive discounted prices on admission to events and merchandise, and you’ll receive 12 monthly issues of Minnesota Bluegrass magazine. Becoming a member of MBOTMA is easy and affordable. Your membership will not only nurture your own interests, but help to ensure that the bluegrass and old-time music tradition is sustained and grows in Minnesota.
Wow! what a great time at the Homegrown Kickoff last month! I could only attend Friday night (before the rain came down), but had a wonderful and informative tour of the El Rancho Mañana campgrounds from MBOTMA board member and all-around champion Gary Germond. Gary and his family have been camping with the MBOTMA festival gangs since before they found the Ranch, and credits our Grass Seeds program with launching the career of his son Jed, who plays with the Cactus Blossoms. Gary remarked, “One of the remarkable things about camping with these folks is there is no age barrier. The old folks welcome the kids to jam with them. This made a big difference for Jed.” Even with the mosquitos biting, I thoroughly enjoyed the Friday night lineup with Karen Mueller and friends Catie Jo Pidel, Craig Evans, Pete Mathison, and Geoff Shannon; followed by Craig’s fine banjo again with the Eelpout Stringers. The DL Cajun Band was in fine form as was Blue Yodel No. 9. After which, the sky became a bit unsettled and I headed for a beer and the open mic at Ranch House Live. All of these stellar bands and many more of our MBOTMA friends look like they will be plenty busy this summer. For the first time since I began editing this magazine, the Coming Up calendar has at least one gig listed for every day in July! So, there is absolutely no excuse for being without some of the finest music around—certainly the finest in the Midwest. Speaking of Coming Up, we had a successful response to the ad posted in the May issue for help with the task of gathering and editing band and event information. Rick Swanson has joined the Minnesota Bluegrass editorial team to help Loretta Simonet scour music venue websites and solicit member band info, so we are sure to bring you the most comprehensive list of bluegrass, old-time, and acoustic music events to be had. This August, it is my intention to actually camp for the big festival. I haven’t camped since I was a teenager, and there’s a reason for it. I admit to being a city girl, and partial to indoor plumbing and soft mattresses. But, I really did want to stay and listen to all the wonderful jamming going on at the Kickoff. So, I’m going to brave it. But, if you see me wandering aimlessly into a mosquito-invested swamp, please do not hesitate to shout out! Hope to see you there. — Jo
Includes Minnesota Bluegrass, events discounts for one person, Individual ($30) and a free classified ad. Includes Minnesota Bluegrass, up to four discounted tickets per Family ($40) event, and a free classified ad. Add $12 for First Class or foreign postage to individual or family membership
Band ($65)
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Patron Level ($120)
Includes Minnesota Bluegrass, advance booking information for MBOTMA events, a free classified ad, and listings in the MBOTMA member band directory in print and on our website. Includes Minnesota Bluegrass, first-class postage, events discounts, two free concert tickets, and a free classified ad. Includes Minnesota Bluegrass, first-class postage, events discounts, four free concert tickets, and a free classified ad.
Go to minnesotabluegrass.org and select the Membership tab to join online and pay with PayPal. Or mail in your personal information and payment to: MBOTMA P.O. Box 16408 Minneapolis, MN 55416 Call 800-635-3037 or 612-285-9133 for more information or if you would like to join by phone. July 2014
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Old-time takes center stage at the August Festival By Jed Malischke
The Minnesota Bluegrass & Old-Time Music Festival has always been an important, and sometimes the only, venue for seeing and hearing real old-time stringband music in the Upper Midwest. This year will be no exception, as the 2014 festival has a stellar line-up of old-time music headed our way. Old-time stringband music will be front stage from August 6 through 10 at El Rancho Mañana, where the festival is held, and you’ll be able to immerse yourself in it by listening, playing, singing, dancing, and simply enjoying. Here’s a preview of what’s in store. Brad Leftwich & The Hogwire Stringband The Hogwire Stringband touts itself as “Traditional Americana: superb fiddling, high energy, rich harmonies, and a direct link with tradition drives Hogwire’s brand of American roots music” (www.bradleftwich.net/ Hogwire/). It makes no difference how thoroughly modern you want to be with your labels, such as “Americana” or “roots music,” and your fancy websites and Facebook pages. Those are for the masses. Underneath, the music is still honest-to-goodness, sure-fire, thereal-thing, pure joy old-time stringband. And the Hogwire Stringband presents an exciting and sophisticated brand of old-time music, blending rich vocal harmonies with superb fiddledriven melodies, backed by a dynamic rhythm section. Brad Leftwich anchors this band on fiddle and vocals, with long-time musical partner Linda July 2014
Higginbotham on banjo and banjo uke. Sam Bartlett adds powerful rhythmic support on guitar, banjo, and mandolin, and Abby Ladin completes the sound on stand-up bass and vocals. The band is based in Bloomington, Indiana, deep in the heartland of the U.S.A. Brad Leftwich has long been the gold standard for traditional old-time fiddling, and he is a highly regarded Hogwire Stringband. Photo: Kevin Atkins banjo player and singer as well. He grew up in Oklahoma in a family with at least three generations early 1970s where she helped start an of old-time musicians, and learned active community based on old-time directly from such legendary masters music and dance. She began playing as Tommy Jarrell, Melvin Wine, Violet clawhammer banjo and banjo ukuHensley, and the Hammonds family. lele after meeting Brad, and together In his nearly 40 years as a performer, they spent many hours visiting and he has released 12 feature recordings learning from older musicians in the to stellar reviews, appeared on dozens Appalachians and Ozarks. The pair of anthologies, and created teaching collaborated throughout the 1980s materials that define the genre. He as Leftwich & Higginbotham, and in has entertained at the White House, the 1990s with the Humdingers. They backed up Doc Watson on stage, and now play together as a duo and in the counts the late Buck Owens and John Hogwire Stringband. She is widely Hartford among his admirers. Brad known for her part in popularizing the also plays with Alice Gerrard and Tom banjo uke in old-time music. “If you Sauber in the band Tom, Brad & Alice. are alive, Linda will make you want to Linda Higginbotham is from a get up and dance” (Don Stevens, All family of musicians and colorful charMusic Guide). acters with deep roots in the pioneer Abby Ladin grew up immersed in heritage of Indiana, Kentucky, and the East Coast traditional folk music Arkansas. She learned to play guitar revival of the 1970s. As a dancer from her father, a Tin Pan Alley Abby was clogging by the age of 6, songwriter, and was introduced to performing with her sister Evie by old-time music as a teenager in New age 10, and touring nationally at 18 York by Miles Krassen. She moved with the renowned dance and music to Bloomington, Indiana, in the company Rhythm In Shoes. As a 5
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musician, she has played bass with some of this country’s finest fiddlers, lending her percussive strength and blending harmony vocals with sweet simplicity. She has won several top honors in the traditional band competition at the Appalachian String Band Music Festival. Abby is also a member of The New Mules, founded by (the late) Garry Harrison, with whom she recorded the now legendary Red Prairie Dawn album in 2000. Sam Bartlett is a nimble, irrepressible performer on guitar, banjo, and mandolin. His original compositions have been profiled on NPR’s All Things Considered and The Thistle & Shamrock, as well as Salon.com. His evocative musicianship has been featured in the Ken Burns documentaries, Prohibition and The Dustbowl. Sam is known as one of this country’s most engaging dance musicians, and has been crisscrossing the States playing for dances for 30 years. He is also the author of a best-selling book on pranks and parlor tricks, The Best of Stuntology (Workman Publishing). Hogwire will be a featured group on Friday and Saturday of the festival, playing the main stage on Friday night as well as Saturday afternoon, and for an old-time dance in the Showcase Tent on Saturday night. In addition, members of the group will be found in various specialty showcase events both days such as the Old-Time Banjo Masters Showcase, the Midwest OldTime Fiddle Showcase, and the Ukelele Craze Showcase. The Volo Bogtrotters According to Wikipedia, “The Volo Bogtrotters were an old-time string band, based in the Chicago area that played songs and tunes from the string bands of the 1920s and fiddle music from the Midwest, as well as from other new and traditional sources. The 6
The Volo Bogtrotters will lead a workshop and take the main stage at the August Festival. Photo: courtesy of the Volo Bogtrotters
band was together from about 1984 to around 2002 and made four recordings on the Marimac Label. They played at many music festivals and traditional dance venues, known for their driving twin fiddle sound and old songs gleaned from 78 rpm recordings. Six members of the band have recently united again (2012) to play at some dances and festivals.” Can this be true? Has the group actually reunited to come to the Minnesota Bluegrass & Old-Time Music Festival? The answer is yes. According to their own Facebook page (yes, they have a Facebook page!), “The Volo Bogtrotters are back. A Midwestern favorite since their first gig at the actual Volo Bog in 1985, the band took a rest after the festival season of 2002. 2012 saw them re-emerge as now a six-piece old-time music powerhouse.” And Jim Nelson recently assured me that, “Just for the record, there are six of us in the band. Chirps Smith on fiddle and mandolin; Fred Campeau on fiddle, banjo, and Hawaiian guitar; Paul Tyler on fiddle and mandolin; Steve Rosen on banjo, fiddle [that’s a lot of fiddles!], and mandolin; Tony Scarimbolo on string bass and harmonica; and me on guitar.”
