Dalis Allen – AcousticMusicScene.com https://acousticmusicscene.com Sat, 17 Sep 2022 13:02:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 SWRFA Conference Returns to Austin, Sept. 21-25, 2022 https://acousticmusicscene.com/2022/09/17/swrfa-conference-returns-to-austin-sept-21-25-2022/ Sat, 17 Sep 2022 13:02:36 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=12327 2022 SWRFA Conference bannerFor the first time in three years, Southwest Regional Folk Alliance (SWRFA) will hold an in-person annual conference in Austin, Texas. Set for Wednesday, September 21-Sunday, September 25, 2022, its 23rd annual conference will feature official and in-room showcases; communal meals; panel discussions, seminars and workshops addressing many facets of the music business; a film screening; mentoring sessions; a DJ reception; an exhibit area, and lots of networking opportunities. AcousticMusicScene.com will host song swaps and a Midnight Hoot on Saturday overnight.

“Gathering in person after two years of making connections though our online events is going to be so lovely,” said Dalis Allen, SWRFA’s executive director and longtime conference coordinator. “Everyone is so excited! We have many new folks attending – joining our team of folks that have continued to make our SWRFA conference the welcoming event that it is.”

Prior to the official start of the conference on Thursday, folks will converge on Austin’s NeWorlDeli on Wednesday night for a party and meet & greet during which many registered artists will e afforded an opportunity to perform a song. Similarly, there will be an open mic during a pool party at the Holiday Inn-Midtown, the conference’s host hotel, on Thursday night, along with a meal courtesy of Berkalin Records. Prior to the pool party, there will be several panels during the mid-late afternoon.

Performing Artists Will Have Lots of Opportunities to Showcase Their Talents; Official Showcases are Open to the Public on Friday and Saturday Nights

Husband-and-wife duo Catherine Miles & Jay Mafale are among the conference's Official Showcase artists and will also take part in an AcousticMusicScene.com song swap. (Paul Silverman Photography)
Husband-and-wife duo Catherine Miles & Jay Mafale are among the conference’s Official Showcase artists and will also take part in an AcousticMusicScene.com song swap. (Paul Silverman Photography)
Eight juried official showcases are slated on Friday night, September 23 and another eight on Saturday night, September 24. The showcasing artists are listed below in order of performance (subject to change if needed). Sept. 23: Jean Rohe, David Starr, Karyn Oliver, Noah Zacharin, Diedre McCalla, Grace Morrison, Javier Jara, and Violet Bell. Sept. 24: Vanessa Lively, Erin Ivey, George Ensle, Shanna in a Dress, Abigail Lapell, Catherine Miles & Jay Mafale, Natalie Price, and Justin Farren. The Official Showcases – to be emceed by veteran folk DJ Rich Warren — will be held in the hotel’s ballroom. Unlike the rest of the conference, the official showcases, which run from 7:30-10 p.m., are open to the public for a $15 cover each night. In addition, singer-songwriter Ken Gaines emcees an Alternates Official Showcase featuring Alicia Stockman, Beth//James, Ryan Biter, Leeann Atherton, Jason Erie, and Wild Ponies that will take place in another room at the hotel following the Thursday night pool party.

A number of unplugged in-room showcases will follow the Official Showcases on Friday and Saturday overnight from 10:30 p.m. to 2 a.m. AcousticMusicScene.com’s in-room showcase on Saturday overnight will feature a Midnight Hoot preceded by several song swaps. Although the online publication for the folk, roots and singer-songwriter communities has hosted showcases at Northeast Regional Folk Alliance (NERFA) and Southeast Regional Folk Alliance (SERFA) conferences for many years, this marks the first time it is doing so during a SWRFA conference. A popular annual event at NERFA conferences since 2007, the AcousticMusicScene.com Midnight Hoot at the SWRFA conference will feature two-dozen artists/acts — each performing one song between midnight and 2 a.m. A house band is available to accompany any artists on request.

Here’s the AcousticMusicScene.com showcase schedule:

10:30 Song Swap: Catherine Miles & Jay Mafale, Shanna in a Dress

11:00 Song Swap: George Ensle, Tim Grimm

11:30 Texas Troubadours: Brian Kalinec, Randy Palmer, Joel White

12:00 AcousticMusicScene.com Midnight Hoot – Part 1
(One song per artist/act; order subject to change.)

Taylor Pie, Nancy K. Dillon, Michael Henchman, Libby Koch, Ken Gaines, Karyn Oliver, Jake Farr, Grace Morrison, Sarah Pierce, Kacey & Jenna, Roxi Copland, Erin Ivey

House Band: Merel Bregante (percussion), John Inman and Brian Kalinec (guitars)

1:00 AcousticMusicScene.com Midnight Hoot – Part 2
(One song per artist/act; order subject to change.)

Ryan Biter, Deidre McCalla, Carl Solomon, Carla Ulbrich, Vanessa Lively & Ben Bedford, Claudia Gibson, Alicia Stockman, Natalie Price, Carolyn Shulman, Dan Weber, Lynn McCracken

House Band: Merel Bregante (percussion), John Inman and Brian Kalinec (guitars)

The conference wraps up with an extended Sunday brunch during which songwriters who drew a random song assignment/topic upon picking up their credentials at the outset of the conference, will share the songs that they wrote over the weekend. “Getting to listen to the songs written during the conference from a prompt is still one of my very favorite things I do all year,” said Allen. Many artists and other conference attendees share her sentiments and have made the song-sharing event a longtime conference highlight.

