Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

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Summer 2016 Orkney Springs, Va.







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Letter from the Chairman

Contents

Welcome to the 53rd season of Shenandoah Valley Music Festival!

Our Sponsors .......................................3 Board of Directors ..............................5

There is much to be celebrated this year with nine concerts to experience and enjoy! The Board of Directors is always in awe of the work done by President and Executive Director Dennis Lynch and the staff to make these great opportunities a reality here in Orkney Springs. It is with great anticipation and enthusiasm that we welcome you, your friends and family members to the longest running summertime concert series in Virginia.

SVMF Music Guild ...............................5 July 15, An Evening With Nitty Gritty Dirt Band .......................................7 July 22, The Hunts and The Band Concord .........................................9

Who knew that when the first baton dropped at a Shenandoah Valley Music Festival concert more than 50 years ago it would lead to now — 2016— with third and fourth generation audience members coming to concerts in Orkney Springs? For one of our patrons, sharing time with family was the high point of the Shenandoah Valley Music Festival summer season. “Watching my sweet grandbaby dance to The Oak Ridge Boys!” was her fondest Festival memory.

July 23, The Piedmont Symphony Orchestra.....................................11 July 29, Eileen Ivers...........................13 Meet the Artists ................................15 July 30, The Piedmont Symphony

Once again, the challenge this year has been in planning another superb season with our artistic mission, the desires of the audience and the budget in mind. The impact of increased costs has driven the need for larger audiences and resources. The truth is no performing arts organization can survive on ticket sales alone, especially one that is at the mercy of the weather. It takes a strong, loyal corps of people who believe in what we are and what we do. As the production costs have risen, the opportunities for giving have increased. In spite of these increases, one patron appreciated the event’s value by commenting: “Great night for a great price.”

Orchestra.....................................17 August 12, The SteelDrivers and The Gibson Brothers ...................19 August 13, LeAnn Rimes ..................21 September 3, Bruce Hornsby and the Noisemakers .........................23 September 4, Hot Strings Cool Breezes

The continued presence of the Shenandoah Valley Music Festival is determined by individual and corporate contributions, ticket sales and sponsorships. You can make a difference as an individual donor toward the continuing goal of great music each summer in Orkney Springs. The sound of great music still bounces off the mountains surrounding Orkney Springs, the smell and taste of great food and ice cream still lingers in the air, and the loud applause can still be heard cheering after the exceptional performances of Seldom Scene, Jackie Evancho, Bela Fleck, Abigail Washburn and many more. We are a place where music comes alive, a place to have fun in a unique setting and to enjoy the beauty of music under the stars and moon.

Bluegrass Mini-Fest .....................25 Fishburn Award.................................29 Special Acknowledgements .............29 Gifts to the Festival...........................31 SVMF Volunteers...............................35

Thank you. Enjoy! Shenandoah Valley Music Festival P.O. Box 528 Woodstock, VA 22624 (540) 459-3396 info@musicfest.org www.musicfest.org

D. Leigh Devier Chair, Board of Directors

Festival Courtesies

Respect your fellow concert-goers. Avoid blocking aisles, stairways or sight lines. Obey all signs in the concert area.

Photography and recording of any kind during the artists’ performances is strictly prohibited. (Members of the media must show proper credentials.)

Children must be supervised and remain with their parents at all times.

In order to make our concerts enjoyable for everyone, we ask that you please observe the following Festival courtesies:

With the exception of dogs assisting disabled patrons, pets are not permitted in the concert areas.

Lawn seating is divided into three sections: blankets, low beach chairs and regular lawn chairs.

Smoking, vaping or the use of any electronic smoking device is prohibited inside the concert area fence, including the lawn section.

At the request of the artists, late seating in the pavilion normally occurs between movements, acts or numbers.

Picnics are welcome on the lawn prior to the concert but any part of your picnic setup that obstructs the view of others must be removed before the concert begins.

Cell phones, pagers, watch alarms or any other device that rings, chirps, beeps or makes any other kind of noise should be silenced during the concert.


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Many Thanks To… Our Season Sponsors Gold Level First Bank Shenandoah Memorial Hospital — Valley Health Shentel Sprint

Special Thanks To: Hampton Inn and Suites of Woodstock Summer 2016 hotel sponsor

Shaffer’s Barbecue and Catering Official caterer of SVMF

Silver Level Cornerstone Technology Services Holtzman Corp. Loudoun Mutual Insurance Co. ShelRand Enterprises Shrine Mont

Shenandoah County Tourism and Board of Supervisors

Bronze Level

The Town of Mount Jackson

Brad Pollack Guests Inc., Comfort Inn Woodstock Graves-Light Wealth Management Group of Wells Fargo Advisors Iris Health Solutions, LLC LD&B Insurance and Financial Services Mountain Valley Management Inc. – Steve Stein Rodney Shepherd-Voya Financial Advisors Inc. Route 11 Potato Chips Swover Creek Farms Farm Brewery Wilton House Museum

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival Guild

Virginia Commission for the Arts

The Shenandoah Valley Music Festival is partially supported by a grant from the VCA and the National Endowment for the Arts.

2016 Media Partners

The Shenandoah Valley Music Festival is a not-for-profit performing arts presenter, with programming made possible by ticket sales, sponsorships, generous contributions from individuals and businesses, local government and private grants and from the Virginia Commission for the Arts from funds appropriated by the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts.



Be a Four Season Festival Supporter of the Shenandoah Valley Music Festival If you are reading this article, you are likely enjoying a summer concert at Shenandoah Valley Music Festival.

pie and ice cream at a Festival concert, then you have experienced another FUN Music Guild FUNdraiser!

In order to assure concerts in future years, there is a way to become a year-round supporter of the Festival. It is a membership in the Shenandoah Valley Music Festival Guild.

With a Music Guild membership, you are notified each month by email of Guild activities, so you may choose the fun event that appeals to you.

The Music Guild is the fundraising arm of the Festival and is comprised of more than 100 people who have FUN while FUNdraising for the Festival. Music Guild FUNdraising events include monthly luncheons with entertainment, held at various venues throughout the Valley. Four times a year the Guild organizes Sunday theater matinees, including dinner at an outstanding Valley restaurant. And if you have ever had

The Music Guild is a great way to meet fun-loving people who also share the goal of supporting the Shenandoah Valley Music Festival experience. To learn more about the Music Guild and how to become a member, contact Mindi Haughey at (540) 856-2423 or email her at mindihaughey@aol.com.

SVMF Board of Directors Officers Leigh Devier, Chair Edinburg Joan Anderson, Vice Chair Maurertown Susie Hill, Secretary New Market Greg Hoover, Treasurer Woodstock

Directors Sarah Brown, Harrisonburg Marcie Finnell, Maurertown Eloise Haun, Woodstock Jerry Weaver, Harrisonburg Honorary Directors John Fishburn* Pearl Pancake*

Staff Dennis Lynch, Berryville President Lorraine Halsted, Winchester Administrative and Marketing Specialist Kim Stevenson, Mount Jackson Financial and IT Manager Matt Carlson, Harrisonburg Lighting and Production Manager

2016 Guild Officers

Sandra Price-Stroble, Chair, Events and Planning, Harrisonburg

Sarah Mason, Franklin Production Assistant

Mindi Haughey, Membership Chair, Basye

Jonny Brown, Gainesville Marketing Assistant

Kathy Scott, Reservations Chair, Woodstock

Amanda Perez, Ashburn Management Assistant

David Collins, President, Basye Bill Ballance, Immediate Past President, Program & Events, Woodstock Kim Stevenson, Vice President, Mount Jackson Sally Montrey, Treasurer, Basye

Lynn Howell, Newsletter Co-Editor, Mount Jackson

Joan Nobles, Recording Secretary, Archivist, Basye

Rich Howell, Newsletter Co-Editor, Mount Jackson

Sandy Pruett, Corresponding Secretary, Program and Events, Woodstock

Leigh Devier, Shenandoah Valley Music Festival Board (ex-officio), Edinburg

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

*deceased

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Friday, July 15, 8:00 p.m.

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival Presents

Nitty Gritty Dirt Band – 50 Years of Dirt!

Not many bands stay together for 50 years, let alone continue recording one chart-topping hit after another. But Nitty Gritty Dirt Band has managed to overcome the odds and is touring the country in celebration of its golden anniversary.

have major crossover appeal. The band was also one of the earliest purveyors of country rock, influencing the growth of that genre, which also gave birth to other great bands in the 1970s and 1980s, such as Alabama and the Eagles.

