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11th July 14, 07:47 AM
#1
Killted Bluegrass Saturday Nite
Banjo man Eric and I, High Lonesome Valley are playing bluegrass tonite at the Yak & Cracker (yes, real yak burgers) in Crestone, Colorado, up around 9000 feet, 6-9 PM Saturday 7/12/14. I'll be kilted, Eric is still in the repentance stage of conversion. I'm working on him, however. He's a 6'4" stout Viking who is fitted for a classic kilt.
The debuting of the MacLaren SW Thrifty Kilt, easy to wash the customers' spilt beer out. Some cover tunes, some original. Some bluegrass, some bluegrass gospel. Bluegrass covers anything from shooting Little Sadie, wishing you were back home in the cabin in the hills, and, of course, drinking and distilling moonshine. Bluegrass gospel is, well, all about the Gospel. If you don't like the bluegrass song your listening to, stick around, you're bound to like the next.
Why kilts and bluegrass? Bill Monroe, the great bluegrass mandolin player, said "Scottish bagpipes and ole-time fiddlin'. It's Methodist and Holiness and Baptist (I'll add "and Presbyterian"). It's blues and jazz, and it has a high lonesome sound."
High lonesome bluegrass harmonies sound awful much like the pipes, the lead singer the chanter and the harmonies the drones, drawing long notes out of the bags we call lungs.
And who will be able to forget the bluegrass band with that guy with a kilt?
Have a great day and via con Dios from the wooly and wild San Luis Valley, home of Black Bart and his gang.
Last edited by Half Scot Half Pole; 11th July 14 at 07:48 AM.
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11th July 14, 08:04 AM
#2
Sounds like a blast! I'd be there in a heartbeat if I were still in the Santa Fe area. Bill Monroe's birthplace is about 30 minutes from where I've spent most of my life, so bluegrass is big around here.
Are there any recordings of you guys playing?
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11th July 14, 08:23 AM
#3
Sounds like a blast!(Hmmm sounds like someone said that before me). Just watch out for Elk on the way home.
Crestone is one of my favorite places. The last time that I was there I had lunch in a wonderful little grocery store/cafe. Even though I have shoulder length hair and a full beard I was still the most conservative, clean cut guy there.
Last edited by gordontaos; 11th July 14 at 08:24 AM.
Si Deus, quis contra? Spence and Brown on my mother's side, Johnston from my father, proud member of Clan MacDuff!
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11th July 14, 10:32 AM
#4
No recordings yet, my hard drive went down recently on my studio, but hopefully soon.
Gordonintaos, you hit the nail on the head about Crestone. If you walked into town backwards on your hands wearing your kilt on your head and screaming obscenities, a tourista would ask you for directions.
Last edited by Half Scot Half Pole; 11th July 14 at 10:35 AM.
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11th July 14, 10:41 AM
#5
I'm from Alamosa and it's good to know you guys are workin' the San Luis Valley. Can't make it to Crestone tonight, but, perhaps will be able to one of these times. Keep me posted on your schedule and will definately be watching for you at Milagros. Crestone is a slightly different crowd, all right. I'm sure that wearing a kilt there will raise nary an eyebrow--you can see most anything there.
Jack
I hold the truth in such high regard, I use it sparingly!
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11th July 14, 05:46 PM
#6
Awesome! Kilts and bluegrass are two of my favourite things in life. I tend not to mix them, though, mainly because playing my mandolin in a kilt seems awkward. My sporran has to move out of the way, and I worry about scratching the back on a buckle or something. I mainly just play at home with my wife, house concerts, at local jams, and small-venue public events.
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16th August 14, 05:08 AM
#7
Bill Monroe was very aware of his Scottish heritage. In 1982 I painted an oil on canvas of him and presented it to him in Maine at the Thomas Point Beach Bluegrass Festival and when I told him I was a Duncan he said "that's Scottish, that's where my people come from" and shook my hand. The painting hangs in his museum at Bean Blossom.
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