SWRFA (swfolkalliance.org) is a regional affiliate of Folk Alliance International, a nonprofit organization that aims to serve, strengthen and engage the global folk music community through preservation, presentation and promotion. SWRFA includes the southwestern United States and Mexico.

Editor’s Note: Besides hosting a late-night song swaps and a midnight hoot during the SWRFA conference, I will assist PuffBunny Records (an indie label for which I provide PR counsel and services) with its in-room showcase and Taylor Pie with a Q & A following the screening of Nobody Famous, an award-winning documentary about her and the 1960s folk-pop trio Pozo Seco Singers of which she was the lead singer and a founding member (along with Don Williams and Lofton Kline). I also will take part in a panel discussion on showcasing and offer some mentoring sessions on various PR, social media and strategic communications topics. I am a board member of Folk Alliance International and NERFA.

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FAI Regional Conferences Go Virtual This Fall https://acousticmusicscene.com/2021/09/22/fai-regional-conferences-go-virtual-this-fall/ Wed, 22 Sep 2021 14:55:07 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=11779 Four Folk Alliance International regional affiliates have opted to present their annual conferences online this fall in light of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. First up is the Southwest Regional Folk Alliance (SWRFA) virtual conference that is slated for September 24-26. Folk Alliance Region-West (FAR-West) hosts its virtual conference October 14-16; Folk Alliance Region Midwest (FARM)’s Virtual Connections The Gathering takes place October 27-30; and the Northeast Regional Folk Alliance (NERFA) 2021 virtual conference is set for November 11-14.

Southwest Regional Folk Alliance (SWRFA) – Sept. 24-26, 2021

SWRFA Conference 2021Southwest Regional Folk Alliance (SWRFA)’s virtual conference. Sept. 24-26, will feature 14 juried official showcases, along with a number of late-night guerrilla showcases, an open mic, seven 90-minute workshop sessions, and one-on-one mentoring.

Showcasing their talents during official showcases on Friday night, Sept. 24, will be The Black Feathers, Jacob Johnson, Nathan Evans Fox, Heather Pierson Acoustic Trio, Kray Van Kirk, Barbara Lica, and South for Winter. Saturday night’s official showcase lineup includes Abby Posner, Alright Alright, Jana Pochop, Sam Robbins, Emerald Rae, Jim Jones, and Conjunto Cats. Named as alternates were Buffalo Rose, Jordi Baizan and Annette Wasilik — each of whom will be afforded an opportunity to share a song prior to the start of an open mic on Friday.

It has been customary during the annual SWRFA conferences for all registered artists to be given a random song topic/prompt. They are expected to write about these during the weekend and perform their songs following Sunday brunch. SWRFA will seek to replicate this song-sharing event virtually on Sunday afternoon.

This is the second consecutive year that SWRFA – whose region includes the Southwestern United States and Mexico — has hosted its annual conference online, rather than in Austin, Texas.

“As was the case last year, Dalis Allen, SWRFA’s executive director, and our board members are eager to keep a sense of continuity and gather our community together in these challenging times,” said Brian Kalinec, SWRFA’s board president. “Back in 2020, we never would have imagined that we’d be doing a virtual conference again. We anticipate as many, if not more, participants than last year. And this year, we’re having nine late-night showcases as well.”

More information on SWRFA and its virtual conference, for which registration is available on a ‘pay what you can’ basis, may be found at swfolkalliance.org.

Folk Alliance Region-West (FAR-West) – Oct. 14-16, 2021

FAR-West 2021 bannerForward with Folk is the theme of the Folk Alliance Region-West (FAR-West) Virtual Conference, Oct. 14-16. “It embraces our movement forward in adapting to a changing world while still curating treasured conference traditions such as the Venue’s Choice Concert, FAR-WestTeaches (panel discussions), guerilla showcases, and Best of the West awards,” according to the FAR-West website. New additions to this year’s online event include campfires (open mics), community spotlights and peer sessions. There will also be a virtual exhibit hall.

A series of 90-minute online panel discussions will include Collect Your Fair Share: Accessing All Your Streaming Revenues, Get Your Music in the Movies, Elevating Your Song: From Songwriting to the Studio, and The Creative Economy in Recovery: Opportunities for Musician Changemakers. There will be not be any juried official showcases this year. The spotlight is on the various individuals and organizations that will host private guerrilla showcases that premiere on Friday and Saturday nights, Oct. 14 and 15.

“As the conference coordinator, I’m so excited to introduce FAR-West to the global community during our first-ever virtual conference,” said Julie Zipperer. Noting that FAR-West has been presenting online programming throughout the pandemic, she continued: “We look forward to continuing our online education and performance events year-round. We are not just a once-a-year conference; we are FAR-West year-round.”

Six ticket registration options for the FAR-West virtual conference are available, ranging from general fan to VIP. Post-event on-demand access to the conference programming will be available for either 30 days or 365 days, depending on the ticket type purchased. This means that people won’t have to scramble from room to room to catch particular artists/acts/programs at certain times and can also catch those that they missed during the regular hours of the virtual conference afterwards.

For more information on the virtual conference and to register online, visit far-west.org.

Folk Alliance Region Midwest (FARM) – Oct. 27-30, 2021

Folk Alliance Region Midwest (FARM) was the first of Folk Alliance International’s regional affiliates to embrace technology and provide educational programming and networking opportunities for FAI members and others in the wake of the pandemic. Under the banner of FARM Virtual Connections, it has been presenting Tuesday Tech Talks, educational panel discussions, mentor sessions, and peer gatherings since April 2020.

