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Wednesday, June 26, 2019

The Custer Myth: History, Music & the Arts Can, and Should, Inform Our Perspectives. June 26 2019 special feature

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Hang on, options abound! As in, trail junction, so Whoa up there, pard...

The LATEST EVENTS EDITION, most recently updated SATURDAY, June 29, at 8:30 am, has our coverage of festivals, concerts, film events, gallery openings, musicals, other live theatre, and quite literally, MUCH more. Get yersef  there directly at:

https://acousticamericana.blogspot.com/2019/06/whole-lotta-goings-on-goin-on-mid-june.html

Right here, where you are now, is a short, one-topic special edition. 
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The Custer Myth: History, Music & the Arts Can, and Should, Inform Our Perspectives, without the Past Being Hijacked

A look at the music, the myth, and the facts, and why we can't seem to reconcile things

The Battle of the Little Bighorn was fought in remote Montana, while it was part of Dakota Territory, on June 25, 1876. Hang on. We know you're saying, "That anniversary was Tuesday!" Yes it was. There's a reason we're presenting this today. It's because of when and how legacies take hold AFTER something happens, and how legends come from mythmaking, and how and why that starts.

      Every generation tends to think of events happening during their lifetime as shockingly significant and bigger than anything that ever happened. In June of 1876, America was about to celebrate its 100th birthday with a massive Centennial Exposition and hundreds of carefully planned celebrations from coast to coast. Then, on the very eve of the Fourth of July, word arrived from remote Montana that a Civil War hero and his entire command had been massacred by Indians -- by "savages" the public believed were subdued and pacified.

It was that era's 9/11. Irrational acts that contradicted white society's proclaimed morals followed the shock. In one example, Buffalo Bill Cody would ride to fame with his "Wild West Show" after "Taking the first scalp for Custer," and he would re-enact it for decades as part of that show.

What Happened, vs Myths and Legends that Become Dominant 

      The Little Bighorn is a river in Montana that flows north. But its name is remembered as the place where George Armstrong Custer, a possible candidate for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination, was killed along with all the officers and men in his battlefield contingent of the U.S. 7th Cavalry.

"Spirit Warrior" bronze sculpture, a recent addition, looms over the horizon
at Little Bighorn National Monument. Photo: Meteor Blades
      It required years for the battle to be interpreted as an existential necessity for the Lakotah (Sioux), Cheyenne, and their allies, who had rebelliously left their reservations because the treaties they had signed with the U.S. government had proven worthless, and their people were starving. Even after that recognition, there was widespread opposition to featuring Native heroics and sacrifice, starting with renaming the battlefield.

      Today, the bronze "Spirit Warrior" sculpture in the photo looms over the horizon at the Indian Memorial at Little Bighorn National Monument. It used to be, until 1991, that the place was named "Custer National Monument," and inclusion of a monumental Native American component at the site was even longer in coming. The sculpture by Ogala artist Colleen Cutschall depicts three Native American warriors riding off to battle. 

      Still, neither old traditional tales, including, graphically, the most famous Budweiser mural to hang above frontier saloon bars (it appears below) -- nor the dozens of movies and countless other artistic and literary depictions of the battle, and eventually, the inevitable parade of revisionist historians' portrayals -- usually attempt to inclusively present much of the entire context. 

   Yes, Custer was the 23-year-old "boy general" cavalry hero of the Union in the Civil War; that IS true. In fact, Confederate General J.E.B. Stuart's attack on the rear of the Union position at Gettysburg would have succeeded on July 3, 1863, had Custer not thrown his Michigan Cavalry Brigade headlong into that isolated but pivotal fray behind the name-brand part of THE decisive battle in Robert E. Lee's bid to win the war by invasion of the North.

      Also true, Custer finished at the bottom of his class at West Point -- but who can remember who finished first in that class, despite the fact they all became officers in the Civil War? That says something all by itself. 

      And something more that's true, regiments under Custer's command captured more Confederate battle flags and took more prisoners of war than any other. Part of the Custer Myth? Yes, and also fact.

      But the primary cliches, of Custer being (a) characterized by recklessness, and (b) having a visceral contempt of Native American Indians, are just not true.

      There is plenty of evidence that Custer had an Indian mistress whom he repeatedly visited in a teepee in her band's village. He was not reviled there, and he went there alone.

      In fact there were Native Americans on both sides in the battle. Custer's scouts, with whom he had close friendships, were mostly from the Crow nation. 

       And it wasn't just the blue-uniformed troopers who died on June 25th. In fact, most of them did NOT die, after surviving being besieged atop a shallow bowl-shaped hill, under command of Custer's subordinates, Maj. Marcus Reno and Capt. William Benteen. Both of them helped precipitate disaster; and with them were surviving members of the detachment led by Capt. Weir, whose efforts to reach and rescue Custer's unit got as close as modern-day Weir Point.

      The thing you've always heard about the Black Hills of (now) South Dakota being ancient sacred lands of the Sioux? Not until the Sioux ran the Crow out of those hills, which had been their ancient sacred lands. Which explains why the Crow, wanting the Sioux defeated and subdued, were with Custer and the cavalry.

      So if it was about the Black Hills, why did this happen in Montana? The many millions of buffalo that had roamed the plains from Texas into Canada had been reduced to just one sizeable herd. And that herd was in Montana. The buffalo -- to say it correctly, American Bison -- was the commissary of all Native American nations on the plains. No buffalo meant starvation, or subservience to the white invaders, or both. Defying orders from the military and leaving the reservation to seek the buffalo was an existential decision.

      In 2017, the popular annual re-enactment of the battle in Montana, just a few miles from where it happened, was the lead feature story on CBS "Sunday Morning." That piece by Mo Rocca covered multiple topics including some relevant obscure ones, interviewed Native re-enactors, and is worth watching here

      We have written about the battle before, and you can use the search function to find several past years' features. But we're keeping this fresh and not sending you off to chase links of our own past treatments. 

      We decided a fresh look was needed, in the light of our previous efforts, because in light of current events, we saw history not repeating but rhyming, and then we saw something else, specifically.

