Music at Main: Kent Shindig All-Stars

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Uploaded by on Aug 10, 2009

The Kent Shindig All-Stars (featuring some of the finest traditional musicians in northeast Ohio) performed old-time music in the Louis Stokes Wing Auditorium on Saturday, August 8th, 2009 from 2-4PM as part of the Cleveland Public Library's "Music at Main" series. For more information on this music series contact finearts@cpl.org.

The Kent Shindig, one of the only regular old-time music and dance jam sessions in northeast Ohio, was started in 1997 by Chardon clog dancer and musician Laura Lewis, as a way to keep Appalachian music and dance alive in our area.

Performers included:

Rob Rhamy, fiddle
Heather Malyuk, fiddle
David Badagnani, fiddle
Gary Mulheim, harmonica
Jim Miller, wooden flute and whistle
Jim Francis, lap dulcimer
Tina Bergmann, hammered dulcimer
John Truitt, banjo
Joel Specht, banjo
David Fuente, guitar
Ed Mills, guitar and bouzouki
Jim Warren, mandolin
Bryan Thomas, double bass
Sally Freeman, flatfoot dancer

Taking place at Brady's Cafe until 2002, it is now held at Professor's Pub in Kent, from 7 to 10 p.m. on the first Sunday of each month. The music is learned orally rather than using sheet music, and musicians and dancers of all skill levels are welcome. Regulars commute from all over northeast Ohio as well as western Pennsylvania.

"Old-time music" is a term coined in the early 1920s to refer to America's fiddle-based traditional music, particularly that practiced in the Appalachian region, which serves as the root for more modern traditions like bluegrass and country music. Although there are also slower songs, most old-time music comprises up-tempo reels that were originally played for flatfoot dancing (a style of percussive dance similar to clogging) or square dancing.

Many tunes come from the British Isles, while much of the music's rhythmic impetus and bluesy ornamentation (as well as the banjo itself) derives from West Africa. Although most of the best-known tunes are of Appalachian origin, similar traditions of old-time music may also be found in other regions, such as the Midwest, New England, and Canada.

Because old-time music favors bowed and plucked string instruments, the music is often referred to as "string band music." The primary instruments are the fiddle and banjo, but one may also find diverse acoustic instruments such as guitar, mandolin, hammered and lap dulcimers, harmonica, washtub bass, double bass, piano, washboard, bones, spoons, Jew's harp, or mouth bow. Because different musicians show up each month, the instrumentation is never the same two months in a row.

Although it is primarily an instrumental tradition, many old-time tunes have lyrics, which may be of a historical nature or describe rural life. Many tunes have fanciful and intriguing names, such as "Cluck Old Hen," "Whiskey Before Breakfast," or "Shaking Down the Acorns."

Many Shindig participants travel regularly to the Appalachian Mountains to study, perform, and teach old-time music.

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  • Very beautiful guys...that's what it's all about. Ya'll are awesome, don't stop that beautiful broadcastin'!

  • You're welcome to visit anytime! We're at a new location now: Europe Gyro-Pizza in downtown Kent, Ohio, from 5 to 8 p.m. (still on the first Sunday of the month, all year round). We had about 18 musicians at the last one.

  • Looks Like a Great Time...If I find myself in Cleveland on the first Sunday, I know where I will be.

    Thanks

    Dave

  • Thanks, Michael, for making such a beautiful video. This tune is called "Doctor, Doctor" and apparently has the following lyric (in the A section):

    Doctor, Doctor, come here quick,

    I swallowed my tobacco and its makin' me sick.

    You can see more videos of this group if you search for "Kent Shindig All-Stars" (with champion flatfooter Charlie Burton dancing).

  • That's a good flat-footer there. ) Hope to see more.

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