Kathy Mattea to Release New Album 'Pretty Bird,' Appears on Mountain Stage August 11.

Grammy winning performing artist and West Virginia native Kathy Mattea will release her new album “Pretty Bird” in September and will appear on Mountain Stage Saturday August 11, 2018 as part of the Augusta Heritage Festival on the campus of Davis & Elkins College in Elkins, W.Va. Tickets are available now.

On September 7th, CMA Award-winning vocalist Kathy Mattea will release Pretty Bird, her first new album in six years. A sublime acoustic collection including a number of smartly chosen and heartfelt covers, the record marks something of a new era in Mattea’s 30-plus-year career. Over the past several years her deep, rich singing voice has experienced significant changes that could have put a permanent end to her performing, but after extensive vocal training she has emerged from what she refers to as her “dark night of the soul” with a duskier instrument. That newly trained but still memorable voice, which gave country fans such hits as “Eighteen Wheels and a Dozen Roses” and “Love at the Five and Dime,” is at the very heart of one of the year’s most affecting LPs.

“This album has led me, slowly and unexpectedly, into new nooks and crannies of singing,” Mattea tells Rolling Stone Country. “Songs showed up in random ways… and became part of our musical landscape during regular Thursday jam sessions in my living room. It’s a very eclectic collection, and for me, each song has a very specific reason for being here, showing me some new point of view about singing along the way.”

One of country music’s most successful artists of the past several decades, Mattea, a two-time Grammy winner, has always approached her material, even the most mainstream country, with an eclecticism and sense of deeper meaning. Those elements are vibrantly evident on “I Can’t Stand Up Alone,” the first track to premiere from the upcoming collection, which was produced by Mattea’s longtime friend and frequent collaborator Tim O’Brien. Written by country-gospel legend Martha Carson in the Fifties, Mattea’s soulful version is a sparkling mélange of those genres, with touches of blues and Appalachian mountain music. The uplifting tune serves as a fitting tribute to singer-songwriter Jesse Winchester, who died in 2014, and whose version inspired this one.

Mattea and her longtime accompaniest, guitarist Bill Cooley, will preview material from the upcoming release when the duo performs on Mountain Stage as part of the closing concert of the 2018 Augusta Heritage Festival. Tickets are availble online. Click here for details.

While she has made 19 apperances on the program, earlier this year Mattea stepped up to the guest-host microphone in an episode that can be heard in the Mountain Stage archives (Or look for episode #917 in Apple Podcasts).

Credit courtesy Bil Lepp
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Bil Lepp will guest-host Mountain Stage on Saturday August 11 in Elkins, WV.

The August 11 episode will feature another guest-host, when storyteller and humorist Bil Lepp steps to the host’s microphone. Also appearing on the line-up in Elkins are award-winning bluegrass group Darin & Brooke Aldridge and traditional music expert and frequent Augusta Heritage instructor Joe Newberry, West Virginia honky tonk and country group Blue Yonder. The show will be broadcast nationally later this fall via NPR Music.

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Folk Music Legend Tom Paxton Celebrates 80th Birthday with Mountain Stage in Elkins This Saturday.

“Mountain Stage with Larry Groce” returns to Elkins, WV this Saturday, August 12 as the closing concert of the Augusta Heritage Festival.

The show will take place at 7:30pm at the Harper-McNeeley Auditorium in the Myles Center for the Arts on the campus of Davis & Elkins College. Scheduled to appear are folk-music icon Tom Paxton featuring The DonJuans– the duo of Don Henry and Jon Vezner, both accomplished songwriters and performers. Also on the bill is bluegrass mainstay and Augusta instructor Laurie Lewis & the Right Hands, guitar-hero Bill Kirchen, also a past Augusta instructor, plus folk duo Cathy Fink & Marcy Marxer and an emerging roots group with ties to Elkins and the Augusta Workshops, The Early Mays.  

Tickets are $25, general admission, and are available online, by phone at 304.637.1255, and at the Augusta Heritage office.

Guitarist Laurie Lewis has instructed at the Augusta Workshops many times. Now she returns to showcase her band when Mountain Stage closes the Augusta Heritage Festival this Saturday.

Tom Paxton is one of the most prolific songwriter/performers in recorded music history, with songs covered by artists including Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan, The Weavers, Dolly Parton and Porter Wagoner, Willie Nelson, John Denver, Sandy Denny and The Move, among many others.  A four-time Grammy nominee and recipient of a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award from The Recording Academy in 2009 and an ASCAP Lifetime Achievement Award (for Folk) in 2002, Paxton has made six appearances on “Mountain Stage” since 1986.