     Tuesday's Daily Kos has a story by their staff writer Meteor Blades titled, "On this date 143 years ago, America began creating the Custer myth, much of which survives today"
 (https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2019/6/25/1867186/-On-this-date-143-years-ago-America-began-creating-the-Custer-myth-much-of-which-survives-today)

      The Daily Kos story is accurate as far as it goes, and it includes a good measure of context and an excellent if brief reading list with its references. But it seems to justify its omissions with the blanket idea that the Custer Myth must be un-done, seemingly by purging its every trace. Thing is, that myth is inclusive of facts that need their convolutions undone, a fuller context applied, and the justifications for their long period of cultural acceptance examined.

      We aren't writing here to challenge the points of substance raised by Mr. Blades, but to enable consideration, and even to amplify, a few points and expand the context beyond where he went.

       While not claiming to be an expert on the Custer battle, your editor has been over the ground there, as well as reading about and studying the battle and what led up to it. 

      Writing this taps the indelible memory of riding the battlefield on horseback with the late Joe Medicine Crow, last war chief of the Crow Nation. It was June 25th, the anniversary date of the battle. It was just the two of us, our horses, Joe's dog, the indigenous wildlife, the tall grasses undulating in the breeze, the big sky, and sounds and scents of a series of places so gently beautiful that the horror of what happened on that distant June 25th seems inconceivable. 

      More than anything, viewing the rises and falls of the landscape -- fording the narrow, rushing river on horseback at the places where Reno's command did, to attack a narrow end of a massive, but not visible encampment; riding up Medicine Tail Coulee and the other routes the Indians raced up into the heights to stop Custer; going into the tangle of trees on the riverbank where Reno's charge fell apart; hearing bird songs while riding up steep draws on the route of the Indian counterattack; seeing Last Stand Hill from atop Weir Point; and more, much of it on ground outside the National Monument -- and having a most remarkable guide who grew up there, talking and sharing and listening to encourage us to work together, he and I, to evaluate and explain things. It allowed me not just to see, but experience, as much as possible, the landforms as the participants saw them aboard their horses. 

      In the same context, learning that the sharp line of ridgetop had disappeared without a trace, when the Park Service built the visitor road, helps to understand why seemingly obvious things were invisible to cavalry participants and decisively useful to counterattacking Natives.

       Riding those routes of the battle's participants, up from the wide bulge of meadow that held the massive gathering of tribal bands whose members knew the ground and were rushing to protect their families -- and the route of the precipitating participants, the cavalry who lured themselves into the fatal notions they developed without opportunity for reconsideration, informs everything about what actions were actually open to the people who took part.

Contrasting images, conflicting views of deadly conflict as civilizations collide
"Custer’s Last Fight" hung above every saloon bar in America. The oldest piece of
American breweriana known to exist, Anheuser-Busch commissioned the original
painting by Cassilly Adams in 1884, and a lithograph was made from it by F. Otto
Becker in 1889. Note the African Zulu warrior shields, "borrowed" from images of
a British colonial war also fought to "expand civilization."
Depiction made by Native participant Kicking Bear, aka Matȟó Wanáȟtaka, an Ogala Lakota who was a first cousin of war chief Crazy Horse (Tȟašúŋke Witkó). Painted at the request of Frederic Remington in 1898, as he remembered the "Battle of the Greasy Grass," the Indian name for the Battle of the Little Big Horn. (Spelling of Native names from Meteor Blades.)
      Research to understand which options they chose, and why, requires developing an understanding of who they were and what they knew, or thought they knew, on that fateful day.

      It isn't myth that Custer believed he was being supported by an entire army that, unknown to him, had been defeated a few days earlier in the truly greatest victory of the Plains Indians over U.S. troops. Strangely, that part is usually left out -- and has been since the 1870s, when the army didn't want its living generals to look bad.

      To some extent, the dead Custer became the fall guy, the scapegoat to protect the reputations of others with career ambitions.

      A popular belief resurrected since the movie "Little Big Man" is that Custer was crazy with hubris, and just plain insane. The historical record says otherwise.

      We are always ill-served by simplistic myths that overemphasize false notions from any direction, particularly when somebody has an agenda to pursue or an axe to grind.

      Custer was, not unlike Patton 65 years later, a harsh taskmaster who allowed himself many contradictory and even flamboyant excesses, holding himself in a place beyond his rules for subordinates. But Patton, who could read all his adversary's communication dispatches, thanks to the "Ultra" secret, ended-up an unquestionable success. And Custer had only scouts reading smoke and trail signs (yes, they did tell him he was heading into a massive gathering of Indians) but he
 is sensationally and mythically remembered for the battle he lost rather than for his brilliant Civil War career.

      There is always more to know. We wrote that paragraph without yet knowing that only two officers are referenced in "The Army Goes Rolling Along," the official U.S. Army theme song -- the two are George Custer and George Patton. (Odd, when you consider the first commander of the army was also a George, as in Washington, and he's left out.)

      Eighteenth century people, particularly men, placed a large value on the pursuit of glory. People were judged in those terms. Today, we seem less able to allow for that difference in perspectives than to abruptly ridicule it.

      The larger point is, there's a big bucket in which our culture enjoys dumping things, labelled "Disaster Caused by Hubris of Runaway Ego." It popularly includes the RMS Titanic sailing too fast and hitting an iceberg; launching the Space Shuttle Challenger after its o-rings froze; believing the Alamo could be held in the face of the entire Mexican army; sending Pickett's Charge into the Union center; the charge of the Light Brigade; Thermopylae; rushing the Apollo 1 spacecraft into production before assessing it for flammables and electrical sparks; most recently, putting complicated autopilot features into 737 MAX commercial airliners that crash the airplane and exprcting it won't be a problem; and plenty more that you can add.

      Go ahead. Name more. But do it knowing that relentlessly simplistic labelling of our short-attention-span society deprives us of any opportunity to understand much when we oversimplify it, whether it's dissecting the past or analyzing the present. Every time and any time we allow ourselves to smugly accept the simplistic answer to complex conditions or circumstances, we set ourselves up to be satisfird with "answers" that are incomplete, and therefore, probably wrong.