The name of the tour, 50 Years of Dirt!, is a play on the title of the band’s album “Twenty Years of Dirt,” a compilation of hits from its first two decades together, which soared to No. 10 on the country music charts and went platinum in 1986.

After 50 years of making music together, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band has compiled a long list of platinum and gold records and classic hits that include “Mr. Bojangles,” "House at Pooh Corner," “Fishin’ in the Dark,” "Jambalaya (On the Bayou)," "The Battle of New Orleans," and "I Fought the Law." Its groundbreaking album “Will The Circle Be Unbroken” has been inducted into the U.S. Library of Congress and the GRAMMY

Through the decades, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band has earned status as an American music legend with a long list of top hits, many of which still

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

Hall of Fame. The album eventually generated three volumes that featured collaborations with top musicians and vocalists, such as Earl Scruggs, Vassar Clements, Roy Acuff, Johnny Cash and the Carter Family, Emmylou Harris, Ricky Skaggs and Bruce Hornsby. In 1989, “Will The Circle Be Unbroken Volume II” won three GRAMMY Awards and a Country Music Association Award for Album of the Year. Today, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band — Jeff Hanna, Jimmie Fadden, Bob Carpenter, and John McEuen— continue their nonstop touring. Plans for the 50th Anniversary celebration included playing to a sold-out crowd Continued on page 39

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Friday, July 22, 7:00 p.m.

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival Presents

The Hunts with special guest The Band Concord With a harmony-laced take on alternative folk, The Hunts have been playing music together almost their entire lives. Ranging from ages 16 to 24, twin sisters Jenni and Jessi and their five brothers Josh, Jonathan, Jordan, Justin and Jamison all learned to sing and play violin as little kids and spent much of their childhood performing throughout their community. In 2007, after years of playing locally, The Hunts began landing gigs in other states and averaging about a 100 performances a year. Then they began trying their hands at songwriting, gradually building up a selection of original songs true to their folk roots but infused with a fresh sensibility with elements of both Americana and indie-inspired folk. The Hunts’ debut EP for Cherrytree Records/Interscope, “Life Was Simple,” features the lead single “Make This Leap,” a lilting piece of indie-folk built on layered harmonies, intricately textured acoustic instrumentation and lyrics that gracefully shift from melancholy to triumphant. Although their tastes run from folkrock to noise-pop, The Hunts hold true to a songwriting process that taps into each member’s unique strengths. As shown on “Life Was

Simple,” that unified approach gives way to songs with an irresistible richness of spirit. From “Lifting the Sea,” a slow-building and soulful epic inspired by the siblings’ longing to bring their music to the world, to “Remember Us,” a hushed and lovely meditation about forgiveness and letting go, all of the EP’s songs prove artfully arranged but instilled with a graceful simplicity. While getting seven strong-minded brothers and sisters to agree on every last note and lyric can sometimes be chaotic, The Hunts note that the synergy born from that chaos is what makes the band so strong. “I like to look at our hectic way of writing as actually really helpful to us

as songwriters,” says Josh. “Each one of us is a filter, and after going through all seven of those filters, each song is so much better than it could ever be if we each just wrote on our own.”

The Band Concord The Band Concord grew up mesmerized by the strum of a guitar, the beat of a drum and the playing of a piano. And they all knew it would stay with them forever. It wasn’t until Fall 2012, when lead vocalist/guitarist Spencer Pugh and mandolin/banjo player Andrew Steger met, that the group began to Continued on page 39

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

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Saturday, July 23, 8:00 p.m.

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival Presents Piedmont Symphony Orchestra Pops

“The Beatles and Friends” Glenn Quader, Conductor Magical Mystery Tour —The Beatles

Lennon/McCartney

Eleanor Rigby —The Beatles

Lennon/McCartney

White Room —Cream

Bruce/Brown

Evil Woman —ELO

Lynne

Love Alive —Heart

Fisher/Wilson/Wilson

Dreams—Fleetwood Mac

Nicks

Something—The Beatles

Harrison

Got To Get You Into My Life —The Beatles

Lennon/McCartney

—Intermission— We Will Rock You/We Are The Champions—Queen

May

Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band/ Help From My Friends —The Beatles

Lennon/McCartney

Comfortably Numb — Pink Floyd

Gilmour/Waters

Little Piece of My Heart—Janis Joplin

Burns/Ragovoy

Take It Easy —The Eagles

Frey/Browne

Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?—Chicago

Lamm

Space Oddity—David Bowie

Bowie

Kashmir—Led Zeppelin

Page/Plant/Bonham

“The Piedmont Symphony marries a rock ensemble, and it’s beautiful.” – Warrenton Lifestyle

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

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Friday, July 29, 8:00 p.m.

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival Presents

Eileen Ivers Eileen Ivers will change the way you think about the violin. One of the pre-eminent exponents of the fiddle in the world today, Ivers returns to Shenandoah Valley Music Festival for another riveting performance. A favorite of the Festival’s audiences, she is hailed as one of the great innovators and pioneers of the Celtic and world music genres. The original musical star of “Riverdance,” Ivers has appeared with more than 40 orchestras, including the London Symphony Orchestra and Boston Pops, and her recording credits include more than 80 albums, plus a number of movie scores. The GRAMMY Award-winner and nine-time All-Ireland fiddle champion has also performed with many top performing artists, including Sting, Hall and Oates, The Chieftains, Patti Smith and Al Di Meola. Ivers’ masterful skills have also received critical acclaim worldwide. The Los Angeles Times calls Ivers “a brilliant fiddler,” The New York Times has proclaimed her “the Jimi Hendrix of the violin,” and The Washington Post says: “She suggests the future of the Celtic fiddle.” And when she performs, The Irish Times says: "She electrifies the crowd with a dazzling show of virtuoso playing." The daughter of Irish immigrants,

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

Ivers grew up in the culturally diverse neighborhood of the Bronx. She was rooted in Irish traditional music since she was 8 years old. Being an IrishAmerican, the intrigue of learning more about the multicultural sounds of her childhood took hold. After graduating magna cum laude in mathematics from Iona College, Ivers immersed herself in the different genres of music that she experienced growing up in New York.

depicts the journey of Irish immigrants, their impact on America, and America’s impact on them. It also showcases the influence of Irish music and dance on country and American roots music.

On her most recent CD, “Beyond the Bog Road,” Ivers’ wrote, produced and played fiddle, banjo and mandolin. The album is a blend of music, story, dance and film that

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Meet the Artists Conductor Glenn Quader

A native of Washington, D.C., Glenn Quader is rapidly gaining national recognition as a dynamic and versatile conductor. Equally adept in the classical, jazz and popular idioms, he appears extensively as a conductor, performer and session musician in the United States and Europe, placing him in consistently high demand both on concert stages and in recording studios. Since Quader’s appointment as music director of the Piedmont Symphony Orchestra in 2005, his tenure has been marked by innovative and enthusiastically received programming and has included three world and two U.S. premieres. The 2007-2008 season included a sixth premiere and the orchestra’s first commission, when composer/guitarist Marcus Wolf performed as soloist. Under Quader’s leadership, the

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

organization has increased its paid core membership, added to the number of performances and enjoyed a three-fold rise in season subscriptions. Quader’s most recent professional appointments include music director of the Frederick Symphony Orchestra and conductor for the Maryland Lyric Opera. Other current positions include staff conductor for the Fairfax Symphony Orchestra, conductor of the American Youth Philharmonic Concert Orchestra and conductor of the American Studio Orchestra, which fuses music, audio visual and graphic arts into multimedia concert experiences. Under his direction, the ASO has presented several world premieres of concert and multimedia compositions. This ensemble has held residencies at Johns Hopkins University and the Baltimore Museum of Art. In past positions, Quader has served as assistant conductor of the Frederick Symphony Orchestra, assistant conductor of the Columbia Orchestra, music director/conductor of the Potomac Valley Youth Orchestra and music director/conductor of the Broward Symphony Orchestra. Quader’s international guest conducting includes programs with the Czech Republic’s Czech Virtuosi and Czech Moravian Chamber Orchestra, Hungary’s Mendelssohn Chamber Orchestra and Romania’s Bacau and Brasov philharmonic orchestras. In the United States, he has led the Memphis Symphony, Nashville Symphony, Tuscaloosa

Symphony, Fairfax Symphony, White Noise Chamber Players and ensemblein-residence with The New World Symphony. Quader studied at the Peabody Institute of John Hopkins University and the universities of Indiana, Illinois, Miami and Florida International, and holds a conducting diploma, awarded by Sicily’s Catania International Conducting Institute. His principal conducting teachers include Gustav Meier, Ovidiu Balan and James Brooks-Bruzzese. Quader has also taken intensive workshops with Marin Alsop, Jorma Panula, James Litton, Larry Rachleff and David Loebel.