Doug Lohman recently wrote in this magazine that “The Volo Bogtrotters are one of the premier oldtime bands from the Midwest. They have maintained their fire, passion, joy, and respect for the music since the 1980s when I first met them.” They hail from Chicago, Skokie, Evanston, LaGrange, WI, and St. Louis, MO. Their influences range from Gid Tanner & the Skillet Lickers, to the Cofer Brothers, Pappy Taylor, and Lotus Dickey. Jim Nelson says, “There is a strong Midwest bent for our instrumental tunes. Chirps brought in a lot of tunes that he collected while playing with Indian Creek Delta Boys in the 70s, with Garry and Steve Harrison. But we also grabbed tunes from Mississippi, Galax, Oklahoma. When someone heard something that caught the ear, we worked it up.” The festival starts early for The Volo Bogtrotters. The group will host a two day old-time band instructional camp on Wednesday and Thursday August 6 and 7. If you’re an intermediate-level player interested in oldtime music, this will be the place to be. A limited number of students will learn some basics of old-time music as well as a few new tunes. They’ll receive instruction on their individual instrument, as well as some experience July 2014
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playing with others. And all in a relaxed, positive, and inclusive environment that should be great fun too (see ad page 8). For the rest of us, we can see the Volo Bogtrotters on the festival main stage on Thursday and Saturday evenings, and dance to their music in the Showcase Tent on Friday night. You’ll also find various members of the group in specialty showcase events throughout the weekend, such as the Old-Time Banjo Masters Showcase and the Midwest Old-Time Fiddle Showcase. Dwight Lamb & Fiddler Nelson Dwight “Red” Lamb is a musician from Onawa, Iowa. Dwight has been fiddling and playing accordion for nearly 60 years and comes from a heritage that includes several generations of fiddlers, including his father and grandfather. And who is Fiddler Nelson? It’s a group of South Dakotans composed of Bill Peterson on fiddle; John Everist on banjo, concertina, guitar, and piano; Tom Weisbecker on guitar, harmonica, and Dobro; Al Slaathaug on standup bass; and Tom Carlson from The Road, on fiddle. Dwight was born in Moorhead, Iowa in 1934 to Clarence and Mary Lamb. Descendants of Danish immigrants, the Lamb family cherished the traditions of self-made music and entertainment. Dwight’s grandfather, Chris Jerup, played traditional Danish melodies on the single-row button accordion and the fiddle. His father played the fiddle and his mother chorded on the pump organ. His great-grandfather, Kraen Jerup, was a famous fiddler in Denmark and his tunes are still played there to this day. In 1946 Chris Jerup moved in with the Lambs and it was then that Dwight started to learn Danish tunes on his grandfather’s accordion. He captured July 2014
about 100 tunes from his grandfather, most of them untitled. Dwight is also known for his Missouri Valley style of fiddling, which he picked up from radio, records, and Decatur fiddler Bob Walters. The Missouri style is defined by both repertoire and the accent a fiddler puts on the bow. Lamb has played in, won, and judged many fiddle contests throughout the Midwest. He was a featured performer in the Smithsonian’s 1996 Festival of American Folklife and the Sesquicentennial Festival of Iowa Folklife. He is a past recipient of the Iowa Arts Council Folklife Award and has several times been the recipient of Traditional Arts Apprenticeship grants to teach fiddling in Iowa and elsewhere. He is also featured in the Department of Cultural Affairs Cultural Express program on Iowa Danish traditions and has a variety of recordings available. You’ll find Dwight Lamb on the festival main stage on Saturday evening and Sunday afternoon. Fiddler
Nelson will be playing dance music at the Showcase Tent on Saturday night. And members of the group will be found in various specialty showcase events both days, such as the Old-Time Banjo Masters Showcase, the Midwest Old-Time Fiddle Showcase, and the Accordion Styles Showcase. Not enough? If you crave more old-time music, you’ll enjoy our favorite Minnesota groups as well. Bob Bovee will be teaming up with Pop Wagner for music, dances, and emceeing. Mike In The Wilderness will be found on the main stage as well as playing for a dance and hosting a showcase about their Minnesota Fiddle Tunes Project CD. And The Roe Family Singers will bring all their unusual instruments to the main stage and elsewhere. So the 2014 Minnesota Old-Time & Bluegrass Music Festival will have plenty of old-time string band music for you to enjoy. So, if you’re not a fan of old-time music now, you soon will be.
Fiddler Nelson will back up Dwight Lamb on the main stage Saturday and Sunday at the August Festival. Photo: courtesy of Fiddler Nelson 7
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PRE-FESTIVAL INSTRUCTIONAL CAMPS Prior to the Minnesota Bluegrass & Old-Time Music Festival El Rancho Mañana Campground ~ August 7–10, 2014
BLUEGRASS JAM CAMP WITH MONROE CROSSING
The members of Monroe Crossing will host a three-day bluegrass instructional camp. For beginners and intermediate level players, camp will include individual instrument instruction plus group playing and harmony singing dynamics. It starts on Tuesday, August 5 after 6 p.m. and continues in morning and afternoon sessions on August 6 & 7. The camp will wind up with a group recital in the Showcase Tent on Thursday evening. $95 registration fee before July 15; $120 after.
OLD-TIME STRINGBAND CAMP WITH THE VOLO BOGTROTTERS
The members of The Volo Bogtrotters will host a two day old-time band instructional camp on August 6 & 7. They will teach intermediate and advanced level old-time musicianship. Learn some basics of old-time music as well as a few new tunes, and gain experience playing with others. Instruction on student’s own instrument. $80 registration fee before July 15; $95 after.
SOUND WORKSHOP WITH ARMADILLO
Doug Lohman of Armadillo Sound will cover audio production and sound reinforcement for this intensive two-day workshop. The nature and characteristics of audio gear (analog and digital) and how to master it, along with the characteristics of a successful sound person will be the topics. Camp begins at 9 a.m., August 6. $80 registration fee before July 15; $95 after.
For more information or to register: 1-800-635-3037 info@minnesotabluegrass.org
Minnesota Bluegrass
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July 2014
Meet the masters
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Charlie Hoffman, building a legacy By Mary DuShane and Peter Albrecht Charlie Hoffman is a Minneapolis luthier who has been building guitars for more than 40 years. His guitars are among the most sought after in the acoustic music community in Minnesota and far beyond. Among the notable players who have bought Hoffman guitars are Leo Kottke, Norman Blake, Dakota Dave Hull, and Tim Sparks. Charlie can be found at his shop on East Franklin Avenue in Minneapolis, nearly every day. He often answers the phone and likes to talk to customers from his workbench. He is a loved and admired member of the community. His shop is a destination for famous and everyday people, where folks come to chat, engage in serious or winsome discussion, and enjoy being in the company of other musicians. Charlie has dedicated his life to producing fine instruments that will be around and cherished long after we are all gone. So what made you want to build guitars in the first place?
I was a graduate student at the University of Minnesota, studying for my Ph.D. prelims, which are awful, and I decided that if I didn’t do something with my hands, I would end up in the psych ward, and since I had been doing wood work all my life, plus I used to go to the West Bank parties and sit and play guitar behind everybody else, I thought, well, I’ll make a guitar. And I did. Several people told me they thought it was a good guitar. Not too long after that, Rod Bellville came to me and said, “Hey, we oughta open up a guitar repair shop.” I said, “No, I have to get a Ph.D. and teach college.” Well, a couple of years of July 2014
being a teaching assistant showed me that I didn’t actually want to teach. So, eventually Rod and I opened up our shop on April 1, 1971. We were Bellville & Hoffman until 1977. How long have you been in the location on Franklin Avenue? I bought this building in 1975. My workbench has been in that corner for as long as I Charlie Hoffman in his workshop. Photo: Cindy Gentling can remember. It’s to your credit that you have such long-term employees. Do you have certain models of Ron Tracy has been here since guitars that you build, or do you 1980, Kevin Schwab since 1981 or 82, build entirely custom? and Michele Beardsley since the midI have certain body shapes, such as 90s. They are excellent repair people, dreadnaughts, single O’s, double O’s. I and repair is about three quarters of build quite a traditional guitar in some our business. They also like to make ways, with x-bracing in the tops, and instruments. traditional woods, such as mahogany, And your son Gabriel? maple, and Indian rosewood. That Gabe does mostly business stuff, single O there has sides and back of inventory, ordering, some of the bookkoa, from Hawaii, my current favorite keeping, and manages our computer. wood. But any model can be customHe also has built some electric guitars. ized to the customer’s wildest imagI see you have some electric guitars ination, with added inlays, etc. They hanging here in the shop. can be made from a variety of woods Yes. The first three there were made as well. I communicate continually by Gabe. The next ones were made by with the customer who orders a special Ron. They look like Telecasters but model, from the initial information with a slightly shorter scale, so they sheet covering basics such as wood, have a slightly different tone and are a shape, binding, purfling, etc., through little easier to play. And now Michele the building process until the guitar is has started making lap steels, and you complete. The customer is invited to can see three of her lap steels here. She pick the specific wood to be used from calls them “Hepcat.” They’re very nice. my stock of many different woods. He or she can also check-in online and see photos of the guitar as it takes form. 9
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The guitars of yours displayed here in the shop, are they representative?
They are. There are two 12-string guitars up here. My 12-strings are basically the same body shape as a Gibson J-185, what I call a small jumbo. They have been selling quite well. Then there’s a single O “parlor guitar,” which currently may be my favorite guitar shape. My experience is that a small guitar, done well, will have a remarkable amount of sound. You won’t take a parlor guitar to a bluegrass jam session, but you can do a lot with it, and sitting at home you can do anything with it. I still make dreadnaughts. Over the years I’ve made more dreadnaughts than anything. Where do you get your spruce for the tops? The most common spruce is Sitka spruce, which comes from the West Coast. I’ve been using a lot of Adirondack or red spruce, from the East Coast. Engelmann spruce is from the Rocky Mountain area, and there is European spruce too. I have different suppliers for all of those. I see your guitars don’t have pick guards. I don’t put them on when I make them. If somebody wants one, I’ll put it on, free for nuthin’. Same thing with dots on the fingerboard. You’ll notice these have no dots. If people want them, I’ll put them in, no extra charge. But maybe later they’ll want something fancier, and maybe the dots would interfere. So, they have choices. Pickups too. If someone wants a pickup in one of my guitars, I charge for the pickup itself but not the installation. And all my guitars have a lifetime warranty to the original owner, covering workmanship and materials, which means, for example-and this is particularly pertinent to us here in Minnesota--that if you do 10
not properly humidify your guitar during the winter and it develops a crack in the body, that is not under warranty. Humidity cracks are not covered under any warranty I am familiar with: Martin, Gibson, Taylor, whatever. Talk about your neck construction.
