The 2nd Annual Earl Scruggs Music Festival was held over Labor Day weekend at the Tryon International Equestrian Center just outside of Tryon, North Carolina, in Mill Spring. The gorgeous festival grounds, nestled in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, were the perfect setting for the sunny and warm event, featuring glamorous cabins, manicured campsites, brick-and-mortar restaurants and shops, horse-jumping demonstrations, workshops and two stages chocked full of bluegrass, old-time and roots music. The festival is a partnership between Tryon International, roots radio station WNCW and the Earl Scruggs Center just down the road in Shelby, North Carolina, the county seat of Cleveland County – Scruggs’ ancestral home. Over four days, the event showcased the broad, varied and lasting influence Scruggs and his playing have had on American roots music as a whole, especially in North Carolina.
BGS returned to ESMF for its second year, once again sponsoring the very special, fan favorite Earl Scruggs Revue tribute set, hosted by Tony Trischka – and his band, Michael Daves and Jared Engel. Listeners and fans packed the plaza surrounding the Foggy Mountain gazebo stage to hear Trischka and many special guests – such as Della Mae, Michael Cleveland, I Draw Slow, Twisted Pine, Tray Wellington, Greensky Bluegrass, Jerry Douglas and more – pay tribute to Earl’s and his son’s groundbreaking and innovative group, the Earl Scruggs Revue, and their Live! From Austin City Limits album.
Enjoy a collection of photos from the Earl Scruggs Music Festival below and make plans to attend the 3rd Annual edition of this first-class event in 2024 – the dates are set and tickets are already on sale for the August 30 to September 1, 2024 edition of ESMF!
Flint Hill Stage photo by Reagan Ibach
Horse jumping demonstrations were held daily at the festival, held at the Tryon International Equestrian Center. Photo by Rette Solomon.
Earl Scruggs Music Festival host Jerry Douglas on the main stage. Photo by Cora Wagoner
Sister Sadie perform on the Flint Hill Stage. Photo by Cora Wagoner
Deanie Richardson, fiddler and band leader of Sister Sadie, on the Flint Hill Stage. Photo by Cora Wagoner.
The Infamous Stringdusters perform with Jerry Douglas during their headline set. Photo by Cora Wagoner.
Tryon International's Silo Bar, festively lit. Photo by Eli Johnson
Del McCoury smiles during his headline set on the Flint Hill Stage at Earl Scruggs Music Festival. Photo by Cora Wagoner.
Greensky Bluegrass on the Flint Hill Stage for their headline set. By Eli Johnson
Jake Blount and band step off the stage to perform among the crowd when technical difficulties interrupted the beginning of their set. Photo by Cora Wagoner
Della Mae cover Bob Dylan's "I Shall Be Released" during the Earl Scruggs Revue set. Photo by Eli Johnson
Tony Trischka and Tray Wellington perform "Earl's Breakdown" during the Earl Scruggs Revue tribute set. Photo by Cora Wagoner.
Tony Trischka embraces Kathleen Parks of Twisted Pine during the BGS-sponsored Earl Scruggs Revue tribute set. Photo by Eli Johnson
Della Mae and Michael Cleveland join Tony Trischka and band during the Earl Scruggs Revue set. Photo by Eli Johnson
Anh Phung of Twisted Pine with Michael Cleveland at the Earl Scruggs Revue tribute. Photo by Cora Wagoner.
Paul Hoffman of Greensky Bluegrass and Jerry Douglas perform during the Earl Scruggs Revue tribute show. Photo by Cora Wagoner
Twisted Pine perform on the Foggy Mountain Stage. Photo by Cora Wagoner
Della Mae performed a main stage set at Earl Scruggs Music Festival. Photo by Cora Wagoner.
Della Mae's rousing late night set on the Foggy Mountain stage, complete with an appearance by BGS managing editor Justin Hiltner on banjo. Photo by Eli Johnson
Rissi Palmer on the Flint Hill Stage by Rette Solomon.
Zoe & Cloyd on the Foggy Mountain Stage by Eli Johnson
Emmylou Harris joined by many special guests during her set to close out the festival. Photo by Cora Wagoner.
Brooke Aldridge, Rissi Palmer, and Darin Aldridge sing background vocals with Emmylou Harris. Photo by Cora Wagoner.
Emmylou Harris shines and sparkles on the Flint Hill Stage. Photo by Cora Wagoner.
