Amy Speace – AcousticMusicScene.com https://acousticmusicscene.com Mon, 23 Mar 2026 15:24:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Erin Ash Sullivan Wins Heyman Rising Artist Award https://acousticmusicscene.com/2026/03/23/erin-ash-sullivan-wins-heyman-rising-artist-award/ Mon, 23 Mar 2026 15:19:57 +0000 https://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=13638 Erin Ash Sullivan, a Massachusetts-based singer-songwriter, has been named as the winner of the 2025 Heyman Rising Artist Award. Focus Music established the award in 2022 in honor of the late Reba and Vic Heyman, two stalwart supporters of the folk music community.

Sullivan –- whose songs draw inspiration from her own life experiences — was cited for her dedication to the craft, storytelling, stage demeanor, and immersion in the folk community. She beat out finalists Allison Strong and Us! (a trio comprised of AcousticMusicScene.com co-creator Glen Roethel, Judy Kass and Amy Soucy) in a competition that drew more than four times the number of applications than it has in previous years. The number of entries and quality of them made the listening- and decision-making process both time-consuming and challenging for judges Ron Olesko (a folk DJ and creator of Folk Music Notebook), Tina Ross (a singer-songwriter who won the award in 2022), and Debby St. Charles.

“I’m just so happy and grateful,” said Sullivan of receiving the award from the predominantly volunteer organization that that provides performance opportunities for and presents concerts by emerging and nationally touring singer-songwriters, and folk and acoustic musicians in DC, Maryland and Virginia. “To get that vote of confidence from the Focus Music judges has just felt so good. It comes at a time when I’m embarking on a third album and to have that message of support from the organization is really heartening and an encouraging reminder to keep on going,” she told AcousticMusicScene.com.

Sullivan — who primarily performs in the northeast U.S. and along the eastern seaboard —  describes her music as “story-driven folk.” She notes that the kind of songs that she personally loves are those that have a really vivid story attached to them – like ones penned by singer-songwriters Lori McKenna and Patty Griffin. “If you’re someone who likes music that’s going to immerse you in other people’s perspectives and stories, then my songs might be interesting to you,” she said.

In addition to McKenna and Griffin, she cites singer-songwriters Ellis Paul and Vance Gilbert as major inspirations. Sullivan has participated in Ellis Paul’s New England Songwriter Retreats for a number of years. “Those experiences have been game changers for me in terms of inspiration and building community for songwriters,” she said. “Another inspiration for me has been Vance Gilbert,” whom she calls “a real honest and loving mentor.” Noting that he’s someone who doesn’t pull punches, she said: “He just pursues everything with honesty and joy, and I’d like to do that too.”

Music has long been a major part of Sullivan’s life. She recalls taking piano and voice lessons from her grandmother during childhood. However, she didn’t start playing guitar or writing songs until after graduating from Amherst College. While living in and teaching elementary school in New York City, she and Amy Speace, a college friend who is also a noted singer-songwriter, formed a band, Edith O. that performed at venues across the city and released an album called Tattooed Queen. Although marriage, children and her career in education (as both a teacher and an administrator) prompted her to put music on the back-burner for years, Sullivan resumed writing and performing in 2018 and released her debut album in 2021. Entitled We Can Have Each Other, it reached #10 on the monthly Folk Alliance International Folk Radio Charts, and was followed up in 2024 by Signposts and Marks, which reached #4 on the top albums chart during the month that it was released.

Sullivan was named the winner of the Al Johnson Performing Songwriter Award during the 2025 Wildflower! Arts & Music Festival in Richardson, Texas and looks forward to performing at the festival in May. She also was voted a “Most Wanted to Return” Artists by festival attendees following the Grassy Hill Emerging Artist Showcase at the 2023 Falcon Ridge Folk Festival, won the Rose Garden Coffeehouse Performing Songwriter Competition that year, and has been a finalist in a number of other songwriting competitions.

Beyond providing recognition and support, the Heyman Rising Artist Award includes $1,000, which Sullivan plans to use towards producing her third album with Doug Kwartler at Hollow Body Studios near Boston, Massachusetts.

The Heyman Rising Artist Award is named for Vic and Reba Heyman, who were widely viewed as “folk angels” for their staunch, decades-long support of artists – especially those early in their careers. Reba Heyman, who passed away in June 2021 2021 at age 84, grew up in Chevy Chase, Maryland and lived in Rockville, MD for decades. Along with her husband Vic, who died years earlier, she was an integral part of the folk music community in Maryland, South Florida and nationally for many years. The couple was known for their generous financial backing for folk festivals and artists, and also formerly ran a concert series in Rockville known as Vic’s Music Corner. They also launched and ran Heyman Mailing Service for many years (a godsend for artists in the pre-Internet days), served on the boards of several music festivals, and established a scholarship fund for performing artists. In her later years, Reba Heyman spent considerable time in Florida and co-presented the South Florida Folk Festival Singer-Songwriter Competition, whose winners received the Vic Heyman Songwriting Award – including a cash prize and the opportunity to perform at the festival.

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FARM Gathering & Presenter Summit Set for Oct. 23-26 https://acousticmusicscene.com/2025/10/19/farm-gathering-presenter-summit-set-for-oct-23-26/ Sun, 19 Oct 2025 05:11:44 +0000 https://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=13579 Nearly 400 people will converge on Lisle, Illinois (near Chicago) October 23-26, 2025 for the annual FARM Gathering & Presenter Summit presented by Folk Alliance Region Midwest, one of five North American regional affiliates of Folk Alliance International. The extended weekend of contemporary and traditional folk music, learning opportunities and networking features 14 official juried showcases, along with a number of late-night private showcases hosted by AcousticMusicScene.com and others.

Booking gigs may be the primary objective of some performing artists who attend the FARM Gathering, and many presenters and folk DJs do scout out new artists and those whom they have not previously heard and seen in perform live. However, the conference experience is much more than that; it’s really about forging connections, building community, and attending workshops and panel discussions to learn about options to further their careers, promote the music, and attract audiences and listeners

This year’s conference also includes a Presenter Summit for the first time. It will feature a full track of programming designed specifically for venues, festivals and other concert presenters to learn from experts in accounting, audience development, community engagement, marketing, and production.

Taking center stage during this year’s FARM Gathering will be 14 artists/acts selected by a panel of judges to each perform a short set of just shy of 20 minutes, with full sound Showcasing their talents on Friday night will be Mac and Cheese, Dennis Warner, Weary Ramblers, Andy Baker, Stone & Snow, Amy Speace, and Paula Boggs Band. Saturday’s official showcase lineup features Warren & Flick, The Twangtown Paramours, Sam Robbins, Maggie’s Wake, Dave Moore, Bruce Henry & Dean Magraw, and Abigail Stauffer and the Wisdom. Unplugged private showcases follow from 10:30 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. each evening.

On the docket for Thursday night is a barn dance, followed by a folk DJ showcase featuring performances by Friction Farm, Gia Dagenhart, Chris Walz, Matt Watroba, The Springtails, Helene Cronin, Senior Infants, Bobbie Lancaster, Rees Shad, Mark Jewett, The Thorntons, and Dandelion Delivery Service. Following that showcase, attendees also will shuffle between a number of rooms to enjoy private showcases.

“In addition to the great performances and showcases we have lined up, I am very excited to welcome some special guests to this year’s conference who will speak to the issues affecting our country and our local music communities right now, including our keynote speaker Nicky Mehta.” said Ellen Stanley, the conference director. “Although best known for being a member of the Canadian folk band The Wailin’ Jennys, she is also an activist and will talk about how artists can stay true to their artistic vision and the causes they believe in.” She also mentioned Spencer LaJoye, a winner of the prestigious Kerrville New Folk Competition, who will give a spotlight talk ahead of the keynote about telling their truth as a queer artist

Daytime programming includes a wide array of workshops and panel discussions and peer group conversations addressing timely topics. “”We’re going to talk about the issues that we’re all worried about, and we hope to provide a welcoming space for everyone to share their stories and learn from others as we do our best to navigate these challenging times, Stanley told AcousticMusicScene.com.