FARM Gathering 2021 bannerFARM Virtual Connections The Gathering, Oct. 27-30, represents its ongoing efforts to serve the Midwest (U.S. and Canadian) folk community and beyond. It will feature official and private guerrilla showcases, a keynote address by singer-songwriter Carrie Newcomer, panel discussions, workshops, mentor sessions, and affinity/peer group discussions. Official Showcase applications are due by Sept. 30. Panel topics will be announced beginning early next month.

“Much as we miss seeing everyone in the flesh, the virtual world is offering some unique opportunities for meaningful connections we may not have been able to make in person,” said Annie Capps, director of Virtual Connections for FARM. “To that end, we’re gearing up for some inspiring conversations which, at their core, revolve around making those connections that continue to grow our community. Of course, there will be lots of amazing musical performances, all live streamed (no pre-recorded) and ample networking opportunities, like speed dating-style meet ups, spontaneous chat rooms and other fun activities to keep everyone engaged.”

Registration for FARM Virtual Connections The Gathering is on a sliding scale, from $25-$50. For more information and to register, visit farmfolk.org.

Northeast Regional Folk Alliance (NERFA) – November 11-14, 2021

NERFA 2021 logoRounding out the virtual regional conferences this fall is one being presented by Northeast Regional Folk Alliance (NERFA), Nov. 11-14. Beloved long-standing NERFA conference traditions – including its coveted juried Formal Showcase, the Suzie Wollenberg Folk DJ Showcase, late-night guerilla showcases, and an exhibit hall will be paired with new opportunities and programming — all designed to offer a dynamic, interactive and engaging online conference experience.

This year’s NERFA virtual conference will feature more than 100 hours of showcasing opportunities, according to Ethan Baird, the organization’s executive director. He cited Formal Showcases to be presented by some of the region’s finest acoustic listening rooms, as well as three days of open mics with some of the best digital producers on the scene – folks who have worked with Jonatha Brooke, Susan Werner and Dar Williams, among others – coaching participants to produce their best performances. “There will also be curated panels and workshops covering such timely topics as zero to professional set-up streaming systems for venues and the evolution of audience to community to fan base,” said Baird. “The entire event will be capped off with keynotes and awards ceremonies celebrating the community – our lessons learned, triumphs and losses,” he added.

Like the FAR-West virtual conference, NERFA’s will afford participants an array of registration options and on-demand access to the conference programming for either 30 days or 365 days after the virtual event, depending on the ticket type purchased.

Prior to the pandemic, NERFA’s board of directors had been engaged in discussions about transitioning to a year-round organization that can provide increased value and better meet the needs of the community it serves. With the inception of its NERFA 365 initiative late last year, the organization — whose geographic boundaries extend from the northern Virginia suburbs of Washington, DC to the eastern provinces of Canada — has done just that. NERFA hosts virtual panel discussions, artist and presenter peer group sessions each month, as well as a quarterly video spotlight series.

Visit nerfa2021.com for more information and to register for the conference.

Southeast Regional Folk Alliance (SERFA), the fifth North American-based regional affiliate of FAI, held a virtual conference in May.

Folk Alliance International Conference – Feb 23-27, 2022

FAI 2022 Conference BannerFolk Alliance International hosts a hybrid conference (in-person, along with online elements), Feb. 23-27, 2022 in Kansas City, Missouri — where the nonprofit organization that aims to serve, strengthen and engage the global folk music community through preservation, presentation and promotion is based. Registration for the conference is open now, while artists have until Sept. 30 to apply for juried official showcases. Visit folk.org for more information.

Editor’s Note: I am a board member of Folk Alliance International and NERFA (of which I am also a past president) and have been a mentor and/or panelist on public relations and strategic communications topics, among others, for FAR-West, FARM and SERFA, as well as FAI and NERFA. AcousticMusicScene.com hosts showcases at NERFA and SERFA in-person conferences.

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SWRFA Hosts Virtual Conference, Sept. 25-27 https://acousticmusicscene.com/2020/09/23/swrfa-hosts-virtual-conference-sept-25-27/ Wed, 23 Sep 2020 22:12:56 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=11353 Southwest Regional Folk Alliance (SWRFA) hosts a 2020 Virtual Conference online from Friday, September 25 – Sunday, September 27. It will feature a dozen official showcases, several workshops, breakout sessions and one-on-ones, open mics, and song assignments.

Along with the other four U.S.-based regional affiliates of Folk Alliance International, SWRFA felt compelled to cancel its annual in-person conference this year due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. However, “Dalis Allen, SWRFA’s executive director, and our board members wanted to create a virtual version of our yearly gathering to keep a sense of continuity and gather our community together in these challenging times,” said Brian Kalinec, its board president.

Times shown in the conference schedule above are Central Time.
Times shown in the conference schedule above are Central Time.
Showcasing their talents from 7:30-9 p.m. central time on Friday and Saturday nights will be the following artists (listed alphabetically, not in order of appearance): James Lee Baker, Danny Britt, Randy Lewis Brown, Wes Collins, George Ensle, Rachel Laven, Nobody’s Girl, Grace Pettis, Katherine Rondeau, Ben Shannon, John Sonntag, and David Starr. Alternates are Marc Douglas Berardo and Randy Palmer. These Official Showcases will be open to the public via SWRFA’s Facebook page and YouTube channel.

