I was at the Old Songs Festival in Altamont New York this past weekend and found a Flatiron Mandolin. I haven't had a mandolin for a few years. It's really great having one again - and this one is very playable with a great sound. It's been a lot of fun the past few days playing all the old fiddle tunes again. I'm amazed at how quickly they are all coming back to me.

The mandolin was in great shape, but the strings were a little too thick so I changed them to the manufactures recomendation (printed inside the mandolin). I also gave the fingerboard a few coats of linseed oil, letting it soak in overnight, attached my old mandolin strap and dug out my old hard shell mandolin case. I'm ready for whatever mandolin adventures may come my way!

'The Big Red Songbook'

Historian completes a labor of love -- 'The Big Red Songbook'
Jesse Hamlin, Chronicle Staff Writer
Monday, June 18, 2007

John Neuhaus was a strapping Mission District machinist who joined the Industrial Workers of the World -- the radical unionists called the Wobblies -- in San Francisco in 1930. A passionate man who wore lumberjack shirts and had no use for doctors, lawyers and other bourgeoisie, Neuhaus became an ardent folklorist, researching and collecting the potent and piquant songs that Wobblies of many creeds and colors sang around copper mines and hobo campfires, on picket lines and in jail.

Shortly before he died of cancer in 1958 at age 54, Neuhaus gave his friend and fellow folklorist Archie Green a tin tea box containing all but one of the 29 little red Wobbly songbooks published between 1909 and 1956 (seven more have appeared since, the last in 1995) and a World War II ammunition box filled with original sheet music and other material he'd amassed with the goal of publishing a complete Wobbly songbook. Green implicitly understood the job would fall to him.

"I felt morally responsible to do something with his collection," says Green, one of the editors of "The Big Red Songbook," an engaging new anthology (Charles Kerr, $24) that's been in the works for nearly half a century.

It features the lyrics to 250 or so Wobbly songs, rich with references to job sharks, shovel stiffs, capitalist tools and plutocratic parasites. Wobbly wordsmiths such as the fabled Joe Hill, T-Bone Slim, Haywire Mac and Richard Brazier set their fighting words to popular tunes of the day, gospel hymns, old ballads and patriotic anthems. Green and his co-editors place the songs in the context of the tumultuous times in which they were written and sung.

"I put it off as long as I could," laughs Green, who turns 90 this month. "Eventually, you run out of time, and I knew that if I didn't finish it, nobody would."

A longtime San Francisco shipwright, union leader and labor historian who's a retired University of Texas folklore professor, Green is sitting in the sunny living room of the tidy upper Castro neighborhood house he and his wife, Louanne, bought for $9,000 in 1950, when the neighborhood was filled with blue-collar families. A lively storyteller with wispy white hair and amused blue eyes, he's dressed in pressed khakis and a blue-plaid shirt.

Green grew up in Los Angeles in a family of Russian-Jewish immigrants active in the Jewish socialist group called the Workmen's Circle. He soaked up live cowboy music and jazz with his friend Norman Granz, the late, great record producer. After graduating from UC Berkeley with a philosophy degree, he began working on the San Francisco waterfront in 1940, returning to the shipwright's trade after serving in the Navy in the Pacific during World War II. At 22, he was elected secretary of his local union, which, unlike the Wobblies, never sang songs at meetings.

"Working on the waterfront was like going to graduate school,'' says Green. "The conflict was intense, with the AFL fighting the CIO or vice versa. It was a mixture of Trotskyites and socialists and New Dealers. I was immersed in the ideological controversy from day one. If you went to a meeting and talked out of line, you were likely to be thrown down the stairs. It was a good education. I was better at union politics than I was as a skilled worker."

Green became close with Neuhaus in the early 1950s. The older man passed along Wobbly lore and Green introduced him to Cal's Bancroft Library and the ways of the academic folklore world. Neuhaus was adamant that the Wobbly songs he collected should be sung -- he spent years tracking down their source melodies and talking to old Wobblies. Green disagrees.

