Celtic Thunder – AcousticMusicScene.com https://acousticmusicscene.com Sun, 20 Jan 2019 16:38:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Folk and Roots Artists Showcase Their Talents During APAP Conference in New York City https://acousticmusicscene.com/2019/01/20/folk-and-roots-artists-showcase-their-talents-during-apap-conference-in-new-york-city/ Sun, 20 Jan 2019 16:34:30 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=10329 Dozens of performers from the folk, roots and singer-songwriter communities in the U.S., Canada, and several other countries showcased their talents during the annual conference of the Association of Performing Arts Professionals (APAP) that took place January 4-8. The global multidisciplinary performing arts marketplace and conference drew several thousand arts professionals from throughout the U.S. and many other countries to New York City.

A number of booking agencies whose rosters include folk and roots artists were among the more than 300 exhibitors in the large EXPO Hall. The conference also featured networking opportunities galore, daily plenary sessions and keynote speakers, an awards ceremony, a town hall on the artist as activist, and a wide array of professional development workshops and forums.

The theme for 2019 was The Power of WE and highlighted the collective strength and the influence of the performing arts in the world. As Mario Garcia Durham, APAP’s president and CEO, noted in welcoming conference attendees: “At APAP, we celebrate both the impact of our work and the opportunity for each one of us to draw energy, ideas and inspiration from it. Our strength as an industry comes from the everyday efforts of individuals in this field, and our collective power – The Power of WE – that fuels us as performing arts professionals.”

Showcases of Note Took Place at the Host Hotel and at Venues Around New York City

More than 1,000 showcases (music, dance, theater, comedy, and more) took place both at the New York Hilton Midtown, the conference hotel, and at venues throughout Manhattan. A few also were set in other New York City boroughs.

Scotland's Skerryvore (shown in concert on Long Island last summer) opened a pre-conference showcase party at City Winery (Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
Scotland’s Skerryvore (shown in concert on Long Island last summer) opened a pre-conference showcase party at City Winery (Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
Prior to the official start of the conference, music PR firm Rock Paper Scissors and GlobalFEST (which was concurrently taking place in NYC) joined forces to again co-produce a free, two-day Wavelengths: APAP World Music Pre-Conference, Jan. 3-4, that featured a number of panel discussions geared towards artists and presenters, with short performances and artist pitches also sprinkled in. A Thursday night pre-conference showcase party at City Winery featured performances by the brilliant Scottish folk-rock band Skerryvore, Canadian Celtic-rockers Enter The Haggis, and the harmonious American folk-rock trio The Sweet Remains.

January 4: As he has for the last two years, composer, banjoist and producer Jayme Stone curated an eclectic roots music showcase at the host hotel that extended from the late afternoon into the evening. Called the Secret Agents APAP Showcase, it featured a number of notable, primarily self-managed touring artists. As Stone told AcousticMusicScene.com last January, he sought “to create a space for independent roots/world music artists to have their music heard by performing arts center directors and festival programmers. My goal was to make the cost slightly more affordable for artists and to create an opportunity for underrepresented artists to have a seat at the table. Most of the artists at our showcase do not have agents, which is rare at this conference.”

Kicking off the musical festivities was Eleanor Dubinsky, a soulful NYC-based singer songwriter, and her ensemble. Although I’d seen and previously been impressed by Dubinsky’s singing and song stylings in solo and duo performances, having an ensemble backing her added a whole new dimension to her performance. Next up, Stone debuted his New Art-Pop Project. Among the artists joining him on that was Moira Smiley, herself a gifted songwriter and vocalist, who, accompanied by her group, VOCO, had her own short showcase immediately afterwards entitled The Voice is a Traveler.

Moira Smiley (with accordion) and VOCO showcase their talents during the APAP Conference (Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
Moira Smiley (with accordion) and VOCO showcase their talents (Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
Smiley, who has attended and showcased her talents at several APAP conferences over the years, told AcousticMusicScene.com: “Each of them [showcases] had different results. Some of them were very direct aid to the bookings for the following year, and some seemed more like spending money to hang out with friends in the city.” Wandering the conference’s exhibit hall one year helped her to gain a new band member, while another artist reached out to her after seeing her brightly-colored postcards, and they wound up doing a TEDx presentation together.

“2019 was my first time at Wavelengths, and that was a revelation to experience the small, fierce like-minded group of people interested in traditional arts,” she said, expressing appreciation to the pre-conference’s organizers for screening her promo video for her The Voice Is A Traveler show. In my view, it was the best of a number of short videos and video clips screened. As for the Secret Agents Showcase, Smiley said: “I love [them] for their absolute weirdness of variety. It reminds you how many worlds of entertainment here are – some intersecting not-one-bit with your own! Yet we’re all here making our dough with these sights and sounds.”