Singer-Songwriters Nancy Beaudette and Laura Zucker lead a workshop based on information and insights contained in their book, SongC.R.A.F.T. – Writing in Your Authentic Voice, while Elaine Hayden leads a concurrent session for concert presenters on Friday afternoon. Neale Eckstein, Jeska Forsyth, Jerod Rivers and Eric Schwartz will delve into new techniques in the virtual world. Fosyth and her husband Guy also lead a breakout session on performance, while artist manager Charlie Stewart offers demo evaluations, Emily Pickrell will discuss performing in Mexico, and Jana Pochop explores social media. Liz Sunde of Music to Life will conduct a special presentation prior to the Friday night showcases. She and her father, Noel Paul Stookey of Peter, Paul & Mary fame, co-founded the national nonprofit organization that connects activist artists of all genres with the resources they need to revitalize their communities through music. Veteran folk DJ Rich Warren, who recently stepped down as the longtime host of The Midnight Special, a nationally syndicated radio program emanating from WFMT in Chicago, and others will conduct one-on-ones.

It has been customary during the annual SWRFA conferences for all registered artists to be given a random song topic/prompt. They are expected to write about these during the weekend and perform their songs following Sunday brunch. SWRFA will seek to replicate this song-sharing event virtually on Sunday afternoon.

SWRFA 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. SWRFA includes the southwestern United States and Mexico. For more information on SWRFA, visit https://swfolkalliance.org. To register online (free) for its virtual conference, click on https://swrfa.wufoo.com/forms/m1uhtpbn08y5xmz/.

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Winners Named in Kerrville New Folk and Songwriter Serenade Competitions https://acousticmusicscene.com/2019/05/28/winners-named-in-kerrville-new-folk-and-songwriter-serenade-competitions/ Tue, 28 May 2019 12:28:14 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=10536 Six singer-songwriters have been named as winners in the 2019 Grassy Hill Kerrville New Folk Competition for Emerging Songwriters. They were chosen by a panel of judges from among 32 finalists who performed two songs each during the New Folk Concerts on May 25 and 26 as part of the Kerrville Folk Festival, an 18-day event at the Quiet Valley Ranch in the Texas Hill Country. Winners were also named in the Songwriter Serenade that took place elsewhere in Texas earlier this month.

8c8624_98ed97625bae49ac8eff73ef42550255Lisa Bastoni (Northampton, MA), Liv Greene (Washington, DC), Scott Mulvahill (Nashville, TN), Daniel Neihoff (Paducah, KY), D.b. Rielly (New York, NY), and Aaron Smith (Harrison, AR), will each perform 20-minute sets during a Grassy Hill Kerrville New Folk Winners concert at the festival on Sunday afternoon, June 2, and will receive cash honorariums and other prizes. They were selected as 2019 New Folk Winners by songwriters Joe Crookston, Ellis Delaney and Rebecca Loebe who served as judges. More than 500 songwriters had initially submitted entries.

Established in 1972 at the urging of Peter Yarrow, the Kerrville New Folk Concerts have become a highlight of the annual festival that is geared towards singer-songwriters of various musical styles. It is the longest continuously running festival of its kind in North America.

“New Folk is our way of finding new, exciting, excellent songwriters from around the world,” said Dalis Allen, producer of the Kerrville Folk Festival. “Our line-up every year is full of artists who have remained a part of the festival long after their first introduction in the competition.”

Kerrville, completing its 48th year, extends through Sunday, June 9. Besides concerts each evening, Kerrville features “Ballad Tree” song-sharing sessions, late-night and afternoon song circles and jam sessions at various campsites, concerts and activities for children, organized canoe and kayak trips on the Guadelupe River and Hill Country bike rides, a professional development program for teachers, as well as a three-day songwriters school and instrumental workshops. For more information, visit www.kerrville-music.com. A listing of all of this year’s New Folk Finalists was included in a previously posted article: https://acousticmusicscene.com/2019/04/16/2019-kerrville-new-folk-finalists-announced/

Justin Farren is Top Winner in Songwriter Serenade

Songwriter Serenade logoNeihoff was also among the winners in the 13th annual Songwriter Serenade that took place on May 4 in Moravia, TX. First-Place honors in that competition went to Justin Farren, a Sacramento, California-based singer-songwriter, who was also a 2016 Kerrville New Folk Winner and is one of the “Most Wanted to Return” artists at this summer’s upcoming Falcon Ridge Folk Festival in Hillsdale, NY, following audience voting after last year’s Grassy Hill Emerging Artists Showcase. He was chosen from among 15 semi-finalists in the Songwriter Serenade by a panel of judges who evaluated them based on lyrics (imagery, story, creativity, and originality), melody (structure, phrasing, and rhythm), and performing ability (vocals, musicianship), as well as stage presence/audience rapport.

Taking second through seventh place, respectively, were Scott White, Wyatt Espalin, Daniel Neihoff, Kyle Donovan, Kora Feder, and Scott Marin. In eighth through 15th – in alphabetical order – were Hilary Adamson, Helene Cronin, Teghan Devon, 
Jackson Emmer, Claudia Gibson, 
Keith Larsen, 
John Statz, and
Alicia Stockman. Prize monies were awarded to all of the finalists.

Singer-songwriters Mary Bragg (last year’s first-place winner), Susan Gibson and Walt Wilkins judged the Songwriter Serenade.

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2019 Kerrville New Folk Finalists Announced https://acousticmusicscene.com/2019/04/16/2019-kerrville-new-folk-finalists-announced/ Tue, 16 Apr 2019 15:13:51 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=10439 Thirty-two songwriters have been named as finalists in the 2019 Grassy Hill Kerrville New Folk Competition for Emerging Songwriters. Chosen from among more than 500 submissions from around the world, the finalists will perform the two songs they submitted at the New Folk Concerts slated for Saturday and Sunday afternoons, May 25 and 26, as part of the Kerrville Folk Festival.

