2006年VOA标准英语-Grey Fox Music Festival Brings Together Top Blu(在线收听) |
By Katherine Cole -------- It was a busy weekend for Uncle Earl's banjo player, . In addition to two main stage performances with that group, she also had her own set on the main stage. Lending Abigail a hand during that performance were friends including: Cellist Ben Sollee, fiddler Casey Driessen, and Bela Fleck on banjo. That band toured China last year under the name The Sparrow Quartet, and has just released their first recording.
But the Grey Fox Bluegrass Festival is more than sitting in front of a stage, watching performers. Perhaps more than any other style of music, bluegrass encourages fans to learn to play. Grey Fox offered several different ways to learn the music. There is a workshop stage, where the pros play and share tips, tricks and techniques. There is also "The Academy." Each summer, Cathy Goode spends a week teaching fiddle at the Grey Fox Bluegrass Academy for Kids. At home in Newton Massachusetts, Cathy teaches using the "Suzuki Method," which has students attending both private and group lessons. "They have to learn how to play together, learn together, and hopefully to develop camaraderie and respect for each other. And those are certainly things we are trying to do in the bluegrass Academy," she says. This was a special year for the Grey Fox festival family. While 2006 marked the seventh year of operation under that name, this is the 30th year a bluegrass festival has been held on the Rothvoss Farm in Ancramdale, New York. The Berkshire Mountain Bluegrass Festival of the '70s, became Winterhawk through the 1980s and '90s. But despite the name changes, one thing has stayed the same: For as long as anyone can remember, The Dry Branch Fire Squad, led by singer and mandolinist Ron Thomason, has been hosting the festival. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/7/33766.html |