Summer 2020 News

Classes and workshops in June and July 2020!

Summer Greetings. I hope that this newsletter finds you healthy and safe. If you are on the front lines, whether on a check-out stand or an ER room or anywhere in between, my heartfelt thanks. If you or your loved ones or friends have been stricken by or lost to this pandemic, my heart goes out to you. If you are standing up for Black Lives Matter, hats off. If you are working to expand safe and inclusive voting and/or just and compassionate government, big shout out to you.

Like many of us, I continue to what I can to build resiliency and a better future on as many fronts as possible, as we journey through the unknown together. On the music front, here’s what’s coming up: a trio of review/jam Bridge the Gap classes focusing on tunes from my recently completed 2020 Spring Quebec Session Class, and (starting July 26), a 2020 Summer Quebec Session class. I invite you to join me in making the rafters (safely) ring across the nation and around the world, pandemic be damned! 

July 13-15 Bridge the Gap: Quebec Spring Session Review and Jam. From mid-March through mid-June, I led a series of six two-hour Zoom workshops focusing on style in Québécois fiddle music. The idea was to look deeply into tunes from different regions, celebrating the beautiful details of bowing and ornamentation which give them lift and a distinctive sound. Over 80 participants from three continents took this bilingual workshop (French and English) and, by popular demand, I’ll be doing another series starting July 26 (see below for details). MEANWHILE!

 I’m offering a series of three one-hour review/jam sessions from 5-6pm PST (8-9pm EST/20h à 21h, l’heure de l’Est) on July 13, 14, and 15 to  review the twelve tunes which were explored during my 2020 Quebec Spring Session Zoom Class. Each one-hour session will focus on four tunes (see individual class dates for the specific tunes). These classes will be conducted in English, with French-language translations if our group includes francophones. 

Please note: If you did NOT take the 2020 Quebec Spring Session Class, you are still welcome to register for any of these sessions, but be aware that I will NOT be teaching these tunes, but rather reviewing them. You will receive dance-speed recordings and sheet music for the tunes which will be reviewed in the session(s) you register a few days before the actual session. These tunes vary in complexity; you definitely want to be an advanced or intermediate/advanced player in order to be able to jump in and play along.

We’ll spend about 15 minutes per tune, starting with a 3-4 play-throughs at warm-up speed, followed by a Q&A check-in, in case you have questions about specifics, and then another 8 or so play-throughs, building tempo as we go. If there’s extra time at the end of the session, we’ll do some jam session favorites!

TUITION OPTIONS. Each workshop is $15.76. You can sign up for one, two or all three–whatever works for you. At this price, you can take all three workshops for less than $48. I’m also including two other options so that our community can support each other through this pandemic, and so you can do what works best for your schedule, musical interests, and budget. Pre-registration is required, so sign up today!

July 26- Oct. 4: 2020 Summer Quebec Session Class., Aug. 9, Aug. 23, Sept. 6, Sept. 20, Oct. 4.

The Summer 2020 Québec-Acadie Session Class is a six-session group Zoom class for intermediate/advanced players who love (!) playing Québécois and Acadian dance music and want more pizazz, detail, and stylistic authenticity in their music. Each class will explore two tunes from Québec or Acadie, delving deeply into the details of ornamentation, bowing, swing, variations, etc., to add sparkle and joie de vivre to your playing! 12 tunes in all! All melody instruments welcome!

Each of the six  Zoom classes will be recorded and made available to class members who can’t make the scheduled meeting times. In addition, each class is supplemented by a Google folder with materials about the two tunes explored in that class, including source recordings, learning recordings, sheet music, biographical backgrounds of the folks whose versions we are learning; tune histories, photos, additional related video and  links when available–yowza!

These classes will be conducted primarily in English, with supplementary French-language explanations along the way if francophone participants sign up!

SCHEDULE: The six group class sessions meet via ZOOM every other Sunday from 10am-12pm Pacific Standard Time (= 1-3pm Eastern Standard Time). Here are the class dates: July 26, August 9 and 23, September 6 and 20, and October 4. 