Yevgeniy Dovgalyuk Yevgeniy Dovgalyuk, a native of Riga, Latvia, began studying violin at the age of six. He holds a Doctor of Musical Arts degree in Violin Performance from University of Maryland, Bachelor and Master of Music degrees from George Mason University. His teachers have included UMD professor Dr. James Stern and National Symphony Orchestra violinists Peter Haase and Pavel Pekarsky. Winner of numerous performance awards, Dr. Dovgalyuk, is a Concertmaster with Piedmont Symphony Orchestra and the American Studio Orchestra and Continued on page 27

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Saturday, July 30, 8:00 p.m.

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival Presents Piedmont Symphony Orchestra

“Tcheck Out Tchaikovsky” Glenn Quader, Conductor Yevgeniy Dovgalyuk, Violin Star-Spangled Banner American Salute

Gould

Sheherazade, Op. 35 Finale

Rimsky-Korsakov

Concerto for Violin in D Major III. Finale Yevgeniy Dovgalyuk

Tchaikovsky

Romeo and Juliet, Overture-Fantasy

—Intermission— Raider’s March from Raiders of the Lost Ark 35th anniversary of the release of the film

Williams

Capriccio Italien, Op. 45

Tchaikovsky

Shenandoah Tribute Special arrangement dedicated to Shenandoah Valley Music Festival

Rawlins

Stars and Stripes Forever

Sousa

1812 Overture

Tchaikovsky

Many thanks to the Shenandoah Community Foundation and the Marion Park Lewis Foundation for making Piedmont Symphony Orchestra’s community outreach possible.

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

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Friday, August 12, 8:00 p.m.

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival Presents

The SteelDrivers and The Gibson Brothers

The SteelDrivers The SteelDrivers’ innovative brand of soulful bluegrass has made it one of the hottest bands in contemporary bluegrass today. Its unique sound is a masterful blend of bluegrass, soul, blues, country, rock and R&B. Tammy Rogers, fiddle player and vocalist, who founded the SteelDrivers in 2005, also describes the band’s music as having a "realness, rawness and edge. “I think that’s what moves people when they come to see us,” she says. Earlier this year, the band earned a GRAMMY for Best Bluegrass Album for “The Muscle Shoals Recordings,” which has received tremendous critical acclaim. Ann Powers of NPR has praised the SteelDrivers for its “dazzling bluegrass musicianship,”

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

and Arnold Pan of “PopMatters” described the band’s music as “virtuosic ‘bluesgrass’ songs that take classic Americana instrumentation and give it an intense, soulful inflection.” Much of the inspiration for “The Muscle Shoals Recordings,” the SteelDrivers fourth album, had come from Muscle Shoals, home to SteelDrivers' lead vocalist and guitarist Gary Nichols, who co-wrote five of the album’s 11 songs. Rogers has credits on all but one of the album’s songs, “Drinkin’ Alone,” a romp penned by Jay Knowles and former SteelDriver Chris Stapleton. With Nichols having written nearly half of the new songs and Rogers most of the balance, this is the SteelDrivers' most fully realized album to date.

Before joining the SteelDrivers, Nichols had signed on with Mercury Nashville Records in 2006, and his single under that label, "Unbroken Ground,” made the Top 40 Billboard Hot Country Songs. Since then, his reputation in writing circles and record labels has grown in and around Nashville and beyond. Rogers has recorded with Neil Diamond, Wynonna Judd, Rodney Crowell, Radney Foster, Bill Anderson, Randy Scruggs and Patty Loveless, among many others. She has also toured the world with Trisha Yearwood, Reba McEntire, Patty Loveless, Maria McKee and the Dead Reckoners. Other band members include:

Brent Truit, who plays mandolin Continued on page 37

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Saturday, August 13, 8:00 p.m.

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival Presents

LeAnn Rimes with special guest Walker County with 42 singles on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs Chart and her version of “How Do I Live” becoming the second-longest charting song in the history of the Billboard’s Hot 100 Chart. Her last album with Curb Records, “Spitfire,” released in June 2013, immediately became the critics' darling, debuting at No. 9 on Billboard’s Top Country Album chart and No. 4 on iTunes. And the album, “Dance Like You Don’t Give A .... Greatest Hits Remixes,” released in summer 2014, went to No. 1 on the iTunes Dance chart.

LeAnn Rimes LeAnn Rimes is one of the most successful entertainers with a career spanning more than two decades. With 44 million albums sold, two GRAMMYs, three Academy of Country Music Awards and 12 Billboard Music Awards, she has made her mark in the world of music. Unstoppable since age 11, Rimes was the youngest person ever to win a GRAMMY and was the first country music artist to win the GRAMMY for Best New Artist. When she was only 13 years old, she scored her first top hit with the 1996 release of “Blue,” which remained at the No. 1 spot on Billboard’s country albums chart for more than three months. Rimes has since made her mark as both a country and pop artist

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

Rimes has also ventured into acting, including the CMT Original Movie “Reel Love,” the Lifetime movie “Northern Nights” and the ABC telefilm “Holiday In Your Heart,” based on the novel she wrote by the same name. She has also penned the inspirational book “What I Cannot Change” and children’s books “Jag” and “Jag’s New Friend.”

Walker County Hailing from Sulphur Springs, Ind., Walker County is a family trio that includes sisters Ivy and Sophie and their father, Billy Walker. Ivy is the lead vocalist and a proven powerhouse with an outstanding range. Sophie plays drums and backs up Ivy on vocals, creating beautiful sibling harmonies, while their father plays lead guitar. Walker County emphasizes soulfulness along with underlying southern rock and traditional country flavors that will bring you to the roots of this family tree. They turn heads whenever they perform and have been embraced by most everyone who has listened to them.

Rimes has long-supported a variety of charity organizations including the National Psoriasis Foundation, the DAV (Disabled American Veterans), The Coalition to Salute America’s Heroes, StandUp For Kids and The Trevor Project. She most recently began her work with the Friend Movement, an anti-bullying organization.

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Saturday, September 3, 7:00 p.m.

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival Presents

Bruce Hornsby and The Noisemakers Almost three decades after winning a GRAMMY for Best New Artist and launching one of contemporary music’s most diverse careers, Bruce Hornsby still makes a joyful noise as he discovers clever and expansive ways to chronicle dynamic musical snapshots of his often generously collaborative journey. Nothing better illustrates this than Hornsby’s communion with his longtime band, The Noisemakers. The Virginia-born pianist started performing with The Noisemakers in 2000. The band brought a freewheeling live approach to Hornsby’s memorable songs. Its members are keyboardist/ organist John “JT” Thomas and drummer Sonny Emory, who have played with Hornsby for 24 and 12 years, respectively; bassist J.V. Collier, a 20-year veteran of the band; fiddle/mandolin player Ross Holmes; and guitarist Gibb Droll. Holmes and Droll joined the band in summer 2014. Holmes currently fiddles for Mumford and Sons, has played with hosts of Nashville titans as diverse as Ricky Skaggs and the Dixie Chicks and has performed with symphonies in the United States and Europe. Droll has played guitar on various projects involving Keller Williams, Kevin Kinney and Brandi Carlile. He is also a composer and painter.

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

“I think the guys in The Noisemakers like the gig because there’s never a dull moment, and we attempt to keep the spontaneity factor high,” Hornsby says. “The idea always is ‘Watch Bruce.’ I’m a fairly loose leader, and I don’t like to rehearse. We mostly just ride around the country on a bus and laugh a lot. Hopefully you can hear that loose spirit in our shows.” Times and band members change, and Hornsby knows it. Yet for all his forward thinking, he remembers the past. “As the years go by and my music evolves, I've been increasingly

interested in hearing some new sounds in my band,” he says. “As I get older, I’ve become more of a folkie than a jazzer, and I’ve felt the need to move the music accordingly.” For all his talents as a singer, bandleader and pianist with an instantly identifiable sound, Hornsby is a songwriter at heart, committed to portraying his songs in changing ways that allow them to expand organically. This approach was further developed by Hornsby’s time with The Grateful Dead when he joined the legendary band between 1990 and 1995 for more than 100 Continued on page 39

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Sunday, September 4, 6:00 p.m.