Paxton’s new album, “Boat in the Water,” is produced by Grammy winners Cathy Fink and Marcy Marxer, who are also scheduled to be a part of the “Mountain Stage” program in Elkins. “Boat in the Water” is a fitting addition to a career that first took off in the fertile turf of New York’s Greenwich Village in the ‘60s, where his contemporaries included Bob Dylan, Phil Ochs, Dave Van Ronk and Joan Baez.

With movies like the Coen brothers’ Inside Llewyn Davis (in which Paxton is portrayed as a soldier in uniform singing “The Last Thing on My Mind”) and the recent induction of Joan Baez into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the ‘60s Village folk scene has been the focus of renewed attention. Tom will be celebrating his 80th at The Birchmere on October 28th and in NYC at  Pace Univeristy October 29th.

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Credit Polly Whitehorn
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Emily Pinkerton, Ellen Gozion and Rachel Eddy comprise the roots trio The Early Mays, who appear on Mountain Stage this Saturday in Elkins, WV.

Kaia Kater: A Portrait of a Young Quebecalachian

Since the show began almost two years ago, A Change of Tune has highlighted some of the best up-and-coming artists out of these West Virginia hills with podcast-y chats ranging from Tyler Childers to The World is a Beautiful Place…, The Sea The Sea to Qiet and beyond.  But those interviews have been a bit infrequent, and since West Virginia Day is coming up (not to mention A Change of Tune’s second birthday), we thought we’d do something special: 30 days, 30 brand new #WVmusic interviews that range from Morgantown alt-rockers and Parkersburg singer-songwriters to West Virginia music venues and regional artist management and beyond, all of which contribute to this state’s wild and wonderful music scene.

And today, we are chatting with recent Davis & Elkins College graduate Kaia Kater, a singer-songwriter who traveled from Quebec to West Virginia nearly four years ago to learn more about Appalachia‘s old-time music and culture. We sat down with Kaia in our Charleston studios to talk about her musical journey, her love of bluegrass and R&B, and her recent feature from Rolling Stone magazine.

Kaia Kater’s newest release is Nine Pin, now available for purchase, download, and streaming. You can hear more of her music on A Change of Tune, airing Saturday nights at 10 on West Virginia Public Broadcasting. And for more #WVMusic chats, make sure to go to wvpublic.org/wvmusic.

Interview Highlights

On being from Canada:

I’m from Montreal, Quebec. I grew up there for most of my life. Then I spent a little bit of time in Winnipeg, Manitoba. And I’m currently based in Toronto, Ontario.

It’s funny because I had very little appreciation for Canada until I left Canada. And then I was like, “Wow… things are pretty ok in Canada!” And so I think, living home was probably the best thing because now I have more of an appreciation for my country.

On falling in love with old-time music at a young age:

Actually my grandpa is a luthier. He used to build harpsichords and guitars, but he cut some of his thumb off in 2013… he’s ok! [Laughing] But I think that sort of cut his career short, but he was retiring anyway. At family gatherings and Christmases and birthdays, we would always gather around and have a kitchen party where we would play tunes. And it was always really exciting for me because it was the time I could stay up past my bedtime to listen to people sing and play. And sometimes I would just fall asleep listening to people singing. It was just really special for me.

I got into old-time music in a really odd way. My mom fell in love with bluegrass music when I was eight. And she was like, “Ok. We’re going to go to a bluegrass festival now!” So I just got carried along, and registration was free if you were under 11. It was actually Grey Fox Bluegrass Festival in Oak Hill [in New York], and they ran this Bluegrass Academy for Kids. It’s a really successful program, but at the beginning, it was basically [where] parents could drop off their kids at 9am and pick them up at 3pm and during that time, you would pick either banjo, bass, fiddle or violin. You would bring your own instrument, and all of these kids from 8- to 11-years-of-age would just hang around and learn how to play bluegrass music.

So I tried all of the different instruments. I tried fiddle and bass, and then I settled on the banjo. And I was determined to be a bluegrass banjo player, and somehow old-time swooped in like a hawk and picked me up, so I switched to clawhammer. And I think it’s because a lot of the teachers around me at home were clawhammer players and influenced me that way.

On becoming a professional musician:

You know when you discover your passion is when you trudge through your daily activities and chores and classes, and then at the end of the night, you’re like, “Ok. What do I really want to be doing?” And that was playing music for me.