Song swapping and jamming, speed mentoring sessions, open mics, and FARM’s popular Performance Lane series of 10-minute mini-showcases that take place simultaneously in several rooms are also part of the daytime mix. Special events on Friday include a 30-minute Chicago Celtic Spotlight featuring Reverie Road and a folk DJ meet & greet. Marilyn Rea Beyer, who hosts the nationally syndicated weekly radio program “The Midnight Special” from the studios of Chicago’s WFMT, will host a Wisdom Across the Ages panel discussion featuring artists and activists from different generations: Amy Speace, Paula Boggs, Katie Dahl, and Sam Robbins. Also on the docket for Saturday afternoon is a Celtic jam, as well as the spotlight and keynote talks. FARM’s 2025 Lantern Bearer Awards will be presented following dinner that evening to two individuals who have made significant contributions to the folk community locally and/or regionally. This year’s recipients are Charlie Mosbrook (a musician, former FARM board president, and current vice president of Folk Alliance International) and Lilli Kuzma, a veteran folk DJ at WDCB Public Radio in Glen Ellyn, Illinois).

AcousticMusicScene.com Hosts Two Nights of Private Showcases

Although AcousticMusicScene.com has hosted primarily song swap-style private showcases at Northeast Regional Folk Alliance (NERFA), Southeast Regional Folk Alliance (SERFA), and Southwest Regional Folk Alliance (SWRFA) conferences, and its editor & publisher has also participated in Folk Alliance Region-West (FAR-West) conference, this year marks the first time that two nights of private showcases will be held under its banner at a FARM Gathering. The AcousticMusicScene.com Showcase lineup follows.

Thursday Overnight in Muddy Waters (Conference 3) Room

10:30  Ben Bedford & Vanessa Lively, Jim Patton & Sherry Brokus

11:00  Erin Eades, Rob Lytle

11:30  The Shandies, another artist TBA ?

12:00  Julie Grower, Lucy Isabel

12:30  Tony DiCorpo, Doug Harsch

1:00    Josh Harty, Josh Rose

1:30    Patty & Craig, The Raven & The Remedy

2:00    Beth Bombara

Friday Overnight in Childress/Saxton (Oak/Green) Room

10:30  Two from Texas: Lynn Crossett, Tipps & Obermiller

11:00  A Trio of Duos: Ruth & Max Bloomquist, Dan & Faith, Tom & Barb Webber

12:00  Mixed Bag: Sue Horowitz, Miles & Mafale, Mike Ward

1:00    Chris Farrell, Jim Gary

1:30    Gina Forsyth, Karen Mal & David Stoddard

2:00    Rick Vines, Joshua Vorvick

FARM is one of five North American regional affiliates of Folk Alliance International (folk.org), a nonprofit organization that aims to serve, strengthen and engage the global folk music community through preservation, presentation and promotion. Although folks from throughout North America attend its annual Gathering, FARM (farmfolk.org) serves Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Manitoba, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Nunavut, Ohio, Saskatchewan, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. The 2026 FARM Gathering is set for October 22-25 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. FAR-West and SWRFA held their annual conferences earlier this fall, while NERFA’s is slated for Nov. 6-9 in Albany, New York.

Editor’s Note: In addition to curating and hosting two nights of private showcases, I look forward to sharing information and insights gleaned from my many years as public relations and strategic communications professional, as well as a concert and former festival presenter with conference attendees. I will join Elexa Dawson and Joy Zimmerman as part of a Promoting Your Event panel discussion and will offer a series of one-on-one speed mentoring sessions. A past president of NERFA and former board member of Folk Alliance International, I am excited to be attending my first in-person FARM Gathering.

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FAI Folk Radio Charts – October 2024 https://acousticmusicscene.com/2024/11/06/fai-folk-radio-charts-october-2024/ Wed, 06 Nov 2024 12:47:27 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=12991 Amy Speace - The American DreamNashville-based contemporary folk and Americana singer-songwriter Amy Speace’s The American Dream was the top album, while its title track was the most-played song and she was the second most-played artist on folk radio during October 2024. Kris Kristofferson, a singer-songwriter and pioneer of the 1970s outlaw country movement, who died on Sept. 28, was the month’s top artist. So say charts compiled by Folk Alliance International based on radio playlists submitted to FOLKDJ-L, an electronic discussion group for DJs and others interested in folk-based music on the radio.

[Here’s a link to enjoy the official video for Amy Speace’s “The American Dream”:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dqf9isqmEu4.]

The October 2024 top albums, songs and artists charts are based on 10,592 airplays reported on 374 playlists submitted by 101 different folk DJs. The number of reported spins is shown below in parentheses.

Folk Alliance International (folk.org) is a nonprofit organization that aims to serve, strengthen, and engage the global folk music community through preservation, presentation and promotion.

Top Albums of October 2024

1. The American Dream by Amy Speace (82)
2. Bluegrass Sings Paxton by Various Artists (75)
3. Lonesome Road by Joel Mabus (55)
4. Heart of the Swan by Carla Sciaky (52)
5. Everything Must Go by Donal Hinely (48)
6. In the Real World by Eric Bibb (47)
7. Now, O Now by Rakish (43)
8. Wildfire by House of Hamill (38)
9. Woodland by Gillian Welch and David Rawlings (35)
9. Quiet Town by Mindy Smith (35)
11. Beneath Blue Water by Bett Padgett (34)
11. Lantern in the Dark: Songs of Comfort and Lullabies by Edie
Carey and Sarah Sample (34)
13. The Legend of Sugarbelly by Guy Davis (33)
14. This Hen’s Gonna Cro by Colleen Kattau (32)
14. Things Done Changed by Jerron Paxton (32)
16. Back to the Light by Heather Pierson (31)
16. The Sound of That by Mark Stepakoff (31)
16. Trapeze by Kate McDonnell (31)
19. Deep Feeler by Liv Greene (30)
20. Carved in the Bark by Nick Carter (29)
20. Highway Prayers by Billy Strings (29)
22. Hot Jazz Cool Blues and Hard Hitting Songs by Barbara Dane (28)
22. Woodbird by Jenny Burtis (28)
22. With a Guitar and a Pen by Tish Hinojosa (28)
22. Ten Good Sermons by Eugene Ruffolo (28)
22. The Set by Jerry Douglas (28)
27. Crooked Road by Steve Erickson (26)
27. Hands of Time by Rik Palieri (26)
29. Backbone by Kasey Chambers (25)
30. Storm Season by Tania Elizabeth (24)
30. Manos Panamericanos by Larry and Joe (24)
30. From China to Appalachia by Cathy Fink, Chao Tian, and Marcy Marxer (24)
33. Willie Watson by Willie Watson (23)
34. Dan Tyminski: Live From the Ryman by Dan Tyminski (22)
35. Never Too Late by Neale Eckstein (21)
35. Somewhere in the Constellation by Brad Yoder (21)
35. Hurricane’s Eye by Jan Gillies (21)
38. Earth Music by Moses Crouch (20)
38. Terra Madre by Beppe Gambetta (20)
38. Haunted by Steve Madewell (20)
38. Into the Wild by Molly Tuttle and Golden Highway (20)
42. Hanging at the Luna Star by Lou Dominguez (19)
42. Harbortowne by Jim Patton and Sherry Brokus (19)
44. Always Here by Trampled by Turtles (17)
44. Pathways by Julian Taylor (17)
44. Woman Creature (Portrait of a Woman, Part 2) by Mean Mary (17)
44. Boarding Windows in Paradise by Rebecca Frazier (17)
48. Blessed by the West by Sarah Pierce (16)
48. A Prosperous Gale by Open the Door for Three (16)
48. Symbiont by Jake Blount and Mali Obomsawin (16)