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival Presents

The Hot Strings and Cool Breezes Bluegrass MiniFest featuring The Grascals with The Barefoot Movement and Flatt Lonesome traditionalists, as evidenced by more than 150 performances at the Grand Ole Opry. As their records prove, The Grascals’ musical empathy gives them an unerring ear for just the right touch to illuminate each offering’s deepest spirit – whether they’re digging into one of their original songs or reworking a bluegrass classic or a pop standard. Non-bluegrass listeners will enjoy a new take on a familiar song, while diehard bluegrass audiences will enjoy it just the same.

The Grascals The Grascals make music that is entirely relevant to the here and now while immersed in traditional values of soul and musicianship. Its cutting edge, modern bluegrass sound has earned the band three GRAMMY nominations for Best Bluegrass Album, the most recent for its 2013 release “Life Finds a Way,” and two Entertainer of the Year awards from the International Bluegrass Music Association.

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

The Grascals success has also received plenty of national attention. The band has made TV appearances on “The Tonight Show” with Jay Leno, “Fox & Friends,” “The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson” and CBS’ “The Talk,” and has performed for President Barack Obama’s inaugural ball at the Smithsonian and twice for President George W. Bush While crossing the boundaries of bluegrass into other genres, The Grascals are still warmly embraced by

The Grascals most recent album is “When I Get My Pay,” released in 2013 by Mountain Records. Other previous releases include “Life Finds a Way,” which received one of the band’s three GRAMMY nominations for Best Bluegrass Album, “Dance Till Your Stockings are Hot & Ravelin” and “The Grascals and Friends: Country Classics with a Bluegrass Spin.”

The Barefoot Movement The Barefoot Movement is anything but your standard bluegrass band. Returning to the Festival for the Continued on page 41

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Meet the Artists From Page 15 Associate Concertmaster with the American Festival Pops Orchestra. Yevgeniy is a regular substitute with the National Symphony Orchestra and also performs with Fairfax Symphony, Alexandria Symphony and is a founder of the Liya Ensemble. He is actively involved with Liya Music Camp International in the United States and Ukraine where he serves as the Music Director. He is also active in the Liya Dovgalyuk Foundation, created in memory of his sister. He has performed throughout the USA and Europe, including Sweden, the United Kingdom, Ukraine, Latvia, and Russia.

Piedmont Symphony Orchestra The mission of the Piedmont Symphony Orchestra is to provide an enduring creative outlet for both the musicians and the community, which entertains, educates and furnishes a shared experience in the symphonic repertoire. Founded in 1996 by Michael A. Hughes as the Piedmont Regional Orchestra, the PRO began as an ensemble for amateur and student musicians. The orchestra rehearsed at Fauquier High School and provided several concerts per season of the standard orchestral repertoire. Upon the opening of the Highland Center for the Arts in 2003, the PRO established its residency there and soon thereafter changed its name to the Piedmont Symphony Orchestra. In 2005, Glenn Quader became the second music director of the PSO and continued the tradition set forth by

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

Mr. Hughes. Several new initiatives in programming, education, outreach and patron services have been launched during Mr. Quader’s tenure. Education and Outreach The PSO initiated its annual Young Artists’ Competition in 2001 to provide area students the chance to compete for scholarship prizes. Since the inception of this competition, the PSO has awarded over $30,000 in scholarship prizes. The PSO Summer Music Camp offered positive instruction to young musicians during the summer months in a structured setting. Each year, the camp served between 20 and 30 young musicians from the greater-Piedmont region. In 2005, the PSO launched its annual Student Art Contest centered on a musical/programmatic theme. The contest targeted Fauquier County fourth grade students. All artwork is judged by a professional panel of artists and displayed in the foyer the day of the orchestra’s Young People’s Concert. In 2008, the contest was expanded to include students statewide. In 2007, the PSO began its Side by Side concert initiative, inviting area music teachers to recommend exceptional students to perform in the Young People’s Concert alongside the orchestra. Side by Side has since grown into the Music Mentors program, introduced in 2013. The program design was closely coordinated with lead music teachers in the Fauquier County Public School system. Only in its third year, the PSO’s goal is to bring the program to all Fauquier middle and high school students.

Music and Programming Since 2005, the PSO has presented three world and three United States premieres of new works. It has presented joint concert performances with other area performing arts organizations, including the Piedmont Singers, Warrenton Chorale and The American Children of S.C.O.R.E. The orchestra presented its first-ever commission for a new orchestral work in 2008, with the composer Marcus Wolf appearing as the featured soloist at the world premiere performance. The PSO mounted the first-ever full opera production in Fauquier County in 2008 with Puccini’s “Le Villi” and in 2010, 2012 and 2016, the PSO presented performances of rock music with a full rock ensemble alongside the orchestra. These standing room only performances marked a noticeable upturn in season subscriptions, a trend which has continued to the present. Moving into the Future The PSO is creating an enduring endowment fund to safeguard the PSO during future difficult economic times. Given the immense amount of work in preparing for regular season concerts, the PSO would like to be able to offer additional run-out performances at locations throughout the community. As the flagship orchestra of the region, the PSO wishes to increase its paid core membership and expand its concert offerings to include special area events, major holidays and fundraising efforts.

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Special Acknowledgements This summer's gold level sponsors are First Bank, Shenandoah Memorial Hospital – Valley Health, Shentel/Sprint. Silver level sponsors are Cornerstone Technology Services; Holtzman Corp., Loudoun Mutual Insurance Co.; ShelRand Enterprises and Shrine Mont. Bronze level sponsors are Brad Pollack; Graves-Light Wealth Management Group of Wells Fargo Advisors; Guests Inc./Comfort Inn, Woodstock; Iris Health Solutions LLC; LD&B Insurance and Financial Services; Mountain Valley Management – Steve Stein; Rodney Shepherd – Voya Financial Advisors® Inc.; Route 11 Potato Chips; Swover Creek Farms Farm Brewery and Wilton House Museum. The official caterer of the summer is Shaffer’s Barbecue and Catering. Our hotel sponsor is Hampton Inn and Suites of Woodstock. This summer's media partners are The Northern Virginia Daily, WBTX 102.1 FM/1470 AM, Q102, WMRA/WMEC, WSIG 96.9, The River 95.3 FM/1450 AM, WVPT, and B105. In addition to our sponsors, our media partners, our granting organizations, the SVMF Guild, our donors and our dozens and dozens of volunteers, these great folks deserve a round of applause and a standing ovation: First Bank, our other landlord. John Burns, publication designer, creator of the SVMF birds, great artist and bluegrass bass player. Peggy and Allen Easterly, of Imagegrafx, who take our photographs and design our newspaper ads. Kemp Miller, the velvet-toned voice and creator of our radio ads (and our real estate consultant.) Kevin Moomaw and the staff of Shrine Mont. What else can we say about this great team? Larry Roberson, light guy and tech director for years and current official golf cart mover. Mike and Lisa Rimmington, for providing a home away from home. Jeff Hess, our Web dude. Jason Misterka and the outstanding crew from Southard Audio, without question the universe’s best audio team.

Fishburn Award In order to recognize extraordinary service and dedication to the Shenandoah Valley Music Festival, the SVMF’s Board of Directors established the Fishburn Award in 1987. This special honor is named for John Fishburn, Resident Manager/Executive Director from 1973-77 and President from 1978-80.

RECIPIENTS 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015

John Fishburn Wilmer Moomaw Edgar Arey Woody Rohrbaugh Gabor Aufricht Florence Young Robert Einstein Eve Newman Gary Boyle Shirley Anderson Russell and Pearl Pancake Emily Carnan Eloise Haun Marion Park Lewis Suzanne Montgomery William Holtzman The Shenandoah Valley Music Festival Guild James and Mary Nolan Leigh Devier Bernie Boston Bill Hudson Michael Funk Thelma Fleming Susie Hill Rod Shepherd Larry Roberson Dick Moomaw and John Moomaw Sandy Pruett John Burns

We wholeheartedly apologize for any omissions.

