Author: Shan

Artist, writer, music freak. www.sistersdissonance.com www.shanspykerauthor.com

Looking ahead, looking forward | 2013 Newport Folk Festival

Sisters Dissonance has a history of roadtrip-itis. It is not unusual for us to travel to a new place that is a decent distance away for a show at least once, if not a few times each year. The goal: eliminate the 400 mile gap between us, soak up music we love, find good food and drink and culture, and explore a new location.

2013 is a bit different. Last July after attending the 2012 Newport Folk festival, my sister Ady and I decided on the spot that all of our traveling pennies would immediately be stashed and we named the Newport Folk Festival our sole 2013 long-distance travel destination.

Jim James and My Morning Jacket performing at Fort Stage as the rain rolls in

NFF 2012: Jim James/ My Morning Jacket, Fort Stage

{ Travel back in time to last year’s festival via our archive}
{ An Alphabetical Memoir of the 2012 Newport Folk Festival }

It’s no joke when I say the groundwork for our trip this year was laid less than a few weeks after we returned home from the festival last year. We also added a 2013 NFF countdown on this site back in August. Now here we are a mere 16 weeks away, bands are being announced on a rolling basis (that has been a bit like getting to open a giant gift every few days as the festival tweets and posts announcements as they are added to the schedule), and we are reveling in our decision. The excitement grows evermore!

The festival, despite the fact that the full line up was not announced before tickets were released, managed to sell out (very quickly) all 2 and 3-day passes, and single day passes for Saturday and Sunday. All that remains now is some single-day Friday tickets, which are still available via the Newport Folk Festival site (a-hemm-grab’em!). A testament to the adoration of the finest of festivals.

Among the line up this year are acts that fall into three categories: those that we have covered in the past including The Felice Brothers, Andrew Bird, John McCauley (Deer Tick), The Mountain Goats, Jim James (My Morning Jacket), Spirit Family Reunion, and Shovels and Rope—all of whom we danced around in excitement as they were announced. We are looking forward to catching them all again.

Then there are the many acts that we have never had a chance to see live (Feist, Bonnie “Prince” Billy, Justin Townes Earle, Colin Meloy, Lumineers to name but a few)—until now. For that we are equally excited. Finally, there are those that we’ve only just discovered thanks to NNF, that adds to this buildup of anticipation. (For me Bombino, Cold Specks, Lord Huron, and Trombone Shorty are among those calling!) I have no doubt every single act on the bill will be an amazing experience. The amount of energy and love and camaraderie that fills the air in Newport, RI on that very special folkin’ weekend is immeasurable and not fully defined on paper or in words. You just have to be there. And we anxiously await that moment when we have arrived there once again.

The 2013 Newport Folk Festival Lineup to date:
The Avett Brothers
Milk Carton Kids
Feist
Phosphorescent
Sarah Jarosz
Amanda Palmer
Berklee Gospel and Roots Choir
Old Crow Medicine Show
Blake Mills
Justin Towers Earle
Cold Specs
Bonny “Prince” Billy and Dawn McCarthy
Colin Meloy
Lord Huron
Beth Orton
Wheeler Brothers
Frank Turner and the Sleeping Souls
Langhorn Slim and the Law
Bombino
Black Prarie
Trombone Shorty and Orleans Avenue
Hey Marseilles
The Felice Brothers
Tiff Merritt
Rayland Baxter
Iris Dement
Father John Misty
JD Mcpherson
Kingsley Flood
Hurrah for the Riff Raff
Jim James
Jason Isbell
Nicki Bluhm and the Gamblers
Spirit Family Reunion
Michael Kiwanuka
The Lumineers
Houndmouth
The Last Bison
Andrew Bird
Shovels and Rope
The Lonely Bellow

(Yet to be announced are the NFF after shows…a whole other world unto themselves!)

Ben Sollee live at The Cat in the Cream, Oberlin OH

French press coffee, hot tea, fresh baked cookies, and Ben Sollee and his cello all at The Cat in the Cream! Everything about this evening was perfect—great company and great conversation during the trek to Oberlin and over a delicious dinner at Weia Teia prior to the show at the cozy Cat in the Cream Oberlin College coffee house. All of this topped off with the amazing and beautiful music from Ben Sollee. The night exuded warmth at every turn.

When we arrived at the coffee house admittedly a tad late (lost in the time-warp of the food banquet), we were greeted by Cat in the Cream staff who were regretful to inform a group of about 20 of us that the show was at capacity and we could not enter. We had traveled over an hour to the show (unfortunately not by bike as Ben Sollee strongly advocates) so I’m sure our faces reflected the disappointment, as did everyone else’s. But we were met with a compromise that we could watch from the back hallway if no one entered when they opened the double doors for us. We followed down the hall, and when the doors were opened it revealed a room full of people sitting in every available spot on the floor, in chairs, and all along the back wall, as opener Luke Reynolds (also Ben Sollee band-mate/guitarist) played and warmed up the audience. We spilled out into the hallway in the same fashion, creating an ocean of eyes and ears eager for the music, as more people continued to arrive and join us.