Photos courtesy of Earl Scruggs Music Festival. Lead image credit: Devon Fails All other photos:Reagan Ibach, Eli Johnson, Rette Solomon, and Cora Wagoner.
The BGS Team is excited to return to Western North Carolina for the second year of the Earl Scruggs Music Festival at the Tryon International Equestrian Center in Mill Spring. Held September 1, 2, and 3, the event will be hosted by Jerry Douglas and will include headline sets by the Infamous Stringdusters (Friday), Greensky Bluegrass (Saturday), and Emmylou Harris (Sunday) plus, on Saturday at 3:30 p.m., don’t miss the Earl Scruggs Revue Album Tribute hosted by Tony Trischka and sponsored by BGS. The showcase will spotlight an album by Earl Scruggs’ iconic late-’60s to ’80s group featuring his sons, the Earl Scruggs Revue, and will include appearances and performances by many special guests pulled from the festival’s expansive bluegrass and roots lineup.
In preparation for the festival this weekend and our trek to beautiful Western NC, check out a few of our preview picks for each day of the event:
Thursday, August 31, 2023
It’s the day before the real fun begins at the Tryon International Equestrian Center, but you’ve already pulled into town and you’re rearin’ and ready to go – what to do? Travel down the road about 30 minutes and visit Shelby, North Carolina, Earl Scruggs’ hometown, and the incredible Earl Scruggs Center. It’s open every day of the festival until 4 p.m., but hours vary some so check before you visit.
Not only does the Center co-present the festival, but it’s housed in the former Cleveland County Courthouse in the center of the Shelby town square. It’s an adorable small town with an outsized impact on American roots music – Don Gibson is from Shelby, as well; Nina Simone is from Tryon, just down the road. (Visit her homeplace on your way back to Mill Spring.) We focused on Shelby for an episode of our podcast made with Come Hear NC titled Carolina Calling. Listen to our Shelby episode while you drive!
Ready to head to the Equestrian Center to check out the festival footprint and do some reconnaissance? You’re in luck! The official festival events don’t commence until Friday, but on Thursday there will be a FREE concert on-site and restaurants and vendors will be open from 6 to 9 p.m.
Friday, September 1, 2023
The day is finally here! Gates open at 8 a.m. and the fun begins at 10 a.m. with restaurants, vendors, experiences, workshops, performances, and so much more.
Don’t miss “Secrets of Scruggs-Style” on the Legends Workshop Stage at 11 a.m. featuring Tony Trischka, Charlie Cushman and Pete Wernick – arguably three of the best living scholars and emulators of Scruggs – a perfect way to kick off his namesake festival. At 3 p.m. on the main stage, affectionately dubbed “Flint Hill Stage,” J.T. Scruggs and Jerry Douglas will do an official festival welcome leading directly into a Banjo Kickoff by Gena Britt, Charlie Cushman, Rob McCoury, Pete Wernick, Tony Trischka and Ben Wright.
We’ll also be making a point to catch Foggy Mountain Stage sets by Jake Blount (5:30 to 6:30 p.m.) and Shawn Camp (8:30 to 9:30 p.m.) plus Flint Hill Stage appearances by Sister Sadie (4 to 5 p.m.), Del McCoury Band (7:30 to 9 p.m.), and the Stringdusters closing out the night at 9:30 p.m.
Don’t go back to your campsite or your hotel yet, though! Foggy Late Night begins at 10:30 p.m. with Armchair Boogie.
Saturday, September 2, 2023
If your schedule is too-tight and you can only make one day of ESMF 2023, Saturday is the day not-to-miss. It’s wall-to-wall, superlative programming across all of the stages at the event.
On the Legends Workshop Stage we’re eyeing “High Lonesome Songs: Then & Now” at 11:30 a.m., a songwriting workshop featuring Louisa Branscomb, Celia Woodsmith and Jon Weisberger. But you may have to split your time between Legends Workshop and Flint Hill, because Tony Trischka’s tribute to Earl Scruggs – EarlJam! EarlJam! – begins on the main stage at 12 p.m. Stick around, because banjo phenom and innovator Tray Wellington brings his tight and tidy band to the main stage directly after EarlJam. Wellington’s languid drawl is only one of many traits of Scruggs’ he carries on with his innovative sound and truly traditional right hand approach.