8c8624_98ed97625bae49ac8eff73ef42550255Scheduled to perform (in order of performance) at the Threadgill Theater on the Quiet Valley Ranch Campgrounds in the Texas Hill Country on Saturday, May 25, from 1-4 p.m., are Scott Sean White (Terrell, TX), Lynne Hanson (Ottawa, Ont, Canada), Lisa Bastoni (Northampton, MA), John Louis (Minneapolis, MN), Cari Ray (Nashville, TN), Angela Parish (Los Angeles, CA), Jordi Baizan (Houston, TX), Lyndy Butler (Hurricane, UT), Nancy Beaudette (Shirley, MA), Aaron Smith (Harrison, AR), Tia McGraff (Port Rowan, Ont, Canada), Scott Mulvahill (Nashville, TN), Liv Greene (Washington, DC), D.B. Rielly (New York, NY), Katy Vanderwood (Minneapolis, MN), and Eric Kilburn (Acton, MA).

New Folk Finalists slated to perform on Sunday afternoon, May 26, include Michael Braunfeld (Philadelphia, PA), Avery Hill (Portland, OR), Amanda Pascali (Houston, TX), Claudia Gibson (Wimberley, TX), Daniel Neihoff (Paducah, KY), Rick Frydman (Lawrence, KS), Hope Dunbar (Utica, NE), Karen Dahlstrom (Brooklyn, NY), Beth Snapp (Kingsport, TN), Sophie Buskin (Brooklyn, NY), James Wyatt Martin (Austin, TX), Clementine Volker (Holland), Gordon & Christy McLeod (Garland, TX), Alice Howe (Newton, MA), Kyle Donovan (Boulder, CO), and Sarah Jane Nelson (Star City, AR).

Named as alternates were Joanna Howeron & Mike Cross (Austin, TX), Leah Gams Johnson (Nashville, TN), Arlon Bennett (Tappan, NY), and Lisa Nicole Grace (Edmonton, Alb, Canada).

After performing, six songwriters will be selected as 2019 New Folk Winners by songwriters Joe Crookston, Ellis Delaney and Rebecca Loebe who are serving as judges. The six, to be announced during the evening concert on May 26, will receive cash honorariums and other prizes, as well as the opportunity to return the following weekend to each perform 20-minute sets during a Grassy Hill Kerrville New Folk Award Winners concert at the festival on Sunday, June 2.

Established in 1972 at the urging of Peter Yarrow, the Kerrville New Folk Concerts have become a highlight of the annual festival that is geared towards singer-songwriters of various musical styles and is the longest continuously running festival of its kind in North America. In addition to receiving cash awards and additional performance opportunities, being named as a New Folk Award Winner is regarded as a very prestigious honor.

‘New Folk is our way of finding new, exciting, excellent songwriters from around the world,” said Dalis Allen, producer of the Kerrville Folk Festival. “Our line-up every year is full of artists who have remained a part of the festival long after their first introduction in the competition.”

Besides concerts each evening, Kerrville features “Ballad Tree” song-sharing sessions, campfire jam sessions, concerts and activities for children, organized canoe and kayak trips on the Guadelupe River and Hill Country bike rides, yoga, beer and wine seminars, a Young Artists Performance Incubator, a professional development program for teachers, as well as a three-day songwriters school and instrumental workshops. The festival runs for 18 straight days – Thursday, May 23– Sunday, June 9.

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2019 Kerrville New Folk Competition Opens https://acousticmusicscene.com/2018/12/02/2019-kerrville-new-folk-competition-opens/ Sun, 02 Dec 2018 16:51:26 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=10207 8c8624_98ed97625bae49ac8eff73ef42550255Entries are now being accepted for the 2019 Grassy Hill Kerrville New Folk Competition for Emerging Songwriters, to be held on Saturday and Sunday, May 25 and 26, 2019, during the first weekend of the 48th Annual Kerrville Folk Festival in the Texas Hill Country near Austin and San Antonio. The first 800 entries postmarked or submitted online by February 28 will be judged, and 32 finalists will be named in April.

Six songwriters will be chosen as 2019 New Folk Award Winners after performing, along with the 26 other finalists, at the Threadgill Theater on the Quiet Valley Ranch Campgrounds. A Kerrville New Folk Award Winners concert is slated for Sunday, June 2.

Songwriters may submit two original songs (written after Jan. 1, 2017) online at www.tlok.org/kff/ or by following the link on the Kerrville Folk Festival website’s New Folk page, filling in the requested information and uploading two separate song files (any common audio format should work). Alternatively, home-burned CDs (mp3 format only) may be mailed to the Kerrville Folk Festival office along with a completed entry form. The entry fee is $25. Official guidelines, along with entry information and forms, are posted at www.kerrville-music.com/new-folk.

‘New Folk is our way of finding new, exciting, excellent songwriters from around the world,” said Dalis Allen, producer of the Kerrville Folk Festival. “Our line-up every year is full of artists who have remained a part of the festival long after their first introduction in the competition,” she continued. Among those she cited as first coming to the festival’s attention as New Folk Finalists are Nanci Griffith, Lyle Lovett, Hal Ketchum, James McMurtry, Lucinda Williams, Jimmy LaFave, John Gorka, David Wilcox, Tish Hinojosa, Dave Carter, Johnsmith, Tom Prasada-Rao, Tom Kimmel, and Michael Lille.

