Blues Festival 2011 Program

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2011 Centrum Summer Season Fort Worden State Park Port Townsend, WA

Port Townsend Acoustic Blues Festival

August 3-6

Taj Mahal,

appearing at the 2011 Port Townsend Acoustic Blues Festival

Complimentary Program Guide


Port Townsend Acoustic Blues Festival Welcome Greetings blues lovers! Welcome to the 2011 Port Townsend Acoustic Blues festival. Whether you are a vocalist, guitarist, pianist, bassist, banjo, washboard, harmonica or accordion player, Centrum has something for you. Put down the cell phone, the laptop and the TV remote and pick up an instrument to play the music you love. This year we welcome Taj Mahal, Pura Fé, Otis Taylor, and Mali’s master griot, Cheick Hamala Diabaté, among many others. Each faculty member is hand-picked for their artistry and their dedication to teaching.

2011 Centrum Summer Season CONCERTS FOR KIDS AduLTS $5/KidS FREE Tickets available at the door only (ages 3 and up) Fort Worden Chapel, 11:00 AM FRidAY, AuGuST 5 Lauren Sheehan Centrum thanks the Congdon-Hanson Family for their support of youth programs.

Lauren Sheehan

FREE FRIDAYS AT THE FORT Corey Harris

Make the most of the festival by checking out the pavilion shows and club jams, and get to know these outstanding musicians, and the music they make. Step outside the box and try something new! If you have always wanted to sing but were afraid to try, or if there is an instrument that you have always wanted to pick up, now is your chance. I am looking forward to seeing you all soon. Thanks, Corey Harris Artistic Director

The lunchtime concert and reading series, on the lawn of the Fort Worden Commons. All events take place from noon to 1:00 PM, and are open to the public at no cost. July 29: Jazz Port Townsend Participant Big Band, Directed by Clarence Acox August 5: Orville Johnson & Friends

CENTRUM FESTIVAL TICKET INFORMATION

VENUE INFORMATION

By web: centrum.org By phone: 1-800-746-1982 In person: Centrum Office, 223 Battery Way, Fort Worden State Park (12:30-4 p.m., Monday-Friday) or at the venue box office one hour prior to show time. Special needs: For impaired hearing, vision or mobility issues, please call Centrum at 360-385-3102 ext. 110. Programs and artists subject to change. All sales are final.

McCuRdY PAViLiON – a 1,200-seat fully enclosed seasonal theater at Fort Worden State Park with excellent sightlines. For matinee performances, lawn seating may be available on Littlefield Green; these tickets may be available one hour prior to performance and have limited sight visibility.

Ticket Prices Taj Mahal: $25-$40 BluesFest: $18-$33 Club Pass: $25

A $1 per ticket processing fee is added to in-person orders; a $3 processing fee is added to phone and web orders. Under 18: tickets are free. Please no babes in arms or strollers for indoor performances.

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ViSiTOR SERViCES The Port Townsend Visitor Information Center, located at the Park & Ride lot (440 12th Street, Port Townsend, WA) can help with directions, accommodations, and other information. You may also visit the Port Townsend tourism website at www.enjoypt. com, or call 360.385.2722, or 888.ENJOYPT (888.365.6978).

Authentic Indian Cuisine

Enjoy alfresco dining on our summer patio!

t Laurette SweeCafé & Bistro

Lunch t Buffe $8.95

Featuring Fresh Farmers’ Market Produce! Open 7 Days a Week

Happy Hour Daily 1/2 Price Appetizers & Drink Specials 4-6 pm

Muskan Indian RESTAURANT & BAR 2330 Washington St. • Port Townsend, WA (across from Aladdin Motor Inn) 360-379-9275

The Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader • 2011 Centrum summer season