We’re super excited to see our friends Della Mae (Flint Hill Stage, 8 p.m.) and Twisted Pine (Foggy Mountain Stage, 8:45 p.m.), but the highlight of day two for us will certainly be the Earl Scruggs Revue Album Tribute show on the Foggy Mountain Stage at 3:30 p.m. It will feature a star-studded lineup hosted by Trischka and his band and featuring songs from a classic Earl Scruggs Revue performance. (Hint above.) Our own managing editor Justin Hiltner will be emceeing and updating y’all on the event on our socials, so be sure to follow along.
At Foggy Late Night we’ll be dancing along to Della Mae past midnight! See you there?
Sunday, September 3, 2023
When Sunday morning rolls around, we, too, will be wondering where the weekend went so fast. But don’t worry, there’s still a full day of music and fun before the post-festival depression starts to creep back in.
Sunday begins, appropriately, with Gospel Brunch hosted by Darin & Brooke Aldridge and immediately following, singer-songwriter and host of Apple Music’s Color Me Country, Rissi Palmer will “take us to church” on the Flint Hill Stage, too. If you’ve never had the chance to experience Palmer’s heartfelt, modern, and soulful country stylings you won’t want to miss her set. For an infusion of a faith tradition less prominent in roots music, check out Zoe & Cloyd on the Foggy Mountain Stage at 4:30 p.m. Their latest album, Songs of Our Grandfathers, combines bluegrass, fiddle music, old-time and Jewish folk and klezmer.
On the Legends Workshop Stage at 1 p.m., get up close and personal with festival host and the worlds premier resophonic guitarist Jerry Douglas before his main stage set with his band at 3:45 p.m.
Then, to close out your weekend full of amazing music, excellent hangs, and so much fun, settle in for Emmylou Harris’s headline set on the Flint Hill Stage at 5:30 p.m. As her final notes fade into the Western North Carolina air, cheer up – you don’t have to go home yet! Reedy River String Band will give us one last hoorah for their Foggy Mountain Stage performance from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
As you drive back home after the second annual Earl Scruggs Music Festival we hope, like ourselves, you’ll be making plans to return next year (perhaps as you listen to Carolina Calling).
As we approach the end of the year, I’ve been reveling in the sensation of the world slowing down, surreal in a society that seemingly spins faster than ever. And as December draws to a close, I finally have a moment to take a deep breath and reflect on the year we’ve had.
At the top of 2022, I eagerly anticipated celebrating the ten year anniversary of BGS. In the process of digging through archives of old emails and photos I was reminded of so many special moments I’d forgotten: events and people that have helped shape the last decade. Everything from our very first blog post, to hanging backstage at countless festivals and shows, to producing an all-star video series in the middle of quarantine; every memory an individual building block of who we are today and where we’re headed tomorrow.
The Bluegrass Situation started in 2012 with the goal of bringing together like-minded music fans who didn’t feel represented in the existing roots music scene. But it’s become so much more than that. And it’s hard for me to express the gratitude and love I feel for every individual who has contributed in building an inclusive, fascinating melting pot of creativity and tradition.
So as this year – and our birthday celebration – draw to a close, I want nothing more than to say thank you for being a part of it all.
Wishing you and yours a peaceful and beautiful season with wonderful things awaiting us all in the New Year!
On Wednesday, August 2, 1972, after an overnight ferry voyage, I arrived in North Sydney, Nova Scotia. A four-hour drive brought me to Fred and Audrey Isenor’s mobile home in Lantz, 50 km (30 miles) north of Halifax. It was just after 7 pm, and they already had company, including gospel singer Lloyd Boyd, known as “The Radio Ranger,” and Charlie Fullerton, a dobroist and bassist whose sound system was to be used at the Jamboree.
Other friends of Fred’s dropped in that evening – men and women active in the local country music scene who shared his interest in bluegrass. I was the center of attention, the imported expert on the eve of Nova Scotia’s first homegrown bluegrass event. In my diary I noted:
Immediately I was quizzed on my knowledge of instruments, principally, D- series 45 style Martins but other things as well. Fred’s F-5 pulled out, my F-4 and Mastertone looked at.
Owning a prewar Gibson or Martin was a mark of serious interest in bluegrass. The big fancy Martin D-45 was the top of that guitar-maker’s line. Only 90-some were made from the early ‘30s to 1942; these were owned by famous country stars, including bluegrass great Red Smiley. In the late ‘60s Martin began making the D-45 again. Lloyd had one.
