Category Archives: Music

Nurturing Participatory and Live-Performance Arts

I was just suggesting to friends on Facebook that we need to figure out ways to nurture participatory and live-performance arts in a culture of “efficiency,” commuting, and commodification.  My friend Patrick asked more of what I was thinking, here’s what I said:
“I did some small group shape note singing this summer which was the most fun. So, obviously, just do it is one important thing. But policy-wise, everything is so interrelated.
“At the risk of two much information, here’s my two cents: Public transportation; arts education in public schools; nurturing families of all sorts, since our loved ones are often the vehicle for passing on arts as a shared experience.
“Out where I live [in the suburbs], improvements in town planning including cohousing and others that facilitate informal and intergenerational interaction would all go a long way, as well as subsidising arts venues that can get easily overwhelmed by seemingly unrelated regulations–like the cost of a modern sprinkler system in a dive bar that happens to be a center for local music acts.
“Cities that haven’t destroyed their pedestrian and human-scale infrastructure have a big advantage in forming critical masses for the arts.
Even forms that we consider “country,” like bluegrass music, I’m told developed in amazing ways as “old time” musicians met as they sought jobs and found practice and performance venues in mill towns and other cities in twentieth century America. The growth of blues from the Delta into cities like Chicago is another example. “
I’d love to hear what others think, either as comments here or post links to your own blog posts or good urls.

Singers Glen

My friend John Haugland singing a song we wrote together: Singers Glen.  I think of it as the love child of “Ashokan Farewell” and “The Band Played Waltzing Matilda.”

Suburban Hymn

I just posted printer-friendly music and words to “Suburban Hymn,” a hymn about the human condition in the affluent suburbs, in the music section of this blog.  It’s set to the tune of “A Mighty Fortress is Our God.” Churchgoing folks might find it appropriate to sing in church, perhaps during lent.

Lyrics

I went to an excellent symposium on bluegrass music at Harvard yesterday, organized by the Harvard student American Music Association and the university’s Committee on Degrees in Folklore & Mythology.  It made me proud to work at Harvard.

Yesterday morning, in anticipation of that event, I added to this blog some some lyrics that I have written.  If you’re looking for a hymn to sing at church this coming season of Lent, check out “Suburban Hymn.”

The Blue Morpho

The Bluegrass Gospel Project’s new album The Blue Morpho is scheduled to be released this Friday, May 1.  I expect that it will be for sale at the Acton, MA. concert on that date.  Previews from The Blue Morpho:

The Blue Morpho by The Bluegrass Gospel Project

Lean on Me

The Cup

(more)

Bluegrass Gospel Project

I’m looking forward to this week’s appearance of the Bluegrass Gospel Project in Acton, MA.  BGP is an underappreciated gem: international talent, largely New England appearances.  Bluegrass Gospel ProjectThey’re playing at 7:30 p.m., May 1, 2009 at the South Acton Congregational Church.  It’s a lovely, warm, intimate setting.  And it will be the place to be in New England on May 1 if you like bluegrass or folk music, whether religious or secular.  Here’s a sample, “Get Together,” from their latest album, and a favorite, “All Prayed Up,” from their fourth album.  For concert details, see the Facebook listing, the church event listing, or order tickets at MKTix.  Accessible by public transportation.  Take the Fitchburg Line commuter rail to South Acton Station from North Station, Boston,  or Porter Square, Cambridge.  Walk five minutes to the concert (map).