You can see that they are laminated. They are mahogany necks with a maple or rosewood, generally maple, stripe down the middle. I started doing Charlie with one of his signature guitars. Photo: Cindy Gentling that at first because it makes them more stable, they won’t twist, and they also look one here for repair, with the back off. I good. I’ve done them that way ever could see the inside, so I knew exactly since. Also, I use an adjustable truss what I was doing. rod, which everybody does these days. Any famous people playing your The truss rod I use is patterned after guitars? the one Gibson has used for many Well, in a sense, I think “Famous years, and it’s working very well for People” is a false way of looking at the me. No need to change something if process. Each person is an individit’s working well. ual and has a certain sound they are How about some unusual guitars looking for. The phrase I like to use is: you’ve made? You’ve made harp “Guitars have personality, and you’ve guitars? got to get married.” That speaks to me I have. I’ve made several of what strongly, because I’ll make a guitar and we call Dyer Brothers harp guitars. one guy will come in and not like it Although the original harp guitars and then try the next one, and somewere made by the Larson Brothers in body else will come in and fall deeply Chicago, they were sold by the Dyer in love and haul out their checkbook music store in downtown St. Paul. and away they go. And there’s no right There are probably more of them in or wrong about that, no predicting the Twin Cities, perhaps sitting in that, it just happens. Which leads me attics, than in the rest of the country. to be amazed that people will buy guiA guy once sent me an email saying, tars over the internet. They’ve never “Here’s a picture; can you make me heard the guitar. Even if they’re lookone of these?” And since I’d seen a lot ing at a D-28, they’re not all the same. of them and thought they were really You can get two D-28s that came off cool, I said, “Yes.” At that time, we had the assembly line at Martin the same July 2014
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day, and yes, they will sound similar, but they won’t sound exactly the same, and those minor differences are, for a lot of players, important. With good guitars, there are differences. When people buy from me, whether over the internet or a guitar they have special ordered me to build, I take the money, send the guitar, and they have a week to decide. If they return it to me undamaged, they get their money back. I’ve had to return guitars only four or five times, so I’d say my batting average is pretty good. Let’s go back to your history. So you gave up on the Ph.D. and began doing guitar repair and building, and you were supporting your family this way? Yes. However, in 1983, I had children who were planning on going to college. And also, I’d been sitting here for 12-odd years, cranking out dreadnaught guitars as fast as I could, and I was getting kinda bored. So I went to law school. I took a class, took the LSAT exam, scored very well, and started law school about a week after my fortieth birthday. My graduate
work had been in Constitutional history, so law school made sense. I went to the University, graduated very well in my class, got a job immediately in a very good law firm, worked there as an associate, and then became a partner. I was a partner there until my sixtieth birthday and then became “of counsel” until I turned 65, when I retired fully. And went right back to the work bench. The shop was open the whole time, and I came in frequently at the end of the day and on weekends. During those years, my annual production dropped, but there were still some guitars being made. How long does it take you to build a guitar; what are your production expectations for yourself? I don’t really know how many hours go into a guitar, because I don’t keep track. I build guitars in batches, 8 or 10 or 12 at a time. Right now I’m starting a batch of 12 guitars, and I work on them ’til they are done and then start a new batch. These days a batch of, say, 10 guitars will take me about six months from start to finish. And there
may be vacation or other time off, so right now perhaps 20 guitars a year is what I am likely to do. Currently I am on guitar #625. Charles A. Hoffman Handmade Guitars 2219 East Franklin Avenue Minneapolis MN 55404 612-338-1079 www.hoffmanguitars.com —Mary DuShane is the MBOTMA board secretary and a well-known local fiddler currently playing in the Moonlight Duo and the DL Cajun Band. Peter Albrecht is the board’s treasurer and sings and plays folk, bluegrass, and jug band music on guitar, mandolin, and banjo.
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612-306-3490 douglohman@aol.com 11
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New Inside Bluegrass brings more bluegrass to your radio Two retired guys who love bluegrass music are hosting a new bluegrass radio show on KRWC 1360 AM in Buffalo, Minnesota, with plans to syndicate to other markets around the state as listenership grows. Denny O’Brien and Tom Schuveiller have teamed up with station owner Joe Carlson to produce Inside Bluegrass, a show that aims to promote primarily Minnesota talent, but will also feature regional and national bands. KRWC will continue to promote and air Phil Nusbaum’s Bluegrass Review on Sundays at 4 p.m. The new Inside Bluegrass airs on Saturdays at 10 a.m. Denny O’Brien played in the Siloa Creek Bluegrass Band for 13 years. He and Schuveiller, both civil service retirees, are long-time friends with a mutual love for playing, listening to, and promoting the music. Tom has volunteered at KRWC radio and for Minnesota Pioneer Park in Annandale, Minnesota where he produced bluegrass shows at park events. Schuveiller co-chaired the Bluegrass and Fiddlers Festival at Pioneer Park in 2013 and arranged with Carlson to carry part of the festival live on the station. The duo has recorded interviews with bluegrass favorites Monroe Crossing, as well as other bands that performed on Danny Stewart’s Bluegrass Cruise this past winter. They will combine their on-the-road experiences, including a live broadcast from MBOTMA’s August festival, with in-studio air time and podcasts to provide variety for local audiences. O’Brien and Schuveiller are seeking advertising support for the new show and encourage fans of the genre to give them a listen. If you are outside the KRWC listening area, ask your local station to carry Inside Bluegrass and The Bluegrass Review. For more information on advertising on Inside Bluegrass or carrying the show outside the Wright County area, contact Joe Carlson at joe@KRWC1360.com.
FOR SALE: 1998 Motorcycle Camping Trailer w/cover. 325 pounds; easy pull by bike or any small car; move by hand. Harley Davidson package (logo, lettering, chrome fenders, etc). K-size bed w/3" mattress & memory foam cover, standup 4x6 dressing area, inside storage, attached igloo cooler, 1-7/8" hitch, spare tire, stored indoors. Easy set-up. Exc. condition. $1650. 763-213-1349.
Attention All Bands If you want to sell your music, you need a good band. If you want to sell your band, you need good smiles!
Lloyd “Doc” Wallin, D.D.S. Cosmetic Dentistry Burnsville, MN 55337 952-892-5050 (Free Consultation for MBOTMA Members) 12
July 2014
MinnesotaBluegrass.org
Minnesota Duet Championship Friday, August 29, 2014, 2 to 5 pm West End Market Stage, Minnesota State Fair
GRAND PRIZE
Cash Prize of $200 plus a Pair of BREEDLOVE GUITARS from The Podium plus trophies and cash prizes for 2nd $200; 3rd $100; 4th $75; 5th $50
Minnesota Flatpicking Guitar Championship Saturday, August 30, 2014, 2 to 5 pm West End Market Stage, Minnesota State Fair
GRAND PRIZE
Championship Round 1st Place:Hand-Built Guitar by David Vincent Guitars (retail value of $2,500) Trophies and cash prizes for 2nd $350; 3rd $250; 4th $150; 5th $100 Preliminary Round a. Ages 21 & Under: 1st $40; 2nd $20; 3rd trophy b. Ages 22 to 55: 1st $40; 2nd $20; 3rd trophy c. Ages 56 & Up: 1st $40; 2nd $20; 3rd trophy
ONL
Y
$20
Registration $25 - Space is limited - First come first serve! Up to 15 Duets, 17 guitarists Guidelines, registration forms and more information at www.MinnesotaBluegrass.org or call 800-635-3037. July 2014
TO R E UNT GISTE IL A R 15! UG
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Take the MBOTMA Survey
MinnesotaBluegrass.org
MBOTMA is surveying its members (and non-member followers) to gather information on what our audience likes and doesn’t like about the organization. Let us know what we should add, subtract, or change in the near future. The survey is your chance to communicate with us. Log on to fluidsurveys.com/s/ MBOTMASurvey. Your answers will be used to measure how well MBOTMA is doing its job on your behalf. All survey responses are anonymous and will be reported in the aggregate, processed by a neutral third party, to protect your anonymity. Your answers and comments are confidential but very important to determine how MBOTMA can better serve its constituents. The survey is not limited to current MBOTMA members, so feel free to pass the survey web address to other musicians who share our interest in the bluegrass and old-time music world. If you have questions about the site or the survey, please contact Marilyn Bergum at 763-234-1040, mwbergum@ gmail.com.
LaPlant Instruments maker of fine mandolins & guitars
Buy - Trade Sell - Repair (stringed instruments) 218-326-4456
31751 LaPlant Road Grand Rapids, MN 55744 14
July 2014
MinnesotaBluegrass.org
July 2014
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MinnesotaBluegrass.org
New owner, name, and menu at former Coffee Grounds By Alex Lodner, Park Bugle
When Tim Cheesebrow took the helm as the new co-owner of Coffee Grounds along with his parents and business partners, Bonnie and Dennis Cheesebrow, folks got a little nervous. The beloved neighborhood coffee shop and bluegrass music venue at 1579 Hamline Ave. N., Falcon Heights, had been a favorite hangout for music lovers and locals looking for a comfortable spot to meet up with friends. Former owner Dave Lawrence and his crew had made everyone who walked down the stairs into the cavernous café feel welcome. It was Falcon Heights’ version of Cheers, where everyone did, in fact, know your name. It was home away from home for many regulars, and the change in ownership was a bit unnerving. No one understood that better than Tim Cheesebrow. “Rest assured it will not become a Starbucks,” he wrote on Coffee Grounds’ Facebook page in January. “We are a local family business that will continue to run the shop with an independent spirit.” It is with that same independent spirit that the Cheesebrow family also runs MusicWorks Minnesota (MWM), a nonprofit organization that works with at-risk youth through in-school and community programs. While looking for a location for the organization, Cheesebrow found Coffee Grounds when he was recording his album Home in the Heartland at Essential Sessions Studios around the corner. 16
