Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts

Friday, April 16, 2010

Caroline Herring Takes Critically Acclaimed Music on Tour




Popular international folk singer, Caroline Herring, has announced a spring and summer tour that begins in Texas, and winds through the Southland before a whirlwind tour of London, Paris and the Netherlands in late May and early June. Creative Loafing Magazine credits Herring with “almost single-handedly making folk music ‘cool’ again with her great lyrics, fine finger picking, and unique interpretations of popular tunes."

We have written about Caroline in this space in the past and want to support her summer tour and urge readers to get out and hear her if she is in their area. Caroline is a fierce advocate for human rights and her music reflects this commitment. She deserves our support, as do all artists who work for what is right in this world.

Herring emerged out of the Austin music community ten years ago, beguiling critics and accumulating an international following with her provocative outpourings about southern life and pathos. Her subject matter takes its inspiration from the complicated and controversial history of the rural American South. As a onetime folklore scholar Herring also draws on her knowledge of traditional music and culture as a way of presenting her unique interpretations.

“I’ve learned a lot from academics and all the artists I’ve worked with,” she says, “but I do try to write from my own experience, as a poet would approach her work, rather than as an academic. Though I admire all sorts of traditional art forms, I would never call myself a traditional artist.”

In April, Caroline Herring won the prestigious Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters award for the popular music composition and her fourth critically acclaimed album, Golden Apples of the Sun (Signature Sounds).

The critics love Herring, and the Boston Globe named Golden Apples of the Sun one of the top ten folk albums of 2009. Scott Alarik said, “Herring’s haunting, honey-husk voice seems to be singing only to you. Full of fresh turns, yet as knowable as your best friend’s smile.”

Caroline's song “The Dozens” was featured as part of the 11th Annual Oxford American Music Issue CD in December. Featured in the “Southern Masters” section, the Oxford American says Herring’s Golden Apples of the Sun “Is the album of a woman who has come into her powers as a singer-songwriter, claiming as her ground the territory where folk meets alt-country.”

The summer tour will wind up at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art on August 13 in New Orleans. Herring and fellow southern singer songwriters Claire Holley and Kate Campbell will reprise their critically acclaimed presentation, “A Celebration of Eudora.” The concept performance was conceived by the Eudora Welty Foundation and originally performed in Jackson, Mississippi in April of 2009 to mark the Pulitzer Prize winning author’s Centennial. Welty was a short story writer, photographer, and novelist credited for unique insights into Southern living, and traditions.

The New Orleans concert will coincide with an exhibit of Welty’s work and photography.

For more information on this and all other events, visit Caroline Herring’s website.





UPCOMING SHOWS:



Friday, April 16
All Good Cafe
Dallas, TX
8:00 PM
(214) 742-5362

Saturday, April 17
Anderson Fair
Houston, TX
9:00 PM
832-212-4057

Friday, April 23
Howard's
Greenwood, SC
8:00 PM

Saturday, April 24
East Cobb United Methodist Church
bobbonstein@bellsouth.net
Marietta, GA
8:00 PM

Saturday, May 22
Ivey House Concert Series
Fort Mill, SC
8:00 PM
704-877-9282


Sunday, May 23
Sundays on the Square
Roswell, GA

Wednesday, May 26
The Green Note
London, England

Thursday, May 27
La Pomme d'Eve
Paris, France

Friday, May 28
In the Woods
Lage Vuursche, Netherlands

Saturday, May 29
Naked Song Festival
Eindhoven, The Netherlands

Sunday, May 30
De Schalm
Westwoud, Netherlands

Tuesday, June 01
Folk in de Wâlden
Oentsjerk, Netherlands

Wednesday, June 02
Qbus
co-bill with David Olney
Leiden, Netherlands

Friday, June 11
Mountain Heritage Literary Festival
Lincoln Memorial University
Harrogate, TN
6:00 PM
606-344-0662

Saturday, June 12
The Melting Point
with Jim White
Athens, GA
8:00 PM

Saturday, August 07
Music at the Lakes Concert Series
Flat Rock, NC
7:00 PM

Friday, August 13
The Ogden Museum of Southern Art
CELEBRATING EUDORA with Claire Holley and Kate Campbell
New Orleans, LA
8:00 PM