Breakfast & Lunch: Wed/Thur/Fri: 8 am-2:30 pm Brunch: Sat. 8 am - 2:30 pm, Sun. 8 am - 2 pm Dinner: Fri/Sat & Sun: 5-9pm Closed Mondays & Tuesdays 1029 Lawrence St. • 360-385-4886 www.sweetlaurette.com

Wednesday, July 27, 2011


WEdNESdAY, AuGuST 3 Taj Mahal Trio with guest, Corey Harris 7:30 PM / McCurdy Pavilion Corey Harris Intermission Taj Mahal Trio ___________________________ FRidAY, AuGuST 5 Concerts for Kids 11 AM / Fort Worden Chapel Lauren Sheehan Free Fridays at the Fort 12 PM/ Fort Worden Commons Lawn Orville Johnson & Friends Blues in the Clubs 8 PM to 12 AM See page 7 for schedule ___________________________ SATuRdAY, AuGuST 6 The 20th Annual down-Home Country BluesFest 1:30 PM / McCurdy Pavilion Jerron Paxton Guy Davis Otis Taylor Intermission

Blues in the Clubs 8 PM to 12 AM See page 7 for schedule

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Corey Harris, Artistic director, is an accomplished guitarist, songwriter and performer, whose musical artistry is complemented by serious explorations of the historical and cultural conditions that gave rise to the blues. He has demonstrated the boundless expressive power of the music by weaving traditional styles with elements from jazz, reggae, gospel, and African and Caribbean folk music. Harris’ imaginative compositions spark renewed interest in the musical potential of the blues, sometimes forgoing the traditional 12-bar structure and mimetic repetition common to the style. In this way, Harris has forged an adventurous path marked by deliberate eclecticism. With one foot in tradition and the other in contemporary experimentation, he blends musical styles often considered separate and distinct to create something entirely new. In September, 2007 Harris was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship. He has been the Artistic Director of the Port Townsend Acoustic Blues Festival since 2009. After his days in The Inkwell Rhythm Makers, Kit Stovepipe teamed with female vocalist and tenor banjo player, Caliope Kane to form The Crow Quill Night Owls, and much like the Rhythm Makers, they’ve built their sound around Kit’s signature resophonic guitar playing and old-timey charisma. They perform all over the Pacific Northwest and beyond, sharing their love of the Memphis Jug Band, Dallas String Band, Andrew & Jim Baxter, Mississippi John Hurt, and others. Bruce “Sunpie” Barnes is a veteran musician, park ranger, actor, former high school biology teacher, and former NFL player with the Kansas City Chiefs. His career has taken him far and wide, travelling to over 35 countries playing his own style of blues, zydeco and Afro-Louisiana music incorporating Caribbean and African influenced rhythms and melodies. With his musical group “Sunpie and the Louisiana Sunspots,” he has played festivals and concerts across New Orleans and the US, as well as internationally. Guy davis is a musician, composer, actor, director, and writer, but most importantly, Guy Davis is a bluesman. He has dedicated himself to reviving the traditions of acoustic blues and bringing them to as many listeners as possible through the material of the great blues masters, African American stories, and his own original songs, stories and performance pieces. Raised in the New York City area, he grew up hearing accounts of life in the rural south from his parents and especially his grandparents, and they made their way into his own stories and songs. And it’s his storytelling set in an acoustic blues framework that sets him apart from his contemporaries.

Cheick Hamala diabaté is recognized around the world as a master of the ngoni, a Malian traditional instrument. His performances have been featured at such notable venues as The Smithsonian Institute, the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, and the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Fest. At an early age, he mastered the ngoni, a stringed lute and ancestor to the banjo. He later learned to play the guitar from his uncle, legendary Super Rail Band guitarist Djelimady Tounkara.