Top Songs of October 2024

1. “The American Dream” by Amy Speace (20)
2. “Standing by a River” by Carla Sciaky (16)
3. “I Can’t Help but Wonder (Where I’m Bound)” by Tom Paxton and Della Mae (13)
3. “Me and Bobbie McGee” by Kris Kristofferson (13)
5. “Something ‘Bout a Town” by Amy Speace (12)
5. “Wild Geese” by Liv Greene (12)
5. “When Fall Comes to New England” by Cheryl Wheeler (12)
8. “Gray October Days” by Bett Padgett (11)
8. “Put a Woman in Charge” by Raise the Vibration (11)
8. “Sunday Mornin’ Comin’ Down” by Kris Kristofferson (11)
11. “Blues in a Bottle” by Joel Mabus (10)
11. “This Hen’s Gonna Crow” by Colleen Kattau (10)
11. “The Frog and the Scorpion” by Tom Smith (10)
11. “Love Is Gonna Come Again” by Amy Speace (10)
11. “I Can’t Wait to Wake Up Tomorrow” by Mark Stepakoff (10)
11. “Lightly Come or Lightly Go” by Rakish (10)
11. “The Welcome Song” by Jan Aldridge Clark (10)
18. “Ramblin’ Boy” by Danny Paisley (9)
18. “Time After Time” by Edie Carey and Sarah Sample (9)
18. “Crooked Road” by Steve Erickson (9)
18. “Show Up” by Natalia Zukerman (9)
18. “With a Guitar and a Pen” by Tish Hinojosa (9)
18. “Blackbird” by Edie Carey and Sarah Sample (9)
18. “Everything Must Go” by Donal Hinely (9)
18. “Where Did You Go” by Amy Speace (9)
18. “1800 and Froze to Death” by Carla Sciaky (9)
18. “Dirty Dish Rag” by Theme: Harvey Reid (9)
18. “Up Here in the Mountains” by Heather Pierson (9)

Top Artists of October 2024

1. Kris Kristofferson (107)
2. Amy Speace (89)
3. Joel Mabus (65)
4. Carla Sciaky (54)
5. Eric Bibb (51)
6. Donal Hinely (48)
7. Barbara Dane (47)
8. Rakish (43)
9. House of Hamill (39)
9. Gillian Welch and David Rawlings (39)
9. The Brothers Four (39)
12. John Prine (37)
13. Billy Strings (36)
13. Guy Davis (36)
13. Mindy Smith (36)
16. Heather Pierson (35)
16. Colleen Kattau (35)
18. Edie Carey and Sarah Sample (34)
18. Bett Padgett (34)
20. Kate McDonnell (33)
20. Jerron Paxton (33)
22. John McCutcheon (32)
22. Tom Paxton (32)
24. Mark Stepakoff (31)
25. Tish Hinojosa (30)
25. Liv Greene (30)
25. Eugene Ruffolo (30)
28. Nick Carter (29)
28. Rik Palieri (29)
28. Jerry Douglas (29)
31. Jenny Burtis (28)
31. Kasey Chambers (28)
33. Steve Erickson (27)
33. Cheryl Wheeler (27)
35. Larry and Joe (26)
36. Joni Mitchell (25)
37. Cathy Fink, Chao Tian, and Marcy Marxer (24)
37. Dan Tyminski (24)
37. Molly Tuttle and Golden Highway (24)
37. Tim Grimm (24)
37. Tania Elizabeth (24)

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AcousticMusicScene.com Hosts Midnight Hoot at 2024 SERFA Conference https://acousticmusicscene.com/2024/05/04/acousticmusicscene-com-hosts-midnight-hoot-at-2024-serfa-conference/ Sat, 04 May 2024 13:15:36 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=12830 AcousticMusicScene.com and others. ]]> SERFA 2024 LogoMore than 300 people will converge on Black Mountain, North Carolina, May 9-12, 2024 for the annual Southeast Regional Folk Alliance (SERFA) Conference. An extended weekend of contemporary and traditional folk music, networking and learning opportunities, the conference will be keynoted by Rachael Sage and features 16 juried official showcases, along with a number of late-night private showcases hosted by AcousticMusicScene.com and others.

Nurture the Future is this year’s conference theme. “It was something we felt needed to be communicated as our world is changing every second of the day,” says Jill Kettles, SERFA’s board president. “We aim to uphold the past, mold the present, and project it for future generations; this is not just important but vital.”

SERFA is a regional affiliate of Folk Alliance International (folk.org), a nonprofit organization that aims to serve, strengthen and engage the global folk music community through preservation, presentation and promotion. SERFA (serfa.org) exists to promote, develop and celebrate the diverse heritage of roots and indigenous music, dance, storytelling and related arts in the southeastern United States. It has produced an annual conference since 2008. This is SERFA’s third consecutive year at the YMCA Blue Ridge Assembly, nestled in the Blue Ridge Mountains of western North Carolina.

The official showcases take place Friday and Saturday evenings, with each artist/act performing a 15-minute set. Unplugged private showcases follow from 10:40 p.m. to 2 a.m. Also on the agenda are daytime panel discussions and workshops, a Wisdom of the Elders session, a few thematic song circles, open mics, mentoring sessions, an awards presentation, an exhibit hall, communal meals, and plenty of other opportunities to learn, share and network –- including during built-in afternoon breaks in the programming. Informal jams and song circles also are apt to break out in the lobby and outside (weather permitting).

Rachael Sage, Award-Winning, Prolific Singer-Songwriter and Boutique Label Owner to Deliver Keynote Address

Rachael Sage will be the keynote speaker during the 2024 SERFA Conference.
Rachael Sage will be the keynote speaker during the 2024 SERFA Conference.
Keynoting this year’s conference is internationally touring New York-based folk-pop artist Rachael Sage. A John Lennon Song Contest grand-prize winner, Rachael Sage is a prolific songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, poet, visual artist, former ballet dancer, and founder of MPress Records. In addition to releasing more than 20 self-produced albums and EPs on her boutique label, Sage has executive produced releases by Grammy-nominated and Billboard-charting artists such as Melissa Ferrick, Seth Glier, and K’s Choice. Her latest album, Another Side, is being released this month. It features guest vocalists Crys Matthews, Amy Speace and Sage’s labelmate Grace Pettis. A self-described “cancer thriver,” Sage is an activist and philanthropist who supports a variety of worthwhile causes.

Daytime Programming Includes Workshops, Song Circles, Think Tanks, and Mentoring Sessions

Like the past two, the 2024 SERFA Conference takes place at the YMCA Blue Ridge Assembly in Black Mountain, North Carolina.
Like the past two, the 2024 SERFA Conference takes place at the YMCA Blue Ridge Assembly in Black Mountain, North Carolina.
An array of workshops and panel discussions will include “Add Teacher to Your Musician Resume,” “Banjo Fever: Banjos and Banjo Styles for Folk Music,” “Building and Sustaining a Successful Concert Series,” “Can’t Stop, Wont/t Stop: Hip Hop is Folk Music,” Connecting the Dots: Building a Stronger Profile,” “Engaging Your Fans: It’s Not All In-Person Anymore,” “The Heart of the Matter: Creating Emotional Impact in Songwriting,” “LGBTQ+ Voices in Americana: Perspectives, Representation, and Impact,” “MAD (Making A Difference) with Music,” “Song Keepers,” “Utilize Your PRO to Make Money Performing Your Original Music,” “We’re All Ears” (during which a panel comprised of folk DJs and other music industry veterans will offer snap evaluations of submitted songs after listening to the first minute or so of each one); “Writing for Film, Television, and Games,” “Yoga for Performing Musicians,” and “Your Voice is an Instrument: Vocals for Stage and Studio.”

