Dedicated to the memory of "The Bluegrass Boy Himself," John Herald.

Monday, September 4 -- Noon to 8pm
(due to rain, rescheduled from original Sat., Sep. 2 date)
Willow Kiln Park, Rosendale, NY

Admission is free. Donations to the fund that provides music events at the Willow Kiln Park would be appreciated at the event or by sending a check to (and made out to) the "Town of Rosendale" Main St, Rosendale, NY, 12472 (please note "FolkFest" in the memo section).

 
Mountain Stage Canal Stage Big Cheese Courtyard Stage Sponsors Contact Directions
 

Welcome to the first of what is hoped to be an annual series of folk music festivals featuring Rosendale area musicians. The festival is taking place on three separate stages. Following are the schedules for each stage:

 

 

Mountain Stage

 Noon  Family
Corner
Family Corner Every member of this band "fell in love" with their current soulmate over twenty years ago while residing in Rosendale. Family Corner members conspire to present original material in a folksy, bluegrass, Cajun, gospelly sort of way. Members include Rosendale resident Charlie Kniceley on banjo, sisters Danetta Armm on bass/squeeze-box and Nancy Armstrong on guitar, along with niece and nephew Missy Alexander on guitar and Bill Petkanas on mandolin. Everyone adds to the harmonious tones that give this group a personal sound that only the magic of family can conjure up.

 1 pm  Helen
Avakian
Helen Avakian Singer/songwriter/guitarist Helen Avakian cultivates "a courageously idiosyncratic sound, a warm, lacy realm of reality and romance." Helen's impressive musicianship coupled with her down to earth stage manner has endeared her to an ever-increasing audience. "Meshes her classical guitar roots with a songwriting style that adds a new dimension to the realm of acoustic performers; "Helen Avakian has developed a songwriting talent which few possess," says Rhythm and News Magazine. [artist's website]

 2 pm  Eric
Erickson
Eric Erickson Now living in the Woodstock area, Eric has two albums under his belt. Peter Yarrow of Peter, Paul and Mary brought things full circle when he said, "Eric is a warm, wonderful performer. His songs carry on a marvelous tradition that we gratefully inherit." The list of performers with whom Eric has shared the stage includes Pete Seeger, Livingston Taylor, Suzanne Vega, John Hall, Happy and Artie Traum, acoustic guitar master Adrian Legg, Priscilla Herdman, Rick Danko of the Band, Tom Chapin, Ronnie Gilbert of the Weavers and the British group Fairport Convention. [artist's website]

 3 pm  Virginia
Wolves
Virginia Wolves The Virginia Wolves: brother and sister, Kelly and John McNally. The siblings were introduced to an old player piano as toddlers and later pursued other instruments. John was involved in many different project bands in high school as a drummer, while Kelly experimented with song writing on her mother's acoustic guitar. At the moment, Kelly McNally, Adele Schulz and friends are performing gigs in the New York area...singing soulful, acoustic harmonies. [artist's website]

 4 pm  Rented
Mule
Rented Mule Rented Mule is Kate and Jeff McCoy, along with other rented, borrowed, and stolen musicians as catch can. Kate writes and sings the songs and plays acoustic guitar. Jeff keeps things grounded and steady on bass and is endowed with a fine set of ears for detail. The music is a mix of country, old time, blues, and rock, aspiring to storytelling and tradition. [artist's website]

 5 pm  Jeff
Entin
Jeff Entin Rosendale resident Jeff Entin has been performing both solo and in bands for years, and currently plays guitar for the MotherLode Trio. His solo work focuses on virtuoso guitar playing as well as vocals, with a selection of originals and covers.