Based out of New York, the Ebony Hillbillies are Henrique Prince - fiddle, Norris Bennett - banjo, Newman Baker - washboard and percussion, William Salter – bass, and Gloria Gassaway – vocals. Whether they play for thousands of people at Carnegie Hall or a crowd at Grand Central station, The Ebony Hillbillies bring history alive with the still vibrant sound of Americana. They’ve maintained their grassroots credibility while inspiring heartstring tugs and toe-taps in fans of all types of music, and with a musical repertoire that pays homage to the traditional, but with an eye on the future. Pura Fé is a founding member of the internationally renowned native woman’s a capella trio, Ulali, and is recognized for creating a new genre, bringing Native contemporary music to the forefront of the mainstream music industry. Pura Fé, whose Spanish name translates as “Pure Faith,” was raised by her mother and a gifted family of female singers that are decedents of the Tuscarora Nation that had migrated from North Carolina to New York in the early 1900’s. Mark Graham grew up in Renton, Washington and has been playing blues and country music on the harmonica since 1970. With an encyclopedic knowledge of Southern country and blues styles, he has mastered the hallmark traditional harmonica solos and the call and response song accompaniment reminiscent of Sonny Terry and Peg Leg Sam. Mark has performed at such venues as The Newport Folk Festival, The Prairie Home Companion, and Festival Hall in London, England and has taught at The Augusta Heritage Festival.

CONTiNuEd ON PG. 4

August 3 - 6

Erwin Helfer Nat Reese Pura Fé

Biographies

pt acoustic blues festival

PORT TOWNSEND ACOUSTIC BLUES FESTIVAL PROGRAM

2011 Centrum summer season • The Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader

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Biographies (cont.) Erwin Helfer is a Chicago boogie woogie innovator and master, whose way of playing the piano reflects the impertinence of youth paired with the expertise and humorous wisdom of age, mellowed and ripened in blues joints, jazz clubs and concert halls in the States, Europe and Asia. While in New Orleans, Erwin studied with Professor Longhair and Tuts Washington, worked with trumpeter Punch Miller, and recorded with Peg Leg Willie and Big Joe Williams. For many years, Erwin accompanied Mama Yancey, and was also mentored and influenced by Cripple Clarence Lofton, Speckled Red, and Sunnyland Slim. Son Jack Jr. & Michael Wilde are an award winning traditional blues duo based out of Seattle, WA, with more than 30 years of touring and recording experience. They released their first album in September 2010 to widespread and regular airplay, and have been in the top 10 on the Roots Music Report chart since December 2010, reaching #2 for Washington and the national Top 50. They appeared at Portland’s Waterfront Blues Festival in 2009 and again in 2010, and earned the right to compete at the International Blues Challenge semi-finals in Memphis, TN. The Jelly Rollers combine compelling rhythms, guitar licks, and rousing harmonies to create their own brand of infectious blues. Best known for packing dance floors across the Northwest, the group originally formed in the late 1990s as a duo, singing and playing in the tradition of Terry and McGhee, and Cephas and Wiggins. Their newest self-titled release is receiving substantial airplay in the Northwest, including regular rotation on Seattle’s KEXP. Orville Johnson has a gift for finding the secret ingredient that makes a song sound letter-perfect, whether it’s an R&B tune from New Orleans, a country blues or a jazz ballad. Musical associates include Laura Love, Ranch Romance, and the File’ Gumbo Zydeco Band; and he’s shared the stage with artists such as Doc Watson, Bonnie Raitt and John Lee Hooker. Orville’s guitar, dobro, and quavering, honeyed vocals have been featured on more than a hundred recordings, soundtracks and countless TV and radio commercials.

Visit www.centrum.org/blues for schedule updates, directions & more.

