- This topic has 1 reply, 2 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 11 months ago by
Victor.
-
AuthorPosts
-
July 18, 2008 at 4:39 am #25166
Will_S
ParticipantRicky Skaggs and Bruce Hornsby with Kentucky Thunder 6/20/08
Telluride Bluegrass Festival
Town Park, COBlack-Eyed Suzie, Toy Heart, Bluegrass Breakdown, Darlin’ Corey, The Way It Is, Mandolin Rain*, Across the Rocky Mountain, The Dreaded Spoon, Sheep Shell Corn#, Sally Jo, Little Maggie, White-Wheeled Limousine > Little Sadie > Just One More, Uncle Pen, Valley Road
encore: Super Freak* w/ Chris Thile
# w/ Sam BushSeptember 12, 2008 at 5:24 pm #29988Victor
ParticipantHere’s a belated clipping from the local press with a mention of Ricky and Bruce–
FEST DIGS BACK TO TRADITIONAL ROOTS
The Gazette, Colorado Springs
June 24, 2008
By WARREN EPSTEINTELLURIDE — After four days of nonstop concerts and allnight jams, thousands of festivalgoers packed their tents on Monday and headed out of this box canyon.
Many took home mudstained, sunburned skin, hangovers for the ages, and memories of the best music festival in years.
The 35th Telluride Bluegrass Festival sold out, with 10,000 tickets sold for each day, Thursday through Sunday, maintaining Telluride’s title as the most popular regular musical event in the Rockies.
This year’s festival may be remembered for its uncharacteristic emphasis on traditional bluegrass. After all, Telluride has built its reputation as the vanguard of the bluegrass movement, over the years featuring such nonbluegrass headliners as Jewel, James Taylor and Counting Crows.
This year’s lineup relied on the country’s top pickers, fiddlers and high-lonesome harmonizers — Del McCoury, Yonder Mountain String Band, Ricky Skaggs’ Kentucky Thunder, Spring Creek and Hot Rize, among others.
Even some nontraditional songsters reinvented themselves as bluegrassers. The most surprising?
John (where has he been for 30 years?) Oates of Hall and Oates fame. The 1970s pop star joined the Sam Bush Band for a set mixed with old bluegrass tunes and transformed Hall and Oates hits. (Among the most fun was “Man Eater,” done in a bluegrass/reggae style that had the audience alternately cheering, singing along and laughing.)
Bruce Hornsby also joined the parade of reinvented pop stars, playing and singing with Skaggs and crew. It’s amazing how fresh “The Way It Is” sounds as a bluegrass tune.
Other highlights of the fest included:
Two amazing festival discoveries: North Carolina singer- songwriter Tift Merritt, who charmed the crowd with her sweet voice and introspective lyrics; and the duo of Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova, who, belting “Falling Slowly” into one mike, re-created the romantic scene that earned them an Oscar for the movie “Once.”
Leftover Salmon’s energetic rendition of its early hit “Euphoria.”
The all-girl old-time- music group Uncle Earl (providing gender balance to an always testosterone-dominated festival) underscored a tune with a complicated game of patty cake. (Banjo wizard Bla Fleck sat next to me in the audience. I asked him if a boy group could get away with that. He shook his head.)
Both the Sam Bush Band and The Duhks, on separate nights, performed lively cover versions of Led Zeppelin’s “A Whole Lotta Love.”
–Vic
-
AuthorPosts
- The forum ‘Setlists’ is closed to new topics and replies.