And I think I was scared because I had seen a lot of musicians around me deal with touring. My mom was the executive director of the Ottowa Folk Festival and the Winnipeg Folk Festival. So a lot of musicians crashed at our house and hung out, and I think it was a really interesting education for me because I did see the darker side of touring, which is not being able to see your family. And some folks had drinking problems (not anything that was overwhelming, but it was a different way of life). And I think I was apprehensive about that, but there is a way to tour in a healthy way, I think. 

Credit Susan Bibeau – Beehive Productions
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Quebecer singer-songwriter Kaia Kater.

On deciding on West Virginia for old-time music education:

I had been going to a lot of old-time camps. I went to the Swannanoa Gathering outside of Asheville [in North Carolina], which is a little slice of heaven to spend a week to play clawhammer banjo and living in this community who are nerding out as much as you are. [Laughing] Like “I never want to go back to the outside world!” So I went there twice, and it was really my first introduction to the Southern United States because the furthest I had been was New York State.

I had actually wanted to go to Warren Wilson [College in Asheville, North Carolina] for the longest time, which is the location of the Swannanoa Gathering. It’s funny. I remember the exact moment I clicked on their website, wondering what their tuition was. And it was $42,000 a year or something. And I thought, “What?! Is that even possible?” I took a year off of school, and I didn’t expect to be going to school because I didn’t feel like anything interested me enough and the programs that did interest me, I couldn’t really afford. And I was ok with that. I just played a lot of music out in Montreal.

I casually applied to the Augusta Heritage Center, which is where Davis & Elkins College is. And I got this Facebook message from this guy named Jerry Milnes, who’s quite well-known. At first I thought it was spam. “Who is this person contacting me, offering me free college tuition to go to a school in Appalachia. Are they messing with me? Do they know my deepest dream somehow? [Laughing] Luckily I read through the whole thing, and I called him. My family and I went down exactly four years ago, we checked it out, and I loved it, and they offered me a financial package that made it so that I wouldn’t have to pay $42,000 a year. And the rest is history.

On the meaning behind Nine Pin, her latest release:

It’s named after a particular square dance formation where you have eight people (four couples) and in the middle you have one person, which what makes it a nine pin, and you dance around it. To me, it’s one of the most fun because everybody swings, and then everyone holds hands and dances around the nine pin, and then the caller says something like, “Break,” and basically the nine pin has to try and find a partner. And whoever doesn’t find a partner becomes the new nine pin. So it’s almost like musical chairs.

I started doing a lot more songwriting in my junior year of college, and I was thinking a lot about those formations and the deeper symbolism of being one person surrounded by a lot of people swirling around you (in both good and bad ways).

On her last four years at Davis & Elkins’ Augusta Heritage Center:

In many ways, it was a really beautiful experience. I was not even from this country, and I had so many people offer to have me over to their house for dinner. I don’t have a car, so I had a lot of people say, “Do you need me to take you to Kroger or Wal-Mart?” So I was met with a lot of warmth, and I think that made all the difference for me because there’s a certain amount of challenge moving to a new place and a new school.

There was a certain amount of what I call “ugly face crying,” which is when you cry so hard, your entire face turns red from sobbing and your snotting over yourself. So there was a fair amount of that from the experience of doing that for the first time. But at the end of the day, I settled into a routine, as you do. At the end of the four years, I wouldn’t be the same artist, I wouldn’t release the same music if I hadn’t spent these last four years here because I knew old-time music, and I was good at playing tunes, but I don’t think I understood the communities behind the music or the stories behind the music.  And that takes time. That just takes time.

On her recent inclusion in Rolling Stone’s recent 10 New Country Artists You Need to Know:

My publicist Devon Leger told me, “Listen I pitched your album [Nine Pin] to Rolling Stone, but I don’t know if they’re going to pick it up because they must have people flinging albums at them left and right.” [Laughing] And then all of a sudden, I get this frantic message from him and he’s like, “I need you to answer these four questions… it’s for a certain journalist.” I was like, “Ok…” So I answer them, sent them back. And he said, “That was for Rolling Stone!”

Credit Polina Mourzina
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Last May, Kaia Kater was listed as one of the best new artists to watch by Rolling Stone magazine.

So we knew they were going to say something about it, but we didn’t know that they would have such kind words about it. I felt totally honored and excited that more people would be hearing the album.

I almost peed my pants when they said I sounded like Gillian Welch. [Laughing] I was like, “Really? She’s my idol!” If I could have a shrine to Gillian Welch in my house, I probably would.

