Category: Hudson Valley

  • Mihali Announces Annual Mihalidaze Tour Dates

    Singer-songwriter Mihali has announced the dates for his annual Mihalidaze tour spanning nine venues across the Northeast, including three nights around New York State.

    Photo by Dave DeCrescente

    Reggae artist Mihali Savoulidis has spent the past few years spreading his good vibes through sound and live performance. Formerly the frontman and founding member of rock band Twiddle, Mihali began his solo career formally in the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, bringing in fans new and old with a series of singles and albums following in the following months and years.

    Most recently, Mihali has been on a collaboration streak, making tunes with the likes of Andy Frasco, Coyote Island, and Collie Buddz, in addition to touring the country as a solo headliner and supporting musical acts G. Love & Special Sauce and The Movement on their recent tours. 

    Wrapping his incredibly successful year in an exciting bow, Mihali has announced the 2024 dates of his annual ‘Mihalidaze’ holiday themed tour, returning to some of his favorite venues including a few in Syracuse, Saratoga, and Woodstock with both his live band and his solo looping act.

    Composed of Scott Hannay on keys, Adrian Tramontano on drums, Zdenek Gubb on bass, and Mihali himself on guitar and vocals, the band will kick off the tour in Massachusetts and make their way through the Northeast- including stops at the Westcott Theater on December 11, Putnam Place on December 12, and Bearsville Theater on December 14. A celebration of family, friends, and the holiday season, this tradition is not one to be missed.

    “Every year, I get super excited to announce my Mihalidaze celebrations. The holidays are so important for friends and family to come together and celebrate life, and I can’t think of a better way to do that than with live music!”

    – Mihali Savoulidis

    Tickets to Mihali’s Mihalidaze tour are available now- for more information on how to attend, ticket purchasing, and Mihali’s other adventures, visit his website here.

  • Big Eddy Film Festival Comes to Narrowsburg Oct 18-20

    The Big Eddy Film Festival is coming to Narrowsburg in Sullivan County from October 18 to 20. The weekend festival contains several screenings of films along with workshops for all ages.

    Over the three-day span at Big Eddy Film Festival, there are 11+ events to behold. Several film screenings are to take place prior to panel discussions where the films are dissected and analyzed. Along with the film screenings and panel discussions, a segment of the festival is dedicated to the young filmmakers of Sullivan County.

    Nine kid-directed short films will be screened, followed by a Q&A with the cast and production teams. An animation workshop is also included in the festival on Sunday, October 20. This workshop aims to educate young filmmakers on animation, camerawork, and abstract artistry.

    Opening night on Oct 18 features a single film screening – “Happy Campers.” From 10:00AM to 11:00PM on October 19, the day is jampacked with six total events for festgoers to enjoy. Wrapping up on Oct 20, four events take place, with the final film screening of the festival being documentary feature “Dory Previn: On My Way To Where.” This is an all-encompassing screening you won’t want to miss.

    Feature Film – Happy Campers

    BIG EDDY FILM FESTIVAL SCHEDULE

    Friday, October 18

    6:30 PM Opening Night Feature Event: Happy Campers – Feature Documentary

    Followed by a panel discussion moderated by Greg Triggs. HAPPY CAMPERS chronicles the final days of a working-class summer colony in a scrappy trailer park that just happens to hold the secret to a rich life.

    Saturday, October 19

    10:00 AM Kids Make Film – Free Entry for Under-16s

    Followed by Q&A with young filmmakers

    Celebrating the creations of Sullivan County’s newly minted young filmmakers.

    12:30 PM Prodigal Daughter – Feature Documentary

    Filmmaker and former punk artist Mabel Valdiviezo reunites with her family in Peru after 16 years of estrangement, confronting her troubled past as an immigrant in the United States.

    2:30 PM Space Cowboy – Feature Documentary

    Followed by Q&A with the film’s editor Eric Bruggemann

    Joe Jennings, an innovator in the world of skydiving, has spent decades capturing breathtaking aerial moments with his camera for extreme sports competitions, Super Bowl commercials, and Hollywood blockbusters. Flying at the top of their game, Joe’s world was shattered when tragedy struck, leaving him to navigate the skies alone. Filmmaker in attendance.

    5:00 PM Rural Shorts

    Followed by a Q&A with filmmakers moderated by Greg Triggs Short films celebrating local New York makers and the rural imagination. Filmmakers in attendance.

    7:00 PM Start Them Young – Narrative Short David and Danielle take their 4-year-old daughter, Dahlia, to interview at the prestigious Future Generations Preschool; they are adamant that Dahlia gets into this school, they are sick with anxiety over it. 

    Hummingbirds – Documentary Feature In HUMMINGBIRDS, Silvia and Beba tell their own coming-of-age story, transforming their hometown on the Texas-Mexico border into a wonderland of creative expression and activist hijinks.

    9:30 PM Scarlet Winter – Narrative Feature After waking up to find his girlfriend murdered in bed, Mark must cover up her death while trying to piece together events from the previous night to find her murderer. Filmmaker in attendance.

    Sunday, October 20

    11:00 AM Drawing On Film Animation Workshop

    At Tusten Community Center Join us for a lively workshop where we will collectively make a handmade animated film without using a camera. Participants will draw directly onto clear 16mm film to create colorful dancing abstractions of lines and shapes on celluloid.