"I'm interested in having a record of all the songs," says Green, who thinks many were never actually sung. "It's historically important to bring all the material together. But I don't think most of them will ever be sung, and I don't think they deserve to be sung, because most are unsingable." He notes in his commentary to Brazier's leaden "Come and Get Wise," set to a 1903 Anheuser-Busch beer jingle, "worthy causes do not guarantee good songs."

"How many times can you say, 'One Grand Industrial Union'? After you've said it once or twice, it's repetitive. John was obsessed with getting it correct. He dug up the original sheet music and he'd get pissed off if a guy used the wrong melody. Every progressive is somewhat of a reactionary," Green adds with a smile.

But a handful of Wobbly numbers have become classics, still sung by labor groups and folk singers. They include Hill's sardonic "The Preacher and the Slave" (sometimes known by its famous phrase "Pie in the Sky"), set to the 1868 gospel hymn "Sweet Bye and Bye''; John Brill's "Dump the Bosses off Your Back," wed to the hymn "Take It to the Lord in Prayer''; "Solidarity Forever!," which Ralph Chaplin set to the Civil War tune "John Brown's Body''; and Slim's "Mysteries of the Hobo Life," sung to the melody of "The Girl I Left Behind," a ballad and fife tune popular in colonial America.

"They're memorable tunes," Green says. "The Wobblies didn't pass out sheet music. They didn't bring a piano to the picket line. Sometimes at a meeting there might be a piano or an accordion, but guitars weren't popular then. Guitars came in when the left discovered folk music. Remember, these were not trained musicians -- they were loggers, miners, construction stiffs. They would hear a song at church, or a patriotic or vaudeville song, remember it as best they could and, out of revolutionary zeal, write a song."

Whatever the music -- "The Big Red Songbook" includes pieces set to everything from "Yankee Doodle" and "The Star-Spangled Banner" to the "Toreador Song" from Bizet's "Carmen" -- the songs were meant to prod and praise workers. Each piece, Green writes in his preface, "whether topical, hortatory, elegiac, sardonic or comic served to educate, agitate, and emancipate workers. Songs were intended as arrows to penetrate bourgeois (in Wobbly parlance, "scissorbill'') mentality, and to anticipate a new social order: the commonwealth of toil."

The songs stressed the solidarity and power of the working class, Green says, "it wasn't about the state, or the Communist Party or the worship of Stalin, this murderer who killed more people than Hitler and became a demigod of the left. The Wobblies said no, no one is our leader."

Before the 1917 Russian Revolution, the Wobblies and other radicals hailed the Red Dawn, the coming emancipation of workers. In 1918, Wobblies volunteered to help build railroads and other construction projects in the emerging Soviet Union. But as soon as they got there, "they began organizing their fellow workers against the bosses, who were the commissars," Green says. "So among the first enemies of the state to be executed were Wobblies." The Wobblies rejected the communist line and there was a long-standing enmity between them and the other radical American groups. The Wobblies -- whose influence waned in the 1920s, although there's a chapter of younger Wobbly workers in Berkeley -- would have nothing to do with probably the best-known song about one of their own, "I Dreamed I Saw Joe Hill Last Night," popularized by Paul Robeson, Pete Seeger and Joan Baez.

The song, which immortalized the Wobbly poet executed by a Salt Lake City firing squad in 1915 after he was convicted of murder, was written at a communist camp in New York in 1936 by Earl Robinson and Alfred Hayes.

"The Wobblies wouldn't sing that song because they were conscious of what they called Stalinist methods," Green says. For similar reasons, they wouldn't embrace Woody Guthrie's famed "Union Maid," which was not included in the little red songbook (often subtitled "Songs to Fan the Flames of Discontent," which cost a dime) until the 34th edition in 1973. "Instead of thinking of Guthrie as a freedom singer or a freedom fighter, they thought of him as a Stalinist stooge." By the time "Union Maid" made it into the songbook, Green adds, "the song had been sung in radical circles and in labor circles, and the young Wobblies didn't know or didn't care about its historical context. They just accepted Guthrie as a working-class hero a la Walt Whitman."

