Fwd: Anniversaries

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Les Herring lesherring@gmail.com


I think it worth pointing out that in addition to next month being the 40th anniversary of Woodstock, it is the 50th anniversary of the Newport Folk Festival, the next addition of which will take place next weekend.  If you can't make it, kiss someone from Rhode Island!!

WOODSTOCK WOODY GUTHRIE FEST & WOODY RADICAL PROSE


From: John Pietaro leftmus@earthlink.net



Friends,

Well, if this is July it must be another Woody birthday anniversary. He would have been 97 this time around. Like many others around the world, I organize this annual salute to Woody in the world's most famous little village, Woodstock NY, and this year will be spectacular. Come on up to Woodstock early---check out the galleries, the shops, the memorobilia, the Byrdcliffe Art Colony (where Dylan had his home), the Bearsville site that was Albert Grossman's digs and Todd Rundgren's studio and where Jimi Hendrix lived for a time, and then come over to the Colony Cafe to celebrate Woody.

By the way, at the end of this announcement, look for the radical prose by Woody. I will be reciting this to the accompaniment of Laurie's bass and my own drumkit on Saturday evening....just one of the many reminders of Woody's revolutionary art!

In Solidarity,
John Pietaro - www.flamesofdiscontent.org

WOODSTOCK WOODY GUTHRIE FESTIVAL RETURNS TO COLONY CAFÉ, JULY 25

Woodstock NY:  Woody Guthrie, legendary folksinger and prototypical protest musician, will once again be celebrated at Woodstock's historic Colony Café. This is the third annual event in his honor. This July would have been the 97th birthday of Guthrie, who died in 1967 but has long been remembered not only by fans of folk song but progressive thinkers all over the world. Guthrie, who fought against racism and fascism as well as for workers' rights and a more equitable society in his lifetime, has been acknowledged as the father of the folk song revival that begat the likes of Pete Seeger, Leadbelly, the Almanac Singers, the Weavers, and their 1960s offspring, Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Phil Ochs and numerous others.

This year's event will feature not only some of Woody's most powerful songs but also his poetry, prose and even a member of his family. The Keynote Address will be given by ANNA CANONI, Woody's granddaughter and the Outreach Coordinator for the Woody Guthrie Archive. The Festival is very pleased to present Ms. Canoni in Woodstock for the first time.

A special feature will include guest speakers who are both journalists: DAN MARGOLIS, New York Bureau Chief of the People's Weekly World newspaper who will discuss Guthrie's contributions as a columnist for the Daily Worker, and GARY ALEXANDER, Music Writer with the Woodstock Times.
Music will be provided by festival hosts THE FLAMES OF DISCONTENT who perform 'alternative protest song', folk expansionists HOPE MACHINE, Mexican revolutionary musician ZENOTE SOMPANTLE, and Labor singer JOHN O'CONNOR.  And there will also be recitation of Guthrie writings by performance poet PATRICIA MARTIN.

THE WOODSTOCK WOODY GUTHRIE FESTIVAL 2009
When: SATURDAY, JULY 25, 8 – 11PM
Where: The Colony Café, 22 Rock City Road, Woodstock NY, (845) 679-5342
Admission: $10.
For more info: www.flamesofdiscontent.org or www.colonycafe.com
----------------------------------------------------------------

Art is a weapon and as deadly as steel cannons or exploding bombs.
It is the job of poets to untangle all of the knots, wipe away all of the clouds and fog.
It is the job of all artists, painters, dancers, writers, singers, sculptors, musicians, critics, actors, everybody everywhere, to join hands with the workers and root out, expose, and kill out the fascist enemy everywhere. Words must be turned against the Nazis like red hot machine gun bullets, mowing their poor, misled soldiers to the ground like brutes and monsters, blowing their factories and munitions dumps into 10 million pieces. Unless words do this job, they are useless……

I carted my paints and my water color brushes today down the street two short blocks and painted some fancy leafs and weeds and stems all around the edge of the window of the Communist Party.
I painted, "Join the Communist Party" on a strip of wrapping paper and "Kill the Taft-Hartley Slave law" on some more strips. "Lets Have a Low-Cost Housing Project in Coney Island" and "Read Your Daily Worker". Gwen, my 11 year old daughter from Texas helped me clean, sweep, scrape and paint and fix the windows of the Party office and book shop.
When we got it all done, I went in next door to a little eat shop and the soda jerker told me, "Your work is just one big, gigantic smudge!"
I didn't even say one single word. Just drunk my coffee and walked out.