Besides the workshops and panel discussions, there will be moderated, interactive “think tanks” on House Concerts and Small Venues and Hey, What’s Your Problem, one-on-one mentoring sessions, several thematic song circles, several thematic song circles, and a Wisdom of the Elders session during the daytime hours.

Wisdom of the Elders and SERFA Awards are Among Conference Highlights

The Wisdom of the Elders conversational panel session provides a structured opportunity for conference attendees to learn from and about veteran leaders in the folk community and for the elders to talk among themselves as well. Participants this year are Scott Berwick, Wayne Erbsen and Taylor Pie.

Berwick has long been active in American Federation of Musicians (AFM) Local 1000 (the traveling musicians union), has been attending SERFA conferences for the past decade, and has also been involved with the Hudson River Sloop Clearwater, the Hudson Valley Folk Guild, and the Ashokan Center, as well as an informal, weekly song circle near his home in upstate New York.

Erbsen has been engaged in traditional American music for more than 50 years as a musician, recording artist (with nearly 20 albums to his credit), professor at Warren Wilson College and the University of North Carolina at Asheville, author and publisher (who has written and published 40 books), and a public radio DJ.

A Tennessee-based traveling folk minstrel and Americana artist, Taylor Pie (Susan Taylor) helped form the Pozo Seco Singers with Don Williams in the early 1960s and has been a solo singer-songwriter and musician since the folk group disbanded. Many notable artists have covered her songs, while Pie was inducted into the Old-Time Country Music Hall of Fame in 2015. Along with her friend Kathryn Harrison, she launched PuffBunny Records in 2007 to share her music and that of other artists she admires. Taylor Pie, who now handles A &R for the label, also stars in Nobody Famous, an award-winning music documentary that was screened during the 2022 SERFA conference.

Art Menius moderates Wisdom of the Elders and receives an award during the SERFA conference. (Photo: Neale Eckstein)
Art Menius moderates Wisdom of the Elders and receives an award during the SERFA conference. (Photo: Neale Eckstein)
Art Menius moderates the Wisdom of the Elders session. A radio promoter and a veteran folk DJ, he also is among this year’s SERFA Awards honorees — along with Dom Flemons, the nonprofit organization Junior Appalachian Musicians, Inc., and Menius’ fellow folk DJ Taylor Caffery.

Menius, who currently hosts “The Revolution Starts Now” on Hillsborough, NC-based WHUP, has hosted radio shows on four stations since 2007. The first executive director of the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA), from 1985-1990, Menius also served as Folk Alliance International’s initial board president in 1990 and manager from 1991-1996, prior to serving as associate director of MerleFest for a decade and then as executive director of Appalshop in Whitesburg, Kentucky and The ArtsCenter in Carrboro, NC. He’s also produced concerts, festivals and conferences and worked as a fundraiser, marketing director, emcee, stage manager, and writer.

Dom Flemons, an Arizona native and Chicago area-based musician who has earned the moniker “The American Songster” since his repertoire covers more than 100 years of American roots music, records for Smithsonian Folkways. He is a songwriter, multi-instrumentalist (banjo, guitar, harmonica, jug, percussion, quills, fife, and rhythm bones), music scholar, actor, slam poet, record collector, and the creator, host and producer of American Songster Radio Show on WSM in Nashville, Tennessee. Earlier this year, he was named the grand-prize winner as well as first place honors for Best Folk/Americana Roots Album (for American Wildfire) in the International Acoustic Music Awards. In 2020, he received the prestigious United States Artists Fellowship Award in the Traditional Arts category. Two years later, he received a degree as Doctor of Humane Letters from his alma mater Northern Arizona University and was the commencement speaker at the graduation ceremony or the Class of 2022. Flemons was a founding member of Carolina Chocolate Drops, a Grammy Award-winning African-American old-time string band.

Junior Appalachian Musicians, Inc. (jamkids.org) is the nonprofit parent organization for more than 50 afterschool programs for children ages six and up. JAM provides communities with the requisite tools and support to teach children to play and dance to traditional old time and bluegrass music. Its program model introduces music through small group instruction on instruments common to the Appalachian region and provides youth with opportunities to learn traditional music with their peers from local teaching artists and to perform in their communities and regionally.

Taylor Caffery, the longtime host of “Hootenanny Power” on WRKF in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, is the recipient of this year’s Kari Estrin Founding President’s Award. His weekly radio show incorporates musical styles and cultural influences from Caffery’s five decades on radio that began when he hosted his first show while in the U.S. Navy and continued with his college radio station KCSL. To that musical gumbo, he mixes in new discoveries from Folk Alliance International and SERFA conferences.

Dozens of Artists to be Featured in Official and Guerilla Showcases

Slated to present official showcases on Friday evening, May 10 are (in order of appearance) Sue Horowitz, Chris Haddox, Ron Fetner, A Tale of Two, Dustin Gaspard, Nicholas Edward Williams, Helene Cronin, and Admiral Radio. Saturday’s official showcase lineup features Jess Klein, Wes Collins, Bett Padgett, Cast Iron Bluegrass, Ruth and Max Bloomquist, Stone & Snow, Couldn’t Be Happiers, and Ordinary Elephant.

Here’s a link to a Spotify playlist that features one song from each of the official showcase artists.

Following the official showcases on Friday and Saturday, as well as an open mic on Thursday, late-night guerilla showcases will take place in various meeting rooms for several hours. AcousticMusicScene.com, which has had a presence at SERFA conferences since 2011, will host a couple of late-night song swaps and a midnight hoot (featuring more than two-dozen artists/acts – each performing one song) on Thursday, May 9, overnight. The AcousticMusicScene.com Midnight Hoot is a pre-arranged round-robin song swap that is intended to provide concert and festival presenters, folk DJs and others with an opportunity to get a small sampling of the music of a lot of artists in a short period of time on the conference’s opening night. It also enables artists to enjoy and each other’s company and music before the conference really gets into full swing on Friday.

Here’s the AcousticMusicScene.com Showcase schedule:

10:40 Brooklyn in the House: Carolann Solebello and Pat Wictor

11:00 Long Island Sound: Hank Stone and Jim Whiteman

11:30 Midnight Hoot, Part 1 (one song each):

Antonio Andrade, Max & Ruth Bloomquist, Dan & Faith, Katie Dahl, Annie Stokes

12:00 Midnight Hoot, Part 2 (one song each, not necessarily in this order)

Taylor Pie, The Farmer & The Crow, Amy Speace, Annie & Rod Capps, Marc Douglas Berardo, Karyn Oliver, Lindsay Whiteman, Miles & Mafale, Rachael Sage, Emma Frances, Nicholas Edward Williams, Noah Zacharin

1:00 Midnight Hoot, Part 3 (one song each, not necessarily in this order)

Jon Shain & FJ Ventre, Erin Ash Sullivan, Robert Bidney, Rob Lytle, Jim Patton & Sherry Brokus, Meg Braun, Alice Hasen, Brian Ashley Jones & Melanie Jean, Couldn’t Be Happiers, Reckless Saints, Siena Christie

AcousticMusicScene's Michael Kornfeld is shown here with Taylor Pie, who will be part of a Wisdom of the Elders session and also hosts a late-night showcase during the 2024 SERFA Conference.
AcousticMusicScene’s Michael Kornfeld is shown here with Taylor Pie, who will be part of a Wisdom of the Elders session and also hosts a late-night showcase during the 2024 SERFA Conference.
Editor’s Note: I have been an active participant in SERFA conferences since 2011. Besides hosting a couple of song swaps and an AcousticMusicScene.com Midnight Hoot at this one, I will be assisting PuffBunny Records (Taylor Pie’s label, for which I handle public relations) with its showcase. As a mentor, I will offer insights and counsel on various aspects of PR, social media and strategic communications. From 2014-2023, I served on the board of directors of Folk Alliance International and am a past president and former board member of Northeast Regional Folk Alliance.