“The Coffee Grounds space was the perfect fit to give MWM a stage for its community programming and to financially support the work of the nonprofit,” he said. A few months later, the Coffee Grounds changed Tim Cheesebrow. Photo: Kristal Leebrick hands. With the “Most nonprofits don’t have the passing of the torch advantage of having a bricks-andcame some immediate changes. mortar place where they can get the The name change to Underground word out to a built-in audience of likeMusic Café rattled regulars at first minded people.” but made sense—most of the space is The Underground Music Café now underground. serves coffee from top local roaster But the new emphasis on music is True Stone as well as fresh pastries what really matters to Cheesebrow. from April Fool Virtual Bakery and He sees the café as a venue for local Gourmet Donuts of the Twin Cities. bands that are being ignored by radio The menu has expanded to include stations playing trendy music geared made-to-order pizzas, wraps, sandtoward selling rather than creativity wiches and smoothies. Cheesebrow and originality. is working with the City of Falcon “Musicians who are not conforming Heights on securing a license to add to the trends have had to go ‘underlocal craft beers to the menu, but he ground,’ ” he said. “Here we give them has already started serving wine with a voice; we give them a stage.” an impressive selection and a range of The coffee shop will also serve as price points. community outreach for the nonprofit. Slowly, the place is feeling more like “Underground Music Café gives the neighborhood café Cheesebrow MWM a space to build awareness for envisioned. He is searching for a chef the need of music education. If music to create dinner specials that would be lovers are coming here to get their dose showcased exclusively on weekends. of local music, they will learn about Change is hard, and Cheesebrow MWM and realize it’s worth supportknows there may be a shaky transition ing,” Cheesebrow said. period. But he is banking on people’s July 2014
MinnesotaBluegrass.org
Friends of Minnesota Bluegrass Music Stores A to G Music, Osseo, MN, 763-420-5500 All Strings Attached, Minneapolis, MN, 763-542-9542 Blackbirds Music, Minneapolis, MN, 612-326-5745 Cadenza Music, St. Paul, MN, 651-644-3611 Castle Accordion, Minneapolis, MN, 612-823-5848 Christian Eggert Violins Duluth, Duluth, MN, 218-726-1970 Christian Eggert Violins Fargo, Fargo, ND, 701-280-7017 Classical Guitars Etc., Apple Valley, MN, 952-322-1310 Dave’s Guitar Shop, La Crosse, WI, 608-785-7704 Eclipse Music, West St. Paul, MN, 651-451-8878 Evans Music, White Bear Lake, MN, 651-429-0236 Fein Stringed Instruments, St. Paul, MN, 651-228-0783 The Guitar Shop, Rosemount, MN, 651-344-8177 Haas Musical Instrument Repair, Arden Hills, MN, 651-631-8820 Ham’s Music, Saint Cloud, MN, 320-257-7011 Hobgoblin Music, Red Wing, MN, 651-388-8400 Hoffman Guitars, Minneapolis, MN, 612-338-1079
Homestead Pickin’ Parlor, Richfield, MN, 612-861-3308 Kenny’s Music, Grand Forks, ND, 701-772-8670 Kezar Music Company, Thief River Falls, MN, 218-681-2148 Main Street Music, Elk River, MN, 763-441-1753 Marguerite’s Music, Moorhead, MN, 218-233-7546 Mr. Mark Music, Anoka, MN, 763-421-5455 Musicmaker’s Kits Inc., Stillwater, MN, 651-439-9120 My Favorite Guitars, Naples, FL, 239-530-7425 Nelson Music, Erhard, MN, 409-939-3062 Piano Circle, Bloomington, MN, 952-881-6165 The Podium, Minneapolis, MN, 612-767-2800 Rhapsody Music, Mankato, MN, 507-387-2562 Rocktown Music, Waite Park, MN, 320-257-7676 Scheitel’s Music, Mankato, MN, 507-387-3881 Simply Violins, New Hope, MN, 763-535-7055 Tone Music, Owatonna, MN, 507-451-5196 Waseca Music Co., Waseca, MN, 507-835-2980
desire for a neighborhood hangout where they can take the family for a nice meal on a Friday evening or linger over a glass of cold-press coffee on the patio. The new owners are planning a renovation in June that will include the addition of a curved bar, new floors, fresh paint, barn-wood accents and improved lighting. Cheesebrow launched a Kickstarter campaign on June 1 to raise funds for the stage area and sound system. “We hope to have a grand re-opening celebration mid-July,” Cheesebrow said. “It’s going to be a lot of fun to see this place blossom.” Look for MBOTMA member bands playing at the Underground Music Cafe (UMC) in Coming Up (p. 24). —Reprinted with permission from the Park Bugle newspaper: May 27, 2014. www.parkbugle.org El Rancho Mañana is the place to be come August. See pages 4 and 23 for a list of what to expect at the MBOTMA festival. Photo: Martin Chvatal July 2014
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MinnesotaBluegrass.org
MBOTMA Member Bands BLUEGRASS BANDS Alternate Route, Steve Golz, 651-2475360, sfgolz@yahoo.com Alzen Family, Brad Alzen, 715-749-3977, bwalzen@pressenter.com Art Stevenson & Highwater, Art Stevenson, 715-884-6996, artstevenson@ hotmail.com Barton’s Hollow, Ian Kimmel, 507-7663529, ickimmel@yahoo.com Benson Family Singers, Peter Benson,, bensonpd@yahoo.com Big Juke & The Last Resort, Mark Jukich, 218-390-7342, mjukich@msn.com Biscuit Boys, Daniel Fish, 763-434-2734, radiocty@skypoint.com Blue Hazard, Hannah Johnson, 651-500-0747, info@bluehazardband.com Blue Wolf, Shirley Mauch, 612-724-1482, samauch@worldnet.att.net Cabin Fever, Jeanie Wyttenbach, 507-635-5625, wyttenbach.lou@mayo. edu Carver Creek Bluegrass, Tom Monsen, 952-466-2089, carvercreekbluegrass@ gmail.com Copper Creek, Travis Nemechek, 507-775-0067, travisbn@hotmail.com Def Lester, Lincoln Potter, 651-4830469, potter@umn.edu Dick Kimmel & Co, Dick Kimmel, 507-359-1163, kimmel@newulmtel.net The Fish Heads, Kim Curtis-Monson, 218-729-5326, KMonson802@aol.com Froemming Family, Anna Froemming, 320-453-2393, pilgrims@meltel.net Halvorson Family Band, Loren Halvorson, 507-345-7431, loren@ birchcovesoftware.com Hand Picked Bluegrass, Joe Cronick, 715-966-6463, handpickedbluegrass@ charter.net Hey Lonesome, Art Blackburn, 763-213-1349, art@akbmusic.com The High 48s, Eric Christopher, 651-271-4392, eric@thehigh48s.com Ivory Bridge, Jim Tordoff, 612-759-5987, guitarrodeo@gmail.com JedFest, Jed Malischke, jmalisch@ centurytel.net
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Joe Mullins & The Radio Ramblers, Holly Underwood, 937-768-0911, hollybu@gmail.com The Kalisch Family, Sandy Kalisch, 507-744-3348, skalisch7@means.net King’s Countrymen, Lorn Schultz, 715-495-5275, schultzfam92@yahoo.com The King’s Highway, Eddy Van Pamhorst, 807-630-9914, gemvan@ tbaytel.net The Long Shots, Sophie Galep, 715-2330181, sophie.galep@gmail.com Long Time Gone, Ben Manning, 651-388-7383, mndawg@gmail.com Mark Kreitzer Band, Mark Kreitzer, 612-724-7334, mark@markkreitzer.com Marty Marrone & Tangled Roots, Marty Marrone, 651-295-1376, marty@ tangledrootsbluegrass.com The Middle Spunk Creek Boys, Al Jesperson, 612-727-2489, alanjesp@ gmail.com Minnesota Blue, Kelton Parrish, 651-697-0209, kgparrish@gmail.com Monroe Crossing, Art Blackburn, 763-213-1349, info@monroecrossing.com No Man’s String Band, Nic Hentges, 612-387-0196, nihentges@gmail.com Northern Lights Bluegrass, Mary Campbell, 320-679-3094, qbchurch@q. com Ophoven Family Band, Molli Ophoven, 218-327-2058, jmophoven@q.com Phil Nusbaum & Steven Earl Howard, Phil Nusbaum, 651-690-1508, pnusbaum@bitstream.net The Platte Valley Boys, Ron Colby, 651-458-0804, roncolby@comcast.net Porcupine Creek, Sarah Birkeland, 218-624-1781, arahsay328@gmail.com Prairiegrass, Bonnie Hallett, 320-4853310, bkhallett@yahoo.com Pride of the Prairie, Sarah Cagley, sdcagley@comcast.net Purdy River Band, Chuck Lahr, 563-927-2457, purdyriver@gmail.com Riverside Bog Stompers, David Darnell, 218-260-6546, davestreetrod@ hotmail.com Sawtooth Bluegrass Band, MJ Moravec, 507-990-6456, sawtoothbluegrass@gmail.com
The Seldom Herd, Gary Cobus, 612-859-9013, garycobi@charter.net Singleton Street, Sherri Leyda, 763-972-2341, singletonst@yahoo.com The Stringsmiths, Chris Landstrom, 715-671-3772, chris@stringsmiths.com Tim and Cindy, Tim Roggenkamp, 218-568-5559, rogge@uslink.net Timbre Junction, Karen Radford, 612-623-0261, KarenJRadford@eaton. com The Woodpicks, Joel Kezar, 218-6812148, kezarmusic@mncable.net
OLD-TIME STRINGBANDS The Blackburns, Art Blackburn, 763-213-1349, Art@AKBMusic.com Bob & Lynn Dixon, Lynn Dixon, 612-377-6819, dixon@visi.com Bob Bovee, 507-498-5452, bobbovee46@gmail.com Duck For The Oyster, Kevin McMullin, 715-635-7641, kevin@kevinmcmullin. com The Eelpout Stringers, Karl Burke, 651-784-7323, bltfolk@aol.com Eldon Hagen, Eldon Hagen, 952-9759020, elbanjovi@yahoo.com Four Mile Portage, Tom Maloney, 218464-3808, fourmileportage@gmail.com The Gritpickers, Rob Daves, 612-8220085, gritpickers@gmail.com Mike In The Wilderness, Michael Sawyer, 651-698-7520, minnesotafiddle@ yahoo.com Poor Benny, David Furniss, 651-6990557, david.w.furniss@uwrf.edu The Roe Family Singers, Quillan Roe, 612-599-0266, pappyroe@yahoo.com Rush River Ramblers, Eric Hatling, 715-772-4421, ehatling@gmail.com Tickwood String Band, Doug Wells, 218-736-4469, betsyanddougwells@ gmail.com The Tune Jerks, Bob Douglas, 651-7781395, rjdouglas@stthomas.edu Wild Goose Chase Cloggers, Jim Brooks, 612-419-4576, brooks@csp.edu
July 2014
MinnesotaBluegrass.org MBOTMA Bands, cont’d
RELATED GENRE BANDS Alabaster Falls, Julie Kaiser, 218-3083131, tiedyechick40@yahoo.com Alas, Alas, Andrew Temeprante, 651-271-4449, alasalasaband@gmail.com Alchemical Banjo, Richard Swanson, 651-338-1349, rick@richardpswanson. com Ana & The Beltones, Anabel Wirt, 651-795-9561, anabelnjoes@gmail.com Awkward Sorrows, Robert Coleman, 612-801-4660, rob@awkwardsorrows. com The Back Porch Band, LaDonna Seely, 651-324-5990, ladonna_seely@yahoo. com The Barley Jacks with Brian Wicklund, Brian Wicklund, 651-4334564, brian@fiddlepal.com Benji Flaming, Benji Flaming, 612-3266521, mbotma@benjiflaming.com Bernie King & The Guilty Pleasures, Bernie King, 763-242-6943, bkandthegps@gmail.com Bill & Kate Isles, Bill Isles, 218-3404404, bill@billandkateisles.com Blessings Gospel Trio, Timothy Johnson, 763-464-3481, timkarin@ comcast.net Blue Yodel #9, John Whitehead, 651-641-0752, jfw@bitstream.net Butternut Squash, Eric Thurstin, 651-734-0651, eric.thurstin@gmail.com Cousin Dad, Ross Vaughan, 320-6853839, rvaughan@cloudnet.com Culver’s Jammers, Barb Carlson, 763-784-7881, Blinkbug@aol.com Curtis & Loretta, Loretta Simonet, 612-781-9537, curtisloretta@att.net DL Cajun Band, Doug Lohman, 612-306-3490, DougLohman@aol.com Don D Harvey & the Ultrasonic Duo, Donald Harvey, 608-781-3456, dondharvey@centurytel.net Due North, Louise Wiermaa, 218-5907654, lew3355@hotmail.com The Eddies, Phil Platt, 651-500-2279, platt@umn.edu Five Miles From Town, Ross Johnson, ross@commedtec.com The Flemming Fold, Sandra Flemming, 952-758-7522, troynsandra@hotmail.com
July 2014
Four Legg Fish, Mick Garrett, 320-2791868, mick_garrett@hotmail.com Greenwood Tree, Bill Cagley, 651-6369542, bcagley@comcast.net The Hacklewrappers, Mark Rubbert, 612-387-8189, mjrubbert@comcast.net Jack Klatt & The Cat Swingers, Jack Klatt, 612-270-9079, jackklatt@gmail. com John & Rose Band, John Vincent, 218-766-1925, fiddling@hotmail.com Karen Mueller & Friends, Karen Mueller, 612-270-4740, karen@ karenmueller.com Mary Henderson & Geoff Shannon, Mary Henderson, 612-721-3550, hendersonshannon@goldengate.net Mikko Cowdery & Friends, Mikko Cowdery, 320-859-3536, mick@ midwestinfo.net The Moss Piglets, Ian Gamble, 651-644-0810, themosspiglets@yahoo. com Mother Banjo, Ellen Stanley, 612-2811364, motherbanjo@gmail.com New Riverside Ramblers, Eric Mohring, 612-724-4687, info@ newriversideramblers.com No Grass Limit, Sandi Millar, 763-4393515, sandi@lessonpros.com Nordic Bees, Renee Vaughan, 651-2954200, renee@nordicbees.com Now and Then, Daniel Fish, 763-7862524, radiocty@skypoint.com O’Neil Family Band, Jeanne O’Neil, 218-773-3850, oneil@rrv.net Peter Ostroushko, 612-529-2884, postroushko@visi.com Petticoat Rustlers, Julie Young, 612-374-4364, spamzo@earthlink.net Ring of Kerry, Paul Cotton, 320-2510601, paulcot@iname.com Rosby Corner, Jeanne Marti, 763-5597552, romarti3@aol.com Sherry Minnick & Jackson Buxton, Sherry Minnick, 651-644-8682, minnicksherry@gmail.com Sloughgrass, Soren Olesen, 218-6342800, sorenjudith@centurytel.net Split-Shot Sinkers, Chris Boone, 651-274-3054, cboone@dezinnia.com
String Beans, Chick Pea & Garbonzo, Roger Cuthbertson, 612-474-2476, rojo@visi.com Switched At Birth, Rick Anderson, 651-230-2431, ricktune56@gmail.com T & L Schwartz & Family, Linda Schwartz, 701-659-3154, lspollanthra@ gmail.com Thirsty River, Evan Jungbauer, 952-2155244, thethirstyriver@gmail.com Tucker’d Out, John Trelstad, 701-2120015, jdtrelstad@aol.com Wayne Hamilton, 612-508-0768, wayne@waynehamilton.com The Weasels, George Rothenberger, 612724-6911, grothenberger@edilimited.com
For sale: Pristine 2007 Collings D2HG Dreadnaught guitar with German spruce top and rosewood back and sides; w/HS case. REDUCED. MUST SELL. $2995. Call 763-213-1349.
