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Musings on folk, Americana, country, bluegrass and newgrass


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MerleFest shares initial 2023 lineup for 35th festival

Tickets on sale and volunteer opportunities are available

WILKESBORO, N.C. — It’s the most wonderful time of the year … and I’m not talking about the upcoming holidays. Instead, this is the season for finding out who will be performing at next year’s live music festivals and this week’s initial 35th edition of MerleFest‘s lineup announcement for April 27-30, 2023, did not disappoint.

Country music sensation Maren Morris is set to make her MerleFest debut on the campus of Wilkes Community College on Saturday along with the Black Opry Revue who will hit the stage on Friday. And the wildly popular North Carolina natives The Avett Brothers, who first performed at MerleFest in 2004 and are one of the most requested performers in the festival’s history, are set to return on Friday at the festival, which will also honor Doc Watson’s 100th birthday year.

To celebrate the historic milestone event, organizers intend to feature MerleFest’s unique history and present unique collaborations to honor the festival’s founding folk icon.  From the flatbed trailer stage at the 1988 Eddy Merle Watson Memorial Festival to today, and looking into the future, MerleFest, which has served as the unofficial kickoff of the annual outdoor festival season, is an annual homecoming of musicians and music fans. Since its inception, the festival has drawn fans from all over the world to the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains each spring to make music, moments and memories together.

Also joining the lineup, will be award-winning MerleFest veterans Sam Bush, Jerry DouglasPeter Rowan, Jim Lauderdale and Scythian, in addition to many, many more including:

Andy May

Banknotes

Carol Rifkin

Charles Welch

Donna the Buffalo

Jack Lawrence

Jeff Little Trio

Joe Smothers

Kruger Brothers

Laura Boosinger

The Local Boys

Mark Bumgarner

Mitch Greenhill & Mitch’s Kitchen

Pete & Joan Wernick

Presley Barker

Roy Book Binder

T. Michael Coleman

The InterACTive Theater of Jef

The Waybacks

Tony Williamson

Wayne Henderson

To learn more, purchase tickets or to volunteer visit https://merlefest.org/.


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MerleFest to celebrate 35 years April 27-30, 2023

Tickets go on sale Nov. 15, when initial 2023 artist lineup will be announced

Photo by Brent Keane on Pexels.com
WILKESBORO, NORTH CAROLINA — MerleFest, presented by Window World, is planning a 35th celebration on April 27-30, 2023, and a 100th heavenly birthday celebration for Doc Watson.

MerleFest started in 1988 as a fundraiser for the Garden of the Senses on Wilkes Community College to memorialize world-renowned flat picker Eddy Merle Watson, Doc Watson’s son. In keeping with the MerleFest traditions, 2023 will offer jams honoring MerleFest’s past, present and future.

The celebration also aligns with the late Doc Watson’s 100th heavenly birthday. The festival plans to celebrate the life of Doc Watson and the history of MerleFest both visually and musically through vintage videos and artist collaborations.

MerleFest, an annual homecoming of musicians and music fans, occurs on the campus of Wilkes Community College.

Volunteers may choose to work a specific number of days or the entire four-day festival. In exchange for working a four-hour shift, volunteers will receive free entry into the festival for that day, free volunteer parking and shuttle, and a 10% discount on camping at the River’s Edge Campground.

We will begin accepting online applications for its popular volunteer program on Oct. 1.
Those who are interested in volunteering can apply online at www.merlefest.org/volunteer.
Additional information about MerleFest 2023 can be found at www.merlefest.org.


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2022 IBMA Bluegrass Award winners announced

The. 2022 International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA)’s Bluegrass Music Awards were announced on Thursday, Sept. 29, amid three-plus hours of performances ranging from bluegrass royalty to newcomers held at the Duke Energy Performing Arts Center in downtown Raleigh, North Carolina.

Both nominees and winners were chosen by the professional voting membership of the IBMA.