      As for why we asked you to read this, after the anniversary date of an event? We could say, "that should be obvious by now," but wouldn't that betray what we just said, and exhaust your patience, by asking you to settle for excessive simplicity?

     And as for the beginning of the "Custer Myth" which underlies the Daily Kos piece that got us started? In fact, its author asserts -- if his title does not -- that the genesis of that myth started with the widowed Elizabeth "Libby" Custer. We'll add that she proved herself one of the greatest legend-makers in American history. We'll also point out that the Custer Myth therefore did not start with the still-bleeding corpses of cavalrymen at Little Bighorn, contrary to Mr. Blades' story title.

      Libby Custer is worth study as a substantial historical figure and pioneer in an arena beyond her authorship of four books. Her successful mythmaking predates everything we might attribute to the madmen of Madison Avenue. Or the recent multi-season cable tv myth about them and their era of imagemaking advertising. After all, kind of "image-over-substance" salesmanship would elect Ronald Reagan, and er, more recent marketers of sizzle with no steak. Granted, Libby had her late husband's heroics in the Civil War to build on. But it took a long time for the public consciousness to "discover" that the hero had an 1868 massacre of Black Kettle's Southern Cheyenne camp on the Washita River near present-day Cheyenne, Oklahoma.

      Libby is a fascinating character. Instead of allowing the salacious and titillating tales of her husband's Indian lover to take hold, the grieving widow martyred herself, never re-marrying after portraying him in the perfect, fairy-tale relationship with her -- and as the shining knight of civilization, giving his life subduing the savage. Now, isn't that a better topic to examine, anyway?

       Is it just us, or are there echoes here in our reflex of worship of today's veterans who were sent, in our name, to destroy entire countries and leave survivors homeless (in the ruins of the cities they had once worked to build) and instead leave them "free" of regimes we don't like? 

      History isn't about the incontrovertible dead past. The past is prologue to all that comes. And much of what has come has been musical. That's extensively covered as we continue with listening and video links, next.

Music: Comedy, Custer, Dramatis, the Battle, the Myths, and Our Cultural Contradictions

      An astonishing amount of music has invoked Custer and the Little Bighorn. Here's our picks for important examples, with video or audio links.

David Wilkie & Cowboy Celtic, with The McDades, recorded their original folksong, "Custer Died A Runnin'" and named the album for the song which incorporates the "Garry Owen." Their take on things is obvious, though history says otherwise. Still, it's musically superb.  Listen here.

"Garryowen" was adopted  as th
e 7th Cavalry's theme song in 1867. It's an old Irish quick-step that goes back to the early 1680s. Every cavalry movie has used it, some as the soundtrack for inspiring nick-of-time rescues by the arrival of the cavalry, others as the ironicly tragic soundtrack for troops committing massacres of Indians. Hear the Eastman Wind Ensemble rendition, with original lyrics, which has 1,342,590 views, here

"Mister Custer" / "Please Mister Custer, I Don't Want to Go" was a 1960 Number-1 hit song by Larry Verne. (Listen here.)  A "marching novelty song" written by Al De Lory, Fred Darian, and Joseph Van Winkle, it topped the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart for the week of October 10, 1960, and remained on radio play lists for years. Verne released 9 versions, 7 of them in 1960, plus it was put on K-Tel vinyl and tape compilations into the '70s. Ray Stevens put it on "Gitarzan" in 1969. His celebrated fourth studio album propelled the song to again enjoy airplay and popularity, this time as an expression of resistance to the Vietnam War. Stevens' version, stylistically very different from the original, is here.

Johnny Cash's 1964 archetypal concept album, "Bitter Tears: Ballads of the American Indian" included the song "Custer." In it, the Man in Black mocks the popular veneration of George Custer. It was his 20th album release on Columbia Records, and an entire record evoking the perspective of what Native Americans had that was stolen from them. A latter-day live performance by Johnny Cash with Marty Stuart is here.  You can hear the complete original album here

Buffy Sainte-Marie, a Native American singer-songwriter who hit the mainstream of '60s folk-rock, did a truncated version of the Johnny Cash "Custer" song as a concert cover, which she called "Custer Song." It's here. Notably, she also wrote the song "Soldier Blue," subtitled "The Custer Girl." It was used in a movie that did well in Europe but was abruptly pulled from theatres in the U.S. Watch her live music vid of that song here.
 

Redbone, the first Native American rock band to reach the mainstream, recorded their song "Custer Had It Coming" on their 1989 album, "Peace Pipe." Listen here.

Johnny Horton's 1960 song "Jim Bridger" prominently features Custer in its lyrics: "He spoke with General Custer and said 'Listen Yellow Hair / 'The Sioux are a great nation, so treat 'em fair and square / 'Sit in on their war council, don't laugh away their pride' / But Custer didn't listen, and at Little Big Horn Custer died." Listen here.

"The Army Goes Rolling Along," the official U.S. Army theme song originally written by John Philip Souza in 1917, acquired modified lyrics in the 1950s. In them, George Custer and George Patton become the only officers named in the Army's official song. (Odd, when you consider the first commander of the army was also a George -- as in, Washington.) Music vid from an album of U.S. Military Bands, with on-screen lyrics, is here.



Especially important is a brilliantly choreographed scene with a rousing Hollywood music score, for Custer's key Civil War cavalry charge at Gettysburg. It's from the largely fantasy 1941 epic, "They Died with Their Boots On," casting Errol Flynn in THE role that inflated the Custer Myth into the mid-20th century, and Olivia DeHavilland as Libby Custer, whose role as
archetype mythmaker is established in the movie's final scene. This film is Hollywood magic depicting the Custer you wish had been. Watch and listen to that scene here

Check-out these for accounts by Native American participants, turned to video

First is "Crazy Horse's Account of the Battle of the Little Bighorn" as it appeared in the Bismarck Tribune, June 11, 1877, just a year after the battle. It's a video reading, produced with period photos and maps. Incongruously, it includes the white man's music -- "Garry Owen" and "The Girl I left Behind" -- performed by the Brass Mounted Army band. It's here.

The other is "The Battle Of Little Bighorn: Chief Two Moon's Own Words - June 25-26th 1876" an account from his meeting with Hamlin Garland, published in September 1898 in McClure's Magazine. Video reading is here.
 