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

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Gifts to the Festival

SVMF received contributions from these generous people and organizations between June 16, 2015, and June 15, 2016

Conductor's Club ($1,000 +) Bob and Susan Agnew, Arlington Clark W. and Eve O. Fisher Fund, Woodstock Barbara and Karl Stoltzfus, Mt. Crawford Karen Lerohl Wilson, Potomac, Md.; in memory of Kathryn Keany "You Can't Take it With You Fund" of The Community Foundation of Harrisonburg and Rockingham County Shenandoah Community Foundation, Woodstock

Benefactor ($500 to $999) Joan M. Anderson, Maurertown The Boeing Company Gift Match D. Leigh Devier, Edinburg; in memory of Janet W. Stevens Amy Fielder, Winchester David and Mary Finnell, Maurertown Conrad and Robin Koneczny, Winchester Glenna and Earle MacKenzie, New Market Marion Park Lewis Foundation, Winchester Bruce and Vicki McClinton, Maurertown Mary Nolan, Woodstock; in memory of Amb. James Nolan Barry and Carol Shaffer, Edinburg Ivy and Alex Sinaiko, Alexandria Jerry and Wendy Weaver, Harrisonburg Wade and Mary Zirkle, Woodstock

Patron ($250 to $499) Anonymous Frederick and Christine Andreae, Bentonville Elizabeth Benchoff Page, Woodstock; in memory of Katharine Hottel Benchoff and John Milton Benchoff Mary and Brian Bennett, Front Royal Don and Gail Crigler, Stephens City Ethel R. Chrisman, Richmond; in memory of Mary Louise Chrisman Phil and Ellie Daley, Lincoln Ken and Polly Emenheiser, Basye Pat and Warren French, Jr., Edinburg John Gaunt, Fort Valley Ed and Ellen Hardy, Richmond

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

Larry and Robin Helsley, Edinburg Glenn and Sandra Hodge, Harrisonburg Greg Hoover, Woodstock Walter and J.J. Jones, Edinburg David H. Kaeuper, Washington, D.C. George Mills and Carla Lilly, Basye Dot and Bob Lowerre, Woodstock Ian and Crispina McDonald, Chevy Chase, Md. Margaret M. Nelson, Woodstock Richard and Janette Perry, Basye Ray and Judy Powell, Woodstock Dan and Pat Ritchie, Winchester Sprint Foundation Matching Donations, Overland Park, Kan. Donna and Earnest Stern, Bethesda, Md. Helmut and Caroline Thielsch, Midlothian Jack and Kay Townshend, Edinburg Fred and Brenda Wynn, Bryce Tom and Jane Underwood, Basye Lynn and Rick Zoll, Kettering, Ohio; in memory of John and Fredelle Fishburn and Betsy Sager Fishburn

Sustainer ($100 to $249) Anonymous Elise M. Ambrose, Bethesda, Md. Joanne M. Aarseth, Sterling Richard and Debra Banks, Vienna; in memory of Betty Smith and Gorden Breczinski Suzanne Bissell, McLean Christian and Inger Bjerknes, Upper Marlboro, Md.; in memory of Michael Dunn Carol Borden, Strasburg Edwin and Ilse Bornemann, Fairfax Merv and Jacquelyn Bourque, Front Royal James and Nina Burke, Middletown Ned and Margaret Burks, Berryville Jim and Adelaide Cannata, Basye Karen DeLaBarre Chase, McLean Carolyn and John Chilton, Orkney Springs; in memory of Nellie and Wilmer Moomaw Chris and Anne Collins, Arlington Mr. and Mrs. John Conrad, Winchester Skip Constable, New Market Karen and James Costie, Canton, Ga.

Judy and Eddy Craig, Basye Ms. Jane G. Dalton, Madison; in memory of William H. Dalton Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey S. Davis, Winchester David C. Dickinson, Buena Vista Christine Di Lapi, Herndon Dominion Foundation Matching Gift Program, Princeton, N.J. Drs. Robert and Barbara Driver, Chesterfield Fran and Richard Etner, Peoria, Ariz.; in honor of 30 Years of The Legacy East Jim and Barbara Fagan, Basye Michael and Jennifer Funk, Woodstock Richard and Teresa Funkhouser, Toms Brook Stephen S. Ginn, Winchester Tim and Denise Gray, Alexandria; in honor of Bill Larson Douglas L. Guynn, Harrisonburg Chris and Phyllis Hamilton, Harrisonburg Floyd and Amy Heater, Edinburg Laurence Heine, Rockingham Mr. and Mrs. W. Todd Holtzman, Mount Jackson Roy and Kate Isom, Basye Shirley Keir, Ruckersville; in honor of Christine Bendas Richard Kiser, Grottoes John and Vivian Knepper, Broadway Carolyn Kite Kyger, Harrisonburg Wesley and Phyllis Larrick, Strasburg Larry and Jane Lehman, Fredericksburg Eddie and Cindy Litten, New Market Richard and Anne Long, Boonsboro, Md.; in memory of Romaine and Paul Alling John and Elena Lycas, Mount Jackson David and Debbie MacDonald, Woodstock James Mahoney, Maurertown Gary and Gloria Markley, Edinburg EK and Lynn McFadden, Basye Donald Meadows, Delaplane Robert Mecaughey, Basye Bill and Jeri Mindak, Springfield Mr. and Mrs. John T. Moomaw, Orkney Springs Julie and Ron Moomaw, Orkney Springs; in memory of Julia and Bill Pendleton Mount Jackson Lions Club, Mount Jackson Richard and Grace Orndorff, New Market

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Gifts to the Festival Tina Owens, Harrisonburg Judith T. Pattee, Winchester William and Maxine Pence, Edinburg Zack and Judith Perdue, Harrisonburg Dorothy Peterson, Harrisonburg; in memory of Keith Peterson Suzanne M. Porter, Executor of The James and Mary Nolan Trust Jerry and Sydney Price, Fairfax Steve and Debbie Proctor, Harrisonburg Sandra Pruett, Woodstock Jean and John Ralston, Basye Brenda Rawlings, Fort Valley Nancy McFadden and John Richards, Springfield Grant A. and Teresa K. Richardson, Bridgewater Robin Rinaca, Accomac Mark and Heather Rosenker, McLean Chris and Alex Schneider, Basye Dabney and David Schneider, Jeffersonton Ed and Frankie Scott, Winchester Glenn and Patty Sengstack, Damascus, Md. The Sletten Family, Hamilton; in memory of Judy Sletten Leo and Mary Sue Snarr, Woodstock Liz Sollenberger, Woodstock; in memory of Ted Sollenberger Norm and Libby Starler, Alexandria Sherry Stein, Silver Spring, Md.; in honor of Kathi and Steve Stein Keith Stickley, Woodstock George and Debora Swecker, Woodstock Ralph A. Thompson, Fairfax Mary and Bob Towle, Marshall Walt and Cheryl Townshend, Mitchellville, Md.; in honor of Jack and Kay Townshend Scott and Kathy Truax, Front Royal Steve and Dori Walk, Staunton Sandra Welch, Alexandria Betty B. Wisman, Edinburg; in memory of Dr. Douglas P. Wisman Mona M. Wolf, Basye; in memory of Robert O. Wolf Nicholas and Wendy Yarnold, Woodstock

Sponsor ($60 to $99) Anonymous Suzanne and Doug Arthur, Strasburg Eugene Brantly, Garrett Park, Md.