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Washboard Chaz Leary is one of the world’s only professional washboard players. His reputation as a consummate musician and performer, along with his delightful stage presence, has brought him critical acclaim and wide popularity. Over the years Chaz has shared the stage with countless acts, including Bonnie Raitt, John Hammond, Muddy Waters, Doc Watson and the Fabulous Thunderbirds. He has appeared on over 100 recordings, and has played festivals and clubs from coast to coast including Bottom Line in NYC, New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, Telluride Bluegrass and Jazz Festivals, American Music Hall in San Francisco and Denver’s Red Rocks Amphitheatre. Taj Mahal is a singer, multiinstrumentalist, composer, producer, ethnomusicologist, Grammy-winner, world traveler, fisherman, and cigar aficionado. Taj has been playing his own distinctive brand of music -- variously described as Afro- Caribbean, Hawaiian, African, Latin, and Cuban sounds and rhythms mixing with folk, jazz, zydeco, gospel, rock, pop, soul, and R&B, all layered on top of a solid country blues foundation. What ties it all together is his abiding interest in musical discovery particularly in tracing many American musical forms back to their roots in Africa and Europe. His music reflects his global perspective, incorporating sounds from everywhere he’s lived and traveled. After more than a decade of playing with larger ensembles, Taj is now touring with The Taj Mahal Trio with Bill Rich on bass and Kester Smith on drums. Arthur Migliazza was born in Hyattsville, Maryland, and began taking classical piano lessons at age nine. Inspired by his immense talent, blues piano luminaries such as Ann Rabson, Mr. B, and the great New Orleans keyboard master Henry Butler have all taken Arthur under their collective wing. In 2005, Arthur was awarded the Tucson Area Music Award for Best Keyboardist, and in 2010 he was inducted into the Arizona Blues Hall of Fame. John Miller has had a forty year career as a professional musician thus far, achieving acclaim as a solo and ensemble guitarist, composer and teacher in a variety of styles, including country blues, old-time, jazz and Brazilian. By the time he was 27, John had released five solo albums to international critical acclaim. For the past 15 years, John has continued to perform in a variety of styles, but has returned again and again to the country blues that were his first love, releasing 10 instructional DVDs focusing on that music. Los Angeles-based Jerron Paxton plays guitar, banjo, piano, harmonica, and washboard. While there are few young musicians learning country blues in the communities from which it arose, there is a definite increase in younger musicians learning and playing blues in much the same way that young people did forty years ago - by listening to recordings and personally experimenting on their instrument. Jerron Paxton is a supreme example of this, a young man with a huge repertoire of pre-war blues and rags, and an uncanny ability to channel the spirit of pre-war guitar and piano blues music.

The Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader • 2011 Centrum summer season

Mark Puryear has performed a variety of musical styles including blues, jazz, and Afro-pop. Over the years he has performed at Smithsonian Folklife Festivals, the Montpelier Cultural Arts Center, and the D.C. Blues Society Festival, in clubs, on college campuses and at private events. He has worked with blues artists such as Phil Wiggins, Gaye Adegbalola, Nat Reese, Daryl Davis, Judy Luis Watson, Paul Watson, and Charley Sayles. Nathaniel H. ‘‘Nat’’ Reese grew up on a rich musical mix of bigname jazz musicians, local black musicians, and performers on such radio broadcasts as the Grand Ole Opry. In 1939, Nat first met and performed with multi-instrumentalist Howard Armstrong, who was traveling through and playing the coal camp circuit from his home in Tennessee. The duo was to perform together with increasing regularity over the next sixty-five years until Armstrong’s death in 2003. Reese plays and teaches at the annual Augusta Heritage Arts Workshops at Davis & Elkins College, and continues to perform regularly. Reese was inducted into the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame in 2009. Guitarist and luthier George Rezendes has been playing country blues and American roots music since 1970. George is a member of the Toolshed Trio and the Blue Crows, and has performed with or opened for John Jackson, Corey Harris, Taj Mahal, Bill Frisell, and many others. Currently, George runs the Toolshed Soundlab facility, where he has recorded and produced albums with Maria Muldaur, the Crow Quill Night Owls, and others. Jeffrey Scott is a Piedmont Blues musician from Culpeper, Virginia, who has been a featured performer at many events and festivals, including the Smithsonian Folklife Festival, the Kennedy Center, and the D.C. Blues Society Festival. Accompanying his vocals with Piedmont-style guitar and old-time banjo playing, Scott draws on the musical sources and community heritage of the Blue Ridge Mountains region, as well as many of the songs, stories, and sayings of the region. Lauren Sheehan is a charismatic interpreter of songs learned from some of America’s greatest folk and blues artists. Lauren grew up in New England where she studied classical guitar as a child and became infected by the spirit of fiddle music at contra dances in western Massachusetts. Lauren’s passion for learning directly from other musicians has led her into the homes and front porches of the musical legends who passed on much of the material and stylistic qualities she presents today.