    11:00 AM Too Short To Suck

    Followed by Q&A with filmmakers The Big Eddy Film Festival is excited to present a screening of “Too Short To Suck”. Organized by ConPAC, this shorts program celebrates brevity and intensity through the works of 23 filmmakers whose films run the gamut from narrative, experimental, stop-motion animation, and more. Each short is a universe onto itself that doesn’t exceed 2 minutes. Filmmakers in attendance.

    1:00 PM A Song For Imogene – Narrative Feature After discovering she is pregnant by her abusive boyfriend, a fallen-away musician must decide between freeing herself or remaining a relic of her drive-by Southern town.

    3:30 PM Dory Previn: On My Way To Where – Feature Documentary

    Followed by Q&A with the film’s co-director 

    Writing and singing the unvarnished truth about one’s buried secret life experiences is more common today than when Dory Previn wrote brilliant, disturbing, and darkly funny songs in the 1970s. Previn began as an Academy Award-nominated lyricist for Hollywood musicals with songs for Frank Sinatra, Judy Garland & Dionne Warwick before a tabloid scandal and public breakdown led to her re-emergence as a cult artist in the Laurel Canyon scene. Filmmaker in attendance.

    DORY PREVIN: ON MY WAY TO WHERE

    Entry to each film costs $10 unless stated otherwise. For more information on the Big Eddy Film Festival and the many film screenings, click here.

  • Moon Zappa Brings Her Memoir to Woodstock’s Golden Notebook Bookstore

    Her famous dad may not have played the renowned festival, but Moon Unit Zappa certainly was a hit when she ventured to Woodstock to discuss Earth to Moon (Deyst/William Morrow Books), her acclaimed memoir of growing up in the unconventional household of her iconic musician dad, Frank Zappa.

    Moon Zappa

    The October 12 event was sponsored by The Golden Notebook, Woodstock’s premiere independent bookshop since 1978. The shop’s co-owners, Jacqueline Kellachan and James Conrad, have brought many outstanding writers to town for lively readings, including notable musicians like Blondie’s Chris Stein and Steve Earle. To accommodate the 100 attendees, the event was moved from The Golden Notebook’s cozy location on Tinker Street to the larger Mountain View Studios.

    With wit, humor, and humility, Moon addressed the cost of being raised by her largely absent genius father (who she idolizes above all others) and controlling mother – a woman whose anger arose, in no small part, due to her father’s constant philandering.  Moon also discussed her much-varied career as an MTV and VH-1 VJ, an actress, author and the founder of an upscale food concern, Moon Unit® Tea.   She also conversed on her spiritual quest to rise above the challenges of her youth and become a better parent to her daughter, Mathilda.  And, of course, there was plenty about her time in the spotlight helping to create what would become her father’s biggest hit, “Valley Girl.” For a more in-depth look, read our earlier review of the book here.

    Moon Zappa

    In true Zappa tradition, the event kicked off with an unannounced surprise. It was a high-energy performance of “Valley Girl” by Mona Freaka, a quintet of teenage girls from Woodstock who truly captured the punky and snarky spirit of Moon and Frank’s original recording.

    Martha Frankel, the Executive Director of the annual Woodstock Bookfest, moderated the discussion with insight and humor that matched the tenor of Moon’s wonderfully rich memoir. Frankel began by saying that the Zappa household was “truly the epicenter of lax parenting.” She added what would’ve been her advice to Moon’s parents if she had known them – “If you’re going to be doing bad shit, you probably shouldn’t let your kids have diaries!” Moon credits her lifelong interest in writing to her parents in the book, who gave her a new leather-bound diary every year. These diaries provided much of the source material for her memoir.

    In the Q&A with Frankel, Moon discussed the many challenges she faced in writing the book. It was a process that took place over four and a half years and several drafts. Due to the well-publicized squabbles between Moon and her three siblings generated by her mother’s uneven distribution of control of her father’s legacy in her will, she mentioned how her first go at the book was “a f*ck you draft that I ultimately decided to throw out.” Another thing she first left out of the early drafts of the book was the chapter on the whirlwind created by the unlikely success of “Valley Girl.” Unfortunately, this sudden fame came to her during her “awkward teenage phase.” The fact that this novelty tune was the massively productive Frank’s most significant commercial success was something he greeted with chagrin.

    Midway through the event, Moon Zappa teared up reading the chapter where she and her brother Dweezil are invited into Frank’s most sacred space – the rehearsal hall. They each got their turn at the mic, as their father conducted the band with a wide smile.

    Moon also shared some humorous and heartbreaking facts not covered in the book.  These included her unlikely teenage crushes: the stern ABC newsman Sam Donaldson, humorist Spalding Gray and comedian Sam Kinison and how, though she was hugely impressed with it, she was “mortified by my father’s music … largely because it wasn’t lady friendly.” She also mentioned her idea of pursuing a documentary where she would interview the many women her father had affairs with over the years. She also observed that she and her siblings are all “serial monogamists” and very attentive parents, an oppositional reaction to their experiences with their parents.

    Like the book itself, Moon’s discussions of her life with her parents are anything but a bitch fest. Even with their many faults, Moon’s love and admiration for both came through. Moderator Frankel would comment more than once during the event that Moon was “probably the most forgiving person on the planet.”

    To hear more, check out the extensive interview with Moon on my podcast, “Reading Is Funktamental.” 

  • Documentary “Left Behind” To Premire At Woodstock Film Festival

    On Friday, Oct. 18 at the Bearsville Theater, the documentary Left Behind will premiere as part of the 25 annual Woodstock Film Festival.