Green first sang Wobbly songs at the Workmen's Circle school in the late '20s, although he wasn't aware of their origin at the time. He associates the international labor and protest songs he sang with the unsuccessful effort to stop the execution in Massachusetts of the Italian anarchists Sacco and Vanzetti. Asked to sing one of the Wobbly songs he learned as a kid, the folklorist breaks into "The Preacher and the Slave," which Carl Sandburg included in his 1927 "American Songbag'':

"Longhaired preachers come out every night/ Try to tell you what's wrong and what's right/ But when asked how 'bout something to eat/ They will answer with voices so sweet: You will eat bye and bye/ In that glorious land above the sky/ Work and pray, live on hay/ You'll get pie in the sky when you die."

"Obviously that made enough of an impression on me between 1925 and '30 that it stuck with me all these years,'' says Green. His heart was with the Wobblies, but he never joined the Industrial Workers of the World. "Like most Americans, I'm a creature of contradiction," he says. "By the time I was ready to join a union, joining the Wobblies would've been a gesture, a good gesture, but for better or worse, the shipwright's union had jurisdiction over my trade."

After Neuhaus' death, Green -- who later made copies of his friend's little red songbooks and gave the originals to the folklore archive at the University of North Carolina, where Green once taught -- nurtured the collection. The only Wobbly songbook he never found was the second edition, a copy of which was sold to UC Riverside by the Argonaut bookstore in San Francisco in the 1950s a few days before Green wandered into the shop. The songbook was apparently stolen from the university and another copy has yet to turn up.

The labor movement is in a weakened state at the moment. But Green, whose two sons belong to the electricians' union, looks ahead. He thinks "The Big Red Songbook" will prove useful not only to those interested in labor history and lore, but to future workers. "The very fact that working people were able to compose and sing and celebrate their past," he says, "will be encouraging when we form new coalitions, if we do."

E-mail Jesse Hamlin at jhamlin@sfchronicle.com.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/06/18/DDG0GQH1PJ1.DTL

This article appeared on page B - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle

You Tube Debut!

I found a video file my son had taken a few years ago when I was leading a chant at Mirabai Books in Woodstock. I uploaded it to You Tube. Let's see if it works!

Audio Site working again!

For some reason the site with my audio files http://boblusksongs.blogspot.com/ stopped working for a few days. The neat thing is that several people let me know about it, so I guess people are listening out there! It seems to have mysteriously started working again. I'm not sure why.

Woodstock Memorial Day Parade Photos

Here are some photos that were taken by Dayl Weiss, Veteran's for Peace, at the Woodstock Memorial Day Parade http://bobluskphotos2.blogspot.com/

Brassed Off!

Just saw the movie "Brassed Off!" again. It 's about Yorkshire miners who are in a town band. The north of England was based on coal mining and the pits were systematically closed to make room for commercial development (condos, etc.) Each small town had their own brass band and they would play in competitions. It's a great movie with a social message, some great music and a slice of life that doesn't exist anymore.

I didn't see it during the credits, but there was background music to the tune of a folk song , the "Dalesman's Litany' It has a great line "From Hull and Halifax and hell, good Lord deliver me", which was a Yorkshire proverb. Apparently Hull and Halifax were the two towns in that area where you got the hardest punishment from the magistrates for breaking the law. Up to, and including, hanging.

A travel historian writes: regarding the Halifax guillotine, this turns up in travel writing of the 1600s. Celia Fiennes (1698) nearly makes a detour to Halifax to view "ye Engine that that town was famous for to behead their Criminalls at one stroake with a pully." Decommissioned by her time, this device for summarily executing cloth and other thieves predates the guillotine by at least a couple of centuries. According to pedestrian John Taylor, who says he saw the Halifax contraption in 1639, when it may still have been in operation, a suspect could be executed at the discretion of a panel of townsmen, but the line could only be cut by the wronged party. If he or she baulked, the stolen items were forfeited to the community and the thief went free.

Text written (or collected) by Dr Moorman, President of the Yorkshire Dialect Society about 1900.
The tune was written by Dave Keddie of Bradford about 1960 Dave Keddie died a few years ago, a fellow musician and member of the same group (the Dalesmen) as Dave, Eddie Saxton wrote an obit in Tykes News.