And the winners are…

  • Mandolin Player of the Year – Sierra Hull
  • Bass Player of the Year – Jason Moore
  • Instrumental Recording of the Year – “Vertigo” – Béla Fleck featuring Sam Bush, Stuart Duncan, Edgar Meyer, and Bryan Sutton (artists); Béla Fleck (writer); Béla Fleck (producer); Renew Records (label)
  • Gospel Recording of the Year – “In the Sweet By and By” –Dolly Parton with Carl Jackson, Larry Cordle, Bradley Walker, and Jerry Salley (artists); S. Fillmore Bennett/Joseph Webster (writers); Jerry Salley; (producer), Billy Blue Records (label)
  • Collaborative Recording of the Year – “In the Sweet By and By” –Dolly Parton with Carl Jackson, Larry Cordle, Bradley Walker, and Jerry Salley (artists); S. Fillmore Bennett/Joseph Webster (writers); Jerry Salley; (producer), Billy Blue Records (label)
  • Fiddle Player of the Year – Bronwyn Keith-Hynes
  • Banjo Player of the Year – Béla Fleck
  • Guitar Player of the Year – Cody Kilby
  • Resophonic Guitar Player of the Year – Justin Moses
  • Male Vocalist of the Year – Del McCoury
  • Female Vocalist of the Year – Molly Tuttle
  • Vocal Group of the Year – Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver
  • Song of the Year – “Red Daisy” – Billy Strings (artist); Jarrod Walker/Christian Ward (writers); Rounder Records (label); Jonathan Wilson/Billy Strings (producers)
  • Instrumental Group of the Year – Béla Fleck’s My Bluegrass Heart
  • New Artist of the Year – Rick Faris
  • Album of the Year – Béla Fleck’s “My Bluegrass Heart”
  • Entertainer of the Year – Billy Strings


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IBMA announces Momentum Awards 2022 winners

Full Cord performs at IBMA Momentum Awards lunch on Wednesday, Sept. 28.

The annual International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA) Momentum Awards lunch has historically been one of the best places to discover new talent and Wednesday’s event was no exception.

Sponsored by Campbell University School of Law, the luncheon included live and recorded performances from the five groups nominated for Momentum Band of the Year, which was won by Full Cord of Grand Haven, Michigan, whose members were shocked and surprised they beat out who they considered very tough competition, frontman Brian Oberlin said after the awards were announced. Full Cord was also this year’s winner of the Telluride Bluegrass Competition.

Oberlin asked the crowd just before the band started playing for a Raleigh Convention Center ballroom packed full of artists, fans, promoters, record label producers, music writers and marketers, “Raise your hands … Who here is hearing bluegrass for the first time?,” which was met with a hearty round of laughter and apparently a single raised hand.

Other Momentum Award winners were:

Vocalist of the year – Rebekka Nilsson, lead songstress of the Norway-based Hayde Bluegrass Orchestra, which was also up for band of the year. Her haunting performance of “Wayfaring Stranger” left no doubt as to why she was chosen for this year’s award in this particular category.

Rebekka Nilsson

Industry Involvement – Lillian Werbin, president and co-owner of Elderly Instruments, who is on the board of directors of the IBMA Foundation and Bluegrass Pride. She also serves on IBMA’s Arnold Shultz Advisory Committee.

Mentor of the Year – Della Mae’s Kimber Ludiker. In addition to touring and performing, she serves as the director of the California Bluegrass Association’s Youth Academy, co-coordinator of IBMA Kids on Bluegrass, director of the Bluegrass Camp at Ashokan and producer-host of the Bluegrass Academy and Bluegrass Campout.

Instrumentalist(s) of the Year – The first award went to Harry Clark, a mandolin and guitar player who performs with East Nash Grass (also up for band of the year), the Dan Tyminski Band and the Wooks. The second award was presented to George Jackson, a fiddle and banjo player, who has performed with Front Country, Peter Rowan and Missy Raines, among others.

ABOUT THE IBMA MOMENTUM AWARDS

The Momentum Awards recognize impressive new talent in the bluegrass world, on both the musical side of our community. These awards focus on artists and businesspeople who are in the early years of their careers in bluegrass music. Learn more at this link.