I drew pen sketches for the Peoples World and Daily Worker and learned all I could from the speeches and debates, forums, picnics, where famous labor leaders spoke. I heard William Z Foster, Mother Bloor, Gurley Flynn, Blackie Myers.
I heard most all of them and played my songs on their platforms…….
Art is a weapon and as deadly as steel cannons or exploding bombs.
-Woody Guthrie


Take Me Out to the Ball Game

At http://www.parttimemusician.com about Glenn Donnellan, violinist with the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington, DC, making an electric violin from a baseball bat.

Catskills Irish Arts Week!

There's SOOOOO MUCH MORE than classes
at the
CATSKILLS IRISH ARTS WEEK
 
CD Launches! Lectures! Tunes!
 
Céilithe, Seisiúns, Concerts
EVERY NIGHT!
 
Some Highlights:
(see the current IRISH VOICE for detailed schedule)
 
Monday 13 July, Weldon House 4:00
"From Shore to Shore:
Irish Traditional Music in New York City"
screening & discussion presented by Pat Mullins (filmmaker)
 
Tuesday 14 July, Weldon House 4:00
Paddy O'Brien's compositions & work
Book Launch
presented by Eileen O'Brien Minogue
 
Wednesday 15 July, Weldon House 4:00
Tribute to Mike Rafferty
Lecture presented by Don Meade
 
Wednesday 15 July, Shamrock House 4:00
Mrs. Crotty's Legacy
Led by Edel Fox with Caitlinn Nic Gabhann
 
Wednesday 15 July,Bernie O's 10:00
"THE OLD BROOM"
CD Launch / Listening Room Seisiún
Mike Rafferty & Willie Kelly 
 
Thursday 16 July, Weldon House 4:00
"Unskirting the Issue"
Pivotal Irish American women in Irish traditional music
Lecture presented by Earl Hitchner
 
Thursday 16 July, Shamrock House 9:00
"PRIDE OF NEW YORK"
CD Launch / Céilí
Brian Conway, Brendan Dolan,
Joanie Madden, Billy McComiskey
 
Friday 17 July, Weldon House 4:00
Irish music in the Catskills
Lecture presented by Brendan Dolan  
 
Friday 17 July, Shamrock House 4:00
Tunes & Chat
James Keane & Antoine Mac Gabhann
 
Friday 17 July, Quill Festival Grounds 7:30
Tribute to Joe Madden
Concert featuring Joanie Madden, John Nolan,
James Keane, Billy McComiskey & many, many more
 
Friday 17 July, Gavin's 10:00
GIRSA
CD Launch
 
These events alone make the week worth the short drive to East Durham! If you cannot be there for the full summer school, consider heading there for a few days at the end of the week. Something for Everyone!
 
Andy McGann Traditional Music Festival
Saturday, July 18th
Noon ~ 7pm
1-800 / 434-FEST
 
 
For more info: 
518 / 634-2286   or   contact@irishartsweek.com
 
Slán,
Maureen
www.my.calendars.net/ceolagusrince

Should you no longer wish to receive these e-mail updates, 
please reply to this email address, and you will be removed 
from the mailing list.


Fwd: An Exciting Event this Saturday



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Cara Cruickshank <cara@catskillwoodlandcamp.com>
Date: Thu, Jul 9, 2009 at 8:07 AM
Subject: An Exciting Event this Saturday
To: boblusk@gmail.com


Camp Woodland: 1959
An Evening of Stories and Songs
cw
Saturday, July 11
 7:30pm

At the Pine Hill Community Center
287 Main St., Pine Hill
Free Admission
A Legendary and Historical Event
Camp Woodland was a summer camp in Phoenicia, N.Y. from 1939-1962.  Interracial and progressive, it helped to preserve much of the folklore of the Catskills.
Alumni Sue Rosenberg, Pat Gordon Lamanna, Karl and Greg Finger, and (possibly) Eric Weissberg
will give a Camp Woodland Multi-Media Presentation through photos, stories and songs.