Custer is still a popular subject for limited-edition heroic military lithographs
Through it all, the power of the arts has played a key role. From Libby Custer's literary campaigns, to America's most-distributed saloon poster, to songs and soundtracks, to a brisk market for limited-edition heroic military lithographs, it's been working its influences for over 140 years. Art has played a role of such demonstrable importance that it makes all things Custer worthy of study as successful examples of imagemaking, propaganda, and how portrayals in the most advantageous manner can produce enduring mythical heroes. And it should compel us to ask if our art serves in a manner for which we would like to be remembered.


      Certainly, the propagandization of things to reinvent reality is a topic with more -- make that FAR more -- implications for our time. Including the opportunity to recognize how some myths can flourish long after the mythmakers are dead.


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The LATEST EVENTS EDITION, frequently updated, has our coverage of festivals, concerts, film events, gallery openings, musicals, other live theatre, and more.
    Get there by scrolling past this special news edition, or go there directly at: 

https://acousticamericana.blogspot.com/2019/06/whole-lotta-goings-on-goin-on-mid-june.html
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We published a single-topic edition titled "Dishonoring the Universal Declaration of Human Rights’ 70th Anniversary -- prepare to be furious," on June 24. It's at: 

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Last week, THE GUIDE published a special edition calling on you, our readers, to take a simple action to STOP the build-up to yet another war, this time with Iran. That edition has been read by many thousands, all around the world. "Time (just barely enough time) to stop the next war, and help suffering victims of the last one" was published June 20, 2019.
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OTHER RECENT EDITIONS...
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The Guide's special edition for the 75th anniversary of D-Day and its meaning in our world today, has been read by many thousands of people in over 30 countries (so far); it is still available, at:

https://acousticamericana.blogspot.com/2019/06/d-day-in-perspective-75-years-hence-for.html
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The most recent 'uge, 2-volume NEWS FEATURES edition was a while back, but it's still available. You can find it at:

 https://acousticamericana.blogspot.com/2019/04/musicafied-mollified-or-muellerfried.html

As always, we have lots of MUSIC NEWS features in the works, and they'll be along as we get them dressed, shoes tied, cowlicks combed down, bowties cranked straight, and strings tuned.
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'Til we catch ya on the flip side,
as Buford the Wonder Dog looks on, 
and in our best Kathy Baker
"Hee Haw" voice: "THAT's all!"
Stay tuneful!
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We'll be back again soon with music news and more "News of the Non-Trumpcentric Universe." (c)

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LEGALESE, CONTACTING US, 'N SUCH...

Boilerplate? Where's the main pressure gauge? And the firebox?

What "boilerplate"? Who came up with that goofy term for the basic essential informational stuff...

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♪ The ACOUSTIC AMERICANA MUSIC GUIDE endeavors to bring you NEWS – and views of interest to artists everywhere – more specifically to musicians and the creative community and music makers -- and fans of acoustic and Folk-Americana music. That includes both traditional and innovative forms. From the deepest roots to today’s acoustic renaissance, that’s our beat. We provide a wealth of resources, including a HUGE catalog of acoustic-friendly venues (now undergoing a major update), and inside info on FESTIVALS and select performances in Southern California in venues from the monumentally large to the intimately small and cozy. We cover workshops, conferences, and other events for artists and folks in the music industry, and all kinds o’ things in the world of acoustic and Americana and accessible classical music. From washtub bass to musical spoons to oboe to viola to banjo to squeezebox, from Djangostyle to new-fangled-old-time string band music, from sweet Cajun fiddle to bluegrass and pre-bluegrass Appalachian mountain music to all the swamp water roots of the blues and the bright lights of where the music is headed now.
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Monday, June 24, 2019

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights: 70 years ago vs today. June 24 2019



This is a short special edition. The LATEST EVENTS EDITION, frequently updated (as recently as SATURDAY, June 29, at 8:30 am), has our coverage of festivals, concerts, film events, gallery openings, musicals, other live theatre, and quite literally, MUCH more. Get there by scrolling past this special news edition, or go there directly at:

https://acousticamericana.blogspot.com/2019/06/whole-lotta-goings-on-goin-on-mid-june.html

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Monday, June 24th, in history... prepare to be furious.

Dishonoring the Universal Declaration of Human Rights’ 70th Anniversary


by Larry Wines


M
onday marks the 70th anniversary of the “Universal Declaration of Human Rights.” Around the world, a special flag will be flown today — not so much to celebrate as to remind.

To remind, because…


  • Unimaginably barbaric abuses; oppressions; deprivations; denials of freedom, physical or intellectual or of dignity;
  • Proclaimed denials to the world by perpetrators who continue to inflict barbarity; incarcerations of prisoners of conscience; “re-education” brainwashing;
  • Torture; sex-exploitation slavery; political slavery, economic slavery, conflict-related slavery, and slavery designed to extract labor while inflicting pain and killing those in bondage;
  • Myriad manifestations of physical-mental-emotional brutality;
  • Deprivations and genocidal exterminations based simply on race, creed, religious or ethnic or tribal affiliation;
  • Intentionally-inflicted blindings and amputations and cripplings by sledge hammer and pliers and sharpened stick and sword, and beheadings and other forms of executions (some performed slowly) often to make examples and send messages to keep others in line. 
 To remind, because ALL of those things still continue in our world that is inexcusably fond of denying it.
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The word “outrage” has become the political equivalent of the “f-word,” so frequently and reactively expressed that it has lost the power that words should evoke.