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Carolina Bible Camp Bluegrass Festival celebrates 10th anniversary with Kruger Brothers, Junior Sisk

The Carolina Bible Camp Bluegrass Festival was started in 2011 by the Camp’s Board of Directors as a fundraiser for the Camp’s scholarship and capital development funds. According to organizers, it has achieved that goal, operating in the black every year thanks to careful planning and generous stewardship of the festival’s sponsors, organizational team, and volunteers.

This year’s festival set for Saturday, Sept. 10, will feature The Kruger Brothers, the Junior Sisk Band, the Carly Arrowood Band and Big Ron Hunter.

The festival has also become a way to introduce a larger community to the Camp, and to bring Camp friends and family together for a special annual event.

In 2019, Carolina Country magazine readers voted Carolina Bible Camp Bluegrass Festival the winner of the inaugural “Carolina’s Finest” award for the Best Festival in the state of North Carolina! In 2020, the COVID-19 global pandemic and state restrictions prohibited us from holding the festival. We were more grateful than ever to gather together in 2021, and again, we were blessed to win the Carolina Country “Carolina’s Finest” award for Best Festival.

Each year, we pray for a “successful” festival as our Heavenly Father would define success!

For tickets and more information, visit https://www.cbcbluegrass.com/


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Front Porch Fest 13 lineup set for Labor Day Weekend 2022

From the good folks at Front Porch Fest:
Welcome to the Porch, new artists! 

Lonesome River Band 
Goodfellers
Sisters & Brothers
Borrowed Earth
Billy Woods
Maggie Blankenship
Riggs Roberson & Griffin Haley
Maggie May & the Summer Heat
Liv Sloan & The Die Hards

We couldn’t be more pleased to have world renowned bluegrass artists Lonesome River Band join us this year! They perfectly round out the Front Porch Fest 13 musical lineup, alongside many other amazing artists.  You can find out more about the full lineup here!This may the final lineup announcement, but stay tuned to your inbox and FPF social media outlets for additional information and updates!

The 13th annual Front Porch Fest will be held at Spirithaven Farm on Labor Day weekend, September 1- 4, 2022. We are proud to offer a wide range of talented local, regional, and national music acts; children’s activities; vendors, merchandise, and more. Front Porch Fest provides fun for the entire family while raising money and awareness for local community organizations and charities. It is produced by One Family Productions and presented by Patrick County, Virginia

TICKETS AVAILABLE NOW

4-Day General Admission (Tier 3): $140

Ticket includes access to the event for one person, Thursday-Sunday. Tent camping is included with ticket. Parking must be purchased separately online or at the gate. 

4 Day VIP: $300 [GOING FAST!]
VIP ticketholders receive homemade meals, continental breakfasts, beer tickets (must be 21), and a swag bag to include: Front Porch Fest branded merchandise, FPF merch shack discounts, vendor coupons, and sponsor provided swag.  The VIP lounge features special performances, free pour hours and free specialty food events. 

A VIP ticket includes premium VIP only camping (first come first serve) & standard parking. If you are interested in car camping or bringing an RV, those tickets must be purchased separately.

Car Camping: $60 [SOLD OUT]
Car Camping tickets include access to a 20×20 space for 1 car, 1 tent, and 1 10×10 canopy.  Limited quantities available.RV Pass: $120 [LOW TICKET WARNING]
RV Tickets include access for one RV/Pull Behind Camper up to 30 feet. Each RV space will accommodate room for one vehicle.

Parking: $10
All General Admission and Single Day ticket holders must purchase a parking pass (one pass per vehicle – carpooling is encouraged!).  This pass grants parking on-site, just a short walk to the festival grounds.

The festival is a family friendly event and children 12 and under are free!
Please add (1) 4 Day GA (Child 12 and under) ticket to your order per little one!


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IBMA announces full lineup for 2022 IBMA World of Bluegrass on Sept. 27-Oct. 1 in Raleigh

From the good folks at the International World of Bluegrass (IBMA):

Organizers of this year’s IBMA World of Bluegrass, taking place Sept. 27-Oct. 1 in downtown Raleigh, N.C., have revealed the full lineup of artists and daily schedule of performances for IBMA Bluegrass Live! powered by PNC.