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Wednesday, July 27, 2011


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Wednesday, July 27, 2011

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R=Restrictions. Lodging list produced with funding from Port Townsend and Jefferson County lodging tax funds. NOTE: Information subject to change without notice. It is advisable to contact lodging in advance.

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RV/Camping in Port Townsend

2011 Centrum summer season • The Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader  5


North Carolina musician Lightnin’ Wells breathes new life into the vintage tunes of the 1920s and depressionera America. Lightnin’ is a life-long student and devotee of the pioneering performers in the piedmont blues tradition which once thrived in the Carolinas, including such artists as Blind Boy Fuller, Rev. Gary Davis and Elizabeth Cotton.

BiOGRAPHiES (CONT.) Harmonica player Jay Summerour has been involved with music for over 40 years. Summerour began playing with Warner Williams, Piedmont blues master guitarist and vocalist, during the early 1990s, and they’ve been featured in concerts, on television and radio, and at festivals across the country, including appearances on the National Public Radio series Folk Masters, at the National and Lowell folk festivals and on the National Mall during the American Roots Fourth of July celebration. With Otis Taylor, it’s best to expect the unexpected. While his music - an amalgamation of roots styles in their rawest form - discusses heavyweight issues, his personal style is lighthearted. He learned to play guitar and harmonica, and by his mid-teens had formed his first groups. But it wasn’t until 2001, when Taylor started to play a unique and potent hybrid of Delta-inspired country-blues and traditional folk and mountain music – a sound he calls, “trance blues,” that people really took notice. Taylor is a bluesman unafraid to expose social wounds, and has continued to explore his unique sound.

Phil Wiggins was attracted to the blues harp as a young man and began his musical career with some of Washington’s leading blues artists, including Archie Edwards and John Jackson. While rooted in the melodic Piedmont or “Tidewater” blues of the Chesapeake region, his mastery of the instrument now transcends stylistic boundaries. He achieved worldwide acclaim as one half of the premier Piedmont blues duo Cephas & Wiggins. Phil was the Artistic Director of the Port Townsend Acoustic Blues Festival from 2003-2008.

Sule Greg Wilson has performed with Babatunde Olatunji, the International African American Ballet, Boston’s Art of Black Dance and Music and studied with Charles “Cookie” Cooke of the Copasetics, Mama Lu Parks’ Lindy Hop Ensemble, Jelon Viera and Loremil Machado in New York and Cobrinha Mansa in D.C., and with Raymond “ Pata Larga” McKeithan. Wilson has also worked with banjoist Tony Trischka, R. Carlos Nakai, Keith Secola and Brent Michael Davids. Wilson has recorded with Fink and Marxer, Cloud Dance, Pastiche, and has produced two CDs of his own music.

Visit www.centrum.org/blues for schedule updates, directions & more.

CENTRUM THANKS PORT TOWNSEND ACOUSTIC BLUES FESTIVAL SPONSORS The Richard and Anne Schneider Director’s Creative Fund John Hansen • Barbara Saunders Becky Wexler • Teresa Goldsmith

Baker, Overby & Moore, PS

REAL ESTATE

Port Townsend Acoustic Blues Festival tickets by phone: 800-746-1982 Become a member at Centrum. Visit www.centrum.org or call 360-385-3102.

