Harwich Cranberry Festival, Harwich Folk Festival, Harwich Music Hollow, Hollow at Harwich, Fall Into Harwich, Harwich Cranberry Music Festival, Cape Cod Folk Festival, Harwich by the Sea, Harwich Music Festival, Harwich Music Fest, Cranberry Jam, Carn Fest, WOMR/WFMR Musical Jam
We are wishing to be a "green" in our planning for the Harwich Folk- Music Festival next September / October 2010. Why wait until then. We can start contributing right now and build on this community education today.
If any one has any going green suggestions I will post them here. Just email the link to me at jjbangert@gmail.com
We now can keep tract of folks who do individual act of GREEN and building up to goal by offering this as an immediate solution to "going green" all year round!
Ken Woodward, is from Charlottesville, VA and plays acoustic bass and sometimes stomps on a snare at the same time for fun.
Alexandra Spalding, who lends her beautiful voice to create the Beekeepers’ signature harmonies, grew up playing cello in orchestras in Northern California.
Annie met Ken through various attempts to learn bluegrass and saw Alex playing in a Berklee Joni Mitchell ensemble. One brief rehearsal later, the group gathered in Ken's frigid basement apartment with producer and peer, Frank Charlton, for two days of recording. Though the work was never titled or released, those two days in December of 2006 gave birth to a band that would go on to build a reputation for their unique instrumentation and lyrics, evocative layered harmonies, and heartwarming live performances.
Rowland Scherman is an American photographer.
He studied at Oberlin College, and was dark room apprentice at LIFE magazine. He was the first photographer for the newly-formed Peace Corps in 1961[1]. His photographs appeared in Life, Look, Time, National Geographic, Paris Match and Playboy, among many others [2], and he photographed many of the iconic musical, cultural, and political events of the 1960s[3][4], including the 1963 Newport Folk Festival, the Beatles first US concert, and Woodstock. He won a Grammy Award in 1968 for his photograph cover of "Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits"[5]. His published collections include "Love Letters", an alphabet formed by posed dancers, and "Elvis is Everywhere." He lived in Birmingham, Alabama, and documented Alabama's Highway 11. He now lives in the town of Orleans on Cape Cod.
BOB WEISER hosts "The Old Songs' Home"every Monday morning at 9:30 AM
Folk and acoustic, traditional and contemporary, new songs about old subjects and old songs about current matters, singer-songwriters and anon all in the mix.
You'll hear new releases by folks you've never heard of, old chestnuts from the greats, spiced with a touch of bluegrass, Celtic, Cajun, blues, and ethnic music. Songs about real people and their lives, labor and work songs, protest music, and comic relief are all included.
Bob brings his several lifetimes of experiences to the show- labor activist and metal worker, school teacher and salesman, cab driver and chef, father, farmers' market and food coop organizer, etc.
Bob produced close to 1000 musical events- folk, bluegrass, Celtic, festivals and more- before moving to the Cape. He's hosted folk music programs at WBRS 100.1 FM in Waltham, and the late lamented WADN (Walden 1120 AM) in Concord.
Bob has been with WOMR since 2001, and ably fills the void left by the late Jack Cullen, long the host of Monday Folk music at WOMR.