A Dalesman's Litany

It's hard when fowks can't finnd their wark
Wheer they've bin bred an' born;
When I were young I awlus thowt
I'd bide 'mong t' roots an' corn.
But I've bin forced to work i' towns,
So here's my litany:
Frae Hull, an' Halifax, an' Hell,
Gooid Lord, deliver me!

When I were courtin' Mary Ann,
T' owd squire, he says one day:
"I've got no bield(1) for wedded fowks;
Choose, wilt ta wed or stay?"
I couldn't gie up t' lass I loved,
To t' town we had to flee:
Frae Hull, an' Halifax, an' Hell,
Gooid Lord, deliver me!

I've wrowt i' Leeds an' Huthersfel',
An' addled(2) honest brass;
I' Bradforth, Keighley, Rotherham,
I've kept my barns an' lass.
I've travelled all three Ridin's round,
And once I went to sea:
Frae forges, mills, an' coalin' boats,
Gooid Lord, deliver me!

I've walked at neet through Sheffield loans,(3)
'T were same as bein' i' Hell:
Furnaces thrast out tongues o' fire,
An' roared like t' wind on t' fell.
I've sammed up coals i' Barnsley pits,
Wi' muck up to my knee:
Frae Sheffield, Barnsley, Rotherham,
Gooid Lord, deliver me!

I've seen grey fog creep ower Leeds Brig
As thick as bastile(4) soup;
I've lived wheer fowks were stowed away
Like rabbits in a coop.
I've watched snow float down Bradforth Beck
As black as ebiny:
Frae Hunslet, Holbeck, Wibsey Slack,
Gooid Lord, deliver me!

But now, when all wer childer's fligged,(5)
To t' coontry we've coom back.
There's fotty mile o' heathery moor
Twix' us an' t' coal-pit slack.
And when I sit ower t' fire at neet,
I laugh an' shout wi' glee:
Frae Bradforth, Leeds, an Huthersfel',
Frae Hull, an' Halifax, an' Hell,
T' gooid Lord's delivered me!

1. Shelter. 2. Earned,
3. Lanes 4. Workhouse 5. Fledged

Johnny Cash Tribute

I just finished my performance as "John-Bob Dollar Bill"at the John St. Jam, Dutch Arms Chapel, Saugerties. There were a lot of wonderful performers. Also saw a lot of old friends. It felt a little like being the only one in costume at a Halloween party, but everyone was very welcoming and seemed to enjoy it. Thanks to Steve and Terri Masardo for hosting this wonderful space to play.
The whole "John Bob" thing probably deserves some explanation. Whenever anyone calls me by another name accidently it is always "John". Also I have some southern roots on my mother's side. I have a cousin who spent time in prison for moonshining. He has a brother named "Johnny Buck". So the "John Bob" thing didn't seem far afield. It's not my intention to make fun of Johnny Cash or lampoon him. I think the people tonight all appreciated that. They sang along on a lot of the songs - A lot of people there told me they were JC fans.

Gary Emmons Cracker Box Music 1958-2007

Hi Folks, I don't know if you all knew Gary who ran craker box music, a little instrument repair shop on route to Newburgh. He was a great guy and a fine luthier and unfortunately recently died. See notice below. -Mira

We have received several notices regarding the untimely death of Gary Emmons. This following is from Mary DeBerry:

Gary Emmons, 49, died Thursday, May 31, 2007.

Gary is survived by his loving wife, Nancy Mary Emmons; his parents, Guy and Glenda Emmons of Walden; his sister, Penny Marcucci; and his former brother-in-law, Mario Marcucci of Palm Bay, Fla.

Gary was the owner and operator of Cracker Box Music in Cronomer Valley, Newburgh, and was an area resident since 1959. Gary was born in Winchester, Va., on May 26, 1958. He was a graduate of Wallkill High School, class of 1976, and was a self-taught luthier, a craft for which he gained world renown and acclaim.