    Left Behind

    The feature documentary Left Behind follows a group of determined moms who band together to open NYC’s first public school for dyslexic students. The documentary depicts the long journey as the heroes face both institutional and personal hurdles as they try to upend a system for the city’s dyslexic youth.

    The film gives insight into the ways that the public school system ignores the needs of students with learning disabilities and, in doing so, contributes to the school-to-prison pipeline. It examines the current public education system and evaluates it is not built to help students with learning disabilities succeed or thrive. This becomes especially a problem for lower income families as just about every single dyslexia-centered school in the country is privately owned. Anna Toomey’s gripping documentary chronicles a group of advocates in their struggle to start New York City’s first public school for dyslexia.

    “Powerful…inspiring Left Behind is an urgent call to action to help dyslexic kids”

    Anderson Cooper

    Director, Anna Toomey, is an Emmy Award winner as a Producer for ABC News, Good Morning America, ABC News long-form unit, and Peter Jennings Reporting on projects including The Gun Fight, an inside look at the NRA, The Century, and more. Left Behind began in 2020 after her son was diagnosed with dyslexia and she realized the inadequate resources for millions of children across the country. Toomey created, developed and directed the film and it is her first feature length independent documentary. She owns her own production company, Sandy Dog Productions, where she works on independent film projects.

    Following the screening on Oct. 18, Juju Chang, multiple Emmy Award-winning co-anchor of ABC News’ “Nightline,” will host a Q&A on the emotional impact of dyslexia within families and the global issue of the school to prison pipeline.

    Learn more here.

  • Jeff Tweedy Kicks Off Rare Solo Tour In Woodstock

    For the first of three weekend shows at the Bearsville Theatre, Jeff Tweedy performed unplugged highlights from his Wilco and solo catalog, along with three newly penned and unrecorded songs.

    Tweedy’s hour and a half, sold-out concert in Woodstock on Friday, October 10, also marked the first of 15 relatively rare solo show dates that will wrap up in Menlo Park, CA at the end of the month.

    tweedy

    Tweedy kicked things off with “Feel Free” and “Now and Then,” two new tunes that have yet to appear on an official release. The former has been in steady rotation for the good part of a year, and has playful lyrics and a positive message about individuality. 

    While Tweedy is used to his bandmates in Wilco backing him up, he seemed equally comfortable with his Bearsville backdrop — several small body vintage Martin guitars with his beloved dead string sound. Before he kicked into the crowd-pleaser “I Am Trying To Break Your Heart,” he traded one guitar for another that could have been its twin. Tweedy joked that the guitar looked exactly the same, sounded pretty much the same, but had a minor variation in serial number. Guitar nerd stuff for certain.

    Solo Tweedy may well be the best Tweedy. He’s alternately the guitar collector, the Gen-X Bob Dylan, the troubadour, and more than a bit of a standup comedian. When the house lights went out momentarily after the second song of the night, Tweedy joked, “I don’t need full darkness ever, I carry that with me.” And he’s right – while his stage banter often elicits laughs from the audience, his solo material skews dark and his lyrical content has directly taken on the weighty themes of familial love and death. Tweedy called “Having Been Is No Way To Be,” “KC Rain,” and “Don’t Forget” his own “dead dad trilogy” and while he may have been leaning into the gallows humor, the songs themselves were confessional and poignant in this intimate setting.

    Tweedy seemed almost relieved to have the opportunity to play whatever he wanted to a knowledgeable audience of fans. The diehards in attendance managed to make an obscure song like “Laminated Cat” off of the side project Loose Fur’s first album feel like a sing along to a Top 40 hit (the performance of “Laminated Cat” was probably my favorite moment of the evening, and full-disclosure, yes, I’m one of those mega-fans that owns the Yankee Hotel Foxtrot super deluxe box set on vinyl and obsesses over cutting room floor outtakes. But isn’t that like half of Wilco’s fan base at this point?). Many of the fans in the audience planned a whole weekend around these Bearsville shows and planned to attend all three nights. Tweedy hoped to play a lot of “solo songs or songs I’ve written for someone else. I’ll still play Wilco songs, but I really do play those songs a lot.”

    And while the night did rely heavily on new songs, and tracks off of solo albums like Love is the King (“Gwendolyn”) and Warmer (“Family Ghost”, “Evergreen”) or even his Starship Casual newsletter (“Lou Reed Was My Babysitter”), Tweedy did dig out a number of Wilco “Greatest Hits”, which (maybe begrudgingly for Jeff) were still the undeniable highlights of the night. “Hummingbird”, with it’s delightful whistling outro, and a downtempo rendition of  “Box Full of Letters” were both excellent. For “Via Chicago”, Tweedy replaced his bandmates with a harmonica necklace, and in turn became a one-man-band. Tweedy’s best analogues really are Bob Dylan and Neil Young, guys who are songwriters at their core. They can rock in an electric setting, but they also have the magnetism, confidence, charisma, and lyrics to hold the spotlight on their own, or to let the song take the spotlight by itself. And they all look cool as hell wearing their harmonicas while also strumming and singing.