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Shockingly, horrifyingly, disgracefully, inexcusably, incomprehensibly, those things are happening right now, today, even on this anniversary day, and they continue to happen every day. Right here in our not-yet-bright-future with our virtual, cyber, order-everything-on-line voluptuary of the future, we never got the future we were promised. Our instantly-available-everything world is a distraction of self-indulgent playthings to avoid our contemplating that our little worlds do not reflect objective reality, or our expectations derived from a tv reality show, because actual reality is invisible to our denyingly, delusionally, comfortably-numb, market-driven, predictive-analytic-trending-fad, media-ratings-driven world of the 21st century.
And if learning there are  within United States government-run "Immigrant Detention Facilities” — lice-infested, flu-ridden, vomiting sick children, with infants left solely in their care, with no showers and no soap and no running water and an open bucket in the middle of a crowded cell as the only toilet; and that many of these children and infants are sleeping on concrete floors;


  • in these government-run de facto concentration camps in Texas;
  • about which a U.S. Justice Department lawyer has proclaimed in court that a “toothbrush, soap, and blanket are not necessary provisions” in these “detention camps” populated by incarcerated children;
And if learning about these things sounds like any of the litany of abuses by the world’s most depraved dictators and their regimes; and if these sound like the very things that all the signatory nations of the “Universal Declaration of Human Rights” agreed, 70 years ago today, that they would not allow to happen ever again, anywhere?
“Verily I say unto you, Since you have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, you have done it unto me.” — from the Biblical Book of Matthew (25:40), and often cited by the late Mother Teresa.
The word “outrage” has become the political equivalent of the “f-word,” so frequently and reactively expressed that it has lost the power that words should evoke. If we can bestow any vestige of its original meaning, what is happening in those border “detention camps” is an ABSOLUTE, un-nuanced, horrifying outrage that should shake this country to its very foundations.
If we just ruined your day, we won’t apologize. If you didn’t know, you needed to. So, now—if the will of the people really does prevail in this society—what are you going to do about it?
You can get all the contact links for your elected federal representatives here.
W
hile you are giving them a piece of your mind, ask them if they are ready to “Repeal section 1325” of the Immigration and Naturalization Code. It’s the section that allows these incarcerations to happen.

It's especially relevant that today marks another anniversary. It is the birthday of the late Norman Cousins, author, editor, journalist and professor. Born June 24, 1915, he died in 1990. That's relevant because among the things he said and wrote is this:

"All men -- whether they go by the name of Americans or Russians or Chinese or British or Malayans or Indians or Africans -- have obligations to one another that transcend their obligations to their sovereign societies."

Thus the challenge for any citizen to obey the laws of his or her society, and reconcile that unconscious obedience with the conscious obligation to the least of our brethren and to all of humankind — as expressed in our best and highest obligations, including the "Universal Declaration of Human Rights," adopted while every society was forced to extract meaning and direction in the wake of World War II.


Click image to enlarge to read it

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The LATEST EVENTS EDITION, frequently updated, has our coverage of festivals, concerts, film events, gallery openings, musicals, other live theatre, and more.
    Get there by scrolling past this special news edition, or go there directly at: 

https://acousticamericana.blogspot.com/2019/06/whole-lotta-goings-on-goin-on-mid-june.html
___

Last week, THE GUIDE published a special edition calling on you, our readers, to take a simple action to STOP the build-up to yet another war, this time with Iran. That edition has been read by many thousands, all around the world. "Time (just barely enough time) to stop the next war, and help suffering victims of the last one" was published June 20, 2019.
___

OTHER RECENT EDITIONS...
___

The Guide's special edition for the 75th anniversary of D-Day and its meaning in our world today, has been read by many thousands of people in over 30 countries (so far); it is still available, at:

https://acousticamericana.blogspot.com/2019/06/d-day-in-perspective-75-years-hence-for.html
___

The most recent 'uge, 2-volume NEWS FEATURES edition was a while back, but it's still available. You can find it at:

 https://acousticamericana.blogspot.com/2019/04/musicafied-mollified-or-muellerfried.html

As always, we have lots of MUSIC NEWS features in the works, and they'll be along as we get them dressed, shoes tied, cowlicks combed down, bowties cranked straight, and strings tuned.
_________________________________

'Til we catch ya on the flip side,
as Buford the Wonder Dog looks on, 
and in our best Kathy Baker
"Hee Haw" voice: "THAT's all!"
Stay tuneful!
_________________________________


<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>

We'll be back again soon with music news and more "News of the Non-Trumpcentric Universe." (c)

+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+

LEGALESE, CONTACTING US, 'N SUCH...

Boilerplate? Where's the main pressure gauge? And the firebox?

What "boilerplate"? Who came up with that goofy term for the basic essential informational stuff...

________________________________

Direct to the Guide's current editions /

MOBILE-DEVICE-FRIENDLY

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CONTACT US -- Post Comments / Send Questions / say Howdy at:

Tiedtothetracks (at) Hotmail (dot) com
.
OR USE THE COMMENTS FUNCTION on the Blogspot site.
.
<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>

Entire contents copyright © 2019,

Lawrence Wines & Tied to the Tracks.

All rights reserved.

<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>
.
♪ The ACOUSTIC AMERICANA MUSIC GUIDE endeavors to bring you NEWS – and views of interest to artists everywhere – more specifically to musicians and the creative community and music makers -- and fans of acoustic and Folk-Americana music. That includes both traditional and innovative forms. From the deepest roots to today’s acoustic renaissance, that’s our beat. We provide a wealth of resources, including a HUGE catalog of acoustic-friendly venues (now undergoing a major update), and inside info on FESTIVALS and select performances in Southern California in venues from the monumentally large to the intimately small and cozy. We cover workshops, conferences, and other events for artists and folks in the music industry, and all kinds o’ things in the world of acoustic and Americana and accessible classical music. From washtub bass to musical spoons to oboe to viola to banjo to squeezebox, from Djangostyle to new-fangled-old-time string band music, from sweet Cajun fiddle to bluegrass and pre-bluegrass Appalachian mountain music to all the swamp water roots of the blues and the bright lights of where the music is headed now.
.
The Acoustic Americana Music Guide. Thanks for sittin' a spell. The cyber porch'll be here anytime you come back from the road.
<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>




Thursday, June 20, 2019

Time (just barely enough time) to stop the next war, and help suffering victims of the last one. SPECIAL EDITION, June 20 2019.

.
.
The LATEST EVENTS EDITION, frequently updated (as recently as SATURDAY, June 29, at 8:30 am), has our coverage of festivals, concerts, film events, gallery openings, musicals, other live theatre, and quite literally, MUCH more. Get there by scrolling past this special news edition, or go there directly at:

https://acousticamericana.blogspot.com/2019/06/whole-lotta-goings-on-goin-on-mid-june.html
___

THIS IS A special edition, calling on you, our readers, to take a simple action to STOP the build-up to yet another war, this one with Iran. This edition has already been read by many thousands, all around the world.