The weekend festival will offer both ticketed and free Main Stage performances at Red Hat Amphitheater, and on five additional free StreetFest Stages in downtown Raleigh Friday, Sept. 30-Saturday, Oct. 1.

Main Stage performances at Red Hat Amphitheater for this year’s festival will begin at 5 p.m. both days and will feature premier bluegrass acts for six hours each day.

Additionally:

● This year’s festival includes a curated Arts Market featuring makers from local partners Artsplosure and Black Friday Market.

● Junior Appalachian Musicians (JAM) will be back at the Martin Street stage, sponsored by Ron and Nancy McFarlane, for the first time in three years. This stage is a festival favorite and an excellent way to showcase these young musicians’ talent, passion and authentic connection to the music.

● The Come Hear NC Stage returns to the open space in front of the Duke Energy Center for the Performing Arts. New this year is a beer garden featuring craft beers, as well as games and activities for the whole family to enjoy.

“When the festival is in town every third person has a fiddle, guitar or banjo on their back. It’s one of the best times of the year in downtown Raleigh,” said David Brower, festival producer and Executive Director of PineCone, the Raleigh-based non-profit that produces the festival. “I’m especially excited about the Capitol Stage, which this year features Southern gospel traditions, including bluegrass, string band and quartet gospel from Eastern North Carolina. It will be a joyful sound on that end of downtown.”

For the 10th year, PNC Bank returns as the presenting sponsor of IBMA Bluegrass Live! powered by PNC. “As PNC commemorates 10 years of doing business in North Carolina, we can’t think of a better way to demonstrate our long-term commitment to the Triangle than by helping bring regionally meaningful live music to the streets of downtown Raleigh,” said Jim Hansen, PNC regional president for Eastern Carolinas. “This sponsorship represents one of the many ways PNC is supporting the community and driving economic impact locally.”

The schedule for the Main Stage performances at Red Hat Amphitheater:

Friday, Sept. 30

5:00 p.m. Twisted Pine

6:00 p.m. Balsam Range

7:05 p.m. Peter Rowan Bluegrass Band

8:10 p.m. Molly Tuttle & Golden Highway

9:30 p.m. Jerry Douglas Band

Saturday, Oct. 1

5:00 p.m. Della Mae

6:00 p.m. Dan Tyminski

7:05 p.m. Dom Flemons & Shultz’s Dream, featuring: Brian Farrow, Dante Pope, Richard Brown

and Tray Wellington

8:10 p.m. Sierra Hull

9:30 p.m. Infamous Stringdusters

Friday, Sept. 30 StreetFest Schedule:

Come Hear NC Stage (located on the flat parking lot in front of the Duke Energy Center for the Performing Arts)

Buffalo Commons

Jim Lauderdale

Dewey & Leslie Brown and the Carolina Gentlemen

Sister Sadie

California Bluegrass Reunion: Darrol Anger, Chad Manning, Jim Nunally, Bill Evans,

John Reischman, Sharon Gilchrist

Tray Wellington Band

Frank Solivan & Dirty Kitchen

Darin & Brooke Aldridge

Della Mae

Davie Street Stage (located near the intersection of Davie and Fayetteville streets)

California Bluegrass Reunion: Darrol Anger, Chad Manning, Jim Nunally, Bill Evans,

John Reischman, Sharon Gilchrist

Steve Smith & Tim May

Stillhouse Junkies

Crying Uncle Bluegrass Band

Joe Newberry & Jim Collier

Terry Baucom’s Dukes of Drive

Sister Sadie

Gangstagrass

The Sweet Lillies

Martin Street Stage (located on Martin Street between Fayetteville and Wilmington streets)

JAM curated bands

Twisted Pine

Liam Purcell & Cane Mill Road

Slocan Ramblers

Capitol Stage (located on Fayetteville Street between Martin & Hargett streets)