I noted another visitor:
Carl Dalrymple, a C&W bassist and guitarist about to go on the road with his sister-in-law [Joyce Seamone] who has a number one Canadian Country hit, “Testing, One, Two, Three,” came [by]. He’s a D-45 owner, too.
Carl’s son Gary, then three years old, already introduced by his father to bluegrass, became one of the second generation of musicians nurtured at the Festival which grew out of the coming Friday’s Jamboree. In 1993 Gary, a mandolinist, joined The Spinney Brothers, one of Nova Scotia’s most successful bands. I was honored to have them play during my 2014 induction into IBMA’s Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame.
By the early ‘70s, bluegrass in the Maritimes had been embraced by the young, working-class, rural country musicians who formed most of the “spread out” Canadian bluegrass community Vic Mullen had told me about. This night at the Isenors’ was my introduction to a new world of musical friends and acquaintances.
As the evening wore on, the focus shifted from instruments to music making. We jammed; I noted:
We played lots of gospel songs, few bluegrass standards, I did requests for Peggy [Warner, a budding banjo picker]. Tempos were slow generally.
This was not like bluegrass jams I’d experienced during the 1960s working and hanging out at Bean Blossom. In a sense, it was a step back in time for me. In my college years, fifteen years before, I’d first learned about bluegrass through recordings. It was a distant thing.
Then I moved to Indiana, met Monroe at Bean Blossom. By the time I moved to Canada the festival movement had attracted new audiences. Mid-’60s youth had embraced folk music; that drew some of them into bluegrass — the beginning of a process of gentrification that I’ve written about in Bluegrass Generation (pp.240-42). In 1972, this hadn’t happened yet in Atlantic Canada.
The next afternoon, Thursday the 3rd, Fred took me into Halifax. Knowing I was a professor of folklore, he wanted to show me a new shop in town, the Halifax Folklore Centre. He introduced me to the owners, the Dorwards, who, I noted:
Looked at my F4 (fret wire needed, if they are to do a fret job). I got the J&J instrumental LP. Lots of blues records. Fred and Tom Dorward, the owner, get on well.
I don’t recall much talk about the Jamboree. Months later, Fred confided to me that in promoting the event, they’d failed to connect with the Halifax university students who were into folk music. Dorward would play a role in that regard at the Festival, which grew out of the Jamboree. Next, I noted:
…we went to CBC to see about placing ads, and then to an electronics distributor for a mike.
Later I added to this note:
…a local fiddler who was supposed to play in Friday’s festival — Russ Topple — had unexpectedly gone to the U.S. (Wheeling) so when we stopped at the CBC … Fred put my name on the ad as visiting banjo picker. Everyone knows that I worked with Monroe, most think that means as a banjo picker. Lots of questions about the banjo (“old Mastertone”) etc.
After supper we went to farmer John Moxom’s place out in the country at Hardwoodlands, the festival site, about 14 km (8.7 mi) east of Lantz, to help Charlie Fullerton set up his sound system. I noted:
Farmer J.M. has built outdoor covered stage about the size of and dimensions of that at Roanoke. On 4 posts 6’ high; 18’x10’ floor with covered sides (except for the last 4’ at front). Roof slopes from 10’ at the front to 7’ at the back. Rough steps off the left corner rear. We end up setting speakers on Fred’s ’66 Chrysler roof beside the stage for separation. See map of festival site on the following page.
A hand-drawn map of the layout of the first Canadian bluegrass festival. Excerpt from Rosenberg’s personal journals.
The evening ended with a rehearsal at the home of Don and Joyce Peck, Fred’s bandmates. I noted:
Charlie subbed on bass for Fred’s partner (in his Lantz music store, Country Music Sales), Bruce Beeler, who works as a chef on the CN RR.
After dinner the next day (Friday the 4th), Fred and I returned to his home after visiting more of his musical friends, to find The County Line Bluegrass Boys had arrived. They would be playing at Jamboree that evening. They were from Lunenburg County, down on Nova Scotia’s South Shore. I noted:
The mandolin player and the banjo player (Mel Sarty) are the central figures in the group — first got into Bluegrass when they were 11-12 years old in the early sixties, when a relative bought the Bluegrass Gentlemen LP by chance. Have learned entirely by records. … They do quite a bit of four-part singing.
Vic Mullen, Nova Scotia’s best-known bluegrass musician, was the emcee that evening at the Jamboree. The audience was mainly in cars, parked in front of the stage. Applause came in the form of honks and flashed lights. Three Nova Scotia bands appeared.