____________________


THE (SNAKE) OIL SALESMEN'S WAR WITH IRAN. 
YOU CAN STOP IT, IF YOU ACT IMMEDIATELY


by Larry Wines

We intrude here less frequently with news of the outside world, because there is so much to report about music and the arts. But sometimes we must ask you to accompany us to a reality check, and ask that you join us in making a difference. Right now, it's necessary that we join together to face responsibilities to our own people for the last war, even as we take crucial steps to stop the next one.

It doesn't get any more serious than trying to stop a war. We're often told "It's a democracy, you decide," even as we live with the disillusionment of knowing that Big Money, Big Oil, Big Pharma, Big Chem, Big Ag, and Big Media rule a corporatocracy that seduces us with cyber baubles and rules us with predictive analytics derived from their incessant theft of our own data. Realizing such things leads quickly to despair that our voice does not matter. But these are volatile times. It's all up for grabs. Small things do matter, and they can produce profoundly big outcomes.

You can stop the next war. If you waste no time. "Time," that by the way, the chronically ill first victims of the last war no longer have.

We nearly published a piece a few days ago in support of immediate, emergency legislation to restore funding for the medical care needs of 9/11 First Responders. But it looked like Jon Stewart's brilliantly dramatic and eloquent testimony before Congress had dislodged that dysfunctional assemblage from dead center, and put things on the fast track for passage.

Turns out it didn't. And now the excruciatingly pathetic and wholly unjustifiable dithering, dawdling, bickering, and one-upmanship game-playing of our elected representatives? It is costing the health, lives, and family finances of firefighters, Port Authority cops, NYPD officers and others who ran into the danger, and who rescued -- and then recovered remains of -- the initial victims.

Now there are many more victims. And not just the endlessly re-deployed uniformed military whose traumatized veterans fall to suicide at the rate of 22 each day. Failure to care for, in the words of Abraham Lincoln, those "who shall have borne the battle and for his widow, and his orphan," is wrong in only one respect -- both military and 9/11 heroes and victims are not limited to males. Women also bravely rushed in on that September morning, wearing turnout coats and blue uniforms or office attire. Now, even as military veterans' needs are underserved, all those First Responders are being kicked to the curb.

With even Fox News supporting Jon Stewart's appeal for 9/11 First Responders, there should not have been anyone playing obstructionist. Nope. Epic fail for Congress to do its job.
Before we ask you to call your Senators and Members of Congress so you can do some kicking of your own, and kick their asses up around their shoulderblades over this mother of all failures to do their job, we have another item for you to add: demand that they, our elected representatives, prevent the perpetuation of more horror in our names, and stop the next war.

Having failed to care for the last war's wounded, is it time to make more?

Early Thursday morning U.S. time, Iran shot-down a U.S. drone — and the mission and capabilities of that drone are being obfuscated, and whose airspace the drone was in is being disputed. Suffice it to say, the questions are being supressed and the bugle is in the hands of those inclined to sound the charge.

The provocation is being kept simple enough for the chronically stupid: it's the "unprovoked" shoot-down of a $200 million spy plane, either a US Navy BAMS-D, Broad Area Maritime Surveillance Demonstrator, or a USAF RQ-4A Global Hawk, depending on your source. Actually, it might be a prototype of something even more advanced. Either way, it's a 737-sized U.S. military drone that's capable of launching offensive missiles. (Oops. The media isn't supposed to reveal capabilities of "our" freedom-defending drones, are we? We are not alone in not getting the memo.)


The downing of the drone marks a new escalation in a very tense situation  — and with the Trump administration stacked with warmongers, we may well be witnessing the kabuki theatre "presented in a flashy way with little (or sometimes misleading) substance" that leads inexorably to the beginning of a war.

After the second round of oil tanker attacks last week, the Trump war cabinet instantly blamed Iran, ordered 1,000 more troops, and set their pro-Iran-war public relations campaign on full blast.

Iran is the historical Persia. All the modern names
were applied when Britain and France carved the
Middle East into convenient colonies after WW I.
Which often explains plenty about today's strife.
"It is a MIRACLE missiles haven’t already been launched. We CANNOT let that happen. But Pompeo, Bolton, and Trump’s campaign is more aggressive, more extreme, and more sustained than anything we’ve faced in a very long time," writes Stephen Miles (with capitalization as depicted) of the Washington, D.C.-based "Win Without War."

Miles continues, "We remember the Iraq War. We know the immense human horror and heartbreak that we are SO CLOSE to again — which is why Win Without War has been working flat-out to put an emergency brake on this march to war, through Congress, the media, and with allies around the world."

US troops assembling to invade Iraq. Is Iran next?
His organization is not alone. "Just Foreign Policy" is also mobilizing supporters to oppose another war.

Regardless of who is responsible for the tanker attacks, the ensuing crisis and potential escalation toward war is literally because of the actions of Donald Trump and his war cabinet.

Since taking office, Trump walked away from the historic, multinational Iran deal; he's waged economic warfare against Iran through suffocating sanctions; he's launched an administration-wide “maximum pressure” campaign of hostility and antagonism against Iran; and with unprecedented muscle-flexing bluster, he's built-up military forces in the Middle East with the express goal of “confronting Iran.”

In the past few days, we’ve also learned that behind closed doors, Trump's Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has been telling lawmakers they will have nothing to say about it. He says the 2001 AUMF (Authorization for the Use of Military Force) — we call it a "one-size-fits-all-wars-on-people-we-don't-like" law -- passed EIGHTEEN YEARS AGO in response to the 9/11 attacks, would (according to Pompeo) give them authority to wage war against Iran without a Constitutionally-required Declaration of War or any specific Congressional approval.

We’re seeing Team Trump re-launch an intensified public relations campaign selling anti-Iranian and anti-Muslim hate to set the stage for a destructive war with Iran. One by one, they’re trying to lock-in everything they need to launch some kind of war against Iran.