(After-Party and Music Jam at Cara's House)
For more info. call: 845-452-4013, email: patla@hvc.rr.com orinfo@pinehillcommunitycenter.org
www.pinehillcommunitycenter.org


Safe Unsubscribe
Cara Cruickshank | P.O. Box 647 | Phoenicia | NY | 12464

Fwd: WORKSHOP ATA HARTFORD



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Debashish Bhattacharya <debashishguitar@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Jul 8, 2009 at 12:26 AM
Subject: WORKSHOP ATA HARTFORD
To: boblusk@gmail.com



-          Broad-spectrum finger picking and left hand movement

-           Raga Music Workshop with Pt. Debashish Bhattacharya

In

Hartford, CT, USA

 

 

Gurus: Pandit Debashish Bhattacharya and Sri Subhasis Bhattacharya

 

Detailed and extensive knowledge of the following topics will be imparted in this 5 day long residency/workshop program.  The workshop will conclude with a full-length concert by Pt. Debashish Bhattacharya and Sri Subhasis Bhattacharya at Charter Oak Cultural Center in Hartford.  All participants will be able to attend this concert by invitation.

 

* An Overview of Raga Music:

            - Raga music interpretation for both the beginner and advanced level students.

            - The historical and philosophical perspective with an emphasis on the aesthetics and literature of      Raga Music.

            - The inherent capacity of Raga music to express and interpret human nature, along with different moods and emotions.

            - Compositions and Performance

            - How to amalgamate Raga Music in your own work.

 

*  Rhythm Structure in Indian Music:

            - Different rhythmic cycles and various rhythmic structures

            - The synthesis of rhythm and melody in Indian music

 

*  The Impact of technology and modern life on ancient art of Raga Music.

 

* Raga Music in context with the slide guitar, regular guitar, and other Western and Indian instruments.

            - Slide guitar techniques and practices.

practices

 

* Indian melodic chanting and rhythmic vocalizations.       

 

 

Other details

Place: 34 Hilltop Drive , Weatogue, Connecticut

Date: October 12th, 2009 – October 16th, 2009

Concert of Pt. Debashish bhattacharya:  October 17th, 2009

For Registration and further inquiry Please contact: bsumkol@gmail.com

debashishguitar@gmail.com

Phone No: INDIA    +919830204542

Phone No: USA 1 901 757 4567

 

 

Participants are requested to bring their individual instruments and sleeping bags.

 


--
With Best Regards,
Sannati Talukder

Bhattacharya's School of Universal Music
Kolkata, India
Phone:  +91.33.2428 6882
                  +91 9830204542
e-mail:   debashishguitar@gmail.com
visit at:   www.debashishbhattacharya.com


Seeger Banjo

Here is an article on a Pete Seeger style banjo bridge that used to be on the internet. I can't find it anymore - I believe the design is copyright free. If you click on the articles, they will get larger.











Fwd: Bob Horan-NY1 Video


From Bob Horan!

 
Hello!
Springtime greetings to all!
I decided to enter the video contest promoting our local "NY 1" news station here in Manhattan.
It was suggested by my wife Peggy to bring daughter Colleen's boyfriend Phlip Wilson to do the hearing impaired signing, along with my singing the NY 1 theme song. We had much fun shooting the video; and NY 1 has accepted our entry to be judged as the possible winner.
I invite you all to check it out at the following link.
http://contest.ny1.com/videos/56
 
*The more hits it receives the more likely We get "most viewed video status".
Thanks -  Bob Horan                                            


Refinance and lower payments online with Ditech. Visit www.ditech.com Today!

Polka

From Les Herring

The Grammys have announced that they will no longer present an award in the polka catagory.  Too bad for Jimmy Sturr--who, incidently, is mostly Irish.