Dedicated Men of Zion

Mountain Highway

Lorraine Jordan

Caleb Serrano

Alan Bibey & Grasstowne

Dedicated Men of Zion

City Plaza Youth Stage (located on Fayetteville Street across from the Marriott)

Kids on Bluegrass

Fair Black Rose

BJUgrass (Bob Jones University)

UNC Asheville Bluegrass Band

ETSU Bluegrass Pride Band

Denison University Bluegrass Ensemble

KSBTM Bluegrass Band (Hazard Community & Technical College)

Tigertown Roots (Clemson University)

Belmont University Bluegrass Ensemble

World of Bluegrass Open Bluegrass Jams

Dan Bui (Twisted Pine)

Gangstagrass

Crying Uncle Bluegrass Band

Hank Pattie & The Current

Saturday, Oct. 1 StreetFest Schedule

Come Hear NC Stage (located on the flat parking lot in front of the Duke Energy Center for the Performing Arts)

Rocky Creek Ramblers

Violet Bell

John Hartford Fiddle Tune Project: The Tour

Tray Wellington Band

Special Consensus

Unspoken Tradition

Sideline

Henhouse Prowlers

Gangstagrass

Davie Street Stage (located near the intersection of Davie and Fayetteville streets)

Hayde Bluegrass Orchestra

Fair Black Rose

East Nash Grass

Earl White String Band

Danny Paisley

Hank, Pattie & The Current

Missy Raines & Allegheny

Chris Jones & the Nightdrivers

Damn Tall Buildings

Martin Street Stage (located on Martin Street between Fayetteville and Wilmington streets)

JAM curated bands

Diamond Creek

Into the Fog

Buffalo Commons

Capitol Stage (located on Fayetteville Street between Martin & Hargett streets)

The Burnett Sisters

The Gospel Jubilators

Dave Adkins Band

The Glorifying Vines

The Cockman Family

Brother Jerry Harrison & Faith

Darin & Brooke Aldridge

Faith & Harmony

City Plaza Youth Stage (located on Fayetteville Street across from the Marriott)

Kids on Bluegrass

UNC Bluegrass Band

Berea College

Colorado College

Berklee College of Music

Morehead State University

KSBTM Bluegrass Band (Hazard Community & Technical College)

Pellissippi State Community College

World of Bluegrass Open Bluegrass Jams (Market Plaza, Fayetteville St)

Earl White

Youth Jam with Fair Black Rose & The Loblollies

Tray Wellington

Hank, Pattie & The Current

All performers listed are subject to change. Updated artist information, as well as performance times and stages, will be posted in September at https://worldofbluegrass.org/festival Schedules will also be posted at each stage, and QR codes posted throughout the festival will allow festival-goers to access the full schedule and festival map on their phones. Participants who want a printed schedule are encouraged to print that ahead of time from the IBMA World of Bluegrass website.

Pat Morris, Executive Director of IBMA, offered additional comments on today’s schedule announcement: “What a great lineup for this year’s IBMA Bluegrass Live! powered by PNC. Music fans can enjoy great bluegrass from excellent musicians in a festive environment like no other. Come to Raleigh and surround yourself with the best fans in the world enjoying the best music in the world.”

A portion of the proceeds from IBMA Bluegrass Live! powered by PNC supports the IBMA Trust Fund, a 501(c)(3) that provides direct financial assistance to bluegrass artists and other industry professionals in times of emergency need. Since its creation in 1987, the Trust Fund has given more than $1,000,000 in direct aid. To meet the needs of the bluegrass community during the pandemic, the IBMA Trust Fund Board of Trustees established an account specifically for COVID-19 Relief.

Information about Red Hat Amphitheater ticketing, IBMA Bluegrass Ramble showcase passes, IBMA Business Conference registration, IBMA Bluegrass Music Awards tickets and hotel reservations are available at the IBMA World of Bluegrass website, WorldofBluegrass.org.