Young musicians wait their turn to play at the Grass Seeds Academy this past winter. Photo: Jerry Wetteland 19
MinnesotaBluegrass.org
A full time professional luthier since 1978, combining experience in repairing fine instruments, building guitars and mandolins, and teaching lutherie since 1984. Now also taking in a limited number of repairs, specializing in neck resets, refrets, and set ups. davidvincentguitars.com vincentroost@gmail.com 651-380-0566 Clint Birtzer, 3-time Minnesota Flatpicking Guitar Championship Winner, proudly displays the hand-built Vincent guitar he won at the 2013 contest. See him play the guitar on YouTube.com by searching on “Red Haired Boy - Clint Birtzer.”
The Homestead Pickin’ Parlor ®
“For us, serving the needs of the acoustic music community has never been an afterthought—It has always been our only thought.”
We’ve Got You Covered! Lesson times are available with: Mark Briere – Mandolin | Bill Cagley – Guitar | Mike Cramer – Acoustic & Electric Guitar, Mandolin, Electric Bass Mary DuShane – Fiddle | Adam Granger – Flatpicking, Fingerstyle & Swing Guitar | Paul Hatch – Guitar Stu Janis – Hammered Dulcimer | Bruce Johnson – Banjo, Mandolin, Guitar & Harmonica Karen Mueller – Autoharp®, Dulcimer, Mandolin, Guitar, Tenor Banjo, Ukulele | Jim Ohlschmidt – Fingerstyle Guitar Catie Jo Pidel – Fiddle | Jim Plattes – Mandolin, Fiddle, Harmonica & Guitar | Russ Rayfield – Bluegrass & Jazz Banjo Geoff Shannon – Bluegrass Guitar | Jerry Spanhanks – Bluegrass Banjo, Guitar, Dobro | Shirley Spanhanks – Guitar & Piano Accordion Pop Wagner – Fingerstyle Guitar, Fiddle | John Wallace – Old-Time Fiddle & Banjo We never tire of talking about our instructors. They are some of the finest musicians working anywhere today. And to have them right here is an exceptional opportunity for anyone wanting to hone their musical skills for the summer picking season. You can check out their bios on our newly re-designed web site and see interviews on our Facebook page. With their assistance, your next level of musical competency is just around the corner. Call today to schedule a lesson. The Upper Midwest’s Only Bluegrass & Old-Timey Store Founded 1979
6625 Penn Avenue South Richfield, MN 55423 (612) 861–3308
FAX: (612) 861-0085 • Toll Free Order Line: (800) 497-3655 • www.homesteadpickinparlor.com Find us on Facebook: Homestead-Pickin-Parlor 20
July 2014
Bluegrass Saturday Morning
MinnesotaBluegrass.org
By Phil Nusbaum
Summer Broadcasts It’s been my good fortune for a good number of years to have Lyle Lofgren and Adam Granger as broadcast partners on July and August Bluegrass Review shows. This summer, through funding by the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, the West Band School of Music, and the Homestead Pickin’ Parlor, the three of us are doing it again. All of us bluegrass and old-time fans know that each song is a window into traditional music history, culture, and aesthetics. The goal of Lyle, Adam, and me is to come up with interesting lines of inquiry regarding old-time music and bluegrass and play recordings that illustrate what we’re talking about. We try to make our comments succinct. The mission of the Bluegrass Review show is to be a music show with great context, and not a talk show. But talk, of course, has an important function in music radio. Talk is a major player in creating narratives about music. The special summer shows are great for my mental frame of mind: I’m a great believer that “all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.” In over a decade of broadcasting, the Bluegrass Review never has rerun a show. When Adam and Lyle are around, I’m able to sort of take a breather, as the two of them come up with some of the ideas. In actual fact, the three of us shape each other’s ideas, and the outcome is a rich approach to bluegrass and old-time radio. We’ll have a great time creating some unique radio shows this summer, and hope that listeners have fun too. By the way, the Bluegrass Review is on Facebook, and everyone is invited to contribute to the bluegrass and old-time music dialog there.
Bluegrass Revolutions A short time ago I completed a series of Gems of Bluegrass heard on the Bluegrass Review that focused on the three revolutions occurring during the 70- (or so) year-old history of bluegrass music. One revolution was Bill Monroe’s innovations in the 1940s. In the 1960s and 1970s, talented musicians were combining bluegrass with other idioms and broadening the range of bluegrass songtypes. Today, players are combining bluegrass vocals and arrangements with pop elements. If you would like to listen to any of these Gems of Bluegrass, go to www.prx.org and search for “Gems of Bluegrass 1421, 1422 and 1423”. Then, if you’re so moved, July 2014
let everybody know your thoughts on the Bluegrass Review Facebook page.
Music Listings We’ve changed the way the music listings are done. For a long time, we’d take time out and read them on the air. As the majority of people now seem comfortable using the internet, we received more and more messages that we’d best be using it to list events. The listings are found at www. jazz88fm.com. To be precise, the URL is: http://jazz88.mpls. k12.mn.us/uploads/bgsmcalendartemplate_shows.pdf
Bluegrass Review supporters • Berklee College of Music Summer Roots Music Program: www.berkleee.edu/summer • Brian Wicklund’s American Fiddle Camps, www.americanfiddle.com. • Cooperstands instrument stands: www.cooperstand.com • Hoffman Guitars, www.hoffmanguitars.com, sells handcrafted Hoffman guitars and authorized Martin repairs. • John Waddle Violins, www.waddleviolins.com, is a dealer of international and domestic, new and old violins, bows, and cases. • Minnesota Bluegrass & Old-Time Music Association www.minnesotabluegrass.org (membership organization supporting bluegrass experiences).
The Bluegrass Review in Minnesota Check www.bluegrassreview.com for a complete station list. Station
Day
Time
KLQP-FM, 92.1 Madison
Monday
8 PM
KMSU-FM, 89.7 Mankato; 91.3 Austin
Sunday
10 AM
KBEM-FM, 88.5 Minneapolis
Saturday
11 AM
KSRQ-FM, 90.1 Thief River Falls
Sunday
11 AM
KQAL-FM, 89.5 Winona
Saturday
9 AM
KDDG-FM, 105.5 Albany
Saturday
9 PM
WTIP-FM, 90.7 Grand Marais
Thursday
10 PM
KUMD-FM, 103.3 Duluth
Saturday
4 PM
KRWC-AM, 1360 Buffalo
Sunday
5 PM
KOJB-FM, 90.1 Cass Lake
Sunday
6 PM 21
MinnesotaBluegrass.org
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July 2014
MBOTMA Calendar of Events
MinnesotaBluegrass.org
Concerts and events presented or supported by the Minnesota Bluegrass & Old-Time Music Association The following events are presented by the Minnesota Bluegrass & Old-Time Music Association (MBOTMA) or supported in part by MBOTMA, and made possible in part by the voters of Minnesota through a Minnesota State Arts Board Operating Support grant, thanks to a legislative appropriation from the arts and cultural heritage fund.
Presented by MBOTMA
Supported by MBOTMA
The Minnesota Bluegrass & Old-Time Music Festival, August 7–10, 2014, El Rancho Mañana Campground & Riding Stable, 27302B Ranch Rd 56368, Richmond, MN. Four-day outdoor music and camping festival with stage shows, dances, workshops, showcases, children’s shows, demonstrations, crafts, and good food in five stage areas. Three-time IBMA Event of the Year nominee. 2014 performers include The Boxcars, Russell Moore & IIIrd Tyme Out, The Roys, Dwight Lamb, Joe Mullins & The Radio Ramblers, The Volo Bogtrotters, Monroe Crossing, and many more. Mainstage showtimes are 6 p.m. to 11:30 p.m., Thursday; 11 a.m. to 11:30 p.m., Friday; 11 a.m. to 11:30 p.m., Saturday; and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. Admission: $20 to $30 daily at the gate or $77 for all four days in advance (including camping). Teens are only $10 and kids are free. For information or tickets call 800-635-3037 or visit www.MinnesotaBluegrass. org. (See ad page 3.)