    Tweedy closed the night on a positive note, dedicating “I’m The Man Who Loves You” to his wife Susie Tweedy, whom he’d hoped would accompany him to Woodstock from their home in Chicago. Unfortunately, Susie Tweedy’s 92-year-old dad was in the hospital and she needed to stay close to him. To this remark, several audience members mentioned Mrs. Tweedy’s father by name, and Jeff chuckled at the parasocial relationship so many of his fans have with him. He’s shared a lot with his fans, but his fans are certainly prone to digging into the life of their favorite singer-songwriter. Tweedy may be creeping towards 60, but he is prolific as ever as a songwriter, a writer of terrific memoirs, and an internet presence in his newsletter. And let us not forget The Tweedy Show, a webcast that many Wilco fans embraced during the COVID lockdown as it drew back the curtain on Tweedy family life, making Susie, Jeff, and sons Spencer and Sammy, something of an indie Partridge Family.

    While it might be easy to call Wilco super-fans overzealous, Tweedy’s remarkable songbook and magnetism are certainly worthy of deep study. A few tickets remain for the Sunday evening show — get them before someone else does.

    tweedy

    Chicago-based songwriter Elizabeth Moen opened the show with a half hour set. Her excellent vocal stylings which were at times reminiscent of Stevie Nicks and Lucinda Williams were supported by the harmony vocals, bass, and guitar of Gus Martini. Moen’s bluesy and soulful originals like “Fields on Fire” and “The Empty Bottle” felt right at home in Woodstock, the home of classic laid-back rustic albums by the likes of Van Morrison and Bobby Charles. But it was the duo’s take on Bruce Springsteen’s classic “Darkness at the Edge of Town” that stood out the most for its fine performance and unique interpretation. 

    Jeff Tweedy – Bearsville Theatre, Woodstock – October 10, 2024

    Setlist: Feel Free, Now and Then, I Am Trying to Break your Heart, Mine Forever, Via Chicago, Lifetime to Find, Evergreen, Gwendolyn, Having Been Is No Way To Be, KC Rain, Don’t Forget, Laminated Cat, Country Song Upside Down, Hummingbird, I Am My Mother, Lou Reed Was My Babysitter, Box Full of Letters, One Wing, Pecan Pie, Family Ghost, You’re Not Alone, I’m The Man Who Loves You

  • How One Man and a Magazine Documented the Music Scene of the Hudson Valley in the 1980’s

    Rock legends can never seem to have enough press. From Rolling Stone magazine and personal memoirs to archived concert footage, the rich history of Rock and Roll is well-documented on the surface level.

    But it’s on the local level that unsung Rock and Roll veterans of their own right typically go unnoticed. Musician and journalist Michael Rabb didn’t want that to happen in the Hudson Valley.

    MusicMachine Magazine
    Michael Raab pictured at a film festival where one of his documentaries was streamed.

    In the late 70’s Raab – who grew up in Cornwall, NY – meticulously documented the music scene of the Hudson Valley for the subsequent decades. In 1979 he created the MusicMachine Magazine and started writing articles about bands in the region. He had first noticed a surge of live music and bands in Orange and Dutchess Counties but became frustrated when local papers didn’t cover the local scene. So armed with an IBM Selectric typewriter, he took matters into his own hands and began publishing his own articles.

    “The region was ready for media coverage in the trenches where it was all happening,” Raab said. “The time was right for Musicmachine Magazine.”

    Raab himself was part of a band called the Jelly Bean Bandits in the 60’s and 70’s. The group worked their way into a record deal with Mainstream Records and recorded an entire album in 12 hours in a studio in Manhattan. (Their 1967 debut self-titled LP still averages a few hundred streams every month on Spotify, Raab informs me.)  

    The Jelly Bean Bandits self-titled LP

    When the band first started out, they played all over the Hudson Valley in places like the Trade Winds nightclub in Newburgh and the Buccaneer in Poughkeepsie. The Bandits would eventually dissolve before releasing any subsequent records but has reunited a few times over the past decades for reunion shows and charity events in the region.

    As the 80’s came around, readership continued to grow for MusicMachine and the magazine expanded. The magazine partnered with brands like Budweiser Beer and even grew to interview stars such as Southside Johnny (of the famed Asbury Jukes)

    A rare interview with Southside Johnny in a 1983 edition of the magazine – photo via Michael Raab and MusicMachine Magazine Archives Facebook Page
    A 1983 edition of the magazine detailing concert ticket winners from a recent giveaway – photo via Michael Raab and MusicMachine Magazine Archives Facebook Page

    In the 90’s, Raab moved to North Carolina but continued to operate the MusicMachine remotely with the help of a friend and eventually sold the magazine to a company that ended up going bankrupt. In North Carolina, Raab also had an eye for the emerging music scene there and purchased a struggling publication called The Beat and eventually sold that as well.

    Later with the advent of the internet, Raab was able to archive video, photos and articles from the MusicMachine and share them with the world. He even made a documentary titled “Hudson Valley Music of the 1980s’, which is now available to watch on his Youtube channel.

    As Michael Raab himself puts it, “that’s the condensed version of an exciting 12 years in mid-Hudson music.”

    To explore more of the rich history of music in the Hudson Valley in the 80’s, check out the archives of the Musicmachine on Facebook: here

    Hudson Valley Music of the 80’s documentary by Michael Raab.
  • Reflections on Catskill Folk History, A Decade After Pete Seeger’s Death

    The Hudson Valley’s Catskill Mountains are known as the powerhouse of folk music. The land’s rich history is a testament to its iconic music scene. No matter where you wander through the Catskills, you’ll pick up the musical culture that these small communities have. But what brought folk music to the Catskills in the first place?

    To start, the history of colonial Catskills is right there in the name. Dutch settlers in the 1600s brought many of their traditions and their language to the Catskills. The old Dutch word “kill” translates to river or stream in English. The word “kaats” translates to cat, referring to the bobcats and mountain lions. So the region was coined “Kaatskill,” later anglicized to Catskill.