The Pecks with Fred and Bruce on bass opened. Vic and I helped add a bluegrass touch to their sound with fiddle and banjo. A number of other singers and pickers joined us for guest appearances. Next came the County Line Bluegrass Boys.
The Boutilier Brothers closed the show. They came from a musical family; their grandfather was a well-known old-time fiddler in the region, and the two oldest brothers, Bill and Larry, began their professional career with their father, also a noted fiddler. They were inducted into the Nova Scotia Country Music Hall of Fame in 1999.
By the early 1960s they were singing brother duets and appearing with Vic Mullen on banjo. With the help of Mullen, they made four LPs (all had “Bluegrass” in their title) on the Rodeo label between 1963 and 1967, by which time a third brother, Ken, had replaced Vic on banjo. The brothers had retired several years before, but came out of retirement specially for the Jamboree.
When Fred and Vic surveyed the results of the Jamboree, they decided to try another the following year. This time they would announce it as “the second annual BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL at Hardwoodlands, N.S., July 27, 1973.” The Boutiliers and the Country Line Bluegrass Boys appeared again; more widely advertised, it was successful and drew enough bluegrass enthusiasts that in 1974 Fred and Vic brought Tom Dorward into their planning and began working on a two-day event.
John Moxom, Neil Rosenberg, Vic Mullen and Fred Isenor at Hardwoodlands, N.S., July 1973
For the next five years, I traveled to the Festival annually from Newfoundland to help Fred and the gang, running instrumental workshops, emceeing, and appearing with our St. John’s-based band, Crooked Stovepipe.
As the Festival took off, young musicians began appearing. Eventually a fourth generation of Boutiliers became involved. In the 1980s these young pickers added Vic Mullen to their band, and, with his encouragement, took on his old band name, calling themselves Birch Mountain Bluegrass Band. In 2001, 2002, and 2004 they won the East Coast Music Association’s “Bluegrass Album of the Year” award.
Another second-generation band developed out of the County Line Bluegrass Boys. In 1973 banjoist Mel Sarty’s brother Gordon joined the band as bassist and in the 1980s he and his three daughters created a new band, Exit 13. Lead vocalist, songwriter, and banjoist Elaine Sarty fronted the group. They won the ECMA “Bluegrass Album of the Year” in 1997 and 1998. Here’s a profile of the band that appeared in the ‘90s on a national prime time CBC show, “On The Road Again.“
This, of course, was all to come! I knew nothing of the Jamboree’s bluegrass festival future when I left the Isenor home on Saturday August 5, 1972, continuing my research trip. Heading west on the Trans-Canada Highway, a half-day’s drive brought me to Woodstock, New Brunwick, near the Maine border. There I visited a student and her family who’d invited me to see the Don Messer Jubilee at Old Home Week, Woodstock’s annual fair.
The event was held in a large building in Connell Park, the fair site. It had three components: the Jubilee concert, a fiddle contest, and a dance.
The concert followed the format of Messer’s television broadcasts, with fiddle tunes prominently featured along with songs by the band’s remaining vocalist Marg Osburne. Her singing partner, Charlie Chamberlain, had died less than a month before. This was one of the Jubilee’s last public performances; Messer would pass in March 1973.
The fiddle contest, which Messer judged, was won by Mac Brogan, a fiddler from Chipman, NB. Here’s a sample of his fiddling, very much in the Don Messer style, from his 1984 album:
Finally, chairs were cleared away and Messer and the Jubilee orchestra played for dancers. Although Messer continued on the fiddle, several of the other musicians switched to wind instruments. The music was mainly a sentimental reprise of popular songs from the big band era that they’d played for dancers during their salad days in the ’40s and ’50s.
After the dance I introduced myself to Mac Brogan, telling him I was interested in researching old-time and country music in Canada and asking if he would be willing to talk to me some time for an interview. He consented and gave me his address. It would be over a year before I’d have time to do the interview, but this, along with my conversations with Fred and Vic, marked the start of what would become a decade of studying the connections between country and folk music in the Maritimes.
On Monday the 7th I was off again, heading into New England, en route to southern bluegrass scenes.
The energy was palpable in Nashville that day. It was Americanafest, and everyone who was anyone in this community was in town for the week-long conference, festival, and awards show.