2018 Kerrville New Folk Award Winners (l.-r.): Ben Bedford, Sarah Morris, Rich Krueger, Helene Cronin, John R. Butler, Mac Leaphart (Photo: Neale Eckstein)
2018 Kerrville New Folk Award Winers (l.-r.): Ben Bedford, Sarah Morris, Rich Krueger, Helene Cronin, John R. Butler, Mac Leaphart (Photo: Neale Eckstein)
Established in 1972 at the urging of Peter Yarrow, the Kerrville New Folk Concerts have become a highlight of the annual festival that is geared towards singer-songwriters of various musical styles. It is the longest continuously running festival of its kind in North America. In addition to receiving cash awards and additional performance opportunities, being named as a New Folk Award Winner is regarded as a very prestigious honor.

The six songwriters named as winners in the 2018 Kerrville New Folk Competition were Ben Bedford, John R. Butler, Helene Cronin, Rich Krueger, Mac Leaphart, and Sarah Morris.

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2018 SWRFA Conference Shaping Up for September; Showcase Artists Selected https://acousticmusicscene.com/2018/08/14/2018-swrfa-conference-shaping-up-for-september-showcase-artists-selected/ Tue, 14 Aug 2018 13:41:46 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=10081 Seventeen artists/acts have been selected to perform Official Showcases during the 2018 Southwest Regional Folk Alliance (SWRFA) Conference, Sept. 26-30, at the Holiday Inn – Midtown in Austin, TX. Eight will perform on Friday night, while nine will do so on Saturday night. In addition, six alternates have been invited to showcase their talents late Thursday night, the 28th.

SWRFA 2018Slated to perform in the hotel’s ballroom on Friday evening, Sept. 28, from 7:30-10 p.m., are Scott Cook, Byrd & Street, Mike P. Ryan, T Buckley, Dave Ray Cecil, Suzie Vinnick, The Cowboy Way, and The Flyin’ A’s.

Saturday night’s lineup features Nancy Beaudette, Andrew Delaney, Claudia Nygaard, Jaime Michaels, Ben Bedford, Helene Cronin, Clint Alphin, Jenny Reynolds, and Joana Howerton & Michael Cross.

Rich Warren, host of the nationally syndicated “The Midnight Special” radio show that emanates from Chicago’s WFMT-FM, and who celebrates 50 years of hosting folk music on the radio in 2018, emcees both nights. In addition to conference registrants, the official showcases will be open to the public for a $15 cover charge each night.

Following a popular pool party and open mic hosted by John Whipple (with a buffet sponsored by Berkalin Records) on Thursday night, Sept. 27, Charlie Stewart of Handshake Management will emcee the Official Alternates Showcase in the hotel’s Elm Room. Set to perform short sets beginning at 10:30 p.m. are Cari Ray & Shaky Legs, Flagship Romance, Kyle Donovan, Kora Feder, Susan Cattaneo Band, and Ronny Cox.

Besides the official showcases, the SWRFA Conference will feature open mics, in-room showcases extending into the early morning hours, and daytime panel discussions and seminars that address many facets of the music business, according to Dalis Allen, who produces the conference, as well as the annual Kerrville Folk Festival. “We eat meals together, form wonderful new relationships and renew old ones,” she notes. “And we are certain to have fun.”

Prior to the official start of the conference, Paul Barker will host a SWRFA meet and greet and open mic at Threadgill’s North on Wednesday night, Sep. 26, while John Whipple hosts another one by the hotel’s pool on Saturday afternoon. A two-hour, hands-on ‘SongCRAFT” workshop, led by singer-songwriters Nancy Beaudette and Laura Zucker, is set for Thursday afternoon.

Upon arriving at the conference, all registered artists will be given a random song topic/prompt. They are expected to write about these during the weekend and perform their songs following Sunday brunch. This song-sharing event has long been a conference highlight.

SWRFA is a regional affiliate of Folk Alliance International, a nonprofit organization that aims to nurture, engage and empower the international folk music community — traditional and contemporary, amateur and professional — through education, advocacy and performance. SWRFA includes the southwestern United States and Mexico. Its 19th annual conference is expected to draw performing artists, presenters, managers, agents and others engaged more than peripherally in the world of folk and acoustic music. For more information and to register to attend the conference, visit www.swfolkalliance.org.

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Winners Named in 2017 Grassy Hill Kerrville New Folk Competition https://acousticmusicscene.com/2017/06/03/winners-named-in-2017-grassy-hill-kerrville-new-folk-competition/ Sun, 04 Jun 2017 02:32:42 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=9448 Six singer-songwriters have been named as winners in the 2017 Grassy Hill Kerrville New Folk Competition for Emerging Songwriters. They were chosen by a panel of judges from among 32 finalists who performed two songs each during the New Folk Concerts on May 27 and 28 as part of the Kerrville Folk Festival, an 18-day event at the Quiet Valley Ranch in the Texas Hill Country.

2017 Grassy Hill New Folk Winners (l.-r.) are Chris Moyse, Rachael Kilgour, Mia Rose Lynne, Letitia VanSant, Ingrid Graudins, and Winona Wilde. (iPhone Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
2017 Grassy Hill New Folk Winners (l.-r.) are Chris Moyse, Rachael Kilgour, Mia Rose Lynne, Letitia VanSant, Ingrid Graudins, and Winona Wilde. (iPhone Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
Chris Moyse (Nashville, TN), Rachael Kilgour (Duluth, MN), Mia Rose Lynne (Nashville, TN), Letitia VanSant (Baltimore, MD), Ingrid Graudins (Nashville, TN), and Winona Wilde (Toronto, Ontario) will each perform 20-minute sets during a Grassy Hill Kerrville New Folk Winners concert at the festival on Sunday afternoon, June 4, and will receive cash honorariums and other prizes.

