Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 11, 2024, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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THURSDAY JULY 11, 2024 ● ARTS & LIFE EDITOR: JILL WILSON 204-697-7018 ● ARTS@FREEPRESS.MB.CA ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
ARTS
●
LIFE
SECTION C CONNECT WITH THE BEST ARTS AND LIFE COVERAGE IN MANITOBA
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T
HE Winnipeg Folk Festival’s daytime workshops offer audiences an opportu-
nity to take in one-of-a-kind, never-to-be-repeated concerts and storytelling
conferences. The best ones feel like eavesdropping on a jam session between
newfound musical friends.
But how do you know which of the 29 workshops running this weekend at Birds
Hill Park will strike a chord? Free Press staffers Eva Wasney, Rob Williams and Jen
Zoratti have perused the program and picked a handful of daily events with promis-
ing lineups.
Workshops run Friday, Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 5:45 p.m. The folk fest
mainstage gets underway tonight at 6:15 p.m. with performances by Ruth Moody,
Lucinda Williams and Shakey Graves, and winds up Sunday night with Orville Peck
at 9 p.m.
For ticket information and full schedules, see winnipegfolkfestival.ca.
EVA WASNEY, ROB WILLIAMS AND JEN ZORATTI
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Zoon
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Australian surf rockers the Grogans jam at
Green Ash on Friday.
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Manitoba-born singer-songwriter Ruth Moody hosts the Strangers on a Plain workshop at Spruce Hollow on Friday.
AUSTIN HARGRAVE PHOTO
The War and Treaty perform in Sunday’s
morning gospel workshop at Big Bluestem.
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Folk outfit Bonny Light Horseman meet
some new friends at Spruce Hollow Friday.
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Catch Etran de L’Aïr as part of a globetrotting daytime lineup on Saturday.
Friday
My Indie Heart, Snowberry Field, 11 a.m.
Good songwriting can be a cathartic,
transcendent experience for mu-
sic-makers and listeners alike.
Hosted by Ottawa-born, Winni-
peg-embraced artist Leith Ross,
this workshop brings together four
seasoned and searching solo acts for a
concert of collective vulnerability.
Ross will be joined on stage by po-
etic “Swamp Witch” Hunter Park, who
performs as She Returns From War; as
well as melancholic singer-songwriter
Mali Velasquez and breezy folk rocker
Joy Oladokun. If you miss the work-
shop, you can catch Park and Oladokun
on the mainstage tonight and Friday
night, respectively.
— Eva Wasney
Strangers on a Plain, Spruce Hollow,
12:15 p.m.
Hosted by the honey-throated singer/
songwriter (and Wailin’ Jenny) Ruth
Moody, this workshop is all about those
big, plains-sweeping voices.
Moody is joined by Winnipeg folk
phenom Madeleine Roger, SYML, the
atmospheric solo project from Wash-
ington musician Brian Fennell, and
Bonny Light Horseman, an American
alt-country trio composed of Anaïs
Mitchell, Eric D. Johnson (Fruit
Bats, the Shins) and Josh Kaufman,
a multi-instrumentalist, songwriter,
producer, composer, arranger and
engineer who has collaborated with ev-
eryone from the Hold Steady to Taylor
Swift to… Madeleine Roger.
Turns out these two aren’t such
strangers on a plain after all: Kaufman
produced Roger’s forthcoming album,
Nerve, which is out next month.
— Jen Zoratti
Follow the Leader, Green Ash, 2:45 p.m.
Legendary punk act Fugazi’s rhythm
section, bassist Joe Lally and drummer
Brendan Canty, have joined forces
with guitarist Anthony Pirog to form
instrumental jazz-adjacent group the
Messthetics, who will share the stage
with Australian garage/surf folk-rock
power trio the Grogans and American
indie-rock singer-songwriter Rosali
for a diverse showcase of sounds and
styles.
— Rob Williams
Saturday
I’ve Been Everywhere, Bur Oak, 11:30 a.m.
Four different acts from four differ-
ent geographical locations will take
you on a journey hosted by Ontario’s
Sam Polley and the Old Tomorrows.
Polley has a CanRock lineage —
his dad is Blue Rodeo’s Jim Cuddy
and his brother is singer-songwriter
Devin Cuddy — but his rockabilly and
Motown-inflected music owes a debt
to the American Midwest and South.
His band will be joined by Arkansas
country rebel Nick Shoulders, South
Carolina Americana artist She Returns
From War and Washington’s SYML for
a workshop all about wanderlust and
homecoming.
— Jen Zoratti
Insider Trading, Green Ash, 1 p.m.
Often, we share more similarities
than differences with our neighbours.
Same goes for distant but kindred
music genres.
Insider Trading seeks to tease out
the musical and personal connec-
tions between a global cast of artists,
including Inuk pop singer-songwriter
Elisapie, California swamptronica duo
Dirtwire, Nigerien desert blues band
Etran de L’Aïr and Egyptian electroni-
ca artist Nadah El Shazly.
Groove-worthy jams will likely
ensue.
— Eva Wasney
Delusions of Banjer, Snowberry Field, 4 p.m.
A celebration of the banjo and an
exploratory happening hootenanny
featuring Kentucky storytelling-song-
writer Bendigo Fletcher, Michigan
old-time folkie Libby DeCamp, North
Carolina psychedelic-indie artist Tall
Tall Tress, who will showcase his elec-
trified banjotron 6500, and experimen-
tal British Columbia duo Moontricks,
whose music is based on the world’s
natural cycles.
— Rob Williams
Sunday
That Old Time, New Time Religion,
Big Bluestem, 11 a.m.
Start your Sunday morning off right
with a soul-stirring gospel hour fea-
turing the golden-voiced husband and
wife duo the War and Treaty (a.k.a.
Tanya Trotter and Michael Trotter
Jr.) — who you can also catch on the
mainstage Sunday evening — along
with Winnipeg bluegrass quintet the
Stanley County Cut-Ups and New York
multi-instrumentalist Jerron Paxton.
This one will be worth dragging
yourself out of the campground early
for: Paxton is a bluesman born in
1989 but sounds like he time-travelled
from 1929, while the Stanley County
Cut-Ups will have your toes tapping
with the blistering banjo and four-part
harmonies. And as for the Trotters’
rich, golden vocal interplay? You’ll feel
reborn.
— Jen Zoratti
Good for What Ails Ya!, Bur Oak, 1:15 p.m.
It’s the last day of the festival. While
all good things must come to an end,
goodbye never comes easy. Bring
your anticipatory grief to Bur Oak for
an afternoon communion with some
deep-feeling musicians.
Gone Gone Beyond is a quartet of
artists with a moody future folk cata-
logue that blends acoustic instrumen-
tation with electronic sounds. Also tak-
ing the stage are the Medicine Singers,
a multicultural collective fusing a wide
array of genres with Native American
powwow music. Polaris Music Prize
shortlister Zoon, a.k.a. Daniel Monk-
man, rounds out the lineup with a dose
of dreamy introspection.
— Eva Wasney
Songs I Wrote and Some I Wish I Did,
Shady Grove, 4:30 p.m.
A session of original songs and
covers of classic alt-folk, roots and
Americana by Texas singer-songwrit-
er Possessed by Paul James, Ontario
swing-rockabilly outfit Sam Polley and
the Old Tomorrows and Louisiana har-
mony-loving duo Lostines, who com-
bine a classic high and lonesome sound
with doo-wop and girl group vibes.
— Rob Williams
Spreading the jam
Free Press team spills the tea on folk fest workshops promising
tasty licks and sweet harmonies
● WINNIPEG FOLK FESTIVAL
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