Logan Brill’s album, “Shuteye,” released this week, should be a wake up call for a dormant Nashville. Continue reading
Category Archives: Music Festival
Rooster Walk Music and Arts Festival Poised to Become Premiere Southeast Roots Rock Event
Rooster Walk Music and Arts Festival is one of the best up-and-coming events you’ve never heard of.
That’s about to change. With this year’s star-studded roots rock lineup and a new home, you can count on it.
Five Questions with The Avett Brothers at MerleFest
WILKESBORO, N.C. — The Avett Brothers, Concord, North Carolina’s favorite musical sons, hit the stage at MerleFest tonight. Members of the folk rock band are no strangers to the Americana festival that has helped kick off the outdoor music season for 28 years — or to its founder, the legendary flat-picker Doc Watson. Today’s appearance is the group’s seventh at MerleFest since 2004 and their second since Watson died in 2012. At a festival press conference this afternoon which was broadcast live using VisitNC‘s Periscope, Twitter’s new livestreaming app, band members — Seth and Scott Avett along with Bob Crawford and Joe Kwon — talked about coming home to their favorite North Carolina barbecue, sustainable farming in Cabarrus County, how they plan to carry on the Watson legacy and what MerleFest means to them.
Rain, The Avett Brothers and The Waybacks’ Hillside Album Hour promise to be MerleFest highlights on Saturday, April 25
WILKESBORO, N.C. — It wouldn’t be MerleFest if it didn’t rain. And unfortunately, after two gorgeous spring days of making music and memories at the 28th annual Americana music festival on the Wilkes Community College campus deep in the Blue Ridge Mountain foothills, the forecast is calling for just that all day Saturday. But don’t let the weathermen (and women) deter you from heading out to what promises to be another day full of musical surprises and more. Continue reading
MerleFest kicks off on Thursday, April 23, with Scythian, LeeAnn Womack, Bela Fleck, Abigail Washburn, Hot Rize and Trampled by Turtles
It appears that music festival season has snuck up on me and maybe you, as well. While AC/DC and Sturgill Simpson played at Coachella last weekend, Phuzz Phest in Winston-Salem, N.C., kicked off the 2015 season with an amazing, three-day lineup that featured an array of bands that attracted even the likes of me. While everything I heard was good (I can appreciate good music even if it’s not always my favorite genre), some of my favorites were the North Carolina acts including Caleb Caudle, The Genuine, Estrangers, Tyler Nail and Mac McCaughan. Continue reading
Trading Tobacco and Textiles for Live Music and Award-Winning Films
If you can point out Winston-Salem on a map, it’s most likely as the home of the Wake Forest University Demon Deacons, R.J. Reynolds, Hanes and Sara Lee. Continue reading
It’s time to give Phuzz Phest a listen
For five years, I have been hearing about Phuzz Phest, an up-and-coming music festival held in the heart of Winston-Salem, N.C., each spring. The festival returns to the Camel City on April 17-19 with more than 60 bands and this year, I am committed to going to hear some of the performances. Continue reading
Emily Lou Harris, Rodney Crowell among FloydFest 2015 lineup; ticket prices go up April 1
Eight reasons you should go to MerleFest 2015
If you are already a fan of MerleFest, then you can skip to No. 1. For the uninitiated, however, MerleFest is the younger, Eastern cousin of the Telluride Bluegrass Festival. I discovered this gem of Americana festivals more than a decade ago after I moved to North Carolina from spending nearly a decade out West attending Telluride. You may be surprised to learn that MerleFest has nothing to do with Merle Haggard, although that has proved confusing over the years. It was especially confusing last year, when the Hag himself closed out the four-day music festival. Instead it is named in memory of Eddy Merle Watson, son of bluegrass legend Doc Watson. Known as one of the best flat-picking and slide guitarists of his generation, Merle Watson died in a farming accident in 1985 at the age of 36. Doc started the Americana festival that bears his son’s name as a fundraiser for Wilkes Community College in 1988 to honor his son and their style of music, that Doc referred to as “traditional plus,” meaning the traditional music of the Appalachian region plus whatever other styles the Watsons were in the mood to play. We lost Doc in 2012 but he and Merle’s celebration of “traditional plus” music, a unique blend based on the traditional, roots-oriented sounds of the Appalachian region, including bluegrass and old-time music, and expanded to include Americana, country, blues, rock and many other styles, continues on at MerleFest. This year’s festival will play host to a diverse number of artists, performing on 13 stages during the course of the four-day event April 23-26. Watch this video from the very first #MerleFest 1988 featuring Mark O’Connor, Tony Rice, Jerry Douglas, Béla Fleck, Sam Bush and John Cowan, many of whom will be performing this year. And there are many more than eight reasons to attend MerleFest. Please feel free to share yours in the comment section. Continue reading