WBSM’s Monthly Bluegrass Jam, Sundays, 2–4 p.m., West Bank School of Music, 1813 S 6th St., Minneapolis, MN. Bluegrass musician Bill Cagley heads an open bluegrass jam the third Sunday of every month. Admission $5. Call 612-333-6651 or visit wbsm.org. Produced by West Bank School of Music and supported in part by MBOTMA.
9th Annual Harvest Jam Acoustic Music Experience, November 21–23, Marriott Minneapolis West Hotel, 9960 Wayzata Blvd, St. Louis Park, MN. This ninth annual event will feature stage shows Friday night, all day Saturday, and Sunday morning, featuring The Darrell Webb Band, Sawtooth Bluegrass, Ivory Bridge, Hey Lonesome, Bob Bovee & Pop Wagner, and The Fish Heads. Plus the Race For A Place Band Contest on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., the Saturday Banquet Dinner (get the best seats for the evening concert), Kip’s Live Open Mic in Kip’s Irish Pub throughout the weekend, workshops, musical exhibitors, a Sunday morning gospel show, and lots of jam sessions. For more information call 800-635-3037 or visit www.MinnesotaBluegrass.org. To book lodging contact the Marriott at 952-544-4400 and ask for the special Minnesota Bluegrass rate.
Caponi Art Park Bluegrass Festival, Sunday, September 14, noon to 6 p.m., Theater In The Woods, Caponi Art Park, 1220 Diffley Rd., Eagan. Featuring The Okee Dokee Brothers, Monroe Crossing, Roe Family Singers, and The Blackburn Trio, this community celebration and fundraiser for Caponi Art Park starts with an open jam session and welcomes folks of all ages and families to this unique outdoor venue. $20 per person, kids 12 and under free. For more information call 952-454-9412 or www.caponiartpark. org. Produced by Caponi Art Park & Learning Center and supported in part by MBOTMA.
July 2014
Rec-Fest Bluegrass, Friday through Sunday, July 25–27, Recreation Park, 2nd St NW, Milaca, MN. The 5th annual festival, with Sloughgrass, Pride Of Prairie, Blue Wolf, Hey Lonesome, Schaeffer’s Lost 40, Barton’s Hollow, Northland Lights, Porch Pine Creek, Froemming Family, Bartig Brothers, The Biscuit Boys, The Long Shots, Mathison Family, and American Folk Music. Admission: $25 weekend + $20 per camping unit. For more information call 320-2372657 or visit www.milacarecfest.com. Produced by Milaca Parks & Rec and supported in part by MBOTMA.
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Coming Up Venue abbreviations 331C: 331 Club, 331 13th Ave NE, Mpls, 612-331-1746, www.331.mn 3Cr: Three Crows Cafe, 225 N River St, Delano, 763-972-3399, www.thethreecrows.com ACA: Acadia Cafe, 329 Cedar Ave, Mpls, 612-874-8702, www. acadiacafe.com AGr: Amazing Grace Bakery & Cafe, 394 S Lake Ave, Duluth, 218-723-0075, www.amazinggraceduluth.com APHC: “A Prairie Home Companion,” Minnesota Public Radio AST: Aster Cafe, 125 SE Main St, Minneapolis, 612-379-3138, www.astercafe.com BTC: Lake Superior Big Top Chautauqua, Bayfield, WI, 888-244-8368, www.bigtop.org CED: Cedar Cultural Center, 415 Cedar Ave S, Mpls, 612-3382674, www.thecedar.org CJ: Celtic Junction, 836 Prior Ave, St Paul, 651-330-4685, www. thecelticjunction.com CrH: Creek House Concerts, New Brighton, 651-633-5353, www. creekhouseconcerts.com DAK: Dakota Jazz Club, 1010 Mall, Mpls, 612-332-1010, www. dakotacooks.com DUL: 607 W Lake St, Mpls, 612-827-1726, www.dulonos.com DuG: Dunn Brothers on Grand, 1569 Grand Ave, St. Paul EAG: Eagles Club, 2507 E 25th St, Mpls, 612-729-4469, www. minneapoliseagles34.org FITZ: Fitzgerald Theater, 10 E Exchange St, St Paul, 651-2901200, www.fitzgeraldtheater.publicradio.org
GINK: Ginkgo Coffeehouse, 721 N Snelling Ave, St Paul, 651-645-2647, www.ginkgocoffee.com GKb: Grand Kabaret, 210 N Minnesota St, New Ulm, 507-3599222, www.thegrandnewulm.com HOB: The Loft at Hobgoblin Music, 920 State Hwy 19, Red Wing, 877-866-3936, www.stoneyend.com HON: Honey, 205 E Hennepin Ave, Mpls, 612-746-0306, www. honeympls.com HOPK: Hopkins Center for the Arts, 1111 Mainstreet, Hopkins, 952-979-1111, www.hopkinsartscenter.com KIP: Kieran’s Irish Pub, 85 6th St N, Mpls, 612-339-4499, www. kierans.com KRAM: Kramarczuk’s Deli, 215 E Hennepin Ave, Mpls, 612-379-3018, www.kramarczuks.com OAK: Oak Center General Store, 67011 Hwy 63, Lake City, 507-753-2080, www.oakcentergeneralstore.com ROCK: Rockwoods, 9100 Quaday Ave NE, Elk River, 763-2224353, www.nograsslimit.com/RockwoodsCalendar.html SHL: Sheldon Theatre, 443 W 3rd St, Red Wing, 800-899-5759, www.sheldontheatre.org TAP: Tapestry Folkdance Center, 3748 Minnehaha Ave S, Mpls, 612-722-2914, www.tapestryfolkdance.org UMC: Underground Music Café, 1579 Hamline Ave N, Falcon Hts, 651-644-9959, undergroundmusiccafe.com ZUM: Crossings at Carnegie, 320 East Ave, Zumbrota, 507-7327616, www.crossingsatcarnegie.com
To post gigs and events to this calendar, request the link to our online submission form to editor@minnesotabluegrass.org
SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS July 4–6
July 18
July 28
40th Anniversary of MPR’s “A Prairie Home Companion,” Macalester College, St. Paul. Featuring MBOTMA musicians. Visit www.prairiehome.org for more information on events.
Nordic Bees, Mall of America, Rotunda, Bloomington, Daughters of Norway, International Convention, Fashion & Bunad Show, Renee Vaughan, www.nordicbees.com, 6pm
Maple Grove Parks & Rec and Guitars for Vets present MN Acoustic Legends, with MC Bill Hallquist, Town Green, 7991 Main St N, Maple Grove, free, 7pm
July 1—Tuesday
Kellogg Blvd, St Paul, 7pm, TAP dance instruction at 6:30pm • Jeff Ray, Foot Stompin’ Slide Guitar, DuG, 7:30pm • Open Mic, New York Mills Cultural Center, 24 Main Ave N, New York Mills, 218-385-3339, 7pm
• Ring of Kerry, Princeton Music in the Park, Mille Lacs County Depot Museum, 101 10th Ave N, Princeton, 6:30pm • The Farmhouse Band, 331C, 10pm
• Bob Bovee, Rio Grande Scenic Railroad, Alamosa, CO, 9am, The City of New Orleans club car. 7/1-3 • Cafe Accordion Orchestra, Minnesota History Center, 345 W 24
July 2014
MinnesotaBluegrass.org
Coming Up, cont’d
July 2—Wednesday • Daniel and Adrian Volvets, DuG, 7:30pm • John Evans and Dan Perry, Manitou Station, 2171 4th St, White Bear Lake, 7pm • Machinery Hill, 331C, KFAI House Party Presents, 7pm • Sawtooth Bluegrass Band, Concert in the Park, Red Wing, 7pm
July 3—Thursday
• Bela Fleck with Brooklyn Rider Quartet, Minnesota Zoo, Apple Valley, 7:30pm • Mark Stary, Manitou Station, 2171 4th St, White Bear Lake, 8pm • Mister Rowles, EAG, 7:30pm • Saint Anyways, ROCK, 7pm
July 4—Friday
• 40th Anniversary of APHC, Old Crow Medicine Show, Iris DeMent, Robin & Linda Williams, The Wailin’Jennys, Butch Thompson, Dakota Dave Hull, Pop Wagner, Dean Magraw, Peter Ostroushko, Adam Granger, Mary DuShane, Bob Douglas, Pat Donohue, more, Macalester College, St. Paul. Free general admission seats for rehearsal and concert, 11am • Pert Near Sandstone, 80/35 Festival, Des Moines, IA • Sawtooth Bluegrass Band, Meet Me Under the Bridge Concert, Wabasha, 7pm • The Kingery Family, Old Westbrook Lutheran Church, 25280 368th Ave, Westbrook, MN, 4th of July Ice cream social 50th anniversary, 8pm
July 5—Saturday
• Bernie King and the Guilty Pleasures, The Tavern of Northfield, 212 Division St S, Northfield, 8pm • Bob & Lynn Dixon, Prior Lake Farmers Market, Main St, Prior Lake, 9am • Chasing Lovely, AST, 9pm July 2014