Also part of the Secret Agents Showcase were Taarka, a Colorado-based adventurous Americana trio whose sound is a blend of bluegrass, folk, gypsy jazz, and soul; American samba band Os Clavelitos; the energetic Northeastern Brazilian party music of accordionist Rob Curto’s Forro For All; and the joyous Brazilian bluegrass sounds of Matuto (fronted by Clay Ross), among others.

Terrance Simien at NYC's Don't Tell Mama nightclub (Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
Terrance Simien at NYC’s Don’t Tell Mama nightclub (Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
After catching the first few acts in the Secret Agents Showcase, I headed to Don’t Tell Mama in the theater district for another wonderful roots music variety show curated and hosted by Ken Waldman, a fiddling poet who also performed. 10th annual “From Manhattan to Moose Pass” featured performances by three Grammy Award-winners: Cathy Fink & Marcy Marxer and last-minute special guest Terrance Simien, a Louisiana-based Zydeco artist who was without his accordion and shared a lively call-and-response song.

The evening’s musical gumbo also included the jazzy Brazilian Americana sounds of Max Hatt & Edda Glass; Hen’s Teeth, a cross-continental duo with Janie Rothfield (Staunton, VA) and Nathan Bontrager (Cologne, Germany); DuoDuo Quartet comprised of percussive dancer Nic Gareiss with harpist Maeve Glichrist, plus cellist Natalie Haas (who frequently performs with Alasdair Fraser) with her husband-guitarist Yann Falquet (from the Quebecois folk group Genticorum) – all of whom have toured internationally for years; Jenna Moynihan & Mairi Chaimbeaul, a fiddle and harp duo; and Mark Kilianski & Nate Sabat featuring a guitarist and songwriter from the duo Hoot & Holler and the bassist and songwriter from Mile Twelve, a Boston-based bluegrass band. Each of the preceding artists (with the exception of Simien) also joined Waldman in kicking-off the evening’s musical festivities with renditions of “Cluck Old Hen.” A welcome and unexpected highlight of the evening was Waldman’s pairing of harpists Gilchrist and Chaimbeaul for a tune as a twin-harp interlude between sets.

Although some parts of the roots music variety show’s format have remained the same, “it’s always evolving, sometimes in subtle ways, sometimes a little more dramatically,” Waldman noted. “O stage, I’ll sometimes mention a quote I’ve learned as a writer: no surprise to writer, no surprise to reader, which means if a writer is surprised what he or she is writing, which happens, it’s almost guaranteed the reader will be surprised. I think that’s a good thing. It means extra energy. I try to bring that mindset to the show, and have actively encouraged collaborations, which brings an element of the unknown. If the musicians are not 100% sure what’s going to happen next, the audience won’t know either.”

The same lineup of artists who performed at Don’t Tell Mama also showcased their talents the previous night at Brooklyn’s Jalopy Theater. “One of the evolutions in the show was [that] we began booking Thursday night at the Jalopy Theater in Red Hook, which served not only as a public event (on Friday we only market to APAP attendees), but also as a run-through for Friday,” said Waldman.

A twin-harp interlude during Ken Waldman's roots music variety show  featured (l-r) Mairi Chaimbeaul and Maeve Gilchrist (Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
A twin-harp interlude during Ken Waldman’s roots music variety show featured (l-r) Mairi Chaimbeaul and Maeve Gilchrist (Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
In planning this year’s edition of “From Manhattan to Moose Pass,” Waldman intentionally opted to place DuoDuo Quartet and Jena Moynihan & Mairi Chaimbeul next to each other in the program and “asked that Maeve and Mairi somehow do some twin harp.” He noted that “Maeve, in particular, wasn’t sure how the twin harps would go, and wasn’t sure that two sets in a row with harps was a good idea.” Acknowledging that Maeve is not only a noted musician, but has far more credits as a producer ad arranger than he does, Waldman noted her concern but asked that she give it a chance. “I reasoned that because she and Mairi were also long-time friends, it all had a pretty good chance of working.” He was right. Not only was the twin-harp interlude a musical highlight of the evening, it didn’t detract from the strong sets on either side of it.