    In pre-colonial times the Catskills was made up of the Mohican, Munsee and Lenape nations, that is until Henry Hudson sailed up the river now named after him in 1609. Robert Juet, one of Hudson’s crew members, was said to be the first European to take note of the Catskills specifically.

    photo courtesy of winewitandwisdomswe.com

    In 1667 the Anglo-Dutch War ended with the Breda Treaty in which England received “New Netherlands.” In the decades to come, more English settlers moved to the land, but the Catskills never lost its Dutch Heritage. Sojourner Truth, who was born over a century later, grew up in a Dutch Plantation in Ulster County. Although she spoke English, she never lost her Dutch accent.

    As more European settlers moved to the Catskills, different ethnic towns like Germantown, located east of the river, began to pop up. 

    Although New York had long been colonized, it was still too unexplored throughout the 19th century to be substantially populated. The Catskills were partially desolate but it was the land itself that maintained a community of people in the area. Fur trade and beaver trapping were both profitable trades. The abundance of hemlock bark in the areas allowed tanneries to flourish. Needless to say, these industries brought more and more families to the Catskills. 

    New York City began to become dependent on the Catskills. Reservoirs in the land have been providing water to the city’s residents since 1916.

    As water was flowing from the Catskill reservoirs, the region pulled in more and more city residents. In 1906 the Arts Students League of New York City opened a summer school in Woodstock. This was the beginning of the arts and music town that we know today. 

    The League brought in mostly visual artists, around 200 students a year from 1906-1922 and again from 1947-1979. They were said to continue their individualistic lives, enjoying their solitude outside of the city.

    Perhaps the most famous artist that moved to Woodstock was Bob Dylan. Dylan moved to the small town in 1965 after visiting with his then girlfriend Joan Baez. It was above Cafe Espresso on Tinker Street that he wrote Another Side of Bob Dylan and Bringing It All Back Home.

    Self Portrait

    After a motorcycle accident, he continued his private life in Woodstock and turned to a new artistic outlet- painting. In 1970 he painted his album cover for Self Portrait. He also started working with a group of musicians called The Hawks, now known as The Band. They collaborated on Dylan’s album The Basement Tapes and The Band’s album Music From Big Pink. Dylan also created the Big Pink album art. The Band’s Levon Helm went on to make a lasting creation in Woodstock with Levon Helm Studios.

    It wasn’t only artists that flocked to the Catskills. The year-round scenery drew tourists from all over New York to high end resorts and hotels. Perhaps the most significant hotel in Catskill history was The Catskill Mountain House located in Palenville. This almost mythical house opened in 1824 and was visited by presidents U.S Grant, Chester A. Arthur, and Theodore Roosevelt. The Catskills began to be overshadowed by a more Upstate park, The Adirondacks, and the mountain house had its last season in 1941. It was demolished in 1963 despite the passions of preservationists. 

    The modern equivalent to the Catskill Mountain House may be the Mohonk Mountain House, a resort and spa located overlooking a glacial lake. The Victorian style castle was built in 1869 and brings in guests from all over the world. The house sits on top of 40,000 acres of protected land thanks to conservationist efforts of the past. 

    In 1904 the state gained ownership of 92,708 acres of land officially making The Catskills a protected State Park. 

    Catskill tourism began to bring in families specifically of Jewish faith. This became known as the Borscht Belt, referring to the Eastern European soup. In the Borscht Belt heyday during the ’50s and ’60s, more than 1000 Jewish resorts were scattered the Hudson Valley. Today, the Borscht Belt Museum in Ellenville is dedicated to the rich Jewish history in the Hudson Valley.

    With its forests, mountains and streams, the Catskills were the perfect terrains for summer camps, one of which was Camp Woodland. Woodland was founded in 1940 by Norman Studer who was an educator at the Elizabeth Irwin School in New York City. Studer’s purpose with Woodland was to give children a destination full of diverse folk culture.

    Michael Pastor, who was a Woodland camper from New York City, remembers what it was like to be a part of this famous camp in folk history.  Pastor says the eight weeks of camp he attended annually from 1958 to its last year in 1962 consisted of classic camp activities like football, games, outdoor excursions and of course music. 

    “A lot of campers played guitars, and so there was an awful lot of music going on all the time. I started playing guitar when I was 12 at camp,” He said. “It was kind of hard to hear yourself anyway, because there were 30 other guitars playing and a few banjo players as well.”

    In a time of McCarthyism in America, Woodland was called “Camp Red” by conservatives referring to its teachings of inclusion and community building. According to Pastor, there was never any outright democratic or communist values being preached, but many of the families that sent their children to Woodland were leftward leaning. 

    photo courtesy of Camp Woodland, Phoenicia, New York Facebook.com

    Pastor remembers the diverse music the campers performed. “Some of the music were Union songs from the 1930s. Also, there was a variety of international flavor to the music. We would learn songs from different languages,” he said. 

    Studor was always reaching out to the local community to teach kids about the history of the area. Pastor says he remembers community members including a local historian coming in to tell stories of the tanneries and music of the past. 

    Woodland also attracted legendary artists like Ella Jenkins and Pete Seeger. Seeger performed every year for all age groups, inspiring the whole camp.

    Pastor says that being around music all summer and seeing artists like Seeger sharing their talents ignited a passion for music for campers. “A person who I met during my very first summer camp, my very first day of camp, Peter Simon, he and I are still very close friends and he, inspired by Pete Seeger, became a banjo player. We had a bluegrass band when we were in high school and we still get together regularly and play sort of old time traditional countries,” Pastor noted. 