What's the public to believe? Brian Dickerson writes in the Detroit Free Press, "I want you to think about the dangers of charging, tip-toeing or stumbling into such a conflict under the leadership of a commander-in-chief a majority of Americans suspect may be a lying narcissist, and who has demonstrated a willingness to subordinate his country's interests to his own."

Dickerson continues, "But now the president who just weeks ago accused the intelligence community of conspiring in an unsuccessful coup against his presidency is citing the same agencies as authority for his own assertions that Iran is responsible for attacks that crippled two oil tankers in waters south of the Strait of Hormuz... this past week."

All this -- attacks on four oil tankers in May, two more in June, and the shoot-down of the US spy drone -- has occurred in the narrowing passageways leading to or through the Straits of Hormuz (above and to the right of the word "Dubai" on the map). The red arrow marks the site of two tanker attacks. Map: Newswirenow.com
All appearances are that we are on the brink of yet another war. Those organizing to prevent it agree it would be an "absolutely unnecessary, catastrophic, and costly war with Iran," and they're scrambling to unify the message to "stop a needless, costly, and destructive war with Iran."

On Fox News on Thursday, Greg Guttfeld celebrated that "Drones have replaced bones... this is now a big video game. We can fight wars without hurling bodies at bodies... this is good news... you retaliate with machines against machines. Fortunately we have the best stuff, the most advanced machines."

Four nations, before and after 21st century U.S. "regime change" aerial wars.
Tell that to the starving, disease ridden millions in Yemen, Greg. Tell it to the citizens of nations whose cities, villages, and infrastructure have been demoted to the stone age by U.S. bombs. And tell it to U.S. troops whose armored vehicles had their floors implode when they ran over a buried homemade IED bomb. "Video game?" It's enough to make you scream. Or to remember the old Bruce Cockburn song about the rocket launcher that needs to be aimed at the advocates of war.

The good news is it looks like the public isn’t buying the administration's war-mongering, or Fox News playing cheerleader while wearing its video game's virtual flak vest.

The late professor Howard Zinn, author
of "A People's History of the United States"
In part, that's thanks to a growing sense that other voices are the ones who are getting it right.

These include America's most important intellectual, Professor Noam Chomsky; economist Richard Wolff; whistleblower John Kiriakou; human needs advocates Medea Benjamin, Dr. Jill Stein, Kshama Sawant, and Dr. Margaret Flowers; journalists like Pulitzer Prize-winner Chris Hedges, along with Cenk Uygur, Matt Taibbi, Glenn Greenwald, Abby Martin, Aaron Mate, Seymour Hersh, Max Blumenthal, Dan Cohen, Mark Crispin Miller, Amy Goodman, Juan Gonzalez, Robert Scheer, Thom Hartmann, Russell Banks, Ben Norton, Rania Khalek, David Cay Johnston, Ana Kasparian, Loretta Napoleoni, Brian Dickerson, and thankfully, still more fiercely independent pursuers of truth who refuse to be intimidated by "corpirate" media; and organizations like Win Without War, RootsAction, Just Foreign Policy, Veterans for Peace, Food Not Bombs, and a growing number of others; and insightful (and "inciteful") laser-focused, no-BS comedians like Lee Camp, Trevor Noah, and Stephen Colbert.

All are combining to take the wind out of a warconomy that conducts an endless psychological hammering of the masses with stacked-deck partial truths, sensationalist distraction, trivial diversion and fear-based obfuscation that collectively functions as disinformation, underpinned by self-serving assumptions, en-route to things going bang in the night. Make no mistake, the corporacratic oligarchs' money and power and "short-term-profit-taking" investor class are aligned against all who oppose the profitable pursuit of reaping blood money on an industrial scale.

Of course, this meme is from the last
go 'round. Iran is not tribal or tentbound.
It is urbane with a population of 82 million people.
A recent CNN poll (conducted by the independent SSRS research) showed a shockingly ominous 32% of Americans approve of the way Trump is handling the situation with Iran, with only 43% opposed to his Iran policies and 12% undecided. 

Dickerson looks at history: "This [attack on oil tankers and how we respond to it] is precisely the sort of hiccup (Google 'assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand' or 'Gulf of Tonkin incident') that presaged some truly memorable 20th Century bloodbaths. So the president's un-nuanced accusations ('Iran did do it') and threats ('If Iran wants to fight, that will be the official end of Iran') have rattled even a global audience grown accustomed to Trumpian bluster." 

He cites the established pattern from the Commander-in-Tweet, whose thumbs threatened a month ago:

"If Iran wants to fight, that will be the official end of Iran. Never threaten the United States again!"

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) May 19, 2019

SecState Pompeo cites motive, means, and opportunity for attacks by Iran on "the world's oil supplies," and in case we don't get the message that we, the citizens of the U.S., are somehow obligated by a new Manifest Destiny to always make that our business? Just add-in a measure of who's the biggest badass on the block, and emotion will trump reason.
Old themes as new memes on social media. 
Over time, do messages take hold?
The truth is made elusive, caught in a twilight zone of truthiness and emphatic opinion based on delusion characterized by shouted chants of "U-S-A, U-S-A!" and Making America Great Again. It's propelled by intimidating the rest of the world and aggressively accelerating distrust of science, fear of obsolescence, exacerbation of climate change, xenophobia, and ultimately, the militarism required to get away with being a bully.

But as Dickerson says, the "smoking guns are suspect." Tanker crews say they saw incoming missiles, yet the U.S. says that mines, magnetically-attached to the ships' hulls, were detonated. U.S. drones precisely report their flight paths with exact location known, moment by moment. Yet the Pentagon briefing was made by phone, from an empty podium, and no data was offered to support the claim that the drone was over international waters. There's an even bigger disconnect with a president who repeatedly tells us not to trust the very same agencies he now calls upon to provide his provocation for war.

The fight to stop yet another war could go either way. Both the House and Senate have introduced legislation that would bar funding for an illegal, unauthorized war with Iran. HR 2354 in the House of Representatives and S 1039 in the Senate would prohibit the U.S. from using any federal funds to engage in military action in Iran without congressional approval or a declaration of war. But passage of either is doubtful.