To those who knew Gary, he ran a repair shop for mostly wood instruments. He had entered his 25th year in his business. He also worked prior for steinberger guitars in Newburgh (they made headless bass's and guitars) .

He died from a aneurysm.

We are organizing a memorial service so people can chat and play music. I will keep you posted.

If anyone needs to get in touch with anything about the store, contact me and I'll get you in touch with who is handling things.

Mary DeBerry
thirdstone@usadatanet.net

Musicians & Singers Wanted For The Great NYC Sing

Rich Bala sent this in -

----- Original Message -----
From: Ron Dressler
People's Music Network Musicians & Singers Wanted
To Lead This Land Is Your Land (Key of D)
In the first annual GREAT NYC SING.
On Thursday, June 21, 7:00p

The Event
On Make Music NY Day, June 21, 2007, BWC, my non-profit formed to use song for the common good, is conducting the first annual Great NYC Sing , inviting the ENTIRE City of NY to go onto the sidewalks of their neighborhoods - or wherever they are - at 7:00p, tune into WBAI-FM 99.5, and all simultaneously sing This Land Is Your Land in one gigantic sing-along. (Details and a video preview at www.BWCny.org or go to YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UXEYXKaXEV8 )

The Request
Make history and join the first annual Great NYC Sing as song leaders. Volunteer to lead This Land Is Your Land in block after block throughout NYC at 7pm on Thursday, June 21, 2007 as part of the first annual Great NYC Sing. And, while you are there, sing a song or two as part of Make Music NY day.

How To Sign Up As A Song Leader
1. Send an email to bwcNYC@gmail.com .
2. Write "Song Leader" in the email Subject
3. Include: Your name, Phone, Preferred Email, and the # of musicians in your group (1 if solo)
4. If you are from the NYC area and already have a singing location , include the address with zip code and cross streets.
Location Assignments
BWC will assign singing locations in core areas of the city by June 15. .

Yours in the wonder and power of song,
Ron Dressler
212-666-6626 (24/7)
bwcNYC@gmail.com

Leanne Miller

Local musician Phil Miller's wife, Lianne passed away this morning. As it stands right now there will be a get together at Phil and Lianne's next Saturday the 9th between 1 and 4. This is what Lianne wanted. Their address is 53 Oak Ln Saugerties Ny 12477.

Woodstock Memorial Day Parade

Just back from the Woodstock Memorial Day parade. I walked (Jay Wenk the leader, says we "stroll") with Veteran's for Peace as I do most years. I've always loved marching in parades. I also love singing in parades, which I did this year too. I play the banjo and lead a bunch of old zinger songs like "Study War No More", "This Little Light of Mine", etc. It's a short parade, but is on an uphill incline. Singing full voice like that, it is a cardiovascular workout. And each year it's a little bit harder. By the end of the first song today I knew I was in trouble and grabbed a ricola cough drop. By end of the parade, I'm not sure what was coming out of my mouth. I know I was gasping for breath and somehow mouthing the words. I seemed like I took two breaths of air for every word. It would have been interesting to hear what it actually sounded like!

After the parade they had poetry and speeches on the the Village Green while the "regular military" organizations had their service at the Woodstock Cemetery. We've been disinvited to that for several years, hence the program on the green. I sang a few songs - it was through a sound system. Laurie and Julie Kirby were doing a great song when the Onteora Marching band came back from the service at the green playing very loudly interrupting our service. Laurie and julie kept on singing though, even working the song into the rhythm of the drums. The Woodstock bagpipe band followed, but they had the courtesy to stop playing until they were past us.

At the end they wanted us to sing "This Land is Your Land". No one knew how to play it on guitar but me, and I wanted to play banjo. I found a young woman strolling by with a guitar on her shoulder (forget her name but it was a Favilla guitar). I taught her the chords and she joined in.