 6 pm  Gitfiddle Gitfiddle GitFiddle is a guitar/violin duo made up of John and Cathy Granata. They've been featured on TRI-23 TV's "Keeping Country Strong" and "Sarah D's Showcase" and played Nam Jam, Rib Fest-New Paltz, Rosendale Street Festival, the HCC-ARTS Summer Concert series and other local venues. [Artist's website]

 7 pm  Don
Haynie
&
Sheryl
Samuel
Don Haynie & Sheryl Samuel Don and Sheryl have been taking their music far and wide across America, playing concerts in an amazing range of venues: From auditoriums and theaters to sidewalks, college campuses, and coffeehouses; from legendary listening rooms including Passim in Cambridge, the Fast Folk Cafe in New York, and The Freight & Salvage Company in Berkeley, to honky-tonk roadhouses like The Silver Dollar Saloon in Butte, Montana. [artist's website]

 

 

Canal Stage

 12:30 pm  James
Krueger
James Krueger Called one of the true voices of the Catskills, James Krueger has been writing and performing his own music since the age of fifteen. He has toured the Northeast performing for groups such as the Sierra Club, the North American Bluebird Society, National Artists for Mental Health, the Catskill Center, the New York Maple Growers' Association, the Sloop Clearwater's Esopus Meadows Point Preserve and more. James is a two-time honor award winner in the Great American Song Contest, who called him "an extraordinarily talented writer with a real talent for poetic imagery." James' songs celebrate the beauty of the earth while making courageous social, philosophical and spiritual statements. [artist's website]

 1:30 pm  Workshop Alt Folk, Garage Folk, New Folk, Whatever Folk
with Annie Rorick, James Krueger and Michael Truckpile

Dispute as to what qualifies as "Folk" are as old as what Pete Seeger calls the "Great Folk Scare" starting in the 40's and 50's with the purists and traditionalists always ready to eliminate anything that smacked of modernity. It's hard to imagine that James Taylor, et.al., were once considered too experimental. In these days of Ani and her descendants, "if the player calls it folk, it is folk", whether it's from influences of other forms of music, unusual instrumentation, or "whatever". Pete in concert once called rap the folk for the urban masses and did his version of one. So we are pleased to have three young musicians conduct this workshop. Each brings their own approach, widely varying influences, and due respect for their own and each others' creativity. You are invited you to journey with them into what the music will become.


Annie Rorick

James Krueger

Michael Truckpile
Annie Rorick is a songwriter and poet of 12 years, and a Music Therapy graduate from SUNY New Paltz, a Reiki Master and an artist. Her lyrics and poetry touch an honest chord on the experience of being human. With simple spiritual gratitude, she reveals vulnerability, determination, confusion, sorrow, desire and inspiration which tempt her audience on the journey into self-exploration.
James Krueger is performing on the Canal Stage at 12:30 P.M. [artist's website]
Michael Truckpile is performing on the Canal Stage at 4:00 P.M. [artist's website]


 2:30 pm  Workshop Social Commentary
with Redwood, Don Haynie, Danielle Woerner, T.G. Vanini and Jon Stein

Folk Music, more than any other form, has featured lyrics that tell a story or make a point. Social commentary, from political protests to cultural satire, is heard throughout the folk repertoire from early European times to this century. Movements for social change in this country have been heralded and accompanied by songs, given to us by American legends such as Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, Joan Baez, Phil Ochs and so many others. Folk music is the music of the people, which often invites the participation of all, rather than being strictly a performance art. In this age of turmoil, war, cultural violence and a plethora of ills, social commentary songs are being sung and written at amazing rates. Today's workshop will offer a tiny sample, performed by a variety of musicians. You are invited to join in as a thoughtful listener and to sing along when inspired.


Redwood

Don Haynie

Danielle Woerner

T. G. Vanini

Jon Stein
Redwood grew up in the Redwood country of Northern California, where she was inspired by the folk music of Joan Baez, Richard and Mimi Farina and Bob Dylan. She now performs with her husband, the Moose, as Redwood Moose, drawing on many acoustic styles and traditions. Many of her original songs emphasize social commentary, social protest, and satire. [artist's website]
Don Haynie's songwriting is often compared favorably with the greatest, like Bob Dylan and Randy Newman, and his songs can make you laugh, cry, or dance. Don will be performing with Sheryl Samuel at 7 PM pm on the Mountain Stage. [artist's website]
Danielle Woerner Soprano Danielle Woerner has performed from La MaMa to Lincoln Center and throughout the East Coast, as well as extensively in the Hudson Valley. Her internationally-acclaimed debut CD, She Walks in Beauty: Soprano Danielle Woerner Sings Chamber Music and Songs of Otto Luenig and Robert Starer, will be followed next fall by Voices of the Hudson Valley. Danielle has sung leading operatic and musical theater roles with many of the region's companies, and is a frequent soloist with the Hudson Valley Philharmonic, Woodstock Chamber Orchestra, and Ars Choralis. She leads the choral ensemble Voices for Peace. She teaches voice at her Shokan Studio, Dutchess County Community College, and the Vassar College Drama Department. [artist's website]
T.G. Vanini has performed his songs and song-poems widely in the Hudson Valley and beyond, notably with The Princes of Serendip. He's also in demand as a Celtic fiddler. As a long-time peace and social justice activist, Vanini appreciates music's manifold power to nurture peace, express outrage, spread understanding, heap with ridicule, and lift spirits. He is currently a Professor of Mathematics at the City University of New York. [artist's website]
Jon Stein has been writing and performing songs for over thirty years and hosting popular folk shows since 1983. In 1978 he appeared at the Philly Folk Festival in a workshop moderated by Pete Seeger. Stein went on to perform in various venues and on several radio and TV shows throughout the country. Jon created the famed concert series at Bodles Opera House and was host for 8 years. [artist's website]