Established in 1972 at the urging of Peter Yarrow, the Kerrville New Folk Concerts have become a highlight of the annual festival that is geared towards singer-songwriters of various musical styles and is the longest continuously running festival of its kind in North America. Being named as a New Folk Winner is regarded as a very prestigious honor.

“It’s a great honor to be selected — first as a finalist and then as one of the six winners of this year’s contest,” said Kilgour. “Some of my favorite songwriters of all time have been New Folk finalists and winners, It’s pretty incredible to be included in that long and impressive list. I’m grateful for the time spent here at Kerrville amongst folks who share the deep love of a good song.”

Amy Speace, who served as one of the judges, along with fellow singer-songwriters Dan Navarro and Jeff Black, reflected on her experience of being both a two-time New Folk judge and a former finalist in the competition:

“Although those of us creating the art can wax negative on these things — ‘songwriting for sport, ick’ — in the end, the truth is without these contests many of us would not be here. New Folk at Kerrville is a beautiful example of integrating a ‘contest’ with a welcoming key to a kingdom of community. As a former New Folk Finalist who has judged twice, I can see if from both sides. I was thrilled to be a finalist. I was disappointed to not win, but a year later I was playing the Main Stage and realized I wouldn’t have been offered the gig without being seen in the contest, win or lose.

As a judge, I met Robby Hecht who has become a friend and a cowriter; maybe of one of my favorite songs I’ve ever had the pleasure of being a part of – ‘The Sea & The Shore.’ And one of my co-Finalists in 2006 (who won) was Jud Caswell, who co-wrote ‘The Weight of the World’ with me. So I may have lost the contest, but I think what I won far outweighs that disappointment. Kerrville keeps giving gifts and they get deeper each time I return.”

In impromptu remarks at a gathering of New Folk Finalists and Winners at the Rouse House New Folk Camp, where many of the finalists stayed in tents and shared songs over bagels on the two mornings preceding their showcase performances, Speace lauded hosts Lindsay Lee and Deb Rouse for being so welcoming to New Folk Finalists over the years. “They have set up New Folk Central — creating a space for these 32 to create family, so that the experience is less competitive and more collaborative.”

Speace also reflected on how, as festival producer Dalis Allen gave the New Folk Finalists a pep talk prior to their taking the stage, she observed that while it was a songwriting contest on the surface, it “was really a wide-swinging gate of entry into a communion with Tribe and an invitation to Mission.” She recalled standing next to her fellow judges – “veterans of song and stage and the art of creating a living out of music, feeling the rumbles of Spirit move through me, the beginnings of new songs and the rekindling love of Why I Do This.” Looking into the eager and nervous eyes of the finalists, she remembered her own jitters 11 years ago, and said she was moved to tears.

“I am deeply grateful to have spent this past weekend listening to 64 songs sung by 32 songwriters. I am re-inspired, humbled and honored to have shared the experience with my fellow judges who pored over every verse and chorus with cradling care and consideration of the deep importance of this small thing we do. And I am grateful for Dalis, for getting to see her big wide smile so often in the last few days, for dancing with her backstage, and for her thoughtfulness and care taking of an extraordinary place where, every May and June, for 18 days, people of all shapes, sizes, ages, religions, nationalities, genders, coffee preferences, and late night temperaments gather in Kerrville Texas in the simple and beautiful belief that a song could change the world.”

The 46th annual Kerrville Folk Festival extends through Sunday, June 12. In addition to concerts each evening, Kerrville features “Ballad Tree” song-sharing sessions, late-night and afternoon song circles and jam sessions at various campsites, concerts and activities for children, organized canoe trips on the Guadelupe River and Hill Country bike rides, a professional development program for teachers, as well as a three-day songwriters school and instrumental workshops. For more information, visit www.kerrville-music.com.

Editor’s Note: Although I have been writing about the Grassy Hill New Folk Competition since the inception of AcousticMusicScene.com in 2007, I was a first-time attendee at the Kerrville Folk festival last month and am so glad that my five days with this wonderful community included two afternoons of performances by the New Folk Finalists, as well as a bittersweet but beautiful musical tribute to Jimmy LaFave, who was to have been a festival headliner but passed away shortly before it started. I’m delighted to have been able to hear, meet and re-connect with so many talented singer-songwriters. I also express my appreciation to Dalis, Lindsay and Deb, as well as to Ken Gaines, who welcomed me to pitch my tent at Camp Stupid and to my friends Brian and Pam Kalinec for their gracious hospitality during my extended visit to Texas.

8c8624_98ed97625bae49ac8eff73ef42550255A listing of all of this year’s New Folk Finalists was included in a previously posted article. In addition to the winners mentioned in the article above, the finalists included Andy Baker (Gobles, MI), Emily Barnes (Johnsonburg, NJ), Arlon Bennett (Tappan, NY), Robin Bienemann (Oak Park, IL), Mary Bragg (Nashville, TN), John John Brown (Winter Garden, FL), Lyndy Butler (Hurricane, UT), Shawn Byrne (Nashville, TN), Jefferson Clay (San Antonio, TX), Wendy Colonna (Buda, TX), Teresa Eggerston Cooke (Park City, UT), Teghan Devon (Myersville, MD), Kelly Hoppenjans (Nashville, TN), Isaac Hoskins (Denton, TX), Hadley Kennary (Nashville, TN), Martin Kerr (Edmonton, Alberta), Eleanor Kleiner & Elie Brangbour – The Whispering Tree (Beacon, NY), Rich Krueger (Evergreen Park, IL), Catherine Miles & Jay Mafale – The YaYas (Centerport, NY), ordinary elephant (Livingston, TX), Angela Parrish (North Hollywood, CA), Chris Petersen (Cedar City, UT), Brian Pounds (Austin, TX), Ben Shannon (Pittsburgh, PA), and Dana Sipos (Guelph, Ontario).