While I was enjoying the music at Don’t Tell Mama, the Americana Music Association sponsored a showcase concert at Rockwood Music Hall on the Lower East Side featuring singer-songwriter Caitlin Canty with special guests Oshima Brothers, while Smithsonian Folkways recording artists Anna & Elizabeth (who have previously been part of Waldman’s roots music variety shows) shared their innovative, modern arrangements of old-time Appalachian music at Joe’s Pub; The Klezmatics played Irridium, a midtown jazz club; and the Seamus Egan Project (featuring one of the most influential artists in contemporary Irish music) showcased at the New York Hilton, as did Switchback, the Celtic and Americana duo of Brian Fitzgerald and Martin McCormick. A multimedia concert by Seamus Egan’s seminal band Solas was a highlight of a previous APAP Conference.

January 5: My Saturday afternoon is traditionally filled with Celtic showcases at the hotel, and it would have been this year had I not opted to remain on Long Island to emcee a concert that I’d helped to arrange. Among the artists who showcased their talents at the New York Hilton Midtown that day were ebullient New York-based jig-rockers The Prodigals and their alter egos Acoustic Micks; Cherish The Ladies, the all-female Irish band fronted by Joannie Madden; Philadelphia-based Celtic roots band RUNA; and the young Irish trad trio Socks in the Frying Pan (from County Clare), whom I saw the next day.

Also showcasing their talents at the hotel on Saturday afternoon were Banjo Nickaru & Western Scooches and Sam Reider & Human Hands. Natalia Zukerman performed excerpts from The Women Who Rode Away, a multimedia show melding her talents as a songwriter, painter and storyteller. William Florian, formerly of The New Christy Minstrels, presented a taste of Those Were The Days: The Spirit and the Songs of the 1960s.

Tamara Kater
Tamara Kater
In the evening, Strategic Touring and Mavens Music partnered to present a Roots & Americana Showcase that was hosted by Michael Park (The International Americana Music Show) at Hill Country Live in the Chelsea section of Manhattan. Had I not been on Long Island or at the Irridium to see gifted and musically versatile singer-songwriter Susan Werner, that’s where I’d have been to enjoy some fine live music and tasty Texas barbecue. Notable Canadian singer-songwriters Melanie Brulee, Erin Costello and Benjamin Dakota Rogers shared the bill with Canada’s Lonesome Ace Stringband and the bands Youth In A Roman Field and Upstate (a genre-bending young New Paltz, NY-based ensemble that also played Rockwood Music Hall earlier in the evening).

Tamara Kater of Toronto, Ontario- based Mavens Music Management reports that the showcase was well attended, with more than 100 people in the audience – about half of whom had APAP connections. “APAP is always rewarding, especially with the concurrent content of Wavelengths and GlobalFEST,” said Kater. “It’s inspiring and rewarding to meet such an array of presenters and artists all in one place, within a few days. Seeing the venues of New York and so many performances in such a compact amount of time is always a brilliant way to start off the new year.”

Also that evening, booking agency Madison House hosted a showcase at City Winery featuring Canadian singer-songwriter Rose Cousins, American singer-songwriter Willie Nile, and Madagascar-born singer-songwriter ad environmental activist Razia Said. Down at Rockwood Music Hall, The Blue Dahlia featuring Dahlia Dumont, a Brooklyn gal now living in Paris, who pens and sings songs in both English and French, appeared. Among the artists who showcased their talents at New York Hilton were Emmet Cahill (star of PBS’ Celtic Thunder) and the Jen Chapin Trio featuring the soulful urban folk singer-songwriter, her husband Stephan Crump on acoustic bass, and Jamie Fox on electric guitar.

January 6: Isle of Klezbos, a swinging all-female Klezmer sextet shared a bill and some members with the octet Metropolitan Klezmer (now celebrating its silver anniversary) as they performed some vintage instrumentals and Yiddish songs during Sunday brunch at City Winery. Although I enjoyed this last year, I skipped it this time. I also missed singer-songwriter Ellis Paul’s short early morning “Hero In You” showcase, during which he presented 15-minutes of excerpts from an award-winning educational program for children based on his CD and book of the same name that inspires youngsters to dream big.

I enjoyed several showcases that were part of Celebrate Our FOLK at Connolly’s Pub – Restaurant (Connolly’s Klub 45). The highlights were Kaia Kater and Kittel & Co.

Kaia Kater (Photo: Ratz Argulla)
Kaia Kater (Photo: Ratz Argulla)
A Montreal-born, Grenadian-Canadian, Kater grew up both there and in Ontario. The daughter of Tamara Kater (quoted above), she was introduced to folk music at a young age and also studied and soaked up Appalachian music in West Virginia. Kater is among the youngest and most gifted performers on the Canadian old-time and folk scene. An eclectic traditionalist, she plays the banjo, sings, writes songs, and has her own unique take on Appalachian and Canadian traditional music.