Fwd: Music and Torture - Fri, 5/15 - Bard College

The Human Rights Project and the Center for Curatorial Studies
at Bard College invite you to join us at a one-day conference on

MUSIC AND TORTURE

to be held in conjunction with the opening of, and taking place at, Olafur
Eliasson's "Parliament of Reality" installation, on Friday 15 May.

Schedule of speakers

10:30AM  Opening remarks

10:45AM  Chloe Davies, Reprieve and ZeroDB (London)
       on music torture

11:30AM  David Peisner, SPIN Magazine
       "Bring The Noise: How music found its way into American
       interrogation booths"

12:15PM  John Hamilton, Comparative Literature, NYU
       "Torture as an Instrument of Music" (on the brazen bull of
       Phalaris)

1:00PM  LUNCH  +  ZeroDB silent protest recording session

2:00PM  Thomas Levin, German, Princeton University
       "Diabolus in Musica: A Playdoyer for Painful Sounds"

2:45PM  Branden Joseph, Art History, Columbia University
       "Biomusic"

3:30PM  Keynote address by Mark Danner, Chace Professor of Foreign
       Affairs, Politics, and Humanities

4:15PM  Roundtable discussion moderated by Suzanne Cusick, Music, NYU

5:00PM  Closing remarks

In the event of rain, all events will take place in the Multipurpose Room,
Bertelsmann Campus Center.

Additional support for the conference provided by the Goethe-Institut New
York.

Please let me or Danielle Riou (riou@bard.edu, x 7110) know if you have any
questions.

- Tom Keenan


My recording reissued!

My CD recording “Slainte from Ulster County N.Y. Irish Music of the Catskills” from 20 years ago has now been reissued! If you are interested in getting a copy, contact me at bobluskmusic@gmail.com The price is $15 (includes shipping).

Bob Cohen's NEWEST PROJECT: A 4-CD SET FOR ALL OUR GRANDCHILDREN


From: ROBERT COHEN rcohen4@hvc.rr.com

Friends:
 
Attached is the story of and the list of songs on my newest CD project: "Grandson Beecher & Grandpa Bob's Songbook for All Grandchildren Everwhere" - that's GBGBSAGE in case you like to say it all in one breath. I have sung all 131 songs in the Reader's Digest Children's Songbook which is a favorite of our grandson, Beecher Woods Robbi.  The songs range from Sesame Street, Wizard of Oz and Disney movie pieces to nursery rhymes, folksongs, and novelty numbers.  I accompany myself on piana, guitar, autoharp and accordion (but not all at once!)  It is a fun filled informal rendering (mistakes included) that should get your grandchildren singing, dancing, and laughing.
 
I am making it available for $25 plus postage ($2.53) for anyone who wants to gift their grandchildren with these wonderful songs, or even enjoy it with your own inner-grandchild. The 3-page listing of songs and the story of how this CD came to be (see the attached) will be sent along with the 4-CD set.   
 
I don't have fancy-shmancy ways for you to pay, so if your interested (look over the song list) you can send a check, made out to me, to P.O.Box 651, Hurley, NY 12443 and I will mail it out to you post-haste.
 
You are the first, aside from our grandchildren, to know about this.  May I wish you a joyous and loving Pesach (Passover) and Easter and a prayer for a warm and peace-filled Spring in which the new green of the season will stir the green in our wallets and our country will, as it always has, meet the challenges that lie ahead.
 
Shalom, Bob
845 338-6180 or cell: 845 309-3041
 
P.S. The cover page of the program notes has colorful pictures of me, Beecher, and me & Beecher.  It was too complicated to send out into cyberspace but you will have it with the set.  Our dear friend, Estelle Nadler designed it.  Another dear friend, Bruce Berky recorded the whole megillah, and one other dear friend, Bill Ayton who designed my website - www.cantorBob.com posted it there. Of course, Pat and the grandchildren were the inspiration throughout.
 
Songbook Order Form & CD song program attached.