On advice to folks looking to pursue old-time music in West Virginia:

Go for it. Literally nothing bad can come of it. Classical music, you just have to sit in a room and practice and do scales and scales and scales. But with old-time music, you just find someone, play banjo and fiddle tunes for an hour, and you’ve gotten better at your instrument and having fun at the same time.

Music featured in this #WVmusic chat:

Kaia Kater- “Saint Elizabeth”

Kaia Kater- “Nine Pin”

Kaia Kater- “Paradise Fell”

Kais Kater- “To Come”

Mountain Stage to Return to Augusta Heritage Festival

NPR Music & West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s Mountain Stage with Larry Groce is proud to announce its return to the Augusta Heritage Festival on Saturday, August 13.

Now in its 33rd season, Mountain Stage will bring its live performance radio program to Davis & Elkins College on Saturday, August 13 to celebrate the Augusta Heritage Festival for a show at the Harper-McNeeley Auditorium at the Myles Center for the Arts in Elkins, WV. Audiences will participate in a recording that will be heard on over 170 NPR stations around the nation and on the top-ranking Mountain Stage Podcast.

Tickets are available starting today and can be purchased online or by phone at 304.637.1255. Click here, and read on, for ticket prices and festival information.

This August 13 concert will mark the Mountain Stage debut of Dori Freeman, a twenty-four-year-old singer-songwriter whose timeless Appalachian music has caught the ears of NPR Music, No Depression and even The New York Times, who had this to say:

“The purity of Dori Freeman’s voice and the directness of her songwriting reflect not only her Appalachian hometown — Galax, Va. — but also a determined classicism, a rejection of the ways modern country punches itself up for radio and arenas.”

Sample some of Dori Freeman’s latest release on NPR Music & WXPN’s World Cafe:

Joining Dori at this August 13 show will be the Grammy-nominated bluegrass bandBlue Highway, emerging bluegrass group Flatt Lonesome, and the Davis & Elkins Appalachian Ensemble, who were recently featured on an episode of West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s Inside Appalachia as they traveled along the Mountain Music Trail.

Critically-acclaimed multi-instrumentalist and Carolina Chocolate Drops founder Rhiannon Giddens will also perform on this August 13 show. Listeners might remember her last set on Mountain Stage, which brought the entire theater to their feet (and for good reason).

Tickets and more information can be found on mountainstage.org. Stay up to date on Mountain Stage show news and ticket deals by following us on Facebook, Twitter, & Instagram and signing up for our e-mail newsletter. If you’re looking to discover new music between now and then, subscribe to the Mountain Stage podcast on iTunes.

Augusta Heritage Center Refocuses on Arts, Crafts

The Augusta Heritage Center is known around the world for its many music workshops and jam sessions. But Augusta actually started as a way to keep traditional arts and crafts alive in Randolph County.

“Well, it’s gonna be a rabbit in the end,” Dorothy Steinbrueck said as she was chiseling away on a piece of alabaster stone under a hillside pavilion on the Davis & Elkins College campus earlier this week. She was surrounded by rock chips as she concentrated on the task at hand.

 

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting

“So, I started out with a pretty square stone and I’ve got some features that I kinda have to work with and one is that I’ve got a ridge here. So I’m trying to kinda incorporate that into one of the ears.”

 

Steinbrueck and her husband travelled to Elkins from Friedheim, Missouri, for the Augusta Heritage Center’s arts and music workshops. 

 

Steinbrueck’s instructor for the week was Kevin Stitzinger. He’s a stone artist who lives in Pocahontas County, near Greenbank. It’s the first time Stitzinger has taught at Augusta, but he used to live in Elkins and work at the college, so he’s very familiar with the workshop series.

 

“So, you know, well-versed in the idea, the feel of Augusta and was just really excited when they offered me the chance to come out and teach,” Stitzinger said.

 

Credit The Augusta Collection
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The Augusta Collection
Augusta participants build a go cabin during a workshop in 1985.

Augusta’s Roots

The roots of that ‘Augusta feel’ began growing 42 years ago. While many people associate Augusta with traditional music, Brittany Hicks says arts and crafts have been at the center’s core since it began in the fall of 1972.

 

“A group of local leaders were concerned that our craft traditions were dying away and they wanted to pass it on to the next generation,” she said.

 

Hicks is the Augusta Heritage Center’s program coordinator. She wrote her master’s thesis on the center’s history.

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Brittany Hicks

 

“So they primarily started Augusta as a craft program,” Hicks said.

 

She said that as the center’s music workshops became more popular during the 80s and 90s, people didn’t notice the crafts as much. Now, Hicks said, the center is trying to bring art back into the spotlight.

