Monday, October 24, 2011

WFC 2012 Announced!!

For those of you that have been wondering....thanks for the interest and the emails of support.

YES, Winter Folk Camp is a go for 2012. Once again, we will gather at YMCA Camp Wanakita for 3 days of music, outdoor adventure, and amazing community. Put the dates on your calendar:
March 2-5


Once again, we have a stellar list of artists-in-residence. They are :
If you have been before, you know what a great weekend it is. If you haven't......sign up soon!

Thursday, March 10, 2011

We go down to the river....

"Take me to the river. Drop me in the water." Al Green


Hard to believe that I was saying goodbyes to folks just a couple of days ago. I am still basking in the light of so many incredible musical moments. Anyone who has attended any kind of music camp knows that the experience is much greater than the sum of it's parts: WFC is no exception. Yes, there are moments that will live on as distinct memories. Moments like:

  • David Woodhead's solo ukelele performance
  • David Archibald; "I'm a rose between two thorns" Suzie Vinnick: "No, you're the icing between 2 cookies"
  • An all-camp gospel sing that raised roofs and spirits
  • Waking up to 10 cm of fresh snow on Sunday, after all-day rain on Saturday
  • Beginner guitar students getting a standing O after their first public performance
  • The look of joy on someones face after their first-ever cross-country ski.
and many, many  more. Every person reading this will have their own list of moments; memories that will catch you over the coming weeks and months and cause you to smile.

Running between and through those moments is something else.... the real power of an experience like WFC: the sense of community. The warmth, support, and joy that inspires everyone to stretch a bit....to walk to the edge of their own musical comfort zone and say "I can take one more step." It is the river that runs through our experience.

That is why we come; why we drive long distances, sleep in cabins with strangers, stay up too late and get up too early, lug instruments from building to building, sit on hard benches at meals....

Some of us come to listen, some to drink. Some to stick our toes in, others to dive right in. Some of us come to replenish the river, some come to get replenished. For some of us it rages, for others it murmurs. Some of us come to watch from the banks, others come to get carried away.....

Thanks to all of you who came and helped create this river....I look forward to doing it again with you.

"Running the big rapids is like sex: half the fun lies in the anticipation. Two thirds of the thrill with the approach. The remainder is only ecstasy-or darkness."  Edward Abbey

Friday, February 25, 2011

Still some spots left.


We still have some spaces available at WFC. Streams that we are still accepting folks for:
Anne Lederman: fiddle: just a couple of spaces left.
Eve Goldberg: beginner/int guitar
Georgette Fry: community choir
David Archibald: songwriting
David Woodhead: playing well together: a few spaces left.

You can register at here, or contact me directly: singingdog1@gmail.com

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Radio interview with Anne Lederman

100.9 Canoe FM
The best community radio station in the world, Canoe FM, is doing an amazing job of helping to promote Winter Folk Camp. Mike Jaycock, the morning host, has been doing interviews with our artists-in-residence over the past month. Tomorrow morning at 8:10 AM, his guest is WFC fiddle instructor Anne Lederman. Tune in for some great chat and some great tunes.

Monday, February 14, 2011

WFC Ceilidhs announced

We went to a new format last year: more of a kitchen party idea than a straight concert. If you are familiar with the workshop format that is so common at festivals, then it will be familiar to you: 3 artists share the stage and a certain amount of time (with very little rehearsal time). The mix of collaboration/individual performance is up to them. If you missed the ceilidhs last year, you missed a couple of memorable evenings.

Imagine a "rapping folk singer" (Rodrigo's description of Ian Tamblyn), a latin guitar virtuoso/percussionist (Rodrigo Chavez), and a canadian fiddle/stepdance champion (Cindy Thompson Butineau) sharing the stage for the first time: sparks flew!!! The next evening was a little more musically homogenous, but no less magical: Paul Mills, Eve Goldberg and Linda Morrison cooked up a brew of songwriting goodness that was much greater than the sum of it's formidable parts.

This year we have put the following "ingredients" together. Stir and stew for a couple of days and the results are bound to be tasty.

Saturday Night: David Archibald, Suzie Vinnick, Anne Lederman
Sunday Night: Eve Goldberg, Georgette Fry, and David Woodhead