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

Howard and Lisa Brown, Woodstock Kent and Jamie Duffy, Arlington Judith Edstrom, Washington, D.C. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Harkness, New Market Bob and Susie Hill, New Market Susan Kassell, Potomac; in memory of Miriam I. R. Eolis John and Carol Rosenberger, New Market Gilbert Schneider, Middletown Carla Wallen, Strasburg; in memory of Mill Wallen

Friend (up to $59) Anonymous Alex and Pat Banks, Harrisonburg Ted and Faye Barker, Winchester Fred and Mary Bellamy, Vienna Larry and Judy Bennington, Star Tannery Melissa Benudiz, Mission Viejo, Calif. Robbi and Mercedita Biggs, Front Royal; in memory of Kathrine H. Biggs Kevin C. and Kate Brennan, Bayse Marcia Brownfield, Quicksburg; in memory of Amb. James Nolan Phil and Nyda Budig, Alexandria Mr. John Burgoon, Virginia Beach Elden Burkholder, Harrisonburg Casey Carter, Harrisonburg; in memory of Karen Diehl Evans Ida and Donald Cheek, Glenville, Pa. Ginny Chilton, Newport News; in honor of John Chilton Rick Claybrook, Broadway; in memory of grandparents, Marshall and Nellie McNeal of Shenandoah County Kay and Don Clem, Broadway Bill and Lois Coffman, Woodstock Ken and Judy Coleman, Maurertown Sally Cook, Falls Church Linda Couture, Alexandria George and Donna Crossman, Strasburg; in memory of Dorothy Crossman George and Ellie Crump, Wardensville, W.Va. Sean Daley, Almonte, Ontario, Canada Bill and Candace Darling, Centreville Mr. & Mrs. S. DeBone, Silver Spring, Md. Douglas and Laura Denault, Potomac, Md. Mike Didawick, Cross Junction Joseph and Cynthia Donohoe, Arlington Joe and Tamera Drozd, Vienna Sid Stern and Kelly Dunlop, Front Royal Pete and Kathleen Engel, White Post

Rick Engle, Elkton Duval Euland, Winchester Kurt and April Fellenstein, Mount Crawford Pamela Fetsch, Catonsville, Md. Ronald Fischer, Leesburg Pamela Friestad, Winchester Cathy Fulk, Harrisonburg; in honor of Cheryl Talley Cheryl Funk, Maurertown GE Foundation Matching Gifts Program, Fairfield, Conn. Churchill and Linda Gibson, Winchester Kathy Gilliam, Front Royal Margaret Gouldman, Upper Marlboro, Md. Mark and Tammy Gray, Broadway Martha Griffin, Winchester John Hubbard Harris, Richmond; in memory of Dr. and Mrs. William H. Harris, Jr. Barbara and Warren Halvorson, Woodstock June B. Hockman, Maurertown Diana Horvat, Washington, D.C. Dennis Hult, Mount Jackson David and Olivia Hutton, Woodstock Allen and Dot Johnson, New Market Sarah Jones, Harrisonburg Gordon and Sue Keehn, Raleigh, N.C. George and Linda King, Midlothian Mike and Theresa Knight, Alexandria Philip and Irene Kniss, Harrisonburg Tom Knowles, Strasburg Ed and Suzie Koller, Fort Valley Ronald Landis, Basye; in memory of Karen Louise Urquart Landis Ilse A. Larkin, Edinburg Bo and Linda Lindberg, Arlington Bascom and Phyllis Lockett, Charlottesville John and Sue Low, Maurertown Kemper and Sharon Loyd, Spottswood Jonathan Lyon, Ellicott City, Md. Lowell and Jean Lynch, Arlington Ms. Ann MacLeod, Harrisonburg Richard Martnick, Warrenton Joseph and Kay McCallum, Woodstock; in memory of Margaret Walker McCallumMy Mother Jo Ann N. Milander, New Market Roger and Linda Milburn, Winchester Mr. and Mrs. Donald Moomaw, Orkney Springs Suzanne Moomaw, Charlottesville; in memory of Ned Moomaw Joe and Maureen Moore, Vienna

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Gifts to the Festival John and Katherine Morrison, Woodstock; in honor of Dr. Eloise Haun Jean C. Mumpower, Woodstock; in memory of Pauline and Bill Click Richard and Norma Newbold, Woodbridge Darrell Nolton, Alexandria Randell and Linda Norton, Broadway LaDene King and Gretchen Nyce, Harrisonburg David A. Oot, Arlington Mitch and Pam Orndorff, Winchester Sandra O'Shell, Linden Carol Paquette, Arlington Carole Paulett, Mount Jackson Judy Powell, Palmyra Annabelle Rappole, Stuart, Fla. Edward Reardon, Washington, D.C. Peter and Betsy Reddaway, McLean; in memory of Fiona Reddaway Karen Reinauer, Washington, D.C. Bill and Brownie Ritenour, New Market John C. Robinson, Baltimore, Md. John S. Rogers, Harrisonburg Hubert and Judy Roop, Luray Roberta and Donald Ross, Singers Glen Karl and Suzanne Roulston, Woodstock Greg and Pam Sanders, McGaheysville Al and Phyllis Saufley, McGaheysville James W and Diane M Saunders, Burke Robert Schwenger, Basye Steven and Lois Shaffer, Luray Vic and Cheri Smith, Harrisonburg Courtney and Deborah Smith, Woodstock

Major Danuel L. and Helen Jean Smith, Edinburg Ilene N. Smith, Harrisonburg Leonard and Roberta Smoot, Strasburg Lori Snell, Harrisonburg Zachary Snell, Harrisonburg Skip and Susan Stanley, Richmond Jane Stewart, Linden John Stephens, New Market James Stotler, Winchester Larry and Anna Strawderman, Harrisonburg Linda Street, Winchester Craig and Ruth Jolly Swingle, Earlysville Bonnie Thompson, Broadway Amy Beth Tisinger, Woodstock; in memory of Wayne Henry Tisinger Richard Toikka, Rockville, Md. Bill Tortolano, Alexandria Jim and Meg Trott, Fort Valley Rev. and Mrs. Frederick Trumbore, Winchester James and Grace Updyke, Mount Crawford Edward G Upton and Perrian Upton, Hughesville, Md. Virginia Mennonite Retirement Community, Harrisonburg Mr. and Mrs. William R. Walls, Edinburg Richard Walker, McAllen, Texas Wylie and Diane Walton, Timberville Diane and Jim Warrick, Pawleys Island, S.C. Maureen Weaver, Rockville, Md. Cathleen P. Welsh, Rockingham

James West, McGaheysville; in memory of Nadine West Ann Wallinger and Greg Whitmer, Stephenson Kay White, Broadway Wightman Insurance Agency, Inc., Edinburg John and Terry Wiita, Stanley Sylvia Will, Fairfax Brenda Sue Wilkinson, Harrisonburg; in memory of Esther Divizio Bill and Kim Woodwell, Maurertown Camille and Tom Wright, Mount Jackson Jim and Ellen Yeatts, Cary, N.C. Yount, Hyde and Barbour, PC, Woodstock

2015 Volunteers and Brochure Distributors Bill Boone, Summersville, W.Va. Jean and Mike Blackwell, New market John and Gail Carten, Arlington George and Donna Crossman, Strasburg Carol DeHart, Fulks Run Marcie Finnell, Maurertown Katherine Freeman, Woodstock Maureen Gallagher-Macleod, Broadway Chalmers and Melody Goshorn, Stuarts Draft Mike and Colleen Gray, Timberville Diane and Hugh Hanson, Basye Gary and Elaine Harshman, Basye Bob and Susie Hill, New Market Beth Huddleston, Winchester

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

Roy and Kate Isom, Bayse Rovin and Vivian Karki, Alexandria Eleanore Kobetz, Berryville Sara Mason, Harrisonburg Erin McCarthy, Harrisonburg Virginia Meyerhoffer, Harrisonburg Judy Miller, Winchester JoAnn Mulrooney, Harpers Ferry, W.Va. Sharon Music, Wardensville, W.Va. G. William Nabers, Basye Richard and Grace Orndorff, New Market Judy Paige-Grim, Winchester Carole Paulett, Mount Jackson Barbara Plitt, Wardensville, W.Va. Ron Poe, Wardensville, W.Va.

Deb Rice, Sterling Devin Ross, Mount Jackson Mike and Sabrina Showalter, Mount Jackson Gretchen Smith-Klainer, Woodstock Elizabeth Smoot, Edinburg Scott and Kelli Sprague, Keezletown Jessica Tucker, Richmond Deb and John Veitch, Edinburg Bobbie Wilinski, Fulks Run Mona Wolf, Basye Jim and Donna Wolfe, Mount Jackson Vega Ziemer, Strasburg

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The SteelDrivers and the Gibson Brothers From Page 19 and has recorded and toured with top performers including Alison Krauss, Dolly Parton and The Dixie Chicks. He is also an in-demand record producer and Grammywinning engineer and has recorded over 250 records. Richard Bailey, a GRAMMYnominated banjo player, has recorded with such diverse artists as Al Green, Kenny Rogers, Johnny Cash, Tammy Wynette, Ronnie Milsap and George Jones and has performed with Bill Monroe, Roland White, Vassar Clements, Loretta Lynn, Chet Akins, and countless others. He has also played at Carnegie Hall and on Austin City Limits.