• Greenwood Tree, St. Paul Farmers Market, 290 E 5th St, St. Paul, 9am • Jivin’ Ivan and the Kings of Swing, Signature Bar and Grill, 201 Central Ave, Faribault, 7:30pm • Lonesome Dan Kase, Dunn Brothers, 1569 Grand Ave, St. Paul, 7:30pm • Pert Near Sandstone, Nippersink Festival, Spring Grove, IL • Randy Anderson, AGr, 8pm • Scenic Roots featuring Joe Cruz, Manitou Station, 2171 4th St, White Bear Lake, 9pm • Singleton Street, 3Cr, 7:30pm • Various Artists, APHC, 40th Anniversary Celebration
July 6—Sunday
• Leroy Thomas & the Zydeco Roadrunners, EAG • Open Mic, CG, 6pm • Various Artists, APHC, 40th Anniversary Celebration
July 7—Monday
• Andra Suchy, DuG, 7:30pm • Gillian Welch, Minnesota Zoo, Apple Valley, 7:30pm • Pocahontas County, 331C, 6:30pm • Roe Family Singers, 331C, 9pm
July 8—Tuesday
• Barley Jacks, Campanile Center, 131 Milwaukee St., Minocqua, WI, advanced tickets at www.campanilecenter.org, 7:30pm • Bonnie Raitt, Spider John Koerner opens, BTC, 7:30pm • Somali Camel with Abdulkadir Said and Najiib Elmi, Minnesota History Center, 345 W Kellogg Blvd, St Paul, 7pm, TAP Somali dance instruction at 6:30pm • The Farmhouse Band, 331C, 10pm
July 9—Wednesday
• Bloody Ol’ Mule, 331C, KFAI House Party Presents, 7pm • Cafe Accordion Orchestra, Landmark Center, 75 W 5th St, St. Paul, 12pm
• Cooker John, DuG, 7:30pm • Folk Showcase with Larry Carpenter, CG, 7pm • John Evans and Dan Perry, Manitou Station, 2171 4th St, White Bear Lake, 7pm • Mark Stillman & Francine, EAG, 8pm
July 10—Thursday
• Benson Family Singers, Eidem Homestead Historical Farms, 101 & Noble, Brooklyn Park, 612-210-5537, 7pm • Brady Perl, ROCK, 7pm • Chris Silver (solo), Vino in the Valley, Maiden Rock, WI, 6pm • Curtis & Loretta, Strawbale Winery, Renner, SD, 5pm • Jambo Joe Bones and Amy M, Manitou Station, 2171 4th St, White Bear Lake, 8pm • Russ Schmidt, 3Cr, 7:30pm • Southside Aces, EAG, 8pm
July 11—Friday
• Becky Thompson, EAG, 8pm • Bedlam, The Hounds of Finn, and Tom Dahill and Ginny Johnson, Charlie’s Irish Pub, 101 Water St, Stillwater, 7:30pm • Curtis & Loretta, Old Courthouse Museum, Sioux Falls, SD, 12pm • Mill City Hot Club, DUL, 8pm • Sonic Love Child, Minnehaha Falls, Minneapolis, 7pm • The Holy Hootenanners, CD Release Party, AGr, 7pm
July 12—Saturday
• Barley Jacks, Franconia Sculpture Park, Shafer, 4pm • Bedlam, The Hounds of Finn, and Tom Dahill and Ginny Johnson, Charlie’s Irish Pub, 101 Water St, Stillwater, 7:30pm • Curtis & Loretta, Brookings Summer Arts Festival, Brookings, SD • Dick Kimmel, Clover Valley Hoedown, Clearwood Forest Presbyterian Camp, Deerwood 25
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Coming Up, cont’d
July 12—Saturday • Hersch, Yoerks and Griffin, 3Cr, 7:30pm • High 48s, Brookings Summer Arts Festival, Brookings, SD • Relativity, special guest Mike Hildebrandt, Cannon River Winery, 421 Mill St., Cannon Falls, 507-2637400, 1pm • Ring of Kerry with the St. Paul Irish Dancers, Rhythm of the River Fest, multiple bands, Ashley Park, Jackson MN, 6:30pm • The Okee Dokee Brothers, BTC, 1pm
July 13—Sunday
• Chris Silver Band, Dancing Dragonfly Winery, St Croix Falls, WI, 715-483-9463, 1pm • Curtis & Loretta, Brookings Summer Arts Festival, Brookings, SD • High 48s, Brookings Summer Arts Festival, Brookings, SD • Minnesota Guitar Society Open Stage, CG, 2pm • Oak Ridge Boys, BTC, 7:30pm • Open Mic, CG, 6pm • Ring of Kerry, Munsinger Gardens, St. Cloud, Munsinger Clemens Botanical Society will sell $1 root beer floats, 3pm • The Kingery Family, Emmanuel Baptist Church, 1505 Eklund Ave, Duluth, 6:30pm
July 14—Monday
• Doug Otto and Friends, 331C, 6:30pm • Joe Fingers, DuG, 7:30pm • New Riverside Ramblers, Music in the Park, Library Square Park, Hutchinson, 6:30pm • Roe Family Singers, 331C, 9pm
July 15—Tuesday
• Jivin’ Ivan and the Kings of Swing, Rice County Fair, Fairgrounds, Faribault, 7pm • The Farmhouse Band, 331C, 10pm
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• The Fish Heads, Emily’s at the Lighthouse, 218 Scenic Dr, Knife River, 6:30 pm
July 16—Wednesday
• Bill Cagley, DuG, 7:30pm • Country Music Showcase with Bill Travers and Laura Moe, UMC, 7pm • John Evans and Dan Perry, Manitou Station, 2171 4th St, White Bear Lake, 7pm • Michael Monroe, Landmark Center, 75 W 5th St, St. Paul, 12pm
July 17—Thursday
• “Lost” Jim and the Boxcar Scholars, Dunn Brothers, 1569 Grand Ave, St. Paul, 7:30pm • Ecaudor Manta, Coon Rapids Dam Concert Series, 9750 Egret Blvd, Coon Rapids, 763-755-2880, 7pm • High 48s, Eidem Homestead Concert, Brooklyn Park, 6pm • Jeff Ray, ROCK, 7pm • Kurt Jorgensen, Manitou Station, 2171 4th St, White Bear Lake, 8pm • Larry Long & Fiddlin’ Pete Watercot, 3Cr, 7:30pm • New Riverside Ramblers, EAG, 7:30pm • No Man’s String Band with The Biscuit Boys, HB, 8:30pm • Roots Music Showcase with Bill Cagley, CG, 7pm
July 18—Friday
• Accordion-O-Rama! with Dan Newton, Jerry Minar, Dee Langley, ZUM, 8pm • Bernie King and the Guilty Pleasures, Manitou Station, 2171 4th St, White Bear Lake, 9pm • Cooker John, 3Cr, 7:30pm • Nordic Bees, Mall of America, Rotunda, Bloomington, Daughters of Norway, International Convention, Fashion & Bunad Show, Renee Vaughan, www.nordicbees.com, 6pm
July 19—Saturday • Barley Jacks, Grey Fox Bluegrass Festival, Oak Hill, NY • Benson Family Singers, Rice County Fair, Midway Stage, Faribault, 11 am, 1pm, 3pm • Bob & Lynn Dixon, Fulton Farmers Market, 4901 Chowen Ave S, Minneapolis, 10am • Greenwood Tree, Prior Lake Farmers Market, Main St, Prior Lake, 9am • Long Time Gone, Rice County Fair, Fairgrounds, Faribault, 12 noon • The Kingery Family, Living Savior Lutheran Church, 8327 Interlachen Road, Lake Shore, 218-963-9733, 6:30pm • Tim Sparks & Phil Heywood, 3Cr, 7:30pm
July 20—Sunday
• Open Mic, CG, 6pm • Sawtooth Bluegrass Band, Waseca County Fair, Waseca, 1:30pm and 3:30pm • The Flemming Fold, Bavarian Blast, New Ulm Fairgrounds
July 21—Monday
• Joe Fingers, DuG, 7:30pm • Patchouli, Nicollet Island Pavilion, Minneapolis, 7pm • Roe Family Singers, 331C, 9pm
July 22—Tuesday
• Barefoot Becky, Old-time music and dance, Medina Entertainment Center, 500 Minnesota 55, Medina, 1pm • Bluegrass Showcase with Sarah Cagley, CG, 7pm • Dan Rumsey, DuG, 7:30pm • The Farmhouse Band, 331C, 10pm
July 23—Wednesday
• “Daddy Squeeze” Dan Newton, Dunn Brothers, 1569 Grand Ave, St. Paul, 7:30pm • Cafe Melange, Landmark Center, 75 W 5th St, Saint Paul, 12pm July 2014
MinnesotaBluegrass.org
• John Evans and Dan Perry, Manitou Station, 2171 4th St, White Bear Lake, 7pm • Sweet Rhubarb, Raspberry Island, 3 S Wabasha, St. Paul, 12:30pm
July 24—Thursday
• Barley Jacks, Hudson Bandshell, Lakefront Park, Hudson, WI, 7pm • Dedric Clark and the Social Animals, ROCK, 7pm • DL Cajun Band, Coon Rapids Dam Concert Series, 9750 Egret Blvd, Coon Rapids, 763-755-2880, 7pm • Eelpout Stringers, Scott County Fair, Savage, 6pm • Jivin’ Ivan and the Kings of Swing, Concert in Central Park, 500 2nd Ave. NW, Faribault, Thursday Night Concert Series. Bring a chair, 7pm • Kyle Fosburgh and Christopher Bruhn, DuG, 7:30pm • Ozzie Harris, Manitou Station, 2171 4th St, White Bear Lake, 8pm • Roots Music Showcase with Bill Cagley, CG, 7pm • Still Standing, 3Cr, 7:30pm • The Rockin’ Pinecones, EAG, 7:30pm
July 25—Friday
• Assisted Picking with Jon Garon & friends, special guests Clay and Brennan Hess, 3CR, 7pm • Chris Silver Band, River Falls Golf Club, River Falls, WI, 7pm • Dick Kimmel & Co, Yellow Medicine County Fair, Canby, 5pm and 7pm • Recfest Bluegrass Festival with Barton’s Hollow, Biscuit Boys, Blue Wolf, Froemming Family, Hey Lonesome, Porcupine Creek, and many more, Historic Park Bandshell, Milaca, 320-983-3141, www.milacarecfest.com, July 25, 26, 27. See ad p. 22.