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Official Showcase Artists Chosen for 35th Annual Folk Alliance International Conference https://acousticmusicscene.com/2022/09/14/official-showcase-artists-chosen-for-35th-annual-folk-alliance-international-conference/ Wed, 14 Sep 2022 21:19:51 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=12302 FAI Official Showcase Artists 2023 boxNearly 150 artists/acts from more than 20 countrie have been jury-selected to perform in Official Showcases during the 35th annual Folk Alliance International Conference that is slated for February 1-5, 2023 in Kansas City, Missouri.

Chosen to present 30-minute sets on full-production stages with lighting and sound before presenters, agents, managers, media, artists, and other music professionals during the music business conference were Adrian + Meredith, Afrikana Soul Sister, Alice Hasen & The Blaze, Alicia Toner, Alysha Brilla, Amy Lavere, Amy Speace, Andrea Von Kampen, Angelique Francis, Anna Ekborg, Anya Hinkle featuring Billy Cardine, Aysanabee, Bailey Bigger, Barnaby Bright, Ben Sures, Berk Jodoin, Bobby Alu, Brad Reid Quartet, Brek, Bruce Molsky, Bruno Capinan, Buffalo Rose, Canyoon City, Cary Morin Duo, Casii Stephan, Celeigh Cardinal, Charly Lowry, Charm of Finches, Chatham Rabbits, Damoizeaux, Dan Navarro, Delbert Anderson Trio, Digawolf, Dom Flemons, Elexa Dawson, Eljuri, Emily Nenni, Emma Langford, Ernest Aines, Falls, Fanny Lumsden, Cathy Fink & Marcy Marxer with Chao Tian Flagship Romance, Fortunate Ones, Fourwinds, Gangar, Genevieve Racette, Gina Chavez, Gordie McKeeman and His Rhythm Boys, Hanne Kah, Harry Manx, Heather Pierson Duo, Holly Arrowsmith, Humbird, Ian Sherwood, Iona Fyfe, Jack Klatt, Jaimee Harris, Jake Blount, Jancie Jo Lee, Jason Lang: Homage to Penny Lang, Jennifer Knapp, Jenny Mitchell, JigJam, Jim and Sam, Jim Stevens, Jobi Riccio, Joe Jencks, Joy Clark, Karan Casey, Kelley Hunt, Kellie Loder, Kitty MacFarlane, Kris Drever, Lady Nade, Larry & Joe, Le Diable a Cinq, Le Winston Band, Les Arrivants, Les Hay Babies, Les Rats D’Swompe, Les Tireux D’Roches, Little Misty,Lon, Los Arcos Hermanos Pena, Matthew Fowler, Melisande [Electrotrad], Memphissippi Sounds, Mike Biggar, Missy Raines & Allegheny, Monique Clare, My Son the Hurricane, Nadia Larcher with Ensemble Iberica, Nani (Noam Vazana), Nat Myers, Nefesh Mountain, Nigel Wearne, Northern Resonance, Okcello, Ordinary Elephant, Oshima Brothers, Phoebe Hunt, Pipo Romero, Queen Esther, Quote the Raven, Rainbow Girls, Raine Hamilton String Trio, Rakish, Ray Bonneville, Rev. Robert B. Jones, Ron Artis II, Royal Wood, Rum Ragged, Sawyer Fredericks, Seth Walker, Shane Hennessy, Shane Pendergast, Silver Wolf Band, Siomha, So Long Seven, Sophie Lukacs, Spence LaJoye, Steve Poltz, Sussex, Suzie Ungerleider, Talibah Safiya, Talisk, Taylor Rae, , Terra Spencer, The Arcadian Wild, The Armagh Rhymers, The Black Feathers, The Brother Brothers, The Burney Sisters, The Contenders The Faux Paws, The Fretless, The Heart Collectors, The Henry Girls, The Magpies, The McDades, The Rough & Tumble, The Small Glories, Tish Hinojosa, Twin Flames, Veronica Valerio, Waahli, and Wallis Bird.

Besides the juried official showcases and lots of private showcases, there will be a wide array of workshops and panel discussions, mentoring and peer sessions, keynoters, the International Folk Music Awards, a large exhibit hall, receptions and networking opportunities galore.

The theme of the 2023 conference, the world’s largest gathering of the folk music industry and community, is Facing the Future: Sustainability in Folk Music. “As we emerge from the survival mindset of the early 2020s, our attention turns to the horizon and the challenges – and opportunities – that lie ahead for our industry and community,” according to the Kansas city-based nonprofit organization that aims to serve, strengthen and engage the global folk music community through preservation, presentation and promotion. “Together, we’ll explore the intersection of individual excellence and collective strength and work to understand what must be dismantled and what must be built.”

For more information on Folk Alliance International and its annual conference, for which the advanced registration deadline is October 31, visit folk.org.

Editor’s Note: I am a member of the the Folk Alliance International board of directors but was not involved in the selection of official showcase artists.

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FAI Folk Radio Charts – April 2022 https://acousticmusicscene.com/2022/05/10/fai-folk-radio-charts-april-2022/ Tue, 10 May 2022 22:17:56 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=12167 East Nashville-based folk and Americana singer-songwriter Amy Speace had the most-played album (Tucson) and was the most-played artist on folk radio in April 2022, while “Ukranian Now” by Tom Paxton and John McCutcheon was the month’s top song – edging out Speace’s “If You Fall.” So say charts compiled by Folk Alliance International based on radio playlists submitted to FOLKDJ-L, an electronic discussion group for DJs and others interested in folk-based music on the radio.

The April 2022 Top Albums, Songs and Artists charts are based on 13, 056 airplays reported on 446 playlists submitted by 124 different folk DJs. The number of reported spins is shown below in parentheses.

Folk Alliance International (folk.org) is a nonprofit organization that aims to serve, strengthen, and engage the global folk music community through preservation, presentation and promotion.