The Bluegrass Situation’s Midnight Windup, held in The Cannery, was hosted by Ed Helms and his band The Lonesome Trio and featuring a cavalcade of guests that included David Bromberg, the Milk Carton Kids, Aoife O’Donovan, The Infamous Stringdusters, Joy Kills Sorrow, Black Prairie, and the Steep Canyon Rangers joined by an up and coming guitar slinger with an unforgettable name: Sturgill Simpson.
Even though we’d technically been up and running for over a year, that night felt like something of a launch party at an event that has subsequently become a homecoming every year since. We’re honored to return to Nashville to celebrate our tenth anniversary with several events during Americanafest, including a night of pure bluegrass hosted by fiddler Jason Carter and friends, a special pre-awards show happy hour at the City Winery Lounge (cake was involved!) and an afternoon of live music from the artists of Nettwerk Music Group at the Basement on Friday.
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 18: (L-R) Jerry Douglas, Jacob Tilove and Ed Helms perform at the Bluegrass Situation showcase during the Americana Music Festival on September 18, 2013 in Nashville, United States. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images for Americana Music Festival) *** Local Caption *** Ed Helms; Jacob Tilove
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 18: Aoife O'Donovan performs during the Bluegrass Situation's showcase at the Americana Music Festival on September 18, 2013 in Nashville, United States. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images for Americana Music Festival) *** Local Caption *** aoife o'donovan
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 18: Comdedian and actor Ed Helms and David Bromberg gather backstage during the Bluegrass Situation's showcase at the Americana Music Festival on September 18, 2013 in Nashville, United States. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images for Americana Music Festival) *** Local Caption *** Ed Helms; David Bromberg
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 18: (L-R) Aoife O'Donovan and Joey Ryan of The Milk Carton Kids gather backstage during the Bluegrass Situation's showcase at the Americana Music Festival on September 18, 2013 in Nashville, United States. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images for Americana Music Festival) *** Local Caption *** aoife o'donovan; kenneth pattengale
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 18: (L-R) Joey Ryan and Kenneth Pattengale of The Milk Carton Kids perform during the Bluegrass Situation's showcase at the Americana Music Festival on September 18, 2013 in Nashville, United States. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images for Americana Music Festival) *** Local Caption *** joey ryan; kenneth pattengale
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 18: (L-R) Joey Ryan and Kenneth Pattengale of The Milk Carton Kids gather backstage during the Bluegrass Situation's showcase at the Americana Music Festival on September 18, 2013 in Nashville, United States. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images for Americana Music Festival) *** Local Caption *** joey ryan; kenneth pattengale
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 18: Tim O'Brien and Jim Lauderdale gather backstage at the Bluegrass Situation showcase at Americana Music Festival on September 18, 2013 in Nashville, United States. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images for Americana Music Festival) *** Local Caption *** Tim O'Brien; Jim Lauderdale
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 18: (L-R) Ed Helms, Ian Riggs, Larry Campbell and David Bromberg perform at the Bluegrass Situation showcase during the Americana Music Festival on September 18, 2013 in Nashville, United States. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images for Americana Music Festival) *** Local Caption *** Ed Helms; Ian Riggs
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 18: (L-R) Ian Riggs, Larry Campbell and David Bromberg perform at the Bluegrass Situation showcase during the Americana Music Festival on September 18, 2013 in Nashville, United States. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images for Americana Music Festival) *** Local Caption *** Ian Riggs; Larry Campbell; David Bromberg
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 18: Ed Helms (second from right) gathers with the Infamous Stringdusters backstage at the Bluegrass Situation showcase at Americana Music Festival on September 18, 2013 in Nashville, United States. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images for Americana Music Festival) *** Local Caption *** Ed Helms
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 18: (L-R_ Joey Ryan and Kenneth Pattengale of The Milk Carton Kids perform during the Bluegrass Situation's showcase at the Americana Music Festival on September 18, 2013 in Nashville, United States. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images for Americana Music Festival) *** Local Caption *** joey ryan; kenneth pattengale
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 18: Brian Wright and Aoife O'Donovan perform during the Bluegrass Situation's showcase at the Americana Music Festival on September 18, 2013 in Nashville, United States. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images for Americana Music Festival) *** Local Caption *** brian wrigth; aoife o'donovan
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 18: Emma Beaton of Joy Kills Sorrow performs during the Bluegrass Situation's showcase at the Americana Music Festival on September 18, 2013 in Nashville, United States. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images for Americana Music Festival) *** Local Caption *** Emma Beaton
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 18: Nate Smith (center) performs with Emma Beaton and Jacob Jolliff of Joy Kills Sorrow during the Bluegrass Situation's showcase at the Americana Music Festival on September 18, 2013 in Nashville, United States. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images for Americana Music Festival) *** Local Caption *** Emma Beaton; Nate Smith; Jacob Jolliff
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 18: (L-R) Ian Riggs, Larry Campbell and David Bromberg perform at the Bluegrass Situation showcase during the Americana Music Festival on September 18, 2013 in Nashville, United States. (Photo by Erika Goldring/Getty Images for Americana Music Festival) *** Local Caption *** Ian Riggs; Larry Campbell; David Bromberg
Cover photo by James R. Martin; gallery photos by Erika Goldring
This year’s Cayamo cruise is gearing up to be one for the books. With artists like Trampled by Turtles, Patty Griffin, Allison Russell, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Jeff Tweedy, the Jerry Douglas Band, and so many more across roots music genres onboard, we’re looking forward to the musical collaborations destined to take form and many more fun moments. Gather some of the top musicians in the game on a ship for seven days, and magic is bound to ensue.