Musicians wanted

From Jim Marzano -
Dear Hudson Valley Folkies~  Anyone wishing to participate in our "Songs of the Hudson Valley" Open Mic night please get in touch as we still have a few openings.  Our "Open Mic" is not like any other as we like to present about 6 acts with a 20-30min set each.  The food is great & I always share the door with the musicians, so if you can get out your base, the better we do, the better you'll do.
keep lookin up...jbo~*(:-)>
 
 Contact Jim Marzano -

A.I.R. Studio Gallery
(Artist-In-Residence)
71 O'Neil St, Kingston, NY
http://www.AirStudioGallery.com/

Remembering the Women's Orchestra of Birkenau

Music in Desperate Times: Remembering the Women's Orchestra of Birkenau

One night only
Host:
Ars Choralis
Type:
Network:
Global
Date:
Saturday, March 28, 2009
Time:
8:00pm - 11:00pm
Location:
The Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine
Street:
1047 Amsterdam Ave.
City/Town:
New York, NY
Phone:
2123167490
Email:

Description

Ars Choralis (the group I sing with) presents "Music in Desperate Times: Remembering the Women's Orchestra of Birkenau," conceived and conducted by Barbara Pickhardt. "Music in Desperate Times" is a choral concert interweaving orchestral music with spoken memoirs of the World War II women's orchestra and songs of hope, peace and resistance.

Based on memoirs and histories of survivors of the only women's orchestra to play in World War II concentration camps, this concert recreates the unusual instrumentation of the orchestra: violins, mandolins, accordion, recorder, flute, cello, piano, percussion, and singers. The story is told through readings, choral music and representative orchestral music.

For tickets, visit:
http://www.stjohndivine.org/DesperateTimes.html

North American Urban Folk Music 1940-1960

You are invited!

North American Urban Folk Music 1940-1960
Saturday
March 28, 2009
1:00-10:00 PM

Elisabeth Irwin High School
40 Charlton Street
Between Varrick Street and Sixth Avenue
New York, NY 10014


Sponsored by New York Pinewoods Folk Music Club
(Folk Music Society of New York, Inc.)

Hosted by Little Red School House and Elisabeth Irwin High School
(LREI, Inc.)

Come celebrate the North American urban folk music community of the 1940s and 1950s,
and pay tribute to the people who were part of it.

Schedule of events
1:00 - 1:55 PM: The Urban Folk Music Community: an Overview
2:00 - 2:55 PM: Women of the Folk Community
3:00 - 3:55 PM: Families of the Folk Musicians
4:10 - 6:00 PM: The Songs We Sang
6:00 - 7:30 PM: Dinner break
7:30 - 10:00 PM: Evening Concert

Participants (partial list)
Prof. Ray Allen
Oscar Brand
Anna Guthrie Canoni
Rochelle Goldstein
Dottie Miller Gutenkauf
Richard Hawthorne
Lori Holland
George Pickow
Jon Pickow
Jean Ritchie
Tony Saletan
Roger Sprung
Dr. Anna Lomax Wood
Hal Wylie
plus others TBA
 

All event general admission: $40.
NY Pinewoods members and LREI faculty, staff, parents, and alumni: $30.
Children and F/T students under 23: $20.

Afternoon only or evening concert only general admission: $25.
NY Pinewoods/LREI: $20.
Children and F/T students under 23: $ 15.

For more information please visit the website 
www.folkmusicny.org or call 718-672-6399.

Lincoln symposium

From Les Herring

For those of you as batty about history as me, there will be a daylong symposium on Lincoln at Bard College on Friday march 13.  It will feature the Lincoln scholars Harold Holzer and james Oakes and cover several topics.  It runs from 10am to 5pm in Olin Hall on campus.  www.bard.edu.

Books for troops

I usually don't post stories like this, but I'll be playing at Donna's bookstore, the Hudson Valley Guild on 3/13 at 7:30.  Come on by and help celebrate the birthday of this remarkable woman.
 
From: Donna Favicchio brighidscove@optonline.net
I thought this was a great human interest story. ... As all of you know by now I have been trying to get rid of some books in order to make room new stock, well I hooked up with 'Operation Paperback' to send books to the troops; but on the whole, it is individuals collecting books and mailing them and/or raising money to mail them. So I, as one of those individuals, would be hanging on the those books for awhile, because our entrepreneurial shoe-string budget really wouldn't afford that postage right now. ...
 