My Heart's in Old 'Sopus

I've added the lyrics to "My Heart's in Old 'Sopus" (c. 1850) by Henry Backus at the Catskill Mountain/Hudson Valley page http://bobluskcatskills.blogspot.com/

"Sruti's"

OK, a "sruti" is an measurement of pitch in Indian music. So instead of 12 tones (notes) with this system there are 40 tones called sruti's. On the following list first comes the Indian tone name "sa, ri, ga, ma, pa, dha, ni, sa", which is equal to our "do, re me, etc:. "Komal" means flat and "Tivre" means sharp. (Only Ri, GA, Dha, and Ni are flatted and only Ma is sharped.) Following that are the emotions the interval produces and then the mathematical ratio.

Alain Danielou's table of experimental srutis

Note Actual Ezpression Ratio from C
1 Sa (C) (base) 1/1
2 Ri komal - (D flat - ) Sad, pathetic 25/24
3 Ri komal (D flat) Tender, at peace 256/243
4 Ri komal + (D flat +) Loving, calm 16/15
5 Ri komal ++ (D flat++) Enterprising 27/25
6 Ri – (D-) Anxious, weak 10/9
7 Ri (D) Strong, confident 9/8
8 Ri + (D+) Fierce 256/225
9 Ga komal – (E flat -) Sad 75/64
10 Ga komal – (E flat) Loving 32/27
11 Ga komal + (E flat +) Passionate 6/5
12 Ga (E) Calm, pleasing 5/4
13 Ga + (E +) Awake, lively 81/64
14 Ga ++ (E ++) Hard, indifferent 32/25
15 Ma – (F –) Doubt 320/243
16 Ma (F) Moonlight, peace 4/3
17 Ma+ (F+) Intense 27/20
18 Ma tivre– (F sharp - ) Intense, grief 25/18
19 Ma tivre– (F sharp) Uncertain, doubtful 45/32
20 Ma tivre+ (F sharp +) Intense, active 64/45
21 Ma tivre++ (F sharp ++) Acute, interrogative 36/25
22 Pa – (G - ) Inexpressive, self-contradictory 40/27
23 Pa (G) Sunlight, joyful 3/2
24 Pa+ (G+) Confused, self-contradictory 243/160
25 Dha komal– (A flat -) Deep sorrow 25/16
26 Dha komal (A flat) Tender 128/81
27 Dha komal+ (A flat+) Loving, enterprising 8/5
28 Dha-(A-) Uncertainty 400/243
29 Dha (A) Soft, calm 5/3
30 Dha+ (A+) Restless, playful 27/16
31 Dha++ (A++) Hard, active 128/75
32 Ni komal- (B flat-) Helpless, subdued 225/128
33 Ni komal (B flat) Beauty, love 16/9
34 Ni komal+ (B flat+) Desire, anxiety 9/5
35 Ni-- (B --) Doubt 720/400
36 Ni- (B-) Anguish, depression 50/27
37 Ni (B) Soft, voluptuous 15/8
38 Ni+ (B+) Strong, sensuous 243/128
39 Ni++ (B++) Selfish, anger 48/25
40 Sa (C) (base) 1/1

Help needed for fiddler Jerry Holland


Wonderful Cape Breton fiddler Jerry Holland has been diagnosed with bone cancer and may be losing a leg.  He needs financial help.  Checks can be made out to him, and mailed to Beth Telford, at 1060 Bent Hill Rd, Braintree, VT 05060.   I have been listening to his recordings for years.  His website is at http://www.jerryholland.com/

Memorial Day March for Peace

BTW I'm planning to be there with my banjo - all welcome! - Bob

Veterans for Peace Chapter in Woodstock - Memorial Day Gathering, Monday, May 29

Veterans for Peace Chapter 058 in Woodstock, New York will be hosting a Memorial Day gathering. Veterans for Peace has been participating in the Memorial Day parade in Woodstock for many years. In the last few, while still marching in the parade, we have been denied the right to speak at the Woodstock Veterans' Memorial by the Woodstock American Legion. This is because the memorial is located in a private cemetery and the American Legion owns the PA system. So, this year, like last year we will march up Mill Hill Road, but instead of continuing to the cemetery, we'll stop at the top of the hill at the Village Green (where the memorial originally was) and hold a separate event that will include the community. There will be speakers, music, poetry and an open mic for community participation. We have permission to use the Green from the Town and from the Dutch Reform Church which owns the Green.