Additional sponsors who helped make this year’s festival and World of Bluegrass week events possible include Come Hear NC, Ron and Nancy McFarlane, JAM, Chevy, WRAL, Wegmans, Michelob Ultra, Wicked Weed, Stella Artois, Devil’s Backbone, Boone, WakeMed, Pepsi, Cheerwine, Nature’s Twist, Parker Poe, Bandwidth, NC Lotto, Chick-fil-A, RALIcares, Campbell University School of Law and others.

More info about IBMA World of Bluegrass and the IBMA Bluegrass Live! powered by PNC Festival

IBMA World of Bluegrass is the most important week in bluegrass. The week encompasses four events: the IBMA Business Conference, Sept. 27-29; the IBMA Bluegrass Ramble, an innovative series of showcases taking place Sept. 27-29 in downtown Raleigh and at the Raleigh Convention Center; the 33rd Annual IBMA Bluegrass Music Awards scheduled for Thurs. evening, Sept. 29; and IBMA Bluegrass Live! powered by PNC, Sept. 30-Oct. 1, a two-day festival. IBMA Bluegrass Live! features the best of the best in bluegrass today, benefiting the IBMA Trust Fund.

As in years past, events during World of Bluegrass will take place at the Raleigh Convention Center, the Duke Energy Center for the Performing Arts, the Red Hat Amphitheater and at various venues in town.

Volunteer for Wide Open Bluegrass and other World of Bluegrass events: https://worldofbluegrass.org/participate/volunteer/

Learn more about accessibility efforts that are part of the whole World of Bluegrass: https://worldofbluegrass.org/accessibility/

IBMA – the International Bluegrass Music Association – is the non-profit music association that connects, educates, and empowers bluegrass professionals and enthusiasts, honoring tradition and encouraging innovation in the bluegrass community worldwide.

PineCone is the Piedmont Council of Traditional Music. It is a Raleigh-based non-profit that serves as the official local host and festival producer for IBMA’s World of Bluegrass. It was founded in 1984 by a group of friends looking to preserve, present and promote music and dance that’s rooted in the Piedmont. PineCone hosts year-round events that highlight rich and diverse musical traditions that’ve been passed down informally for generations. There’s more about PineCone’s concerts, jam sessions, workshops, camps, youth programs and weekly radio show at Pinecone.org.

PNC Bank, National Association, is a member of The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. (NYSE: PNC). PNC is one of the largest diversified financial services institutions in the United States, organized around its customers and communities for strong relationships and local delivery of retail and business banking including a full range of lending products; specialized services for corporations and government entities, including corporate banking, real estate finance and asset-based lending; wealth management and asset management. For information about PNC, visit http://www.pnc.com.

The City of Raleigh is the capital of North Carolina, home to several colleges and universities, with a vibrant performing arts community. Fueled by an impressive mix of education, ingenuity and collaboration, North Carolina’s capital city has become an internationally recognized leader in life science and technology innovation.

Greater Raleigh Convention and Visitors Bureau (Visit Raleigh)

As the official destination marketing organization for Wake County, the Greater Raleigh Convention and Visitors Bureau (Visit Raleigh), is responsible for promoting Wake County as an attractive travel destination and enhancing its public image as a dynamic place to live and work. Through the impact of travel, the organization strengthens the economic position of and provide opportunity for people throughout Wake County. Raleigh, N.C./Wake County welcomes nearly 13 million visitors annually whose spending tops $1.7 billion. The visitor economy supports more than 17,000 local jobs in Wake County and generates $186 million in state and local tax revenues, saving each Wake County household $470 in taxes annually. visitRaleigh.com

About Raleigh Convention and Performing Arts Complex

The Raleigh Convention and Performing Arts Complex encompasses four city-owned and managed facilities that bring together local residents, out-of-town visitors and a host of performing artists from around the country and the world.

In the heart of North Carolina’s vibrant capitol city, three of the four venues welcome some 1 million visitors to downtown Raleigh each year. The award-winning, 500,000-square-foot Raleigh Convention Center is a leader in innovation, sustainability and guest experience. Next door sits the city’s signature open-air music venue, the Red Hat Amphitheater, with 6,000 seats and a buzzworthy schedule of musical performances.