 

A Living Tradition

She said it’s important not to think of our heritage only in terms of museums and books on shelves.

 

“We’re not just about preserving a tradition. A tradition is not a static thing, tradition is a changing thing. It’s a living tradition, so as you pass it from one person to another, it’s going to change and evolve and the idea is to share it with the next generation,” Hicks said. 

 

To fulfill that mission, Augusta offers a variety of craft and art-related classes during its five-week summer program — everything from the stone carving we heard about earlier to blacksmithing, printmaking and fine arts like drawing, sculpting and painting.

 

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Some of Michael Doig’s artwork in progress.

 

“I consider the fine arts to also be heritage arts as well,” Michael Doig said. He’s the assistant professor of art at Davis and Elkins College during the school year, but this summer he’s serving as Augusta’s arts and crafts coordinator. 

 

“Music is certainly something I support and it’s one of the things that has brought me here and kept me here for many years. We just want to give the visual artists an experience and feel that they’re being take care of paid attention to as well.”

 

Augusta Festival

The summer workshops culminate in this weekend’s Augusta Festival, which includes a fine arts show on Saturday, Aug. 8, in the Elkins City Park. More than 50 regional artists will be selling everything from one-of-kind wood and stone carving to jewelry, painting, photography and much more. 

 

Many of Augusta’s instructors will have their own work for sale at the show this year. Doig says that offers the students an education beyond just learning a particular craft.

Credit Kevin Stitzinger
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A stone sculpture Kevin Stitzinger produced for the Cass Railway.

“Not only are they coming in and learning how to make something, but we want to teach them how to sell that thing, you know, how to put their best foot forward when they’re trying to get their product to the market,” he said.

Augusta is bringing arts and crafts to life on Saturday through several demonstrations, where people can watch the artists at work and try things out for themselves.

 

“They’ll get to see the process, like the tintype photography,” Hicks said. “Lisa Elmaleh, the photographer, is gonna show people the camera, she’s gonna take a photo and they’ll get to watch as she processes the image and see how it works.”

 

Hicks said the show is free so as many people as possible can take part. The festival is kid-friendly, too. There will be a tent with activities for children of all ages, including painting, crafts and theatre activities.

 

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Back at the stone-carving class, instructor Kevin Stitzinger said he’s sold his work at the Augusta Festival for the past five years and is looking forward to doing so again on Saturday.

 

“When I am at art shows, I thoroughly encourage people to interact with the stone by feel. You Gotta touch it. I get in trouble from parents because they just got done telling their kids not to touch the artwork and I’m like, ‘Get in there, you know, you’re gonna love it,’ ” he said.

 

As this summer’s workshop series draws to a close this weekend, it’s obvious that artists like Stitzinger are helping Augusta keep Appalachia’s heritage alive and well.

 

Andrew Carroll and Stacey DaBaldo contributed to this story

 

Credit Andrew Carroll
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Dorothy Steinbrueck works on her rabbit sculpture in Kevin Stitzinger’s Augusta stone carving class at Davis & Elkins College in Elkins.

From Augusta: Teenage West Virginian Finds Pride in Fiddle

It’s Old-Time, Vocal, and American Vernacular Dance Week at the Augusta Heritage Center of Davis & Elkins College. Countless individuals have come to…

It’s Old-Time, Vocal, and American Vernacular Dance Week at the Augusta Heritage Center of Davis & Elkins College. Countless individuals have come to learn everything from African-American String Band Traditions and Square Dance Calling to Balkan Harmony Singing and 19th Century Banjo Music.  For one young West Virginian, Augusta has opened up the world of fiddle music.

Fourteen-year-old Kiara Williams of Rock Cave, West Virginia began playing two years ago in her school’s orchestra program, but she wanted to learn more. So she started experimenting.

“I started looking up sheet music and trying to figure out all these fiddle tunes,” Kiara said, “and then I just started doing new bowing techniques and new things on my fiddle.”

She first came to Augusta for Cajun Week last summer at the urging of instrument repairman and musician Bob Smakula.

This year she came back to Cajun Week and even started to pick up the accordion. She also took classes during Bluegrass and Old Time Week – and she says it’s made a big difference in her playing. Kiara says she especially loves playing fiddle for Square Dances.

“Just watching people smile whenever they’re dancing while you’re playing is really nice because you know they’re enjoying it.”

For Kiara being a West Virginia fiddler is something special.

“I love West Virginia and how West Virginia people play their instruments and being in West Virginia and playing fiddle is just really cool.”

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