A quick break and then Sollee and drummer Jordon Ellis joined Reynolds on stage. Ady and I had seen Sollee performing with others on various stages in various configurations at this year’s Newport Folk Festival (here’s one such appearance with Joe Fletcher and friends at the Newport Folk Festival Backstage BBQ) and we enjoyed his playing very much so I was really looking forward to catching him again, and his performance at Cat in the Cream was the icing on the cake (the cat in the cream?) for me as a fan. The trio captivated the entire audience from the get go with songs from Sollee’s catalog, including his newest release Half Made Man.

Sollee’s sound is a unique musical blend of styles using an instrument that one would more often associate with chamber music as the anchor, and he uses it to create music that is energetic, punchy, folky and the driving rhythms channeled through his cello at times almost borders on funk—it’s fantastic!

Ben Sollee’s got the cello-funk!

Between songs Sollee, personable and very engaging, chatted with the audience and talked about himself and his longtime companion, his cello. He began playing his “long hair instrument” (as reportedly a family member of his called it) in 4th grade, which is pretty evident when witnessing his masterful at-one-ness with his cello. Sollee also played mandolin and guitar intermittently throughout the show. He also shared that often the subject matter of his material originates from experiences and things said to him that he “doesn’t quite know what to do with,” and his way of dealing with it is to “write a song about it,” thankfully for us! He is inventive, interactive and very entertaining. At one point as he began building a song through a sequence of samples he was creating on the spot, he elicited audience participation by asking everyone to yell something together. He captured the sound of our voices yelling “Hiiiii!!!!” in unison, which reverberated through the body of his cello. A few seconds later we heard ourselves loop through the structure of the song, at first the focal point (both humorous and mesmerizing to hear), then we washed into the background as the song continued to build, and off they went into the full song.

The audience remained seated attentively the entire set until finally he suggested he could take a short break so everyone could stand up a moment. But no one wanted him to stop so instead the “butt break” evolved into a quick stretch and everyone stood up to dance until the end (some pretty great interpretive moves spotted in the house!)

Sollee’s solid ethos is also intertwined throughout his performance. He stressed more than a few times the importance of environmental awareness and action (not only does he advocate alternate transport, he has become known as the man who very often tours great distances on bike with his cello strapped to his back), and he also underscored that his traveling band is essentially a small home-grown business. I also learned that his wife is a letterpress artist (which appeals greatly to the graphic designer/artist in me) and his lyrics are for sale in beautiful letterpress prints at the table along with other merch. Integrity in art is something very important to both Ady and I, and we both purposely seek out artists/musicians with this fundamentally at their core, and I was pleased to find that the world of Ben Sollee is a wonderful thing, indeed. If he happens to be headed for your neck of the woods as they continue the tour, please check him out!

Photo | AA Bondy Philly Nov 2011

This is the first in a series of outtakes we will be sharing from our collection of photos that have never been released. Some will be less than “perfect” images that were never shared in the original photo sets, but in my opinion are none-the-less worthy of being shared because of their expressiveness, strangeness or other unique qualities making them worthy of being seen. This first one is one of AA Bondy heating up the the First Unitarian Church in Philadelphia, PA on the cold, rainy night of November 21, 2011.

If you missed the full set the first time around you can find it here.

Video | 2012 Newport Folk Festival & Backstage BBQ

You can read more of our love for this festival through one of the many articles we wrote after our return by scrolling below to the past 7 or 8 posts! This time around instead of words we tried to capture the spirit of the festival and the Benefit BBQ through a video montage of sights, sounds, places and things to help relive our weekend excursion to the enchanting town of Newport, Rhode Island.

In addition to some of our favorite photos of the Festival, the second half of the video has some of our (until now) unpublished photos and audio from the after-festival private Backstage Benefit BBQ, a fundraiser for the Newport Festivals Foundation. Below is the video footage taken by Ady at the BBQ that the audio was taken from. The song is “I Never,” brought to the table by Joe Fletcher, who lead Sarah Lee Guthrie, Johnny Irion, Ben Sollee and friends in an impromptu version of the song, which they worked out on the spot.

The remaining photos from the BBQ and the last few photo sets in our collection will be posted to flickr this week.

Trouble Doll Winner!

And we have a winner! Hazel (who traveled all the way from Colorado with her family to be at this year’s Newport Folk Festival) sent in this very adorable photo of herself holding the winning trouble doll that she picked up while at the festival.

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Because it’s such an exceptionally cute photo that she sent us, Hazel will get her pick of a print of one of Ady’s photos AND we will be sending her one of Shan’s original trouble doll prints!

Congratulations Hazel! May your trouble doll bring you lots of happiness!

– Shan and Ady