Top Albums of April 2022

1.Tucson by Amy Speace (96)
2. All Is Quiet by Susan Cattaneo (69)
3. Crooked Tree by Molly Tuttle and Golden Highway (68)
4. Hurricane Clarice by Allison De Groot and Tatiana Hargreaves (65)
5. 20 Printemps by Le Vent du Nord (61)
6. Bullet in the Cabin Wall by Cheryl Cawood (59)
6. 1960 by Martyn Joseph (59)
8. Time Out Session #2 by The Accidentals (53)
9. Songs From the River Wind by Eliza Gilkyson (52)
10. Backroads by Johnsmith (50)
11. Chris Haddox by Chris Haddox (47)
11. A White Album by Rain Perry (47)
13. Songs From the Beginning by Greg Greenway (43)
14. My Life in Song by Steve Lundquist (42)
15. Hometown Blues by Steve Madewell (38)
16. The Light at the End of the Line by Janis Ian (37)
17. From the Land of Rusted Dreams by Erin Heist (36)
18. Twelvemonth and a Day by Wolf and Clover (35)
19. Dobrosinger by Abbie Gardner (33)
20. Southern Currency by Jefferson Ross (32)
21. Every Seed We Plant by Alice Di Micele (31)
22. For the People by Rubert Wates (30)
23. The Way the River Goes by Dan Weber (29)
23. The Worst Kind of New by The Lied To’s (29)
23. New Road by Wally Barnick (29)
26. Narrow Line by Mama’s Broke (28)
27. I Can Face the Truth by Dana Cooper (27)
27. Lost Love Songs by The Pine Hearts (27)
27. Gravity, Wings, and Heavy Things by Chuck Brodsky (27)
30. Never Slow Down by The Po’ Ramblin’ Boys (25)
30. Good to Be by Keb’ Mo’ (25)
32. You Reap What You Sow by The Weeping Willows (24)
33. House to House by Matt Andersen (23)
34. Something Green by Kate Klim (22)
34. Twang by Carla Ulbrich (22)
36. Fazz: Now and Then by Noel Paul Stookey (21)
37. Satchel of Songs by Diane Patterson (20)
37. Folk Hero by House of Hamill (20)
39. Age of Apathy by Aoife O’ Donovan (19)
39. 12th of June by Lyle Lovett (19)
39. Almost Proud by The Del McCoury Band (19)
39. Woodsmoke and Oranges by Paul Siebel (19)
39. Co-Starring Too by Ray Wylie Hubbard (19)
39. Ice Cream in November by Lynne Hanson (19)
45. A Beautiful Time by Willie Nelson (18)
45. Hell on Church Street by Punch Brothers (18)
45. Anais Mitchell by Anais Mitchell (18)
48. Woman on the Moon by Giulia Millanta (17)
49. Spider Tales by Jake Blount (16)
49. Corner of the World by Scott Martin (16)
49. The Devil and the Deep Blue Sea by Amanda Anne Platt and the
Honeycutters (16)
49. Violet Light by Maya De Vitry (16)
49. A Happy Old Man by Trip McCool (16)
49. Endangered Species by The Sunshiners (16)
49. Saving the Republic by Ernest Troost (16)

Top Songs of April 2022

[Here’s a link to view a lyric video of “Ukranian Now,” a song co-written by Tom Paxton and John McCutcheon in solidarity with the millions of Ukranians forced to leave their homeland in the wake of Russian attacks, as well as those who have stayed to fight. McCutcheon sings lead and plays piano. He is joined by an ensemble of artists that includes Emma’s Revolution, Tret Fure, Joe Jencks, Christine Lavin, Crys Matthews, Bill Miller, Holly Near, Carrie Newcomer, Paxton, Rebel Voices, and Peter Yarrow. The video was edited by Noel Paul Stookey who, like Yarrow, was part of Peter, Paul & Mary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DSwxoJHJ4EI.]

1. “Ukrainian Now” by John McCutcheon (29)
2. “If You Fall” by Amy Speace (26)
3. “Half the People” by Chuck Brodsky (22)
4. “Born Too Late” by Martyn Joseph (21)
4. “Why I Wake Early (For Mary Oliver)” by Amy Speace (21)
6. “12th of June” by Lyle Lovett (19)
7. “Ol’ John Prine” by Steve Lundquist (16)
8. “Cottonwood” by Amy Speace (15)
8. “Born in the City” by Abbie Gardner (15)
10. “Each Season Changes You” by Allison De Groot and Tatiana Hargreaves
(14)
10. “Crooked Tree” by Molly Tuttle and Golden Highway (14)
12. “L&N Don’t Stop Here” by Cheryl Cawood (13)
12. “Little Red” by Amy Speace (13)
12. “Every Seed” by Alice Di Micele (13)
15. “Eastern Standard Time” by The Accidentals (12)
15. “All Is Quiet” by Susan Cattaneo (12)
15. “My Name Is America” by Johnsmith (12)
15. “Nothing Says It’s Springtime Like the Redbud” by Chris Haddox (12)
15. “Nancy Blevins” by Allison De Groot and Tatiana Hargreaves (12)
15. “I’ll Love You Till the Day I Die” by Willie Nelson (12)
21. “At the Foot of the Mountain” by Eliza Gilkyson (11)
21. “Louise” by Paul Siebel (11)
21. “Time + Love + Gravity” by Susan Cattaneo (11)
21. “My Father’s House” by Amy Speace (11)
25. “We Are Made of Stars” by Martyn Joseph (10)
25. “Borrowed Blue” by Susan Cattaneo (10)
25. “Fall Apart World” by Mary Gauthier (10)
25. “Backroads” by Johnsmith (10)
25. “Hold Onto Hope” by Susan Cattaneo (10)
25. “I’m Still Standing” by Janis Ian (10)

Top Artists of April 2022

1. Amy Speace (102)
2. John Prine (76)
3. John McCutcheon (73)
4. Eliza Gilkyson (71)
5. Allison De Groot and Tatiana Hargreaves (70)
6. Susan Cattaneo (69)
7. Molly Tuttle and Golden Highway (68)
8. Martyn Joseph (63)
8. Le Vent du Nord (63)
10. Cheryl Cawood (59)
11. Johnsmith (58)
12. The Accidentals (55)
13. Emmylou Harris (53)
14. Chuck Brodsky (50)
15. Janis Ian (49)
16. Rain Perry (48)
16. Paul Siebel (48)
18. Chris Haddox (47)
18. Greg Greenway (47)
18. Willie Nelson (47)
21. Steve Lundquist (42)
22. Steve Madewell (39)
23. Wolf and Clover (36)
23. Erin Heist (36)
25. Joni Mitchell (35)
26. Alice Di Micele (34)
27. Abbie Gardner (33)
27. Jefferson Ross (33)
29. Dan Weber (32)
29. Rubert Wates (32)
29. Nanci Griffith (32)
29. Keb’ Mo’ (32)
33. Dar Williams (31)
34. Wally Barnick (30)
34. The Lied To’s (30)
36. Mama’s Broke (28)
36. Judy Collins (28)
36. Pete Seeger (28)
36. Richard Thompson (28)
40. Dana Cooper (27)
40. The Pine Hearts (27)
40. Tom Paxton (27)

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Live From Nashville: Amy Speace & Kate Klim https://acousticmusicscene.com/2022/03/16/live-from-nashville-amy-speace-kate-klim/ Wed, 16 Mar 2022 04:46:46 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=12062 AcousticMusicScene.com. ]]> Live from Nashville- Amy Speace & Kate KlimSinger Songwriters Amy Speace and Kate Klim will swap songs live from Nashville, Tennessee on Tuesday, March 22, at 7:30 p.m. EDT/6:30 p.m. CDT/4:30 p.m. PDT during the second of an occasional series of online concerts co-presented by Harbortown Music and AcousticMusicScene.com.

The show can be viewed online at Harbortown Music’s Facebook page or YouTube channel. It may also be shared via the AcousticMusicScene.com group on Facebook. Although there is no set fee to view the livestream, tips for the artists would be most appreciated (suggested donation: $20) and may be made via paypalme.com/harbortownmusic.

About the Artists:

One of the most acclaimed voices in contemporary folk music, Amy Speace was discovered in 2006 by Judy Collins and signed to her record label. The Americana Music Association UK named the title track of her album Me and the Ghost of Charlemagne was named International Song of the Year in 2020. Speace’s latest release, 2021’s There Used To Be Horses Here. chronicles the year between the birth of her son and the death of her father. A new album, Tucson, is set for release this year. Collins, Red Molly, and Blues Hall of Famer Sid Selvidge among others, have also recorded her songs. Speace founded the East Nashville Song Salon in 2010 and teaches songwriting and performance at conferences, institutions, and privately. For more information, visit amyspeace.com.