We will be assembling at the Woodstock Playhouse parking lot at 11:30 (near the intersection of Route 212 and 375). The parade is scheduled to start at 12:00 noon and our event at the Green will kick off at 1:00 pm. More information to follow as it develops. Call Jay Wenk, 845- 679- 2161or e-mail dswbike@aol.com for more information.

Fw: Bob Horan - Save Internet Radio Notice

From Bob Horan
Hello Everyone,
Please take a moment to click on the website at the bottom! Then consider using the email form to ask your elected officials to help keep internet royalties at a fair level.
Being asked to pay a 300 to 1200 % increase for anything is outrageous.
The net is becoming the best bastion for non- corpororate owned free speech that we have. These unfair increases will limit the play time to a wealthy few, the way commercial radio is now.
Thanks,
Bob
 
Bob Horan
bhoran0002@aol.com
www.bobhoran.com
 

Call for performers!

Call for performers!   Hootenanny and Auction!  November 18th 2007, 2-6 pm, Unitarian Universalist Church Hall, Sawkill Road, Kingston, NY, (Near the KingstonThruway Entrance)

            This is a fundraiser for the Heritage Music Foundation.  Our mission is to bring the historic and regional folk traditions of the Catskill Mountains and Hudson River Valley back to the people from whence it came.  Funds raised from this concert will be used to establish our non-profit status, so that we will be eligible for grants.  You can see our website at
http://heritageconcerts.blogspot.com/

            If you are interested in performing at the Hoot, let us know so that we can include your name in our early publicity.  E-mail Bob Lusk at boblusk@hvc.rr.com.


        We are also having an "Auction of Folk Memorabilia" there.  We would welcome donations of CD's, songbooks, posters, even instruments. Your own CD's of course would be especially welcome.  If you can't come that day, but wish to donate an item, contact us for pickup.


Yours in Folk Music!

Bob Lusk
Heritage Music Foundation

Peace Troubadour Cecilia St. King

"I'm going to Lift My Voice above the purple mountain majesty. If I could, I would speak for the silent cry from sea to shining sea. I'm going to Lift My Voice, like a breeze blowing freedom's refrain, I'm going to Lift My Voice across the amber waves of grain." - Cecilia St. King

Dear Friends & Family,

I've been invited to bring my music to Democracy Fest in Manchester New Hampshire on June 9th, as the headliner, opening up once again a speech given by Howard Dean! This is a GOOD thing! Democracy Fest is a fabulous organization now in it's fourth year, that teaches communities how to take control of their local government. Whether you are a Democrat or a Republican, good communities are built through organizations like this. As Ghandi said, "Be the change you wish to see."

So I'll be there "LIFTING MY VOICE" - supporting this great organization and trying to shed some light, but I need your help. Democracy Fest, will put us up for the night, and feed us all 3 meals, which is great, but like most grass roots organization, there is no budget for the musicians.

Joining me on this gig will be Vincenza Dante, Rusty Boris, Sean Crimmins & Chris Kovach. Most times I pay the band out of my own pocket, and if no funds come in, that is exactly what I'll do. That's why, this time I'm looking for sponsors. I'd like to raise $1000 - $150.00 per player x's 4 - $300.00 to the leader of the band : ) and $100.00 for gas. Manchester is a 3.5 hour drive from the Hudson Valley. You can sponsor an individual player, or just give what you can. Heah $10 bucks is almost 2.5 gallons of gas! Every little bit helps.

If you are interested, you can make your donations right on paypal; just go to www.paypal.com and to the tab that says, "Send Money" and enter my e-mail address, I have an account there. Or you can send a check directly to me at: 162 West Chestnut Street - Apt. 1 - Kingston, NY 12401

"Music does bring people together. It allows us to experience the same emotions. People everywhere are the same in heart and spirit." - unknown author


With Love & Gratitude

Cecilia St. King
Peace Troubadour
May Peace Prevail on Earth
http://www.sonicbids.com/ceciliastking
e-mail address: ceciliastking@msn.com