Here’s an opportunity to join in the fun: we’re giving away a free cabin! Enjoy an immersive week of unique performances and showcases as you drift through the beautiful Caribbean from Miami to St. Maarten and Tortola alongside fellow music lovers. You can enter the giveaway here.
Take a look at our photo recap of last year’s festivities in anticipation!
“What started as a small party with 250 people in a neighbourhood in the north of Rotterdam in 2009, initiated by promoter and local resident Guido de Groot, this year resulted in a three day international festival, with 35+ national and international acts, on three stages at and around the Pijnackerplein, during the final weekend of June. This year’s edition marked the tenth anniversary of Rotterdam Bluegrass Festival, with more than 18,000 roots music lovers – from locals and visitors from outside the city, to people from all over the world – attending the festival. They enjoyed a wide variety of live music performances, but also workshops, jam sessions, small theatre performances, a market and lots of good food and delicious drinks.” – Rotterdam Bluegrass Festival
Dylan going electric in 1965. Lomax making his historic archive recordings in 1966. Joni taking the stage after 50-something years in 2022. Newport Folk is a festival full of milestone moments and lots of surprises. And for a brief moment in time in 2014, BGS was a small part of Newport Folk Fest’s long and storied history too, when we presented our Bluegrass Situation Workshop Stage inside the intimate Whaling Museum building on Sunday at the Fort.
Amidst a festival lineup that included such stalwarts as Nickel Creek, Trampled by Turtles, Dawes, Valerie June, Hozier, Jack White, and Mavis Staples, the BGS crew – helmed by co-founder Ed Helms and his Lonesome Trio bandmates Ian Riggs and Jake Tilove – hosted a few “up and coming” acts we were very excited about, singing songs about significant “firsts” in their lives. Some of those young whippersnappers you might have heard of, like Shakey Graves (joined by Chris Funk of the Decemberists and Langhorne Slim), Aoife O’Donovan, Wilie Watson (with special guest Sean Watkins), and Watchhouse (who were still going by Mandolin Orange at the time), which marked Andrew and Emily’s very first – but certainly not last – appearance at Newport.
That big “first” for us was significant – to be welcomed into the “Folk” Family and made to feel like we were all part of something big and wonderful. And it’s that feeling that’s brought us back to the Fort year after year ever since.
September can’t come soon enough, as we’re eagerly anticipating the long-awaited inaugural Earl Scruggs Music Festival in Mill Spring, North Carolina, to be held September 2-4, 2022!
BGS is thrilled to be partnering with the festival to present a tribute to one of the most iconic Earl Scruggs Revue albums, Live at Kansas State. The host band, bluegrass quintet Fireside Collective, will lead an all-star outfit in a revival of the 1972 recording with special guests Jerry Douglas, Darin & Brooke Aldridge, Balsam Range, Acoustic Syndicate, Bella White, and more to be announced – plus a slew of surprise cameos. This will all go down on Saturday afternoon (September 3) on the Foggy Mountain Stage. We can’t wait to join with these incredible artists to pay tribute to this landmark album!
In addition to the folks on this special tribute (who will be performing sets of their own throughout the weekend) the festival will feature the likes of the Earls of Leicester, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Béla Fleck’s My Bluegrass Heart, Molly Tuttle & Golden Highway, and so many more. Take a look at the full lineup below.
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