Fronted by Jeremy Kittel — a virtuosic violinist, fiddler and composer — Kittel & Co. is an acoustic trio/string band with folk and jazz sensibilities whose sound also has Celtic, bluegrass and classical influences. Its recent release, Whorls, debuted at #1 on the Billboard bluegrass chart, while Kittel’s piece “Chrysalis” is among the nominees for a Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Composition.

Also on the bill were singer-songwriter Ashley Davis, Making Movies (a Kansas City, MO-based band whose music defies easy categorization and whose set I missed, although I’ve previously seen the band at a Folk Alliance International conference held in its hometown), and the previously mentioned Socks in the Frying Pan.

Later in the evening, Kater shared a bill at Rockwood Music Hall as part of Quicksilver Productions, Lost Buffalo Artists & Smithsonian Folkways Present: The Women of Folkways with label mates The Bright Siders (featuring singer-songwriter and percussive dancer Kristin Andreassen – formerly of Uncle Earl – and Brooklyn-based child psychiatrist Dr. Kari Groff who create music that helps children and families have meaningful conversations about emotions) and Lula Wiles (a Boston–based, harmonious trio made up of Isa Burke, Eleanor Buckland, and Mali Obamsawin, whose Smithsonian Folkways debut, What Will We Do, is released Jan. 25 and who I had the pleasure of introducing at a couple of festivals).

Among the artists showcasing their talents at the New York Hilton in the evening were The Everly Set: Sean Altman and Jack Skuller Celebrate The Everly Brothers and Sultans of String, award-winning genre-bending world music instrumentalists from Toronto. Vanaver Caravan, a troupe of dancers and musicians, presented nearly half an hour of excerpts from Turn Turn Turn Turn, a show featuring more than 20 of Pete Seeger’s most celebrated songs and timed to coincide with the centenary of the late folk icon’s birth. Li, who describes his music as urban folk, did not impress this writer, while a Folk Legends showcase featuring two former members of The Kingston Trio was cancelled due to illness.

Also during the conference, Sage Artists shared excerpts of Call Mr. Robeson: A Life, With Songs, while cast members from Lonesome Traveler: The Concert performed short musical excerpts from the show, along with narration that helps tell the story of American folk and folk-rock music from Woody Guthrie to Bob Dylan and beyond. Artists in various other musical genres also showcased their talents, while comedy, dance and theatrical showcases also were part of the mix.

Since there were no folk or roots music showcases of note on January 7, and the conference closed with a plenary session on the morning of January 8, I did not venture into NYC those days.

apap_365_logo125About the Association of Performing Arts Professionals (APAP)

Based in Washington, DC, APAP is a nonprofit national service, advocacy and membership organization dedicated to developing and supporting a robust performing arts presenting field and the professionals who work within it. The next APAP Conference is set for Jan. 10-14, 2020 in New York City. More information on the organization may be found on its website: www.apap365.org.

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Folk and Roots Music Artists Showcase Their Talents During APAP Conference in NYC https://acousticmusicscene.com/2018/01/19/folk-and-roots-music-artists-showcase-their-talents-during-apap-conference-in-nyc/ Fri, 19 Jan 2018 20:38:38 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=9834 Nearly 3,500 arts professionals from throughout the U.S. and nearly 30 other countries converged on New York City, Jan. 12-16, 2018 for the annual conference of the Association of Performing Arts Professionals (APAP). As in years past, dozens of performers from the folk, roots and singer-songwriter communities in the U.S., Canada, and several other countries were featured among the more than 1,000 showcases during the global multidisciplinary performing arts marketplace and conference. A number of booking agencies whose rosters include such artists were among the more than 350 exhibitors in the large EXPO Hall. The conference also featured networking opportunities galore, daily plenary sessions and keynote speakers, an awards ceremony, a town hall on the artist as activist, and a wide array of professional development workshops and forums.

The theme for 2018 was trans.ACT and focused on the transformative power of the arts. The conference’s plenary sessions explored the role and responsibility of the performing arts in our world today and the impact of trans-disciplinary thinking and partnerships that are breaking new ground in both the arts and the world beyond.

Showcases of Note Took Place at the Host Hotel and at Venues Around New York City

Showcases took place both at the New York Hilton Midtown, the conference hotel, and at venues throughout Manhattan. A few also were set in other New York City boroughs and beyond.

