My Associates
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The Latter-Day Lizards
The Lizards are a New England based dance band
featuring a quartet of musicians fervent with the desire and talent to
ignite flames under dancing feet. With a wide ranging and hopelessly eclectic
repertoire including everything from Irish and Scottish traditional jigs
and reels to Balkan, blues and swing tunes (often juxtaposed next to each
other) the Latter Day Lizards bring excellent musicianship, playfulness,
drama and unrelentingly infectious rhythm to their dance performances.
With Peter Barnes on piano, guitar and flute, Bill Tomczak on clarinet, sax and
drum and Dave Langford on fiddle and guitar, they blend swing, rock-and-roll and
jazz influences with traditional foot-stomping dance music to make an
innovative, spontaneous and rhythmically inflammatory sound. The Latter-Day
Lizards are slithering at
http://www.latterdaylizards.com
Bare Necessities
Imagine four incurable romantics armed with
musical instruments transported back to play the stately dances,
bawdy melodies and flirtatious dance tunes of the 17th and 18th centuries.
Picture the members of this quartet as being known throughout present-day
America as leaders in the instrumental folk-music scene. Equip them
with an unerring sense for the nuance of beauty coupled
with touches
of humor, and you'll have a good idea of the sound of Bare Necessities.
Bare Necessities is a Boston-based quartet known nationwide for its
unique presentation of English country dance music. The quartet, composed
of Earl Gaddis and Mary Lea (violin and viola), Peter Barnes (flute and
whistles), and Jacqueline Schwab (piano) has been playing weekly country
dances since 1978, performing music primarily from the 17th and 18th centuries.
They have toured in England as a band and have played for concerts, festivals,
workshops, balls and dance camps throughout the United States and Canada
over the years. In the course of concertizing and dance playing, they have
become increasingly free in their improvisatory explorations of these beautiful
melodies. The resulting sound is that of both chamber and folk music, yet
extraordinarily inventive and playful with its interweaving of harmonies
and countermelodies. Bare Necessities has their own web page at
http://www.sover.net/~marylea/bnhome.htm
Dark Carnival
An eclectic, we'll-play-whatever-you-throw-at-us-and have-a-good-time-doing-it trio hired for contradances, English dances, waltz and vintage dance events, bar-mitzvahs, weddings and rent parties. Lise Brown on flute and sax, Mary Lea on violin and Peter Barnes on piano and guitar.
Yankee Ingenuity
Excellent musicianship, wide-ranging repertoire and styles and a sense of drama and playfulness within the framework of good dance music have contributed to Yankee Ingenuity' s unique sound and place in the folk music and dance communities. One of the oldest ongoing bands in the country specializing in contra and square dance music, its members are kept busy playing Irish, French- Canadian and Appalachian-based dance music for an ever-widening audience.
Almost entirely a local phenomenon a few decades ago, traditional New
England dancing is thriving in an atmosphere of renewed
interest across
the country. Contra dancing uses dance steps and figures similar to square
dancing except that it is done in long lines of people facing each other.
It is a more accessible and informal style of dancing than the widespread
Western or club style of square dancing and is finding great appeal among
younger people both in rural areas and the nation's cities. Live music
is always played for these dance events, the musicians drawing upon a vast
repertoire of British Isles, Canadian and American jigs, reels and waltzes,
many of which are two or three hundred years old. Yankee Ingenuity takes
this music and plays it in a style reflecting both their respect for the
tradition and their own more modern roots. Swing, rock and roll and jazz
influences blend with simple drones or unaccompanied melody lines to make
music that is both exciting and familiar, modern yet based in folk traditions,
spontaneous and rhythmically precise. Synthesizers and drums join
violins and pennywhistles in a cohesive and vibrant mix which has inspired
both dancers and listeners alike for over a decade and a half.
The members of Yankee Ingenuity come from diverse backgrounds within the traditional dance music world and have appeared at dance events, festivals, television programs and concerts from the Pacific Northwest to Denmark, France, Scotland and most areas in between. Members of the band are Peter Barnes - piano, synthesizer, flute and whistle,Cal Howard - string bass, Mary Lea - fiddle, Jack O'Connor - tenor banjo , mandolin, octave mandolin, and Tony Parkes - piano and dance caller.
Yankee Ingenuity can be heard on their latest album Heatin' Up The Hall
on the Rounder/Varrick label (No. VR-038). The schedule for Y.I.'s Monday Night
contra series is at
http://lydiamusic.org/concord.html
Childsplay
Childsplay's two dozen musicians are made up
some of the leading virtuosos in traditional dance, jazz, swing, English
country, Appalachian and Swedish music. When playing altogether the sound
is a vibrant, powerful and eclectic experience which surrounds listeners
and dancers alike - playful, innovative and driving. In smaller groupings
Childsplay's members can authentically present the elegance of 17th century
English dance music, the lilting beauty of Celtic jigs and airs, the driving
rhythms of hoedowns from the mountains of Southern United States, the smoky
improvisations of jazz or the wild syncopations of chorinho music from
Brazil and Venezuela.
Tying together these far-ranging stylists are their instruments
- each of the musicians plays a violin made by band member Bob Childs.
In his workshop in Cambridge, Massachusetts Bob produces instruments with
a deep, sweet and dark sound whose quality has captured the interest of
leading string performers throughout the United States and beyond. The
list of owners of his violins and violas is a roll call of America's eminent
folk instrumentalists, including Matt Glaser, Ruthie Dornfeld, Mary Lea,
Joyce Anderson, Laura Light, Kerry Elkin, Mark Simos, Deborah Knight and
many other notables.
Amongst this sea of fiddlers premier bassist Ralph Gordon and I ride
herd on the rhythm. Childsplay is an impossibly fun gig, and the sound
ranges from light jazzy solo styles to Also Sprach Zarathustra. The band
has two recordings, Twelve-Gated City and an album of waltzes.
Childplay has performed at many concerts and dances throughout
the United States including the Smithsonian Institute (the National
Museum for History and Art and the Museum of American Culture) in Washington,
D.C., Camp WannaDance Uptown in Seattle, the Victoria's Revenge Dance weekend
in Cape May, New Jersey (1995 and 1996) and the New England Folk Festival.
More information at
http://www.childsplay.org/