Then a friend suggested donating them to the prison system, and went so far as to find me all of the contact information so all I had to do is compose an e-mail. ...Before I contacted NYState prison system,  I contacted Sue Story, founder of 'Operation Paperback' and told her I had all of these books I couldn't afford postage for, plus piles of hard-covers, and I had an opportunity to donate them to the prisons. ... She thought by all means that these books should go to the prison libraries instead of sitting in storage; and that to put a book in an inmate's hands could be part of a transformation.
 
So I contacted the prison. I was initially told that they wanted the books and they would make arrangements to pick them up. I was ecstatic!  So Tom Testo, Senior Librarian at Hudson Correctional Facility, contacted me, and when hearing that I had so many paperbacks and hardcovers as well, he decided they didn't have room for them afterall. ...He was very nice and in conversation I mentioned how I originally wanted to send the paperbacks to troops and have him take only the hardcover; but that I couldn't afford the postage. ... When he hung up said he would see what he could do and get back to me. I wasn't sure what he meant. ...
 
Less than 24 hours later he called back and said the inmates had collected $200.00 for postage for me to send the paperbacks to the troops! Not state money, money that they make or is given to them. I was so touched by this.
 
...If you want to donate anything to this cause go to http://www.operationpaperback.org/ All monies go directly for postage. Just a few dollars will put a book in the hands of one of our troops.

Fisher Poets Gather for Verse, Song and Stories

From Jan Christensen

    A fascinating story of the annual meeting of poets and singers in
Astoria, Oregon. Use the URL below (free New York Times registration
may be required) to hear and see the interactive feature of poems and
songs, and view the slide show.
Jan

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/04/us/04poets.html?hp

Fisher Poets Gather for Verse, Song and Stories

Dave Densmore, on his boat, wrote his first poem as a joke in the
1970s. Now he studies writing.

By WILLIAM YARDLEY

Published: March 3, 2009 (The New York Times)

ASTORIA, Ore. — Work, sometimes just the memory of it, is what brings
the fisher poets to this faded port at the mouth of the Columbia River
for a weekend each year.

  Stuart Isett for The New York Times

Max Broderick reads his poem. His father, Jon, helped start the Fisher
Poets Gathering in 1998.

They might wax about the versatility of a deck bucket or of romance in
rubber boots, but they also describe a livelihood that can kill those
who pursue it. And at a time when industries everywhere are in
decline, this year some said that increasingly restrictive fishing
laws had long ago taught them about struggle.

"The bailout is there for bankers," said Jon Campbell, a former
fisherman from Rhode Island, reading Saturday night from what he
called a work in progress, "but they're out to sink the fleet."

That line met rousing applause here at the annual Fisher Poets
Gathering. First held in 1998 with a few people standing on a stage in
a bar, the event now fills a weekend with verse, song and storytelling
across four sites. Given the economy, attendance was somewhat lower
this year than in the past. Then again, populism played particularly
well. Camp converged with oceangoing cred. Old salts dazzled
California transplants. Even a bad day of fishing, it seems, can
produce a decent rhyme. Or not.

"I have to set aside my English-teacher hat now and then," said Fred
Chancey, recently retired from Chemeketa Community College in Salem,
Ore., who showed up for the second year in a row, just to listen. "But
a lot of it is really good stuff. I like the blue-collar school of
poetry."

The gathering generates what Mr. Chancey called "friction," a
constructive tension between those who have accumulated real
experience at sea and those who are drawn to them. Looks can be
deceiving. Some participants seem more city than seaworthy but can
recount years on deck. Others look the part but mostly like the lore.

A few performers, like Mr. Campbell, have Web sites. Others, too busy
fishing, write only when the gathering presents a deadline. Still
others face parental expectations.

Max Broderick, 20, a junior at Humboldt State University who is
majoring in natural resource planning, has fished his family's
commercial site on Bristol Bay in Alaska each summer since he was 13.
On Saturday night, he recounted one dreamlike haul:

As it turns out, this set saves the day,

Because the fish train hits

and now we're being highly paid.