January 12:

Jayme Stone's Folklife performs during the Global Routes Showcase at the APAP Conference (iPhone Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
Jayme Stone’s Folklife performs during the Global Routes Showcase at the APAP Conference (iPhone Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
A number of folk and roots music showcases took place during the conference’s opening night. A Global Routes Showcase at the New York Hilton (curated and co-hosted by artists Clay Ross and Jayme Stone) featured Gullah music of the Carolina Coast performed by Charleston, SC-based Ranky Tanky, the joyous Brazilian bluegrass sounds of Matuto (fronted by Clay Ross), the energetic Northeastern Brazilian party music of Rob Curto’s Forro For All, Jayme Stone’s Folklife (pictured), bluegrass-inspired Estonian four-piece string band Curly Strings, Nordic roots band SVER, virtuosic ten-time IBMA Fiddle Player of the Year Michael Cleveland and his band Flamekeeper, and The Nordic Fiddle Bloc. After catching all but the last couple of acts, I headed to Don’t Tell Mama in the theater district for another wonderful roots music variety show curated by Ken Waldman, Alaska’s fiddling poet (although he no longer lives there), who also performed. This year’s lineup for ” From Manhattan to Moose Pass” featured Kristin Andreassen (Uncle Earl, Footworks), The Early Mays (a folk trio with harmonium, whose latest release formerly topped the Folk DJ charts), American roots and blues songsters Ben Hunter & Joe Seamons, Celtic-inspired and fiddle-based indie folksters Laura Cortese & the Dance Cards, Nate the Great with Brian Vollmer (juggling and music), Ryan Drickey, and NYC-based singer songwriter Lily Henley. [The same lineup of artists also showcased their talents the previous night at Brooklyn’s Jalopy Theater.] While I was enjoying the music at Don’t Tell Mama [the showcases hosted by Waldman are always a highlight for me], across town at the City Winery, booking agency Concerted Efforts hosted an Americana Showcase featuring Birds of Chicago, Dom Flemons (a founding member of Carolina Chocolate Drops), Dori Freeman, and Phoebe Hunt & The Gatherers.

January 13:

Tartan Terrors showcase their talents at the New York Hilton (iPhone Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
Tartan Terrors showcase their talents at the New York Hilton (iPhone Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
My Saturday afternoon was filled with Celtic showcases at the hotel. Among the featured artists were the stellar Irish acoustic ensemble Lunasa, ebullient jig-rockers The Prodigals and their alter egos Acoustic Micks (both fronted by Gregory Grene), Philadelphia-based Celtic roots band RUNA, young Irish trad trio Socks in the Frying Pan (from County Clare), and, very notably, the Seamus Egan Project [A multimedia concert by Egan’s seminal band Solas was a highlight of a previous APAP Conference]. Tartan Terrors tore it up the following day with their blend of Scottish music and dance during a rousing showcase in another hotel conference room. Also showcasing, although I missed them, were NYC-based All-Ireland button accordionist John Redmond, Bronx, NY-based singer-songwriter Mary Courtney, and young Celtic-inspired folk-rock band The Narrowbacks.

During the evening, I enjoyed extended sets of music by Jim Messina (of Loggins & Messina, Poco and Buffalo Springfield fame) and Grammy Award-winning southwest Louisiana-based Cajun band Beausoleil avec Michel Doucet at Iridium, a Manhattan nightclub that primarily features jazz artists. Back at the hotel late that night, I also enjoyed a short showcase by the vocal group Estonian Voices.

January 14:

Isle of Klezbos performs during a Klezmer brunch at City Winery (iPhone Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
Isle of Klezbos performs during a Klezmer brunch at City Winery (iPhone Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
Isle of Klezbos, an all-female Klezmer sextet now celebrating its 20th anniversary, shared a bill and some members with the octet Metropolitan Klezmer as they entertained and enlightened a large crowd with vintage instrumentals and songs from Yiddish cinema during Sunday brunch at City Winery. That evening, I headed to New York’s Lower East Side and shuttled between various folk and Americana showcases at Rockwood Music Hall’s three stages. Skyline Presents “Club 47 @ APAP” – An Evening of Contemporary Americana featured living legend Tom Rush and singer-songwriters Caitlin Canty, Ben Caplan, Seth Glier, England’s Jake Morley, and Matt Nakoa, as well as Canadian bluegrass band Slocan Ramblers. A showcase co-hosted by Quicksilver Productions and Lost Buffalo Artists featured Anna & Elizabeth, Ben Hunter & Joe Seamons, Kristin Andreassen with The Bright Siders, and Kaia Kater.

January 15:

Texas-based artist Sam Baker was among the talented performers at The Sheen Center's Loreto Theater (iPhone Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
Texas-based artist Sam Baker was among the talented performers at The Sheen Center’s Loreto Theater (iPhone Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
To cap off the conference, I enjoyed an evening of folk, roots, world, and Americana music showcases co-presented by Val Denn Agency and Mavens Music at The Sheen Center’s Loreto Theater in Noho. Featured acts included Kaia Kater, Corin Raymond, Jonathan Byrd & The Pickup Cowboy, Ramy Essam, Sam Baker, The Last Revel, Ben Hunter and Joe Seamons, and Session Americana.