 4 pm  Michael Truckpile Michael Truckpile Michael Truckpile's music is a blend of folk, country and indie rock hewn through bleary eyes and sore hands in 2:00 AM stints. At times starkly sublime and others bombastic and jovial, Michael's songs are born out of solitary moments and playful exploration while bangin' away on the acoustic guitar. Based out of the Hudson Valley in our cozy town of Rosendale, Michael performs both solo and with a varied cast of characters and musicians. The sound is rich and enveloping bringing listeners into the intimate personal space of Truckpile's songs journeying though the personal, political, satirical and revelatory. [artist's website]

 

 

Big Cheese Courtyard Stage

 1 pm 
to
5 pm
Open
Mic
Hosted by Rented Mule and James Krueger
See the host to arrange time on this stage and try out your folk performance on the audience in the courtyard.

 

 

Sponsors, Supporters, Acknowledgements
 

Sponsors

Redwood Moose


WDST Radio Woodstock


Hard Pressed Records

Supporting Area Businesses

Rosendale Cafe ( All attendees and participants enjoy 10% off on day of festival at The Rosendale Cafe )
Rosendale Hardware
Bill Brooks
McCoy's Guitar Shop
Sapphire - Main St., Rosendale
Barcone's Music
Kate McCoy
High Falls Cafe
the Alamo
the Morning Brew Cafe
Springtown Greengrocers
Sheeley House Bed and Breakfast

Acknowledgements

Supervisor Bob Gallagher
Town of Rosendale
The Big Cheese
The Whistance Family
Freddie Blue Fox
Charlie Kniceley
Steve Terpening
Tuned-In Web Design
HVmusic.com (Hudson Valley Music)

 

 

Contact
 

Garcia    Michael Dmoch
845-658-3159 ext 3
MOOSEHERD@peoplepc.com

 

 

Statement of Intent
 

It has long seemed to me that the extraordinarily talented folk singers and acoustic musicians of the Hudson Valley richly deserved their own festival where they could exhibit their skills in an appropriately supportive and respectful venue-a festival of, for and by folk musicians. I also think it is important and appropriate to provide a venue to offer encouragement to musicians no matter their skill level. It is both my hope and my clear and strong intent to make this that folk festival. The model for this year's festival is the Old Songs Festival, with performance, workshop, and open mike stages. Part of my motivation has been a longstanding frustration with area festivals that have been less than supportive of local musicians (no "people's" organization should be telling local musicians they do not accept "unsolicited submissions"). In the late 70's there was an Ulster County Folk Festival organized by Bob Lusk, and I expect and hope he will be joining us in this continuation of that effort.

I thank all the musicians and volunteers who have made this year's festival possible, and I invite all of them and all who are interested to think of this festival as "your own", and take an active role in planning and developing a self-sustaining organization that can make this festival an annual event. This year's festival has been organized as a "Dmochracy" with a great deal of help, but only because it was done in haste and I happen to have the appropriate experience and connections. It is my intent and purpose to turn it into a true egalitarian democracy in ensuing years, and I invite any person of good will who shares these interests to take part in this grand adventure.

Michael "the Moose" Dmoch

 

 

 
Mountain Stage Canal Stage Big Cheese Courtyard Stage Sponsors Contact Directions