In addition, public opinion is a manipulated commodity. We know that "Media censors the opinions of 37% of Americans. And... they’re gloating about it," as Ted Rall recently cited in LA Progressive. He continued, "The majority is voiceless. A privileged minority rules. The United States is a political apartheid state."

Everyone else invests in infrastructure that we "protect"-?
Whether or not the hegemony and agenda-setting of corporate media is quite that bad, one thing is inescapable: none of us can expect someone else to "do something," and magically take action in our place to stop the sabre-rattling for the next war.

Dickerson concludes his piece using a quote: "'We ride too high on deceptive notions of power and security and control,' an aging Nobel laureate muses near the end of 'Asymmetry,' Lisa Halliday's best-selling novel. '... Our military might is unmatched, and, in any case, the madness is at least an ocean away.'

"'And then all of a sudden we look up from ordering paper towels online to find ourselves delivered right into the madness. And we wonder: How did this happen? What was I doing when this was in the works?'

"It is time to look up from our screens — or at least use them to learn some geography."

Simultaneously, Miles says, "We are in a race against time to stop Trump’s warmongers crossing-over their self-determined threshold before bombs start to rain down."

Doing your part to stop it -- provided you do it early -- is simple:

Heavy-handed admonitions didn't stop escalating wars
under Bush 43 or Obama. What will it take this time?
Or is that "The answer, my friend, is blowin' in the wind"-?
CALL YOUR MEMBER OF CONGRESS AND YOUR TWO U.S. SENATORS.


Tell them, "RECLAIM YOUR CONSTITUTIONAL AUTHORITY, RESPONSIBILITY, AND YOUR OBLIGATIONS TO 'WE, THE PEOPLE,' THAT COME WITH YOUR OFFICE. NO WAR AGAINST IRAN -- NO CREATED PROVOCATIONS (no more ginned-up Tonkin Gulf Resolutions, no more AUMFs)."

NO WAR USING U.S. FORCES, NO PROXY WAR (by supplying arms to Saudi Arabia or Israel or anyone else to attack Iran for us). NO DRONE WAR, NO AERIAL WAR, NO MISSILE WAR, NO NAVAL BLOCKADE WAR -- NO. WAR. -- NO WAR!"

Once you've expressed that, tell them you aren't done yet.

First, you also want them to act IMMEDIATELY, before they take the first of their many summer vacations, because they need to take care of PERMANENT (not more wimpy stop-gap) medical funding for 9/11 First Responders.

Second, clearly communicate something more: you want them to know you are watching them, and if they don't do their jobs, you will happily vote for someone else who can and who will.

You can get all the contact information for your elected
federal representatives at:


https://www.usa.gov/elected-officials/

"No one could make a greater mistake than he who did nothing because he could only do a little." -- Edmund Burke, Irish orator, philosopher, and politician (1729 - 1797).


=÷=÷=÷=÷=÷=÷=÷=÷=÷=÷==÷=÷=÷=÷=÷=÷=÷=


THIS IS A special edition, calling on you, our readers, to take a simple action to STOP the build-up to yet another war, this one with Iran.
___

The LATEST EVENTS EDITION, frequently updated, has our coverage of festivals, concerts, film events, gallery openings, musicals, other live theatre, and more.
    Get there by scrolling past this special news edition, or go there directly at: 

https://acousticamericana.blogspot.com/2019/06/whole-lotta-goings-on-goin-on-mid-june.html
___

The Guide's special edition for the 75th anniversary of D-Day and its meaning in our world today, has been read by many thousands of people in over 30 countries (so far); it is still available, at:

https://acousticamericana.blogspot.com/2019/06/d-day-in-perspective-75-years-hence-for.html
___

The most recent 'uge, 2-volume NEWS FEATURES edition was a while back, but it's still available. You can find it at:

 https://acousticamericana.blogspot.com/2019/04/musicafied-mollified-or-muellerfried.html

As always, we have lots of MUSIC NEWS features in the works, and they'll be along as we get them dressed, shoes tied, cowlicks combed down, bowties cranked straight, and strings tuned.
_________________________________

'Til we catch ya on the flip side,
as Buford the Wonder Dog looks on, 
and in our best Kathy Baker
"Hee Haw" voice: "THAT's all!"
Stay tuneful!
_________________________________


<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>

We'll be back again soon with music news and more "News of the Non-Trumpcentric Universe." (c)

+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+

LEGALESE, CONTACTING US, 'N SUCH...

Boilerplate? Where's the main pressure gauge? And the firebox?

What "boilerplate"? Who came up with that goofy term for the basic essential informational stuff...

________________________________

Direct to the Guide's current editions /

MOBILE-DEVICE-FRIENDLY

editions load quickly at
.
.
<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>
.
CONTACT US -- Post Comments / Send Questions / say Howdy at:

Tiedtothetracks (at) Hotmail (dot) com
.
OR USE THE COMMENTS FUNCTION on the Blogspot site.
.
<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>

Entire contents copyright © 2019,

Lawrence Wines & Tied to the Tracks.

All rights reserved.

<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>
.
♪ The ACOUSTIC AMERICANA MUSIC GUIDE endeavors to bring you NEWS – and views of interest to artists everywhere – more specifically to musicians and the creative community and music makers -- and fans of acoustic and Folk-Americana music. That includes both traditional and innovative forms. From the deepest roots to today’s acoustic renaissance, that’s our beat. We provide a wealth of resources, including a HUGE catalog of acoustic-friendly venues (now undergoing a major update), and inside info on FESTIVALS and select performances in Southern California in venues from the monumentally large to the intimately small and cozy. We cover workshops, conferences, and other events for artists and folks in the music industry, and all kinds o’ things in the world of acoustic and Americana and accessible classical music. From washtub bass to musical spoons to oboe to viola to banjo to squeezebox, from Djangostyle to new-fangled-old-time string band music, from sweet Cajun fiddle to bluegrass and pre-bluegrass Appalachian mountain music to all the swamp water roots of the blues and the bright lights of where the music is headed now.
.
The Acoustic Americana Music Guide. Thanks for sittin' a spell. The cyber porch'll be here anytime you come back from the road.
<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>-<^>