    Seeger was born in New York City and raised in Dutchess County. He was first inspired to pick up the banjo when he traveled to Bascom Lamar Lunsford’s folk festival in Asheville, North Carolina at the age of 16. In 1938, he settled in New York City with other folk musicians known as The Almanac Singers in “The Almanac House.” 

    In 1949 he began to perform with a group known as The Weavers. A year later, the anti-communist book Red Channels came out which accused Seeger of being a communist. He became a blacklisted musician and the accusation loomed over Seeger’s head for decades. 

    According to his daughter he was never a self proclaimed communist. “He believed in community and he believed in it, whether it was a family, a school, a town, a country, the earth, but he wasn’t a communist. He was more like a ‘communityist,’” said one of his daughters Tinya Seeger. “He wanted good people who could do good things in office. That would be where his politics lay.”

    She said that although he was never a communist himself, he was curious about life under communism. He visited North Vietnam during the Vietnam war along with communist China and Soviet Russia multiple times.

    In 1955 he was called before the House of Un-American Activities Committee and was questioned about his political beliefs. He refused to answer their questions leading to 10 counts of contempt in 1956 followed by an indictment two years later. 

    During his blacklisted period, Seeger still created new music and performed all over the country. Some critics believe it was in these years that his best work transpired. He played gigs in smaller venues and college campuses, communities where folk itself began. His children’s albums were a huge success in summer schools and camps like Woodland. 

    At multiple performances, conservative community members would protest outside the venue but it never stopped him from performing. “He was happy when he saw free speech. He really believed very much in a person’s right to express how they feel, that you should be able to do that and life goes on,” remarked Seeger. 

    No two Pete Seeger shows were one in the same. He based his performance on the people that were in the audience. If there were children, he would play children’s songs like “Abiyoyo” or “The Foolish Frog.” If the audience was mostly older adults he would play songs to remind them of their childhood like “If I Had A Hammer.” His set list wouldn’t be determined until he was on stage.  

    At some of his concerts, audience members could leave him notes on the stage before the performance started. He made sure to read every one of them. 

    Seeger narrowly escaped prison time in 1962 when a Court of Appeals decided his 1961 conviction was faulty and deserted the case. Already infamous within right leaning circles, he became heavily involved in the civil rights movement and antiwar movement during the Vietnam War. 

    He was also active in local initiatives as well. His home in Beacon was located along the polluted Hudson River and he was determined to help this ecosystem. Seeger, along with some of his friends in the community, built a sloop named Clearwater, modeling the same boats that sailed the Hudson in the 18th and 19th centuries.

    photo courtesy of Billboard.com

    He sailed up and down the river educating listeners about the problem and collecting donations in his banjo case. His efforts actually cleared the river and although the river isn’t completely absent of garbage and pollutants, Hudson Valley residents today enjoy a much cleaner river than those in the 1960s “In those last 10 years of his life, he was trying to say things that were meaningful,” Seeger said.

    Seeger understood the relationship between the art of folk music and community. According to his daughter, he liked living in Beacon with his family and a generation of adults that were raised on his music. “He created something that was like a camp experience within the Hudson Valley. Maybe it’s just that the same people were coming to the smaller gatherings that were happening around,” Seeger notes. “I think they were carrying on the tradition.”

    Pastor, who is one of those campers carrying on the tradition, says he feels a strong community surrounding folk. “There is a bond that people feel throughout all these decades and I think if you were to ask people, you would find that music is a part of that shared experience, that’s part of that bond. Music was so interwoven with camp life, it’s kind of hard to describe,” he said. 

    Seeger is survived by his family including Tinya Seeger who lives in the Seeger home in Beacon, New York.

    A decade after Seeger’s death, the tradition of Catskill folk continues. The music that was birthed from the land is dependent on the story of the Catskills. Folk was a distraction from work, a time of recreation and bonding for rural families. It was an expression of self for the collection of artists that gathered in the region.

    Another family that carries on the trend of intergenerational folk is the Helm Family. The Arkansas native Levon Helm of The Band settled in Woodstock in 1967. In 1975, he built Levon Helm Studios, putting down permanent roots in Woodstock. His family, including his daughter Amy Helm, continue his legacy with “The Helm Family Midnight Ramble,” an annual celebration of his art at Levon Helm Studios.

    Today, the studio showcases independent artists and bands from all over the country. 

    Eggy at Levon Helm Studios – photo by Zak Radick

    Helm recorded the Dirt Farmer album in his studio which won a Grammy Award for Best Traditional Folk Album in 2008. Guitarist Larry Campbell, who also worked with Dylan, produced the album alongside Amy Helm. They both sang and performed on the album as well.

    Dirt Farmer is not only an award-winning album, but it was deeply personal for Helm. It was his comeback album, his first since 1982. He started recording as he was battling throat cancer, despite the damage to his vocals. 

    The acoustic tracks are a nod to his Arkansas roots, but they have a clear Catskill influence. Each song tells a story of the human condition. “Anna Lee” is about children who remember their late mother by her lullabies. “Wide River To Cross” is the final track on the album. In it Levon describes his journey of life, being “only halfway home.”

    Amy Helm, who has recorded solo music at the studio, was born in Woodstock and grew up watching her father perform. With her three folk albums, she continues to carry on her family’s legacy and tour around the country. 