Mike Fleming, who plays upright bass, also sings the baritone harmony that rounds out the SteelDrivers’ sound. A self-confessed “recovering banjo player,” Fleming has recorded with Holly Dunn, Joy Lynn White and with groundbreaking singer/songwriter David Olney. In addition to traveling the world during stints with Dunn and Kevin Welch, Fleming has appeared on "Austin City Limits," "Nashville Now," "Crook and Chase" and a number of Grand Ole Opry shows.

refreshingly new. The concept of families singing together is a tradition that stretches back through the history of folk music, and with 20 years of professional musicianship behind them, the Gibson Brothers, using those groups as a compass, have established themselves as proud keepers of that musical heritage. Over the last 20 years of performing together, Eric and Leigh have matured considerably as musicians, writers and performers, causing an ever-growing legion of bluegrass fans to take notice and garnering impressive amounts of critical acclaim. Not only did the band win IBMA’s Entertainer of the Year Award in 2012 and 2013, but the organization presented Eric with the prestigious Songwriter of the Year Award last year as well. Their most recent release “Brotherhood,” is a salute to some of

the greatest brother duos, such as the Monroes, the Louvins and the Everlys, whose close harmonies have helped shape and influence The Gibson Brothers sound. Eric and Leigh chose 15 songs from country, bluegrass and early rock ‘n’ roll brother acts. The track listing reflects nearly a century of American music history, from “The Eastbound Train,” a parlor tune with roots that can be traced back to the 1890s, to “It’ll Be Her,” a Top 20 single released by Tompall and the Glaser Brothers in 1982. “Brotherhood” is the Gibsons’ 12th album since their 1993 debut, “Underneath a Harvest Moon.” Listeners will immediately recognize material on “Brotherhood” such as “Bye Bye Love” and “Crying in the Rain” by Phil and Don Everly; “Seven Year Blues” by Charlie and Ira Louvin; and “Sweet Little Miss Blue Eyes” by Jim and Jesse McReynolds.

The Gibson Brothers The two-time International Bluegrass Music Association Entertainer of the Year will take you on a journey through some of the greatest brother harmony songs from the 20th century. The Gibson Brothers combine their wide ranging influences into a unique style that honors tradition but sounds

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

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Bruce Hornsby and the Noisemakers From Page 23 shows. In the Dead’s vibrant tradition of loosely blending improvised folk and blues, Hornsby found a shared musical aesthetic. In recent years, he has pushed his artistic limits, working with bluegrass legend Ricky Skaggs, The Bruce Hornsby Trio and jazz legend Charlie Haden. Hornsby has also scored a number of projects for filmmaker Spike Lee, including the documentary “Kobe Doin’ Work” (2009), “Red Hook Summer” (2012) and the upcoming “Da Sweet Blood of Jesus.” And he’s contributed to all-star collections that pay tributes to Fats Domino, The Band, and in 2014, Jackson Browne. Hornsby’s albums have sold over 11 million copies worldwide, so far. And the commercial successes and creative

achievements of his superstar collaborations — including many sampled passages chosen by hip-hop artists—verify Hornsby’s fusion of wide appeal and musical adventure. The title cut from "The Way It Is" was the most played song on American radio in 1987, winning the ASCAP Song of the Year award. The late Tupac Shakur, working with Hornsby, fashioned a new song over “The Way It Is” adding new lyrics and calling the result “Changes.” The track was an international hit and sold 14 million copies. “Harbor Lights” also won the 1994 Downbeat Reader’s Poll Beyond Album of the Year—a citation given to music from any genre apart from jazz or blues. Over the years, Hornsby has played on more than 100 records, including

albums by Bob Dylan, Don Henley, Bob Seger, Crosby Stills and Nash, Stevie Nicks, Bonnie Raitt, Ricky Skaggs, Willie Nelson and many others. He has also contributed endtitle songs for the Spike Lee films “Clockers” and “Bamboozled.” “I can be a slow learner and sometimes it takes me a while to arrive at the most soulful way to play and sing one of my songs — or anyone’s song for that matter,” Hornsby says of his musical style. “Our approach to playing allows songs to grow, evolve and change through the years. That’s where the improvisatory mindset has led us.” It is a singularly rich place, a place for stirring noise-making.

Nitty Gritty Dirt Band From Page 7 at The Historic Ryman Auditorium on Sept. 14, 2015, where an anniversary special, “Circlin’ Back: Celebrating 50 Years,” was filmed and had aired on

PBS stations around the country earlier this year. WVPT aired the special locally in June.

The Hunts From Page 9 form. They transitioned from dorm room rehearsals to opening for The Maine and being featured on The Avett Brothers’ Facebook page. The additions of violinist Jason Agola, drummer Braden Burns and bassist Alex Winemiller rounded out and solidified the group’s folk sound. Over the past few years, The Band Concord has performed nonstop

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

along the East Coast, from restaurants and breweries to pavilions and festivals. In August 2014, the band performed at American Music Festival in Virginia Beach, featuring artists Train, Hunter Hayes, Rusted Root and more. Known for their love and playing of all things folk, The Band Concord shares a similar sound to that of The

Head and the Heart and Fleet Foxes. Yet the group has expanded their musical palette even further with the release of their debut album “Youth” in April 2014—introducing a twist to their traditional folk style with an emphasized pop sound in the single “Golden Road.”

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Hot Strings and Cool Breezes from Page 25 second year in a row, this band stretches from a strong foundation of traditional Appalachian music,

Carton Kids, and performed onstage with The Carolina Chocolate Drops, Steve Earle, The Duhks and Del McCoury.

Flatt Lonesome Since their debut in 2011, Flatt Lonesome has enjoyed a nearly unprecedented trip to be placed among the bluegrass elite. “Bluegrass Today” calls them “the sort of band bluegrass needs right now” and says

borrowing the best from other rootsbased genres to shape their hallmark sound. In a typical show, you’ll hear elements of bluegrass, blues, folk, rock, country and pop through their narrative lyrics, tight three-part harmonies, hot instrumental riffs, lilting blues scales and catchy vocal hooks. While their top-notch musicianship can speak for itself, as seen by their 2014 Momentum Award at the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA), it’s their witty banter and onstage chemistry that makes a stage of any size feel like home.

their brand of original bluegrass is “some of the freshest our genre has been offered in a while.” Stellar picking and heartfelt songs, centered around beautiful sibling harmony, have made Flatt Lonesome a hit among bluegrass fans young and old.

playing for decades. They have been named 2014 Emerging Artists of the Year by the International Bluegrass Music Association and have released a trio of successful albums. Its self-titled debut album in early 2013 drew high acclaim from both critics and fans. Its opening track, “You’ll Get No More Of Me,” scored the band its first No. 1 hit, and its sophomore album, “Too,” debuted in the Top 5 on Billboard’s Bluegrass Album charts. But the major success of its second release has since been eclipsed by Flatt Lonesome’s third album, “Runaway Train,” which has a generated six charting singles, including the smash hit, “You’re The One.” With how far they have come in such a short amount of time, Flatt Lonesome shows no signs of slowing down. One could say they are truly a “runaway train!”

Youthful, yet mature beyond their years, members of Flatt Lonesome have already reached success levels comparable to bands that have been

This unique trifecta of skill, innovation and charisma has not gone unnoticed. In their young career, they have been featured at festivals across the country, earned a coveted place on tour with The Milk

Shenandoah Valley Music Festival 2016

41



Now featuring the lowest rates among all assisted living facilities in the area, will price match if a lower price is found with no move in fees or longterm contracts

ASSISTED LIVING

Meal preparation, medication management and medical oversight, engaging social Green Valley Commons activities, housekeeping and laundry services, 1/2 Pg Ad clean beautifully decorated and newly renovated building, court yard, den with stone fireplace and piano for those special family gatherings, fitness room, therapy pool, jacuzzi rooms and much more.

Come see for yourself, truly…“it is good to be home” Now accepting applications for residency 549 Valley Mill Rd., Winchester • (571) 359-1499 www.greenvalleycommons.com

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2016 9AM - 3PM

The Inn at Narrow Passage 1/4 Pg Ad

Register Broadway AutumOnline: Fest Strasburg 1/4 Pg Ad www.broadywayhometownpartnership.org/hometown-events each 10x10 spot

each 10x10 spot

For Main St. Businesses

$35 $45 $FREE www.narrowpassage.com I-81 Exit 283 • 30 Chapman Landing Road, Edinburg, VA 22824

540-459-8000 • 800-459-8002

before August 1

after August 1

before August 1


JIM & JOYCE HALL We have been serving the Shenandoah Valley since 1981! Voted Best Place to Sell Gold • Best Jewelry Store • Best Pawn Shop 4 years in a row!