A short walk away, the Duke Energy Center for the Performing Arts offers four unique theaters, seating from 150 to 2,369, and is home to resident companies Carolina Ballet, North Carolina Theatre, North Carolina Symphony, North Carolina Opera and PineCone. Beyond Downtown Raleigh, Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek boasts a 20,000-person capacity amphitheater on 77 rolling green acres and regularly packs the house with big-name acts.www.raleighconvention.com/complex


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Earl Scruggs Music Festival to finally take off over Labor Day Weekend, Sept. 2-4

In 2019, I was on hand at the International Bluegrass Music Association’s annual conference and festival for Jerry Douglas’s announcement about the new Earl Scruggs Music Festival to be held over Labor Day Weekend in 2020.

Nearly three years later, festival organizers are thrilled to announce that the inaugural event will be held Sept. 2-4 at Tryon International Equestrian Center in Mill Spring, North Carolina.

The star-studded lineup includes Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Béla Fleck, Sam BushMolly Tuttle & Golden HighwayThe Earls of LeicesterLeftover Salmon, Alison Brown, Town Mountain and festival host Jerry Douglas. In addition, the festival features a choice display of North Carolina talent including Rissi PalmerDarin & Brooke AldridgeBalsam Range and more (see complete lineup below.)

The festival is partnering with internationally recognized roots music brand The Bluegrass Situation to present a tribute to one of the most iconic Earl Scruggs Revue albums, “Live at Kansas State.” Dexterous bluegrass quintet Fireside Collective (also slated for a Friday night set of original music) will lead an all-star outfit in a revival of the 1972 recording with special guest, ESMF artist-in-residence Douglas, plus a slew of surprise cameos. The landmark event will take place Saturday afternoon (Sept. 3) on the Foggy Mountain Stage. Facilitating world-class showcases across festival stages and musical events in all corners of the country, The Bluegrass Situation is a prime collaborator for Earl Scruggs Music Festival, and organizers look forward to building on the partnership in the years to come.

While first-rate live music remains at the forefront of ESMF programming, organizers have also curated a series of interactive workshops for those who are looking to round out their festival experience. Thought-provoking presentations like “Earl’s Nashville Years,” moderated by journalist and guitarist Tommy Goldsmith and featuring insight from Sam BushBéla Fleck and Jerry Douglas, “Meet the Authors” with WMOT producer and writer Craig HavighurstTommy Goldsmith, veteran music and arts critic David Menconi and more will take place on the Legends Workshop Stage throughout the weekend.

Weekend and single-day passes to Earl Scruggs Music Festival are on sale now via the festival’s website. A limited number of General Admission and Grandstand Weekend tickets are still available at the current pricing level of $200 and $250, respectively. Patron VIP passes are now sold out. To explore premium options, purchase tickets, and stay up-to-date on all things Earl Scruggs Music Festival, visit earlscruggsmusicfestival.com.

Earl Scruggs Music Festival 2022 Lineup
Hosted by Jerry Douglas
Featuring:
The Earls of Leicester
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
Sam Bush Band
Bela Fleck My Bluegrass Heart
Alison Brown
Molly Tuttle & Golden Highway
Leftover Salmon
Balsam Range
Rob Ickes & Trey Hensley
Town Mountain
Chatham County Line
Acoustic Syndicate
Fireside Collective
Dom Flemons
Darin & Brooke Aldridge
Becky Buller Band
Laura Boosinger & Josh Goforth
Lakota John
Chatham Rabbits
Jon Stickley Trio
Fireside Collective
Unspoken Tradition
The Barefoot Movement
Rissi Palmer
Bella White

About Earl Scruggs Music Festival
Established in partnership with WNCW 88.7 at Isothermal Community College in Spindale, NC and the Earl Scruggs Center located in Shelby, NC, Earl Scruggs Music Festival will celebrate the legacy of an American music legend who pioneered a unique style of banjo picking, coined “Scruggs style.” His collaborations with Bill Monroe & the Blue Grass Boys, as well as Lester Flatt and the Foggy Mountain Boys helped to christen the bluegrass genre in the late 1940s. With a standout lineup featuring the best in traditional roots music and progressive fusions, Earl Scruggs Music Festival will illuminate the profound impact that Scruggs had on American culture, while uplifting fresh and noteworthy voices in the genre. A portion of proceeds will support the festival’s beneficiaries, the Earl Scruggs Center and Isothermal Community College, who serve Earl Scruggs’ home region of the Carolina Foothills with cultural programming through multiple channels.


