| About
2 years ago now, the Friends of Folk decided to experiment and take
some risks. We started booking occasional "bigger names"
to our Coffeehouse series. Bigger names tend to ask for a bit more
money than we were accustomed to paying, and required a higher ticket
price, but we had a feeling that Dover would recognize great talent
and come join in the fun.
Our first shows in this experiment included Tracy Grammer, Ronny
Cox, and Garnet Rogers, all of which drew healthy crowds, and were
clear successes. Now we're planning a return visit from Garnet Rogers,
on February 16th.
While the event is still "the Coffeehouse", the venue
has been upgraded a few notches since Garnet's last visit. Rather
than grabbing extra folding chairs while the Standing Room Only
crowd arrives, this time we will be assembling in the church at
Wesley Chapel - a beautiful, historical chapel with lovely (and
fairly hard) wooden pews. In November we presented jam/folk band
Boris Garcia in the church, and last month we enjoyed a special
show featuring Cliff Eberhardt. The acoustics are wonderful, and
it's the only time you'll ever experience Paul mixing sound with
absolutely no reverb whatsoever.
Garnet Rogers started his musical career early in life. It helped
that his brother, 6 years his senior, was the Canadian folk legend
Stan Rogers. Barely out of high school, Garnet was on the road as
a full-time musician in Stan's band. Since Stan's untimely death
in a plane crash in 1983, Garnet has gone on to his own successful,
though staunchly independent career. He continues to draw on some
of Stan's material, like the significant Night Train, but
also records songs from other artists, and writes many original
songs, drawing from blues, rock, roots, and classical influences.
Having met Garnet twice, once when he performed at my home, I find
him to be a complex, yet fairly simple individual. Garnet is probably
one of the few touring musicians left who doesn't have an email
account, but we computer people have a saying that very adequately
describes him: WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get). He's an imposing
figure, at 6 and a half feet tall, but extremely warm and down to
earth. He openly speaks (and sings) his mind in his shows, with
over-the-top humor that draws his audience right in. He's engaging
and charismatic, with a smooth-as-silk baritone voice, and total
command over the carload of guitars that he carries along with him
in his trusty well worn Volvo.
Garnet newest CD, just released and on the Boston Globe's Top Ten
Folk CDs of 2007, is called "Get a Witness", and was recorded
live with a full band. In true independent Garnet fashion, the CD
contains 3 songs which top 7 minutes in length, and a range of selections
including Junior, his um, "tribute" to our current
US President (with quite a catchy chorus), a cover of Springsteen's
Blood Brothers, and Garnet's own versions of Stan's Night
Drive and Northwest Passage.
Opening for Garnet on February 16th will be a staple on the local
Open Mic circuit, Sean Cheezum. Sean should be familiar to those
who have recently attended Friends of Folk Events. He participated
in this past May's Singer Songwriter Circle, and was a finalist
in the Delmarva Folk Hero contest. Before he goes on stage, you
notice the unusual hairstyle, multiple piercings, and uniquely shaped
jeans... but once he sits down to perform, all that's left in your
mind is his attacking Ani DiFranco-esque style on the guitar, and
his frank, open lyrics.
When Garnet Rogers first performed at a Friends of Folk coffeehouse,
we noted in his contract the requirement that we collect food for
our local food bank. In Garnet's words, "It's an enormous privilege
for me to be able to stand up and sing my own songs, but I would
like to be able to have something left behind after the dust is
cleared away where people are actually benefiting from the concert
at some level." The Friends of Folk continued this tradition,
and since that time we have collected food at all of our Coffeehouse
and Festival events. We encourage you to join us on February 16th
for an evening of wonderful music, and ask that you help us support
the Food Bank of Delaware with your contribution.
So be prepared for an extraordinary evening of music. It all starts
at 7:30, February 16 in the Wesley College Chapel in Dover. Special
pricing of $12 for members and $15 for non-members has been established.
There will be plenty of fresh coffee, cold drinks, and sweets available
for a reasonable price (coffee and other beverages are $.50, and
food items are $1). Bring a friend – they’ll thank you
for it, and you’ll both see, there’s nothing else like
it in Dover.
-- Beth Fizell, DEFF Chair |