Enjoy some of Port Townsend’s finest catered fare, and the Centrum Beer Garden, during Centrum’s 2011 Acoustic Blues Festival. SATURDAY, AUGUST 6 - 1:30 PM Barbeque with vegetarian options from dos Okies, available for purchase at McCurdy Pavilion. Dos Okies offers outstanding barbeque catering for private parties, weddings and social events all over the Olympic Peninsula and beyond. Visit www.dosokiesbarbeque.com.

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The Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader • 2011 Centrum summer season

Wednesday, July 27, 2011


FRidAY, AuGuST 5 undertown 8:00 PM – Son Jack, Jr., & Michael Wilde 9:00 PM – Lightnin’ Wells 10:30 PM – John Miller Key City Playhouse 8:30 PM – John Miller 9:45 PM – Phil Wiggins & Nat Reese 11:00 PM – Jeffrey Scott

Sirens 9:00 PM – Otis Taylor 10:15 PM – Otis Taylor 11:30 PM – The Ebony Hillbillies

The Public House 9:00 PM – The Jelly Rollers 10:15 PM – The Jelly Rollers 11:30 PM – Phil Wiggins & Blues Faculty All-Stars

The upstage 8:00 PM – Arthur Migliazza 9:15 PM – Pura Fé 10:30 PM – Erwin Helfer

The Cotton Building 8:30-11:30 Zydeco dance featuring Sunpie Barnes Sirens 9:00 PM – Corey Harris & Phil Wiggins 10:15 PM – Crow Quill Night Owls 11:30 PM – Crow Quill Night Owls

SATuRdAY, AuGuST 6

The Boiler Room (all-ages) 8:30 PM – Cheick Hamala Diabaté 9:45 PM – George Rezendes 11:00 PM – Sule Greg Wilson

undertown 8:00 PM – Mark Puryear 9:15 PM – Jeffrey Scott 10:30 PM – Lightnin’ Wells

The Public House 9:00 PM – Lauren Sheehan & Mark Graham 10:15 PM – Jerron Paxton 11:30 PM – Washboard Chaz & Jay Summerour

Key City Playhouse 8:30 PM – Lightnin’ Wells & Mark Graham 9:45 PM – Cheick Hamala Diabaté 11:00 PM – Sule Greg Wilson

The Cotton Building 8:30 PM – Mark Puryear 9:45 PM – Guy Davis 11:00 PM – Son Jack, Jr. & Michael Wilde

The Boiler Room (all-ages) 8:30 PM – Washboard Chaz 9:45 PM – Lauren Sheehan 11:00 PM – Jerron Paxton

1. Undertown 211 Taylor St. 2. Key City Playhouse 419 Washington St. 3. The Boiler Room 711 Water St. 4. The Public House 1038 Water St.

5. The Cotton Building 607 Water St. 6. Sirens 823 Water St. 7. The Upstage 923 Washington St.

The upstage 8:00 PM – Son Jack, Jr. & Michael Wilde 9:15 PM – Sule Greg Wilson 10:30 PM – The Ebony Hillbillies

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BLUES IN THE CLUBS

2011 Centrum summer season • The Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader

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Concerts In the Barn

• Rare & Older Vintages! • Special Orders! • We Ship!

June 25 - September 4, 2011

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Call (360) 732-4800 or...

Visit us at: www.olympicmusicfestival.org

WA State Farmers Market of the Year!

Gonna move up to the country – Paint your mailbox blue? We’d like to help you!

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Sat. 9am-2pm Wed 3-6pm Uptown! Food! Farms! Arts Crafts! Music! More!

Starting at

Glass Artisan David Lindsey

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Enjoy the shows!

914 Water St., Port Townsend 385-3630

The Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader • 2011 Centrum summer season

1300 Water St., #101 Across from the ferry Port Townsend • 385-1463

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Idyllic Setting • Total Enjoyment!

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World Class Chamber Music

Wednesday, July 27, 2011


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