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Official Showcase Artists Chosen for 2015 SWRFA Conference in Austin, Texas https://acousticmusicscene.com/2015/08/10/official-showcase-artists-chosen-for-2015-swrfa-conference-in-austin-texas/ Mon, 10 Aug 2015 17:00:48 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=8327 Eighteen artists/acts have been selected to perform Official Showcases during the 2015 Southwest Regional Folk Alliance (SWRFA) Conference, Sept. 23-27, at the Holiday Inn – Midtown in Austin, TX. Nine will perform on Friday night, while another nine will do so on Saturday night. In addition, seven alternates have been invited to showcase their talents late Thursday night.

SWRFA_logoSlated to perform in the ballroom on Friday evening, from 7:30-10 p.m., are Ryanhood, Lyal Strickland, Friction Farm, Hardin Burns, Freddy & Francine, Justin Farren, Clint Alphin, Lisa Sanders and Brown Sugar, and The Flyin A’s. Saturday night’s lineup features Mt. Thelonious, Thad Beckman, Susan Cattaneo, Wes Collins, Amy Kucharik, Andrew Delaney, Rebecca Folsom, Heather Styka, and No Fuss and Feathers Roadshow. Rich Warren, host of the nationally syndicated “The Midnight Special” radio show that emanates from Chicago’s WFMT-FM, emcees both nights.

Besides the official showcases, the conference will feature open mics, in-room showcases extending into the early morning hours, and daytime panel discussions and seminars that address many facets of the music business, according to Dalis Allen, who produces the conference, as well as the annual Kerrville Folk Festival. “We eat meals together, form wonderful new relationships and renew old ones,” she notes. “And we are certain to have fun.”

Following a popular pool party and open mic hosted by singer-songwriter Butch Morgan on Thursday night, Charlie Stewart of Handshake Management will emcee the Official Alternates Showcase in the hotel’s Elm Room. Set to perform short sets beginning at 10:30 p.m. are Berkley Hart, Chase Gassaway, Nancy Beaudette, Michael Braunfeld, George Ensle, Katie Marie, and Ordinary Elephant.

Conference registration is $195 if paid by Sept. 15 and rises to $225 after then. Included with registration are five meals and a cocktail party. The official showcases are also open to the public for a $10 cover charge each night.

SWRFA is a regional affiliate of Folk Alliance International, a nonprofit organization that aims to nurture, engage and empower the international folk music community — traditional and contemporary, amateur and professional — through education, advocacy and performance. SWRFA includes the southwestern United States and Mexico. Its 16th annual conference is expected to draw performing artists, presenters, managers, agents and others engaged more than peripherally in the world of folk and acoustic music.

For more information, visit www.swfolkalliance.org.

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2010 Kerrville Wine & Music Festival Set for Sept. 3-5 https://acousticmusicscene.com/2010/08/26/2010-kerrville-wine-music-festival-set-for-sept-3-5/ Thu, 26 Aug 2010 16:04:55 +0000 http://www.acousticmusicscene.com/?p=2823 Wine and music aficionados will gather in the Texas Hill Country over Labor Day Weekend for the 2010 Kerrville Wine & Music Festival. The annual event, pairing Texas wine tastings with performances by two-dozen singer-songwriters, takes place Sept. 3-5 at the Quiet Valley Ranch, nine miles south of Kerrville on TX Hwy 16.

Five artists/acts will perform in concert each evening beginning at 7 p.m. They include Acoustic Eidolon, Baskery (from Stockholm, Sweden), Berkley Hart, Marshall Ford Swing Band, John Fullbright, Seth Glier, The Killdares, Tom Kimmel, Matt King, Snarky Puppy, SONiA, The Trishas, Uncle Lucius, Kevin Welch and Corinne West with Kelly Joe Phelps. Craft vendors, food and wine booths will be open an hour before each evening concert.

The festival kicks-off on Friday afternoon when Texas-based singer-songwriter Raina Rose hosts the Ballad Tree. Seth Glier and SONiA host on Saturday and Sunday afternoons, respectively. Rose, Anthony da Costa and John Elliott – who have been touring together recently – perform a two-hour concert on Sunday afternoon, while a Saturday afternoon New Folk In-The-Round will feature Andrew Delaney, Wyatt Easterling, Kate Klim, Chet O’Keefe and Kim Richardson.

Two-hour wine seminars, for which tickets must be purchased in advance, are slated for late in the afternoon on both Saturday and Sunday. A yoga session and a 10-mile Hill Country bike ride are scheduled for Saturday morning, while a folk song service is set for Sunday morning.

On Aug. 31, from 8-9 p.m. central time, www.radiofreetexas.org will broadcast a performance by Uncle Lucius live from the Tin Roof Steakhouse in Boerne, TX to promote the Wine & Music Festival. Dalis Allen, producer of the Kerrville Music Festivals and president of the Southwest Regional Folk Alliance (SWRFA), hosts the show.

For more information on the festival and to order tickets, log-on to www.kerrville-music.com.

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