With each jag that comes over the roller of kings, reds and chums,

This business of fishing has instantly become more fun.

Mr. Broderick's father, Jon, teaches English and other subjects at
Seaside High School, just south of Astoria and helped start the Fisher
Poets Gathering. Jon Broderick said he was motivated by an interest in
storytelling and because "work was a better subject than love."

For a few fishermen, the event has helped introduce them to a new
audience. Dave Densmore, 62, of Knappa, Ore., said he wrote his first
poem as a joke while hung over one morning in the 1970s. He read it to
fellow fishermen over a VHF radio off Kodiak, Alaska. Now Mr. Densmore
gets calls to perform on Martha's Vineyard, Mass., in the middle of
salmon season and has to decide what to do. He says he chooses
fishing.

"Those are the people I want to talk to," Mr. Densmore said of the
affluent coastal residents who have shown a steady interest in his
stories. "Not that I want to benefit, but I want the industry to
benefit. We're being managed to death."

Mr. Densmore grew up on the Aleutian Islands, where his parents were
missionaries. Writing was not an early interest; now he studies with a
teacher from the local community college.

On Saturday morning, he held an "open boat," inviting attendees of the
gathering into the galley of his salmon fishing boat, the Cold Stream.
Retirees in trim weatherproof jackets marveled at his hard-work hands.

"This is the closest I've been to a boat like this," said Ted Osborn,
an architect who, with his wife Wendy, is waiting for their new
retirement home overlooking the Columbia to be completed. "We lived
for 30 years in Southern California, where pretentiousness is king.
This place is much more real."

The Clatsop County Historical Society is preparing for Astoria's
bicentennial celebration in 2011, two centuries after John Jacob
Astor's Pacific Fur Company established a trading post here. Timber
and fishing followed the fur trade. Struggle came when other ports
rose, dams were built and resource industries faded. The population,
about 10,000, has been flat for decades, though downtown is shifting
toward art and espresso. Victorian houses clutter hillsides, some
brightly renovated, others falling apart.

The most striking legacy of the past is the pilings that rise
everywhere out of the river, with no apparent purpose. They used to
support scores of salmon canneries. Now the new Cannery Pier Hotel
rests on one century-old set beneath the Astoria-Megler Bridge, which
crosses the river to Washington State.

Of course, fresh fish from the region is favored now, not canned.
Entrants in the gathering's "on-site" poetry contest on Saturday night
were told barely 24 hours earlier that submissions had to be at least
eight lines, take less than a minute to read and include the phrase
"you might be missing fish."

Rob Seitz, who cycles nearly year round through cod, whiting and
Dungeness crab seasons on his 80-foot steel boat, placed third with
these verses:

If your son is not intimidating

On the line of scrimmage,

If your daughter's report card

Is not the brightest image,

If your children are not turning out

As healthy as you'd wished,

Perhaps on your dinner table

You might be missing fish.

Mr. Seitz, 42, said he wrote only once a year, on gathering weekend in
Astoria. But he does prepare.

"On the boat, I don't have a TV," he said. "We just read."

Congratulations to me!

After 2 1/2 years of study at the Swaranjali Hindustani Classical
Music School I finally finished the first year, (level 1, Bal
Sangeet, by Pandit Vinayakbua Patwardhan). This by the way is a class
that young children do very well in. The instructor, Anjali Nandedkar
is a very patient dedicated teacher. www.swaranjalimusicschool.com

Dance Flurry

Was only able to go to the Saratoga Dance Flurry for the day. What a
wonderful time! Played dobro at some unlikely jams including Waltz,
Cape Breton and Old Timey. Cape Breton not that much of a stretch as
there has always been a strong C&W influence there. (But ow, the key
of A).

Also had a good workout on the fiddle and concertina, saw so many old
friends. Next year we're there for the weekend.

Then back to Saugerties to the Democratic Party party/dance with
Doctor Romo and the group "Too Much Fun" at the old Sach's Lodge -
Total Tennis. After not dancing at the Dance Flurry, Michelle
actually got me out on the floog for a few whirls and waltzes. Happy
Valentines!

Tomorrow Shape Note Singing.