July 2014
• The Flemming Fold, Scott County Fair, 7151 W 190th St, Jordan, performing both July 25 & 26
July 26—Saturday
• Assisted Picking with with Jon Garon & friends, special guests Clay and Brennan Hess. Also Mark Kreitzer, Alabaster Falls, and others, Cannon River Roots Festival, Northfield, 1–10:30pm • Billy McLaughlin & Friends, ZUM, 8pm • Chris Silver Band, DUL, 8pm • Dave Alvin & Phil Alvin with the Guilty Ones, DAK, 8pm • Pert Near Sandstone, RockyGrass, Lyons, CO • Porcupine Creek, Milaca RecFest, Milaca, 1pm • Sally Barris Songwriting Workshop, Schmitt Music Recital Hall, 2906 W 66th St, Edina, mnsongwriters.org, 1pm • The 3 Dillmans, 3Cr, 7:30pm
July 27—Sunday
• The Back Porch Band, Brookside Bar & Grill, 140 Judd Street, Marine on St. Croix, 651-433-1112, 3pm
July 28—Monday
• Cajun Dance with Millie & the Mill City Cajun Heavyweights, EAG, 7:30pm • Doug Otto and Friends, 331C, 6:30pm • Four Legg Fish, DuG, 7:30pm • Legends Concert, Lonnie Knight, Dale Menton, Tim Sparks, Tom Lieberman, Dakota Dave Hull, Town Green, 7991 Main St N, Maple Grove, free, 7pm • Roe Family Singers, 331C, 9pm • Sherwin Linton, Lake Harriet Bandshell, Minneapolis, 7:30pm
July 29—Tuesday
• Dick Hensold Band, Minnesota History Center, 345 W Kellogg Blvd, St. Paul, 651-259-3000, 7pm,
TAP Scottish dance instruction at 6:30pm • Singleton Street, Bryant Square Park, Minneapolis, 6:30pm • The Flemming Fold, Crow Wing County Fair, 2000 SE 13th St, Brainerd, 1pm
July 30—Wednesday
• High 48s, Town Green, Maple Grove, 7pm • John Evans and Dan Perry, Manitou Station, 2171 4th St, White Bear Lake, 7pm • The Kingery Family, The Dassel Mushroom House, 1st St N, Dassel, 7pm
July 31—Thursday
• Broken Spoke, Manitou Station, 2171 4th St, White Bear Lake, 8pm • Dead Pigeons, ROCK, 7pm • Long Time Gone, Central Park, 500 2nd Ave NW, Faribault, Bring a chair, 7pm • Ring of Kerry, Sartell, 7pm, 320-251-0601, RingOfKerry.us • The Kingery Family, Gregory Park Bandshell, 424 N 5th St, Brainerd, 218-829-9345, 7pm
August 1—Friday
• The Flemming Fold, Lake Itasca Family Music Festival, Lake Itasca Region Pioneer Farmers grounds, Hwy 200, performing August 1 & 2
August 2—Saturday
• Loring Park Arts Festival with The Flemming Fold, Greenwood Tree, Twin Cities Ukulele Club, Paul Imholte, Eclectic Blend, Loring Park, Oak Grove & Hennepin Ave S, Minneapolis, 612-203-9911 • Lyle Lovett & His Large Band, BTC, 7:30pm
August 3—Sunday
• The Flemming Fold, Loring Park Art Festival, Minneapolis, 1pm
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Monroe Crossing
Concerts & Events Coming up This Summer Weds., July 2, 2014
7 pm
Harmony in the Parks, Lions Park Bandshell
Lindstrom, MN
651-257-0620
Friday, July 4, 2014
1 & 5 pm
North Morristown 4th of July Celebration 4th of July Grounds, 10500 215th Street SW
Morristown, MN
507-685-4372
Monday, July 7, 2014
12:10 pm
Rosemary and Meredith Willson Harmony for Mayo Program Peace Plaza, 1st Ave SW & 1st St SW
Rochester, MN
Tuesday, July 8, 2014
7 pm
Plymouth Congregational Church, 1900 Nicollet Avenue
Minneapolis, MN
612-871-7400
Thursday, July 10, 2014
7 pm
Arcadia Historical Society, 401 South Washington Street
Arcadia, WI
608-769-8088
Friday, July 11, 2014
8 pm
Saturday, July 12, 2014
3 & 8:30 pm
Traditional Bluegrass Gospel Music Festival Vernon County Fairgrounds, 210 Fairground Road
Viroqua, WI
608-606-4105
Monday, July 14, 2014
6 pm
Heritage Hill State Historical Park, 2640 South Webster Avenue
Green Bay, WI
920-448-5150
Thursday, July 17, 2014
7 pm
Normandale Lake Bandshell, 84th Street & Chalet Road
Bloomington, MN
952-563-8878
Sunday, July 20, 2014
9 & 10:15 am
Bethlehem Lutheran Church, 4100 Lyndale Avenue South
Minneapolis, MN
612-312-3411
Friday, July 25, 2014
7 pm
Menahga Summer Concert Series, Spirit Lake Beach Pavilion
Menahga, MN
218-564-5462
Saturday, July 26, 2014
8:30 pm
Prospect House Museum Benefit Concert Lakes Area Community Center, 112 Main Street
Battle Lake, MN
218-862-5222
Weds., July 30, 2014
4, 6 & 8 pm
Lyon County Fair, Lyon County Fairgrounds
Marshall, MN
507-476-2351
Thursday, July 31, 2014
7 pm
Story Theater Grand Opera House, 512 Broad Street
Story City, IA
515-733-4551
BLUEGRASS JAM CAMP at the MINNESOTA BLUEGRASS & OLD-TIME MUSIC FESTIVAL AUGUST 5-7, 2014
Wow! Here’s your chance to learn from the best! Camp includes individual instrument instruction plus group playing and harmony singing dynamics. The camp winds up with a group recital in the Showcase Tent. For beginners and intermediate level players. Class size is limited - REGISTER EARLY! 800-635-3037 or email info@minnesotabluegrass.org to sign up.
Go to www.MonroeCrossing.com for detailed information on all our concerts! Booking: Art Blackburn, AKBMusic.com 763-213-1349, art@akbmusic.com 28
July 2014
MinnesotaBluegrass.org
Kick Up Your Turn Your Radio On Heels Dances MON • MINNEAPOLIS, 7:30pm Monday Night Square Dance at The Eagles Club, 2507 E. 25th St. 612–729–4469 SAT • (1st) SAINT PAUL, 8pm New England Contra, Celtic Junction. Jim Brooks 651–222–5475 brooks@csp.edu SAT • MINNEAPOLIS, 7:30pm Tapestry Folkdance Center, New England–style contra dance. SAT • (2nd) DULUTH, 7:30pm Contras, Squares, and round dances, Tamarack Dance Ass’n, YWCA, 202 West 2nd St. Open Stages TUE • MINNEAPOLIS Kieran’s Irish Pub 612–339–4499. Sign–up 8pm, music 8:30. TUE • (3rd) SPRING VALLEY, WI, 7pm Sneaker’s Pub and Eatery, 128 McKay Ave WED • (1st and 3rd) ST. PAUL Gingko Coffeehouse, 721 Snelling Ave. Hosts: Neal Dimick. Sign–up 6:30pm, music 7pm. 651–645–2647 WED • (occasional) MINNEAPOLIS Cedar Cultural Center, 416 Cedar Ave. S., 612–338–2674 THU • RIVER FALLS, WI Knitter’s group + open mic. Dish & the Spoon Café, 208 N. Main St., 715–426–9392 THU • (3rd) SPRING VALLEY, WI, 7pm Sneaker’s Pub and Eatery, 128 McKay Ave SUN • RED WING, 4–7pm Music Loft, Hobgoblin Music, 920 Hwy. 19 651–388–8400 or 877–866–3936
July 2014
KAUR–89.1 FM Sioux Falls, SD “Folk Wave” Sat. 10–noon Host: Gaynor Johnson KAXE–FM 91.7 Grand Rapids, MN “Backporch Harmony” Sun. 5–8pm KBEM–FM 88.5 Minneapolis, jazz88fm.com • “Bluegrass Saturday Morning” Sat. 7am–noon. Host: Phil Nusbaum • “Mountain Stage,” Sat. 4–6pm • “String Theory” Sat. 2–4pm Sun. 9–11pm Host: Kevin Barnes • “Tent Show Radio” Sat. 4–5pm • “Celtic Nation” Sat. noon–2pm KBSB–FM 89.7 Bemidji, MN www.fm90.org “Backporch Bluegrass” Thu. 6–9pm Hosts: Arlan Roline and Jerry Brademan KDUZ–AM 1260 Hutchinson, MN “Our Bluegrass Gospel Get–Together” Sun. 5–6am Host: Tim Benoit KFAI–FM 90.3 Minneapolis, MN • “Stone Soup” Wed. 9–11am Host: Pam K. • “Good ’n Country” Sat. 3–5pm Host: Ken Hippler • “Dakota Dave Hull Show” Thu. 9–11am Host Dave Hull • “Womenfolk” Sun. 11 am–1pm Host: Ellen Stanley • “Dig Up The Roots” Tue. 9–11am Host: Greg Carr • “Freewheelin’” Mon. 9–11am Host: Jackson Buck KLTF–AM 960, Little Falls, MN “Knee Deep in Bluegrass” Sun. 10pm– 12am Host: Cindy Bockem KMSU–FM 89.7 Mankato, MN and KMSK–FM 91.3 Austin, MN • “Tent Radio Show” Sun. 7–8pm • “Minnesota Morning” Mon.–Fri. 9–12am Host: Amy Triebenbach KRWC–AM 1360 Buffalo, MN • “Inside Bluegrass” Sat. 10am Hosts: Denny O’Brien and Tom Schuveiller • “Bluegrass Review” Sun. 4pm Host: Phil Nusbaum KUMD–FM 103.3 Duluth, MN “Folk Migrations” Sat. 7–midnight KVSC–FM Saint Cloud, MN “Frets” Sat. 6am–noon Host: Wayne Bergerson KYMN–AM 1080 Northfield, MN kymnradio.net “The Long Way Home” Sun. 7–9pm Host: Will Healy
WBKV–AM West Bend, WI “The Bluegrass Show” Sun. 4–6pm Hosts: Dale Palacek and Jim Burch WELY–FM 94.5, AM 1450 Ely, MN • “Big Lake Country Bluegrass Show” Sat. 12–1pm Host: Matt Fetterer • “The Bluegrass Review” Sat. s 1–2pm “Woodsongs Old Time Radio Hour” Sat. 2–3pm • “Twisted Roots” Mon.–Fri. 10am–2pm Host: Matt Fetterer WOJB–FM 88.9 Hayward, WI “Folkways” Wed. 7:30–midnight Hosts: Carl Solander and Ernie Martinson WORT–FM Madison, WI | WORT–FM.org “Back to the Country” Wed. 9am Host: Bill Malone WRCO–FM 100.9 Richland Center, WI “Roots & Branches” Sun. 4–6pm Host: Gloria Hays WTIP–FM 90.7 Grand Marais, MN “Classic Country” “Rainbow Trout” Sun. 3–9pm Host: Carl Solander WXPR–FM 91.7 Rhinelander, WI “Bluegrass Saturday” Sat. 12–4pm Minnesota Public Radio KSJN 99.5 FM | KNOW FM 91.1, St. Paul “A Prairie Home Companion” Sat. 5–7pm, rebroadcast Sun. noon
North Dakota Public Radio: 90.5 FM/Bismarck–91.9 FM/Beach 91.9 FM/Bowman–89.5 FM/Crary 91.9 FM/Crosby–91.5 FM/Devils Lake 89.9 FM/Dickinson–91.9 FM/Fargo 89/3 FM/Grand Forks–91.9 FM/Harvey 91.9 FM/Hettinger–91.5 FM/Jamestown 91.7 FM/Lakota–88.9 FM/Minot 91.9 FM/Tioga–89/5 FM/Tioga 89.5 FM/Williston–91.9 FM/Plentywood, MT 88.3 FM/Thief River Falls, MN “Old Time Music” Sun. 12:01am Host: Steve Nelson Wisconsin Public Radio: WHSA–89.9 FM | WHWC–88.3 FM | WHRM–90.9 FM | WLBL–93 AM | WHLA–90.3 FM | WHA–97 AM | WHHI–91.3 FM | WERN–88.7 FM | WHAD–90.7 FM • “Simply Folk” Sun. 5–8pm Host: Judy Rose • “Tent Show Radio” Sat. 7–8pm
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MinnesotaBluegrass.org
noun, often attributive 1: A pattern of parallel lines where any two adjacent rows slope in opposite directions. 2:a; An inlayed trim feature (purfling) on Martin guitars that signifies hand scalloped braces for greater projection. 2:b; Cuts through banjos without breaking a sweat.
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Charles Hoffman has been building guitars for more than four decades. Find out how he’s kept the momentum, starting on page 9. Photo: John Fellman