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Rooster Walk Music & Arts Festival 2022 set for May 26-29

Rooster Walk Music & Arts Festival has announced the third and final wave of music performers for the much-anticipated 2022 festival, scheduled for May 26-29 in Martinsville, Virginia.

Rooster Walk returns with a diverse bill featuring a remarkable selection of over 40 artists performing across 6 stages over the four-day festival. Grace Potter joins Little Feat and Lettuce atop the festival lineup, which features something for everyone! Many ticket options have low inventory; others have already sold out.

Purchase tickets at this link: INFO & TICKETS

In addition to four days of amazing tunes, the family-friendly Rooster Walk will offer a wide variety of kids’ activities, craft beer, great food, arts and numerous opportunities to enjoy Virginia’s great outdoors with kayak tours, bike rides, yoga, a disc golf course and beautiful on-site camping.Rooster Walk has been consistently voted as a Top 3 Best Music Festival and Best Family-Friendly Festival by the Blue Ridge Outdoors Magazine’s Best of the Blue Ridge. It also has been voted the region’s Most Creative Charitable Event by readers of Virginia Living Magazine, among other accolades. The festival was created in memory of late Martinsville natives Edwin “The Rooster” Penn and Walker Shank, who graduated from Martinsville High School in 2000.A portion of proceeds from the festival will be donated to local and regional charities, including Rooster Walk’s own Penn-Shank Memorial Endowment Scholarship Fund for students at Martinsville High School, and the Rooster Walk Music Instrument Program for public band programs in the local city and county school systems.

Learn more at this link: https://roosterwalk.com/


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Will Easter and The Nomads win 2022 MerleFest Band Competition

WILKESBORO, N.C. — Stokes County native Will Easter and his band, The Nomads, were declared the winners of the 2022 MerleFest Band Competition.

“I’m still in shock,” Easter said after finding out he and his band had won the contest.

Since MerleFest’s inception, the festival has fostered and provided opportunities to up-an-coming musicians, songwriters, local and regional artists and other undiscovered talent from around the country and this year was no exception.

MerleFest continues that tradition each year by inviting eight groups to not only perform during Saturday’s events but also compete for the chance to perform on the Hillside Stage in front of thousands of festival-goers.

This year’s other band competitors included:

The Blue Ridge Girls

The Burnett Sisters Band & Colin Ray

His & Hers

Jack Marion & The Pearl Snap Prophets

Love & Valor

South Hill Banks

Judged by members of The Local Boys, the band competition winner was announced by host Mark Bumgarner and the lucky group received a coveted spot on the Hillside Stage’s Sunday lineup at 11 a.m. The band played a rousing set to an appreciative crowd. And The Boot named Easter’s set among the best at the festival.

“For some, performing at one of the nation’s largest Americana music festivals is a springboard for their musical careers, while for all the participants it is a once in a lifetime experience,” Bumgarner said. “The level of talent has been incredible and continues to wow the crowds each year.”

“Offering insight into some of the most premier up and coming talent across the nation, this competition is sure to impress,” adds judge and The Local Boys band member John Aaron Soots.

Not only a fan-favorite event, this annual gathering of next-generation bands is near and dear to MerleFest organizers’ hearts as well.

“The band contest is a great opportunity to discover your next favorite up-and-coming band. Every year the talent and quality continue to impress, and audiences get a chance to feel like they’re discovering the next big thing before they hit the Watson Stage,” says MerleFest Artist Relations Manager Lindsay Craven. “We love getting the local and regional talent on our stages and playing for our audience.”