Other folk and roots artists who showcased their talents during the APAP Conference included The Abrams Brothers, vocals and harp duo Addi & Jacq, multi-instrumentalists Andes Manta, contemporary folk trio A Band Called Honalee, Russian folk ensemble Barnya, young Irish tenor Emmet Cahill (who is also a member of Celtic Thunder), Colombian-Panamanian roots duo Calle Sur, The Everly Set (Sean Altman and Jack Skuller), guitarist Vicki Genfan, seven-sibling act The Hunts, Georgian polyphonic choir Iberi, Quebec’s Melisande [Electrotrad], Guy Mendilow Ensemble, Mojo & the Bayou Gypsies, accordionist and composer-singer Sam Reider, eclectic roots ensemble Upstate Rubdown, Ottawa Valley fiddler April Verch and her band, and Yemen Blues. Randy Noojin presented 15-minute excerpts from Hard Travelin’ with Woody, his one-man multimedia show featuring the music and artwork of Woody Guthrie, as well as Seeger — A multimedia solo show featuring the music of Pete Seeger. Sage Artists shared excerpts of Call Mr. Robeson: A Life, With Songs.” Cast members from Lonesome Traveler: The Concert also performed short musical excerpts from the show, along with narration that helps tell the story of American folk and folk-rock music from Woody Guthrie to Bob Dylan and beyond. Artists in various other musical genres also showcased their talents, while comedy, dance and theatrical showcases also were part of the mx.

Artists who Hosted Showcases Offer Their Reflections

Jayme Stone notes that he started curating a showcase at last year’s APAP Conference “to create a space for independent roots/world music artists to have their music heard by performing arts center directors and festival programmers. My goal was to make the cost slightly more affordable for artists and to create an opportunity for underrepresented artists to have a seat at the table. Most of the artists at our showcase do not have agents, which is rare at this conference.”

“Attending the conference has proven to have a profound impact on my touring career,” says Clay Ross, who fronts both Matuto and Ranky Tanky and produced the Global Routes Music Showcase with Stone. Noting that he’s been attending APAP conferences for the past seven years, Ross told AcousticMusicScene.com: “It’s given me the opportunity to connect with presenters, agents, managers, and other industry professionals around the world.” Those connections have helped prompt bookings for his bands at a number of prestigious Americana, roots and jazz venues and festivals.

“As an artist, I think it’s really important to understand the various perspectives, challenges and concerns associated with all sides of the business,” Ross continued. “By hanging around at conferences like APAP and forging relationships across the field, you start to see more clearly how your talents and interests might best align with potential partners. You start to understand that you don’t need to be everything to everyone, but can instead find your own comfortable niche. “

Fiddling poet Ken Waldman's roots music variety show at Don't Tell Mama was an APAP Conference highlight (iPhone Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
Fiddling poet Ken Waldman’s roots music variety show at Don’t Tell Mama was an APAP Conference highlight (iPhone Photo: Michael Kornfeld)
Ken Waldman, who has been attending, exhibiting and mentoring at APAP conferences since 2007, began hosting a Friday night roots music variety show nine years ago. Noting that many of the attending presenters wear numerous hats, he said: “They might program various spaces – including some that are quite large. So part of what I do with my showcase evenings is to provide presenters with something useful. If it was just me showcasing, I’d be hard-pressed to get an audience. But since I invite seven additional acts that I personally like, I can offer eight distinct showcases (including what I do). Presenters have come to trust that I’ll not only offer them a variety of exceptional artists to sample, but they can sit in one spot with professional sound and lights. We even buy them drinks. Presenters understand that they’re not only experiencing each of the acts discreetly, but they’re experiencing an evening that I personally am putting together. A big theater (with a big budget) may want me to bring three or four acts and make an evening of it. That can only happen for me if the presenter has experienced one of my showcase evenings at APAP.”

Waldman continues, “Going to APAP, we’re more apt to find jobs that pay $2,500, $5,000 and up.” While acknowledging that nothing is guaranteed, he believes that “by offering this particular roots music showcase evening, I’m nudging the odds in my favor. It’s an investment I’ve been happy to make.”