Accompanying herself on piano, Kate Klim, whose songs mix her folk and pop sensibilities, was a winner of the prestigious Kerrville New Folk Competition in 2010, has been part of the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival Emerging Artist Showcase, and has been a finalist in the Mountain Stage Newsong Contest, the Mid-Atlantic Song Contest and the Telluride Troubadour Competition, among others. After a hiatus of a few years surrounding the birth of her two sons, she returned to the studio in early spring 2020 to begin recording her fourth album. Released earlier this month, Something Green is an album about hope, love, change, and new growth. For more information and to listen to some of her songs, visit kateklim.com.

Both artists also have YouTube channels. Here’s a link to view an official video of Amy Speace performing the title track of There Used To Be Horses There. And here’s a link to view the official lyric video for “Something Green,” the title track of Kate Klim’s new release.

About Your Hosts:

Michael Kornfeld and Kathy Sands-Boehmer
Michael Kornfeld and Kathy Sands-Boehmer
The series of livestreams marks a renewed partnership of sorts for AcousticMusicScene.com’s Michael Kornfeld and Harbortown Music’s Kathy Sands-Boehmer, who served as president and vice president, respectively, of the Northeast Regional Folk Alliance (NERFA) for several years and also co-coordinated one-day conferences and a series of showcases. In January, the two co-hosted a Folk from the North Country livestream featuring Canadian artists Angela Saini, Benjamin Dakota Rogers and The Young Novelists.

Michael Kornfeld, a veteran strategic communications and public relations professional – whose clients have included a number of independent recording artists and labels – launched AcousticMusicScene.com in 2007 to provide news, information and commentary for the folk, roots and singer-songwriter communities. The longtime president of the Folk Music Society of Huntington, a nonprofit presenting organization on Long Island, NY, Kornfeld also serves on the boards of Folk Alliance International and NERFA, curates the annual Huntington Folk Festival, emcees concerts, and hosts showcases and mentors artists at various music conferences and festivals.

Kathy Sands-Boehmer is an enthusiastic and tireless presenter, promoter and supporter of independent musicians. For years, she booked and promoted artists, new and old, at a well-respected 225-seat venue north of Boston, Massachusetts; was an active leader of the Boston Area Coffeehouse Association (BACHA); and has also mentored and managed artists. She blogs about all kinds of great music for Everything Sundry and recently launched Harbortown Music as a resource for musicians and venues — building community, while promoting and presenting high-quality music. Sands-Boehmer works with Stephen Bach of The Digital Docs, who engineers all of Harbortown Music’s virtual shows and lends his technical expertise to the participating artists as well.

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Folk Community Mourns the Passing of Two Stalwarts: Clark Weissman and Reba Heyman https://acousticmusicscene.com/2021/06/23/folk-community-mourns-the-passing-of-two-stalwarts-clark-weissman-and-reba-heyman/ Thu, 24 Jun 2021 00:45:39 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=11658 By Aengus Finnan

Last week, the folk community lost two seminal figures: Clark Weissman, co-founder of Folk Alliance International (along with his late wife Elaine, 2005), and Reba Heyman, an omnipresent supporter (along with her late husband Vic, 2009).

While we can’t possibly acknowledge every passing, the specific significance of these two people is reason to pause and celebrate their lives and contributions. The quiet, heartfelt, and passionate presence and work they each did (hand in hand with their respective spouses) brought inspiration and changed the course of many lives.

Clark Weissman

Clark and Elaine Weissman
Clark and Elaine Weissman
Clark and Elaine Weissman traveled across America in 1988 talking to folk music community organizers, gathering over 100 people the following year in Malibu, California, ultimately leading to the formation of the North American Folk Music and Dance Alliance (now Folk Alliance International). Clark was seminal in steering the young organization, ensuring its stability, and stewarding its hand off as it formalized. During preparations for FAI’s 30th anniversary, Clark met with the Board and staff members during a planning retreat at Camp Hess Kramer where he shared stories and photos of the initial meeting and discussions there.

Reba Heyman

Vic and Reba Heyman
Vic and Reba Heyman
Reba and Vic Heyman were more than simply uber-fans; they were consummate supporters of the
scene, present in their matching shirts at almost every Folk Alliance event (regional and international), and consistently in the front row of folk clubs and festivals from Texas to Florida to Washington and beyond. Reba was a generous mother figure to an entire generation of artists (myself included); always there with a word of encouragement, an introduction, a spare bed when passing by, advice when sought, and support of all manner when needed. Her opinion mattered, and she quietly made career-changing things happen for countless people.

In very different ways both Clark and Reba (and their spouses before them) had a profound influence
on the entire community we call home. They exemplified the best we can be: generous, aspirational,
present, and kind.

I’ll close with a quote from the song “Travel Well,” originally written for Vic’s passing by Amy Speace, Cary Cooper, Jagoda, and Tom Prasada-Rao:

“Travel well, friend and angel,
To the place where you belong,
Take your seat, front row in heaven,
Where you’ll always hear a song”

Rest in peace Clark and Reba!

Aengus Finnan is executive director of Folk Alliance International (www.folk.org), a nonprofit
organization that aims to serve, strengthen, and engage the global folk music community through
preservation, presentation and promotion.

Editor’s Note: Both Clark Weissman and Reba Heyman died on June 17, 2021. He was 87, while she was 84.

I did not know Clark Weissman who, along with his wife, ran a house concert series for 15 years and was a founder of the California Traditional Music Society. Clark and Elaine also were among the founders of Folk Alliance Region-West (FAR-West), which honored them in 2007 with its “Best of the West” Ambassador Award.

I was friendly with Reba Heyman – having come to know her through the Northeast Regional Folk Alliance (NERFA). An integral part of our folk community, she will be sorely missed. Among other things, she was a co-presenter of the South Florida Folk Festival’s Singer-Songwriter Competition. Reba and her late husband, Vic, were known for decades for their generous financial backing of folk festivals and artists. The couple also formerly ran a concert series in Rockville, Maryland known as Vic’s Music Corner; served on the boards of several music festivals; and established a scholarship fund for performing artists.

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Winners Named in Fifth Annual UK Americana Awards https://acousticmusicscene.com/2020/02/03/winners-named-in-fifth-annual-uk-americana-awards/ Mon, 03 Feb 2020 19:24:28 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=10936 The fifth annual UK Americana Awards were presented in London, England on January 30. The awards show, presented by the Americana Music Association UK, capped AmericanaFest UK 2020 –- a three-day conference with two evenings of showcases featuring more than 75 artists at various venues in the London borough of Hackney.

Yola debut album coverYola, a 35 year-old rootsy British singer-songwriter, was selected by AMA-UK members as UK Artist of the Year, while her critically acclaimed debut album Walk Through Fire (produced by Black Keys frontman Dan Auerbach) was voted UK Album of he Year. Yola — who showcased her talents at the Newport and Philadelphia Folk Festivals, SXSW, AmericanaFest and Farm Aid, as well as such notable venues as the Hollywood Bowl during 2019 – also was recently nominated for four Grammy Awards.

Here’s a link to view the official video for “Faraway Look,” a rack on Yola’s debut album: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jWTwuQ3LeH4.

Other recipients of AMA-UK member-voted awards included:

International Album of the Year: The Highwomen. The self-titled, Dave Cobb-produced debut album by the Nashville based all-female group of the same name that features Brandi Carlile, Natalie Hemby, Maren Morris, and Amanda Shires.

International Song of the Year: “Me and The Ghost of Charlemagne,” written and performed by Nashville-based singer-songwriter Amy Speace. Here’s a link to the official video for the song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FvQqHCguhQU

International Artist of the Year: Brandi Carlisle, an American folk-rock and Americana singer-songwriter, who also was the big winner in the American Roots Music Field during the 61st annual Grammy Awards presented by the Recording Academy last February during which she was recognized for Best Americana Album (By The Way, I Forgive You), while one of its tracks (“The Joke”) was named both Best American Roots Performance and Best American Roots Song.