Friday, Sept 1
San Angelo New Folk Series
San Angelo, TX
7:00 PM

Friday, Sept 17
Camp DeSoto - private event
Mentone, AL

Saturday, Sept 25
Jammin Java
Vienna, VA
7:00 PM

Saturday, October 16
Our Kind of Folk Music Series
Seminole, FL

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Caroline Herring: Music for the Writer's Soul

Writers don’t exist in a vacuum, but sometimes we are forced to do so. I struggle with this on a daily basis as stories and press releases and pleas from Africa stream across my desk. In this day and age there is a melding of blogging and journalism that can be quite confusing for those of us raised in the rules of “old school” journalism. The bottom line is that when reporting about the sheer inhumanity of it all, no matter how much one tries to meditate or pray, a deep scar is left on the psyche and compassion can be lost if one does not allow the passion to surface. There is so little independent analysis coming out of Congo that writers end up creating one woman/man news bureaus, with no colleague nearby to deflect the horror of it all through gallows humor or a drink after work. Camaraderie and comfort are nowhere to be found.

Rediscovering a love of music has been my stress reducer and consolation during these past few years. I want to write about the great poet/writers who have become friends if only to share my joy of these new discoveries and friends made along the way. Perhaps I am creating my own conflict by worrying that if I happen to “know” someone who is a wonderful writer and happens to be a musician that I am crossing some sacred line of journalism. Am I? Journalists quote other writers and analysts on a regular basis when examining in-depth stories.

Music touches the soul, so is it wrong to write about a friend or acquaintance who creates wonderful art—art that heals the heart and helps one to put one foot in front of the other while grabbing that cup of coffee and limping over to the laptop to see what is happening to the poor, the beleaguered and the dispossessed? Music can be like a morning prayer, and if the composer happens to be someone with whom you are acquainted or simply admire, should it be off limits to write about it? I am asking you the question while trying to walk that tightrope.

I may never be able to write a music review again, but it feels honest and ethical to explain how someone’s music can give you the courage to face the day. The true artist will impart that universal sense of understanding and speak directly to the observer. Mississippi native Caroline Herring is one of those unique artists who can help this writer get centered in the morning, wipe the tears away, and approach the job that needs to be done. Perhaps by writing about her artistry here, in this simple space, it will encourage those of you who visit this arena to learn about her art and her music and use it as a personal prayer.

Golden Apples of the Sun is Caroline Herring's fourth release and with this stunning compilation Caroline will certainly claim the mantel held by icons such as Joan Baez, Joni Mitchell and Buffy St. Marie. In their own way each of them was a freedom fighter for truth and justice in this sorry world—women who inspired me to make my own way.

Caroline’s "Tales of the Islander" is part homage to Mississippi Gulf Coast artist Walter Anderson and part celebration of the wondrous sense of place and nature that inhabits the Deep South. At once highly literate and completely accessible, Herring's original compositions as well as her takes on old favorites like "Long Black Veil" and "True Colors" prove once and for all that folk music is an art form. "The Dozens" is simply amazing and I will not do anything to "explain" it except quote this incredible line, which speaks volumes: "I'm just a white girl, from a segregated town, and I'm looking for some answers that I haven't found."

Herring does not manipulate with words, she simply asks the universal questions, tells the truth, and truth is in short supply these days. Before I had the opportunity to meet her and work through the serendipity of developing a friendship, I wrote several reviews of her work. The line we joke about is one in which I said she had ridden through the southland like Joan of Arc and firmly planted her flag in the red dirt of the Mississippi Delta. The review was about her album Lantana, and I can tell you that with Golden Apples of the Sun Caroline has cemented that flag so firmly into the red delta dirt that there will be nothing, not even a hurricane, which will dislodge it.

As a writer who leans heavily upon finding the correct words to describe the connections between soul, heart and place, I find Caroline to be an inspiration. But more than that, it is the way her music reaches deep into the soul, without effort and without artifice, that is so compelling. Only truth can provide protection and healing, and isn’t that what music is all about?



--