Boscawen Gold 1/4 Pg Ad

VISITORS ALWAYS

WELCOME Call us for Farm Tours

Posey Thisisit Llamas 1/8towards Pg AdLlama care and Farm tour donations go Southeast Llama Rescue. 754 Harrisville Road, Toms Brook, VA 22660 (540) 436-3517 www.poseythisisitllamas.com We also do BIRTHDAY PARTIES / TOURS • FREE ADMISSION • DONATIONS ACCEPTED

SHEN VALLEY TIRES llc Check out our Sister Store in Strasburg Friday, Saturday & Sunday 11-5 Store: (540) 465-1798 By appointment: (540) 336-6106 134 Massanutten St. (Beside the Emporium)

Josh Patton Shenandoah Valley Tires 1/8 Pg Ad

Massanutten St. Gallery Large selection of Antiques 41 BOSCAWEN ST., WINCHESTER, VA • 540-667-6065 WWW.BOSCAWENGOLDANDSILVER.COM

Ph. 540-436-9166 24815 Old Valley Pike • Maurertown, VA 22644


The freshest produce at a reasonable price . . . Fresh from the ground up!

WOODBINE FARM MARKET

Last Minute Gift?

5199 John Marshall Hwy, Strasburg, VA • (540) 465-2729

Premade Gourmet Gift Baskets Now Available!

Here are just a few things we carry during the year: ry Pant s o Go d

Presenting Wine Timeless WinesTastings Every Saturday

1/4 Pg Ad 11:00am - 2:00pm

Amarone, Ripasso, Pinotage, Carmenere, Cotes du Pape, Gewurztraminer, Sauternes

• Fresh Baked Goods • Meat • Produce • Wine • Jams & Sauces • Gift Items • Herbs • Bedding Plants

We have

Woodbine Farm Marketfresh baked pies, cakes 1/4 Pg Ad and cookies all season. Don’t forget us for that special occasion or holiday.

Featuring Value Wines Choc ola te from 13 countries. Many Wines $15 and under! Im

Visit www.timelesswines.com for our complete inventory of over 700 wines!

por te ees d e

Ch

8043 Main Street, Middletown, VA 22645 800-417-7821 timelesswines.com

Open 7 Days a Week 9am-6pm

www.woodbinefarmmarket.com

MIKE’S AUTO REPAIR COMPUTER ANALYSIS

Automatic Transmission Service ENGINE CLUTCH • TUNE-UPS Mike’s Auto •Repair AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE • STEERING 1/8 Pg Ad• BRAKES • EXHAUST SUSPENSION

635 Mount Hebron Rd. • Toms Brook, Va. 22660 Mike Rosenberger Owner Operator

540-436-8006

ROTARY CLUB OF NEW MARKET

New Market Rotary 1/8 Pg Ad

MUSIC FESTIVAL PARKING Since 1998 www.newmarketrotaryclub.net

Hotel Strasburg 1/4 Pg Ad




Enjoy Dinner Under the Stars

Shaffer’s Barbecue and Catering Service of Woodstock will offer a variety of high-end picnic food and assorted beverages on the Festival grounds this year! Visit them in the food tent next to the hotel.

Shaffer’s

913 South Main Street Woodstock, VA 22664 (540) 459-3744 www.shaffercatering.com We are also the Official Caterer of the Music Festival!

The Hotels of the Shenandoah Valley Music Festival Holiday Inn Express– Woodstock/Shenandoah Valley

Comfort Inn Woodstock 1011 Motel Drive Woodstock, Va. 22664 (540) 459-7600 ciwoodstock@guestsinc.com comfortinn.com/hotel/va308

Summer 2016 Hotel Sponsor Hampton Inn and Suites of Woodstock 1150 Motel Drive Woodstock, Va. 22664 (540) 459-7111 hamptoninnwoodstock.com

1130 Motel Drive Woodstock, Va. 22664 (540) 459-5000 hiewoodstock.com

New this year! Our venue host, Shrine Mont and SVMF are offering a package that includes lodging and tickets! For more information, call Shrine Mont at (540) 856-2141; email shrine@shentel.net or go to shrinemont.com. For a list of other accommodations in Shenandoah County, please visit our website, www.musicfest.org or the Shenandoah County Tourism Website, www.shenandoahtravel.org.



Shenandoah-Blue Ridge Music Consortium 2016 Summer Events

Experience V ginia’s Beauty in Music





Come Visit New Market The New Market Chamber of Commerce Welcomes You To Its

NEW MARKET HERITAGE DAYS September 24 & 25, 2016 “The Rinards and Brian Buchanan�

The

Home Store

Bouncy House, Food & Crafts, Train Display VENDORS NEEDED! Application online: newmarketcoc.net We offer a variety of deposit and loan products for both your personal and business needs. Come in and open your account today! Check out our Sona Basic Business & Totally Free Checking

9484 Congress St. New Market, VA 22844 Phone: (540) 740-3898 www.sonabank.com

www.rhomestore.com

Bring this ad and receive an extra 15% off any regular price item in stock. • MATTRESSES • LIVING ROOM • DINING ROOM • FLOORING 540.740.8855 9369 Congress Street • New Market, VA 22844 Hours: Tues.-Fri. 9-5 & Sat. 9-3

HOME-LAND REALTY CO., INC. Serving the Valley since 1950 Residential, Commercial, Farms & Acreage

Beautiful smiles through exceptional dentistry We offer the entire range of modern dentistry to keep your teeth healthy & beautiful for your entire life!

9626 S. Congress St., New Market • 540-740-8937 www.jeffreyburns.com

EDWIN M. NEWLAND Owner/Broker

9560 S. Congress St, New Market !

www.homelandrealtyva.com

Shenandoah Valley

FLEA MARKET Better Than A Treasure Hunt Indoor/Outdoor Market

75 NEW Vendors and Old Favorites • Antiques • Jewelry • Collectibles • Coins • Furniture • Primitives • New and Used Items

3549 Old Valley Pike, New Market

540-740-3900 Seven Days a Week 9am-5pm

Take a trip back to lazy days & priceless memories


See What We Have To Offer! . .. s u t e g r o f u o y Did

TheBest intheValley forYourBest Friend!

www.dominionfarm.net

Dominion Farm Pet B & B Follow us on Facebook: Dominion Farm Pet B and B

Florin Copaceanu has been a certified Realtor in the New Market area for 15 years. Looking to buy a home in the Shenandoah Valley or Rockingham areas, then you are in the right place. Accent Realty LTD 9611 S. Congress St., New Market

(540) 740-4455 accentrealtyltd.com

PACK’S FROZEN CUSTARD NEW MARKET BUY 1 ITEM AND GET THE 2ND ITEM FREE! Must be of equal or lesser value. Only 1 coupon per order. Expires 8/31/16

Ask about our Punch Card Program!

183 East Lee Hwy • 740-8086 Hours: Mon-Sat 11-10 • Sunday 12-10

From the owners of Shenandoah Place

Shenandoah Terrace

A NEW MEMORY CARE COMMUNITY Dementia care in a safe, secure environment that feels like home. Compassionate, attentive, and state-of-the-art.

Now Accepting Resident Applications: submit online or contact us!

540-740-8600

shenterrace.com

See yourself at home in one of our communities. Here you’re more than a resident – you’re family. Enjoy peace of mind in a community that provides services, comfort & support for a good life.

“Committed to the Well-Being of Others”

www.spa122.com

A place where you can enjoy life to the fullest in communities that value & serve seniors of all faiths.

info@spa122.com

540.740.3211

NEW MARKET FLEA MARKET Open 6 days a week year round 10 am to 5 pm Closed Tuesdays

INDOOR BOOTHS OFFER:

540-740-8591 9138 N Congress St., New Market

www.vlhnet.org

STEVEN CUSTER’S CONSTRUCTION

Antiques, Jewelry, Art, Primitive Items, Books, Coins, Collectibles, Country & Decorative Items, Vintage & Retro, and a wide variety of new & used items.

• Roofing • Guttering • Siding • New Homes • Remodeling

9202 N. Congres St. • New Market

2983 Old Valley Pike, New Market

(former Rescue Squad Building)

540-740-2915

540-740-8029

sfc@shentel.net



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