UK Instrumentalist of the Year: Sian Monaghan, a session drummer who has played with a number of artists and tours with UK country band The Wandering Hearts.

In addition to he AMA-UK member-voted awards, board members of the professional trade association that represents and advocates for the voice of American roots music in the United Kingdom, honored a number of folks with special awards. The Lifetime Achievement Award was presented to Joan Armatrading, a British singer-songwriter whose recording career spans nearly 50 years and who also keynoted the conference. Nick Lowe — an English singer-songwriter (“Cruel to be Kind,” among others), multi-instrumentalist and producer (Elvis Costello, Graham Parker, Pretenders) — received the Trailblazer Award; while Mark Whitfield from Americana-UK.com received the Grassroots Award. The Legend Award recipient was Lonnie Donegan, the late influential British skiffle singer, songwriter and musician.

The Outstanding Contribution Award was presented to Bob Harris OBE — a longtime program host on BBC Radio and former host of The Old Grey Whistle Test on BBC-TV, who also hosted the awards show and has been a passionate advocate of Americana music on both sides of the pond. Harris himself selected and presented the recipients of the Emerging Artist Award – Ferris & Sylvester, a British duo whose music fuses Americana, folk, blues and rock.

22 year-old London-based singer-songwriter Jade Bird’s eponymous debut album was the Best-Selling Americana Album by a UK Artist.

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David Olney, Beloved Singer-Songwriter, 1948-2020 https://acousticmusicscene.com/2020/01/20/david-olney-beloved-singer-songwriter-1948-2020/ Mon, 20 Jan 2020 15:23:25 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=10894
David Olney
David Olney
David Olney, a revered folk and Americana singer-songwriter, died after suffering an apparent heart attack on Saturday night, Jan. 18, while onstage at the 30A Songwriters Festival in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida. During a musical career that spanned more than four decades, Olney, 71, recorded and released more than 20 albums and had his songs covered or co-written by such other notable artists as Steve Earle, Emmylou Harris, Laurie Lewis, Del McCoury, and Linda Ronstadt.

In a Facebook post, Amy Rigby, a singer-songwriter who was sharing the stage with Olney and Scott Miller as part of a song swap, wrote:

“David Olney, a beautiful man, a legend, a songwriting poet died last night. I was sitting next to him in the round, had been so honored and looking forward to getting to trade songs with him and Scott Miller. Olney was in the middle of his third song when he stopped, apologized and shut his eyes. He was very still, sitting upright with his guitar on, wearing the coolest hat and a beautiful rust suede jacket we laughed about because it was raining like hell outside the boathouse where we were playing- I just want the picture to be as graceful and dignified as it was, because it at first looked like he was just taking a moment. Scott Miller had the presence of mind to say we needed to revive him. Doctors in the audience and 30A folks were all working so hard to get him to come to. It’s hard to post about this because I can’t really believe he’s gone. I am so sorry for his wife and family and friends and all the people who loved him and his music. Even those who never heard of him. We all lost someone important last night.”

Here’s a link to a nearly 30-minute Acoustic Interlude session featuring David Olney that was recorded during the 2020 30A Songwriters Festival:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxF6WXW4Hq0&feature=youtu.be&fbclid=IwAR0ADwrIUBizMkjE2EbVfBGJEjcnVE1QI0CVPplVN9hyJlX1Vou3SClU8po

Based in Nashville since 1973, the Lincoln, Rhode Island native, who was born on March 23, 1948 and moved to Music City after briefly studying English at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, had quickly become part of a like-minded group of songwriters that included Guy Clark, Townes Van Zandt and Rodney Crowell. “Anytime anyone asks me who my favorite music writers are, I say Mozart, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Bob Dylan, and David Olney,” Van Zandt once said. “David Olney is one of the best songwriters I’ve ever heard – and that’s true. I mean that from my heart.” That quote appears in the liner notes for Olney’s 1991 release, Roses.

After fronting a band, The X-Rays, who recorded two albums for Rounder Records, Olney released his first solo album, Eye of the Storm, in 1986. His 1988 sophomore release, Deeper Well, featured his song “Jerusalem Tomorrow” that Emmylou Harris covered on her 1993 album, Cowgirl’s Prayer; she also covered its title track on 1995’s Wrecking Ball. Of Olney, Harris had said: “David Olney tells marvelous stories, with characters who cling to he hope of enduring love, all the while crossing the deep divide into that long, dark night of the soul.”

Here’s a link to a video of David Olney performing “Jerusalem Tomorrow”:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GQcX_rv20dk

Olney, whose last album, This Side or the Other, was released in 2018, was a prolific songwriter and a mainstay of the Nashville music community. He also was a cinematographer and helped to produce a number of short films and documentaries.

Facebook, the online social network, was replete with online tributes to and remembrances of Olney, beginning shortly after his death.

“I’m in shock. Devastated that my friend, songwriter David Olney has passed away,” wrote singer-songwriter Abbie Gardner in a Jan. 19 post. “We were supposed to write together next week. I spent the morning watching videos of him just trying to turn back the clock and spend some more time listening to his stories and grumbly voice… I always tucked away ideas I thought he would like and saved them for our co-writes. I don’t know what I’ll do with the one I’d hoped to share with him next week. There’s one of our songs on his last record ironically called “Death Will Not Divide Us.” Listening to that now is heartbreaking and healing all at once. I hope you’re right, David, I really hope you’re right.”

Here’s a link to view the official music video for “Death Will Not Divide Us”:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uA2AEyo74ds

Dan Navarro, a fellow singer-songwriter, noted that he was on the same stage, The Boathouse at Watercolor, in a round just before Olney. “I greeted and hugged him as I came offstage, as he was prepping to go on,” Navarro posted. “I hadn’t seen him in a year… He was sweet and I thought he looked great, with his long white beard, which was not so long last year. I complimented him on his cool suede jacket, and he prepped to go on. About ten minutes later, he was seated onstage checking, and I went up to say bye bye. An hour later he was gone. What a shocking heartbreaking loss.”

Singer-Songwriter Amy Speace also posted on Jan. 19: “11 or 12 years ago I got an email from Mary Sack saying that David Olney had heard me at the Folk Alliance and wanted me to join him in a 9pm round at The Bluebird Cafe. It was my first time there. It felt like I’d been handed a secret key to a kingdom. He was one of my first calls when I moved to East Nashville and we had coffee at Bongo and talked about Shakespeare and folk music and touring in Holland. He was welcoming. He was unpretentious and kind. A true master. I saw him only a week or so ago at The Five Spot sounding on top of his game. Word spread quickly at this festival that he died on stage tonight and it doesn’t seem real. The last Bluebird Round I hosted, he was my first call and I got the chance to sit next to him and hear him play all those songs and thank him for graciously opening the door for me years ago. I hope he knew how much that invitation meant. I hope he feels that the tribe won’t sleep tonight. This is one of my favorites. My heart is with his family and his close friends.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxF6WXW4Hq0&feature=youtu.be&fbclid=IwAR0ADwrIUBizMkjE2EbVfBGJEjcnVE1QI0CVPplVN9hyJlX1Vou3SClU8po

Olney was to have showcased his talents and been part of a Wisdom of the Elders panel discussion at the annual Folk Alliance International Conference in New Orleans later this week. In addition to an official juried showcase, he was slotted to play Acoustic Chaos: The Georgia Room on Thursday, Jan. 23, at 11 p.m. The room’s host, Jill Kettles, Olney’s ‘on-again and off-again publicist,’ has invited conference attendees to come to the room during that time and sing their favorite David Olney song or talk about him as a friend, a colleague, or as an inspiration.

Olney leaves behind his wife, Regine, daughter, Lillian, and son, Redding, as well as many friends in the music community. Memorial services have not yet been planned.

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