    The Catskills and its history have shaped perhaps hundreds of solo folk musicians as well as contemporary bands.

    The Felice Brothers, originally from Palenville in the Catskills, are one of the most popular folk groups today. They’ve released ten albums including their latest 2024 album Valley of Abandoned Songs. Ian Felice (guitar/vocals), James Felice (piano/vocals), Jeske Hume (bass), and Will Lawrence (drums) bring back the raw, acoustic sound of the region.

    In a recent interview with NYS Music, James Felice stated that the category of Folk and Americana felt limiting to the band early in its takeoff, but later, he embraced the labels. “All of our music, the way we play and the music we grew up with is folk music. It’s the music that we are most connected to. So yeah, I’m okay with that. I think we’ve been doing this long enough to have our sort of thing,” he said. 

    Valley of Abandoned Songs

    Hudson Valley artist Mikaela Davis moved from Rochester, after her first album, Delivery. Davis got her degree in harp performance at the Crane School of Music in Potsdam. The harp, an unusual instrument in the genre of folk, compliments her whimsical vocals and takes the instrumentation to a new level. She produces a blend of indie-pop and Catskill folk inspired by sounds from the ’60s, the golden era of music in this region.

    Davis records and performs with her own musical family. She has known her drummer Alex Coté since childhood, guitarist Cian McCarthy and bassist Shane McCarthy from college and she met steel guitarist Kurt Johnson in her early twenties.

    The Bones of J.R Jones, another artist from Central New York, started his musical career playing in hardcore punk bands until he became more interested in American blues and folk musicians of the 1930s and ’40s. He officially launched his musical project, The Bones of J.R Jones, in 2012 as an independent artist.

    Although his music is categorized as folk, indie and punk, he doesn’t write with genre in mind. “I honestly believe the music we create is a reflection of life experiences,” he said. Since his start, he has released five albums. In 2021, he relocated from Brooklyn to a Catskill farmhouse. 

    He says, in his experience, the Catskills have been a welcoming environment for him and the music community is supportive and uplifting. There is also something very special about the slow sleepy hills and mountains here. “We are just out of the reach of the weekend crowd from NYC so in a way, it stays true to itself. It’s a magical place full of inspiration,” he notes.

    Upstate, with Brooklyn connections, settled in The Hudson Valley and over the past 11 years of performing together, have released three bold harmonious albums. 

    Members Mary Webster, Melanie Glenn, Harry D’Agostino and Dylan McKinstry recorded their most recent album, You Only Got A Few, in the Hudson Valley at The Building in Marlboro, New York and Greenpoint Recording Collective in Brooklyn, another musical hotspot for independent music.

    Laura Zarougian is a solo artist who describes herself as an “Armenian Cowgirl,” inspired by American folk as well as her Armenian roots. She is a multi-instrumentalist and a powerful vocalist. Her songs tell stories of her family lineage and explore themes of searching for home. “Cairo,” from her 2023 album Nayri, tells the story of her great grandfather’s death and her grandmother’s journey to bring his body back to Cairo.

    Zarougian grew up in Boston, but her musical career blossomed in Brooklyn. She now lives in Red Hook, a town right next to the Hudson River. “I do feel like there is a really strong sense of community here in which people want to support local musicians and do their best to promote them,” she said. Nayri is a seven-track album recorded with her partner, drummer Mike Alan Hams. The storytelling in her music captures the spirit of Catskill folk. “It’s definitely got some twang and elements of Americana and folk. But a lot of my songs, especially on my first album, had to do with my Armenian American identity,” she remarked. “I think folk songs have to do with place and longing and all of these things that are just part of the human experience.”

    The folks that are keeping folk alive are the “grassroots” groups and families that create music without the pressure commercial industry influences.

    Just days before his passing in 2014, Seeger attended the annual celebration of Martin Luther King, Jr., in Beacon. 

    “What did my father do? You know, sometimes I say he was a singer and entertainer, but he was somebody that was really trying to help people get along,” Seeger said. “His version of helping them communicate was to write music.” 

    Seeger is still one of the most well-known folk singers in America and his work in activism and the folk revival movement live on. 

  • Folk Duo Spillway Releases Second Single “Indiana”

    Folk unit and twin brothers Spillway have released their second single to date, titled “Indiana.”

    Spillway Indiana

    Having found a way to communicate with the world through music together when they were young, twin brothers Aaron and Wyatt Mones have been Spillway since long before the moniker came to them. Named in reference to Spillway Road, the street that was home to the small garage they began their musical journey in, Spillway grew their professional musical skills by playing and producing for other artists for several years- eventually amassing a total of five million streams to their credit. 

    Now split geographically between New York and Los Angeles, the two singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalists bridge their physical distance with their mutually engrained passion for music and creating. Melding nostalgic folk pop sounds with whimsical and idiosyncratic lyrics, Spillway offers their poetically packaged belief that music communicates more than simple words ever could. 

    Spillway’s debut single “Are You Having Fun Yet?” was released earlier this summer and has amassed over 130,000 streams to date in the span of just three months. With achingly raw lyrics and an unapologetically human sonic touch, it’s no wonder why Spillway has seen such success so early in their professional career.

    The duo’s newest release, “Indiana,” is rooted in its namesake. A snapshot of modern Midwestern life, “Indiana” encapsulates Spillway’s immediate impression and experience of the state after less than 24 hours spent in the flatlands of Southwestern Indiana that their label, Wally Opus Records, calls home. Channeling the stories and daily lives of the people they had just met, Spillway layers acoustic guitar, brushed drums, and gentle vocals to create a sonic encapsulation of warm, folksy routine. 