“Because I attend so many [conferences], I don’t feel stressed thinking it’s now or never. I see people I’ve met in prior years [and those] I’ve never met before. If some jobs come my way, great — but it doesn’t have to be the result of a particular conference or showcase. It’s invariably the result of attending as many of these conferences as I can.” He maintains that presenters who attend APAP conferences tend to have more experience in the field, access to bigger budgets, and are just so inundated with pitches from artists and their agents that they are virtually impossible to reach by email or phone. “But at a conference there’s the chance to actually meet someone which means if I do have reason to send an email or make a phone call, there’s a much greater chance of having the email returned or the call taken.”

WAVELENGTHS World Music Pre-Conference Features An Inspirational Keynote

Among several arts-related forums that preceded the conference was a two-day WAVELENGTHS World Music Pre-Conference featuring a keynote, panel discussions, workshops, and an artist pitch session co-produced by music PR firm Rock Paper Scissors in cooperation with GlobalFEST.

Keynoting WAVELENGTHS was Emel Mathlouthi, a Tunisian singer-songwriter whose songs played a major role in Arab Spring and led to her being called “the voice of the Tunisian revolution.” She offered heartfelt comments and inspiring thoughts as she spoke of the role of the artist in turbulent times and the importance of empathy.

Here’s a link to a video of Emel performing her song “ Kelmti Horra “(“My Word is Free”) during the 2015 Nobel Peace Prize Concert:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wJ79iEfus8E

“For me, art has always been very powerful in connecting us…[and] in opening doors, [and in transcending] barriers and limits,” she said. “We’re all coming from the same place, and we all have a heart … Art is an international language. I really wanted to convey that,” she continued, noting her collaborations with musicians from other parts of the world. Until recently, Emel, who cites Joan Baez among her influences, has primarily written and sung music in Arabic, and some of her songs contain messages that transcend politics.

Emil Mathlouthi, "the voice of the Tunisian revolution," keynoted the WAVELENGTHS World Music Pre-Conference (Photo: Alex & Iggy)
Emil Mathlouthi, “the voice of the Tunisian revolution,” keynoted the WAVELENGTHS World Music Pre-Conference (Photo: Alex & Iggy)
While expressing pride in her heritage and what she is conveying through her songs, Emel acknowledged the challenges that she and others have faced who are not American or European. “It felt as if we were in a different universe, a different dimension,” she said. “It’s very frustrating and very confining. It’s a barrier that shouldn’t be there. We can offer so much more than just exoticism.”

She advocates for the elimination of ethnic and political silos that have been used to pigeonhole and minimize artists’ cross-cultural appeal and expressing her personal desire to appeal to people based on her humanity, rather than feel like just an ethnic or political artist. “We’re reaching times where all the concepts have to change and allow all the artists who are coming from the world music sphere to be able to explore themselves and go beyond any preconceived notions,” she declared. While acknowledging that she has a conscience and a point of view, and expressing pride in the social impact that her music has had in helping to energize the movement for change in the Arab world, she concluded: “At the end of the day, I’m an artist, a musician, a singer.”

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About the Association of Performing Arts Professionals (APAP)

apap_365_logo125A Washington, DC-based nonprofit –- previously known as the Association of Performing Arts Presenters until changing its name last year — APAP is a national service, advocacy and membership organization dedicated to developing and supporting a robust performing arts presenting field and the professionals who work within it.

“As artists and arts makers, we must embrace our role to engage in the constant and dynamic societal transformation that we are a part of by acknowledging it, reflecting it, discussing it, and leading it,” says Mario Garcia Durham, APAP’s president and CEO. “Our strength as an industry lies in our ability to create, produce, present, share and stimulate audiences everywhere with works that both embrace and acknowledge our differences and increase our understanding of one another.”

The next APAP Conference in New York is set for January 4-8, 2019. More information on the organization may be found on its website: www.apap365.org.

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Winners Named in Sixth Annual Irish Music Awards https://acousticmusicscene.com/2014/01/29/winners-named-in-sixth-annual-irish-music-awards/ Wed, 29 Jan 2014 23:12:50 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=7394 The sixth annual Irish Music Awards were presented by the Irish Music Association on January 25, 2014 at O’Malley’s Pub in Weston, Missouri. The awards were determined through online voting by the association’s members.

RUNA, a Philadelphia, PA-based contemporary Celtic vocal and instrumental ensemble whose repertoire features traditional and more recently composed music from Ireland, Scotland, Canada and the Untied States and includes both high-energy and more graceful acoustic melodies, was named both Top Group and Top Traditional Group in a Pub, Festival or Concert. Keith Harkin, a singer-songwriter from County Derry, Northern Ireland, who also is a principal singer with the popular vocal group Celtic Thunder, won two awards for Top Solo Performer in Concert and Top Solo Performer in a Pub Venue.

