Posted on 11/21/2014 4:53:21 AM PST by Lucky9teen
Not to worry. That pic i posted was originally from Janis Ian. She has a keen sense of humor. I know all about Folk. I live in Kerrville, home of the Kerrville Folk Festival and attend many of the concerts. Some great players around the campfires after the concerts.
I've attended several Kerrville Folk Festivals and enjoyed everyone of them (Lyle Lovett, Nanci Griffith, in the old, old days). I have a few KFF CDs, including an old Women of Kerrville which includes Tish Hinojosa (her later duets with Chip Wheeler are wonderful), Lynn Miles (I Always Told You The Truth), and Cheryl Wheeler (youth everywhere love Ms. Wheeler's song "Potato" and her walk in the woods with her dog, John).
Kerrville State Park is a delightful place to camp. During the right season, when you open your tent flap in the morning it's not unusual to find deer grazing all around you, within a few feet of your tent.
Wow
Seventy-five Septembers is Cheryl Wheeler's very nice tribute song to her grandmother (I know about Wheeler's sexual orientation).
Dar Williams is the Dar Williams who will later become famous, and still be barefoot and then go all Mary Chapin Carpeter "Somebody Feed Me" large on us - which offended people for some reason, but anyway the song's about how Christians and pagans aren't all that different. Riiiiiight. The solstice, so Amber called her uncle. Gee. When Christians sit with pagans only pumpkin pies are burning.
Catie Curtis and Susan Werner - my kids grew up loving Werner's "Last of the Good, Straight Girls" from the CD of the same name ("gone the days of the corduroy jumpers and your birthday string of pearls"), but Werner's agnostic gospel CD is . . . interesting.
Tish Honojosa is, on the CD and still is, an absolute angel - and in some twisted way, through a sampler CD playing in a Cambridge funky shop while my youngest was looking at jewelry, she led me to Chip Taylor & Carrie Rodriguez, for which I'll always be grateful. And, Chip Taylor is John Voight's brother. Who knew?
Cosy Sheridan?
Lucy Kaplansky?
Diane Ziegler?
Hudson and Frankie?
Or my favorite far-leftie since the very late 1970s, UT's own Nanci Griffith.
Hudson and Frankie, along with Lyle Lovett, are sidewalk people in front of the Woolworth's on the cover of Nanci's 'Last of the True Believers,' the album with Rita and steel-guitar-playing Eddie and their Love at the Five and Dime, a Nanci song that Kathy Mattea later recorded, which Nanci reprised on One Fair Summer Evening and perhaps Anderson Fair, both live albums.
I'd enjoy hearing your KFF stories and I'd love to meet you and your sister.
Please accept my condolences regarding your cherished wife. Perhaps a KFF someday in the future in memory of her life. I'd be honored and humbled.
Last time I checked, some, but not all, of the notes were available at http://www.bobdylan.com/us/news/basement-tapes-track-track.
Jon Ims - The Day Daddy Cut The Big One
Jon wrote 'She's in love with the boy' and Trisha Yearwood had her biggest hit with it. I also got to hear Lucinda Williams sing around the campfire after she wrote 'Passionate Kisses, Drunken Angel and 'changed the locks'. Great times for songwriters.
BTTT
Oh, my.
And what did I do to deserve the honor of watching this? :)
Six Blocks Away
Drunken Angel
Lines Around Your Eyes
Sweet Old World
Car Wheels on a Gravel Road
Passionate Kisses
Metal Firecracker
Lines Around Your Eyes
(I like Like Lines Around Your Eyes and Metal Firecracker)
Car Wheels on a Gravel Road
Right in Time
2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten.
Thanks for pointing me to John Ims. I need to learn more about him.
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