    In just shy of three minutes, the brothers paint the midwestern life in all of its shades so vibrantly that it brings the listener into their conversations being had with the locals around them. With such vivid sonic imagery, it’s no wonder why they’ve described “Indiana” to be their favorite piece to come out of at least the past two years of songwriting.

    The official music video for “Indiana” coincides with the track’s release and reflects the listening experience perfectly. With frames of the duo in the Wally Opus recording studio spread throughout scenic, mellow moments in the nature of the midwest, the video’s warm tone and nostalgic attitude weave yet another layer into the deeply human moments Spillway seeks to capture.

    “Indiana” is out now- listen here. To learn more about Spillway’s work and future plans, visit their website here.

  • Jamie McLean Band To Bring One Step Forward Tour Across New York

    New York City based Americana and roots-rock group Jamie McLean Band will be bringing their One Step Forward Tour, celebrating their upcoming release of the same name, to four venues across New York State.

    A triple threat of New Orleans soul, middle Americana roots, and New York City dazzle, Jamie McLean Band create energetic and captivating live experiences each and every time they step on to the stage. Fronted by McLean himself with southern soul vocals, deft guitar skills, and heartfelt, profound songwriting, the band’s live performances are brought to life with the collaboration of drummer Brian Griffin, bassist Chris Anderson, and the return of Jamie McLean Band’s original keyboardist, Jon Solo.

    Following six albums, several singles, and a handful of live releases, Jamie McClean band returns with One Step Forward, to be released on October 25. Featuring themes of life, loss, and love, the tracks of One Step Forward explore the bright lights that provide joy and motivation as well as the heavier experiences of loss and grieving. 

    Written after the loss of a dear friend to suicide, one of the most poignant tracks on the album “Don’t Leave Us Now” grapples with the tragedy and calls listeners to action- to help the ones they love around them, and to help themselves, as there is no shame in being the one in need.

    The One Step Forward Tour, which began on August 22 in Pawling, coincides with their upcoming release and will continue throughout the country- including upcoming stops at the Falcon in Marlboro on October 4 and The 443 Social Club & Lounge in Syracuse on October 12, in addition to later dates at the Colony in Woodstock on November 8  and the Drom in New York City on November 22.

    Tickets for the tour are on sale now. Visit Jamie McLean Band’s website here for further information and ticket purchasing.

    The full list of upcoming tour dates is featured below.

    TOUR DATES

    October 4 – Marlboro NY

    October 12 – Syracuse NY

    October 13 – Waterbury VT

    October 17 – Richmond VA

    October 18 – Vienna VA

    October 25 – Boston MA

    October 26 – Providence RI

    November 1 – Fairfield CT

    November 2 – Westerly RI

    November 8 – Woodstock NY

    November 9 – Egremont MA

    November 15 – Columbia MD

    November 16 – Hampton VA

    November 17 – Lewes DE

    November 22 – New York NY

    November 23 – Ardmore PA

    November 29 – Narragansett RI

    November 30 – Portsmouth NH

    December 5 – Monkton MD

    December 6 – Greensboro NC

    December 7 – Asheville NC

    December 8 – Charlotte NC

    December 11 – Atlanta GA

    December 12 – Charleston SC

    December 13 – Durham NC

    December 14 – Roanoke VA

  • God Street Wine Announces 5 Show Tour, Woodstock Date To Be Recorded

    Jam band God Street Wine has announced a series of five concerts in March, including a date in Woodstock that will be recorded for a live release.

    God Street Wine Woodstock
    Photo- Geoff Tischman

    One of the most prominent acts of the early jam band scene, New York based God Street Wine has been jamming on and off for over twenty six years. Within their first decade as a unit, the group had released five albums and performed over 1,000 shows across the country.

    After a nearly decades-long split, the band reunited in 2009 privately to honor the passing of an old friend and later performed a series of shows in New York City benefiting the National Multiple Sclerosis Society. With the band spread geographically, releases came sporadically throughout the next few years, including a 25th anniversary box set retrospective and the All The Way To Here documentary film.

    Just off of the heels of eight shows in the Summer of 2019, the band faced an unexpectedly lengthy hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent lockdowns. After four years kept apart, God Street Wine was able to reunite in 2023 with two New York shows, this time in benefit of Mission Stadiums for Multiple Sclerosis.

    Earlier this year, the group celebrated their first major-label release’s 30th anniversary with digital releases of once-lost tracks and pressed three of their albums on vinyl for the first time ever, punctuated with four sold-out shows in Woodstock, New York City, and Asbury Park in New Jersey.

    With countless performances and releases behind them, God Street Wine has decided once more that what they’ve accomplished so far is not all that is in store for the group and their fans. The band has announced five concerts in March of 2025, including a date in New York.

    Performing at the historic Bearsville Theater, God Street Wine will be making an appearance in Woodstock on March 15. This performance will wrap the mini-tour, and notably will be recorded for a future Live Release- it’s truly a show to not be missed. Tickets are on sale now- visit here to purchase and learn more.

    The full list of tour dates is below.

    TOUR DATES

    March 7: Admore Music Hall – Philadelphia, PA

    March 8: The Atlantis – Washington, D.C.

    March 13: The Sinclair – Boston, MA

    March 14: Nectar’s – Burlington, VA

    March 15: Bearsville Theater – Woodstock, NY