RUNA  is (l.-r.): Cheryl Prashker, Maggie Estes, Shannon Lambert-Ryan,  Dave Curley and Fionan de Barra (Photo: Kendra Flowers)
RUNA is (l.-r.): Cheryl Prashker, Maggie Estes, Shannon Lambert-Ryan, Dave Curley and Fionan de Barra (Photo: Kendra Flowers)

“We are unbelievably excited and honored to be recognized with so many incredible artists,” said Shannon Lambert-Ryan, who fronts RUNA with her rich, vibrant vocals. “We are so grateful to all of our fans (our spectacular RUNAtics) for their unending support and for voting for us,” she continued, expressing thanks also to the Irish Music Association for its support of Irish music and culture. The five-member group, which previously won an award for Best Song in the World Traditional category in the 12th annual Independent Music Awards, is set to release its fourth album this spring.

Phil Coulter, a popular musician, songwriter and producer, who also hails from Derry, was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award., while the Tommy Makem Award went to The Dubliners, an Irish folk band that played its final concerts last month, following a career that spanned more than 50 years.

A complete list of Irish Music Award recipients follows:
Irish Music Awards trophyTop Solo Performer in Concert: Keith Harkin
Top Solo Performer in a Pub Venue: Keith Harkin
Top Duo in Pub, Festival, and Concert: Ryan Kelly & Neil Byrne
Top Group: RUNA
Best New Irish Music Artist(s): Gothard Sisters
Top Celtic Rock Band: The Fighting Jamesons
Best Irish Tenor (individual): Emmet Cahill
Best Female Vocalist (individual/traditional): Meav
Best Sean-nos Singer: Brid Ni Mhaoilchiaran
Top Traditional Performance Show: The Chieftains
Top Traditional Group – In Festival, Pub & Concert: RUNA
Tommy Makem Award: The Dubliners
Top Harpist: Moya Brennan
Top Uilleann Piper: Kieran O’Hare
Top Fiddle/Violin: Cora Smyth
Top Button Accordion: Danny O’Mahony
Lifetime Achievement Award: Phil Coulter

The Irish Music Association produces, promotes and perpetuates Irish music through sponsored events, festivals, concerts, pub shows, and an annual network production, according to its website.

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Burning Bridget Cleary is Top Winner in Celtic Radio Music Awards https://acousticmusicscene.com/2010/04/07/burning-bridget-cleary-is-top-winner-in-celtic-radio-music-awards/ Thu, 08 Apr 2010 02:00:22 +0000 http://www.acousticmusicscene.com/?p=2325 Burning Bridget Cleary, a contemporary Celtic group from southeast Pennsylvania, has won Album of the Year and two other honors in the 2009 Celtic Radio Music Awards. According to Highlander Radio, the awards program was created to promote exceptional Celtic music across six categories and was expanded in 2008 to include the Celtic Radio Album of the Year and the Contemporary Celtic music category, which the group also won.

Fronted by spirited and energetic young fiddlers and singers Rose Baldino and Genna Gillespie, and ably backed by Rose’s father Lou on guitar and vocals, with percussionist Peter Trezzi, Burning Bridget Cleary is named for the young woman remembered as the last witch burned in Ireland. In addition to being recognized for its sophomore release, Everything is Alright, the group received the Contemporary Celtic award for its song “Soldier, Soldier,” while “Three Set: Waram Patat/Jean’s Reel/Miss Shepherd/Mason’s Apron” received the award in the Jigs & Reels category. Baldino and Gillespie met eight years ago at a traditional Irish music session in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. Both have been first-place winners in the historic Lehigh Valley city’s Celtic Classic fiddle competition and served as judges last September. As previously noted on AcousticMusicScene.com, Burning Bridget Cleary’s live performance was a highlight of last summer’s Philadelphia Folk Festival in this writer’s view.

The following artists also received 2009 Celtic Radio Music Awards:

Enter the Haggis (Celtic Rock) for “Murphy’s Ashes” on the album Gutter Anthems; Celtic Thunder (Traditional and Roots Traditional) for “Caledonia” and “Raggle Taggle Gypsy,” respectively, on the album Act Two; and Jim McRae (Bagpipes) for “The Queen’s Piper Medley” on the album Global Gathering.

Listeners and members of CelticRadio.net, an online radio and social media network, make nominations throughout the year. Based upon listener nominations, ratings, requests, and other radio statistics, three songs in each category were selected for voting by listeners during the first quarter of 2010. A record number of nominations were reportedly received during 2009, while members of Celtic Radio cast a total of 1,379 votes. Winners are inducted into the Celtic Radio Hall of Fame.

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