TUITION OPTIONS. I’m offering a bunch of options so that our community can support each other through this pandemic, and so you can do what works best for your schedule, musical interests, and budget:

  1. If money is really tight, no worries! There’s a $0-to-whatever sliding scale Pay What You Can option–use it! 
  2. If you have enough money to pay your registration AND help pay it forward for someone who can’t, buy your subscription  with the Regular Tuition button and then add a donation with the Pay it Forward donation button. 
  3. Otherwise, just use the Regular Tuition Options button to sign up. 
  4. AND! I’m offering a special discount class/private lesson combo: Attend the class-and-folder option for only $100 when  you also sign up for four consecutive 30-minute weekly Skype, Zoom, or Facetime private lessons, with a hefty discount: $40 per 30-min. lesson: total = $260 (30-min. lessons are normally $50).

Pre-registration is required, so sign up today!

Spring News 2020

Classes and workshops April and May 2020! Spring Greetings. I hope that this newsletter finds you healthy and safe. COVID-19 is causing a huge ripple of tumultuous disruption and harm throughout the world. If you are on the front lines, whether on a check-out stand or an ER room or anywhere in between, my heartfelt thanks. If you or your loved ones or friends have been stricken by this pandemic, my heart goes out to you.

Like so many of us, I’m doing what I can to build resiliency for my family, my neighbors, and as many communities as possible, as we journey through the unknown together. On the music front, here’s what’s coming up: I am about to launch a twelve week session class and invite you to join me in making the rafters (safely) ring across the nation and across the border this Spring, pandemic be damned! 

The Spring 2020 Quebec Session Class is a six-session group Zoom class for intermediate/advanced players who love (!) playing Quebecois dance music and want more pizazz, detail, and stylistic authenticity in their music. Each class will explore two popular Quebec session tunes, delving deeply into the details of ornamentation, bowing, swing, variations, etc., to add sparkle and joie de vivre to your playing! 12 tunes in all! All melody instruments welcome!

Each of the six Zoom classes will be recorded and made available to class members who can’t make the scheduled meeting times. In addition, each class is supplemented by a Google folder with materials about the two tunes explored in that class, including source recordings, learning recordings, sheet music, biographical backgrounds of the folks whose versions we are learning; tune histories, photos, additional related video and  links when available–yowza!

These classes will be conducted primarily in English, with supplementary French-language explanations along the way if folks from Québec sign up! 

SCHEDULE: The six group class sessions meet via ZOOM every other Sunday from 10am-12pm PST. Class dates are April 5 and 19; May 3, 17, and 31; and June 14.

TUITION OPTIONS. I’m offering a bunch of options so that our community can support each other through this pandemic, and so you can do what works best for your schedule, musical interests, and budget:

  1. If money is really tight, no worries! There’s a $0-to-whatever sliding scale Pay What You Can option–use it! 
  2. If you have enough money to pay your registration AND help pay it forward for someone who can’t, select and purchase an option from the Regular Tuition button drop-down menu and then add a donation with the Pay it Forward donation button. 
  3. Otherwise, just use the Regular Tuition button drop-down menu to sign up. 

REGULAR TUITION OPTIONS:

  • $140 US for all  6 two-hour Zoom classes AND class folders;
  • Can’t make all six Zoom sessions? Sign up to come to any 3 classes of your choice plus access to the related three class folders for $100;
  • Can’t make any sessions at all? Sign up for access to class folders ONLY or $80.
  • CLASS/PRIVATE LESSON COMBO DISCOUNT PACKAGE: Attend the class-and-folder option for only $80 when  you also sign up for four consecutive 30-minute weekly Skype, Zoom, or Facetime private lessons, with a hefty discount: $40 per 30-min. lesson: total = $240 (30-min. lessons are normally $50).

Pre-registration required!  Class starts April 5, so please sign up today!  Private message me on FB if you have questions! Merci!

Spring and Summer News for 2019

Hello folks!

Spring is in the air here in the Pacific Northwest and here in Fiddleville, workshops, festivals, and music camps are looming on the horizon. Most of my energy is still focused in my work with Olympia Indivisible, but music continues to be a wellspring for joy and renewal. Hope to see some of you in my travels this summer, which will include Oregon, California, Vermont, British Columbia, Quebec, and Newfoundland.

MAY: Workshops in Quebecois and Cajun Music!

In Olympia: Spring Sing Mouth Music Fling SATURDAY, MAY 11, 10:15am-12:15pm. Come learn how to do turlutte, the Québécois answer to scat-singing. You’ll learn how to sound authentic lilting some great tunes from Quebec and Acadie. AND enjoy some rhubarb crisp, a quintessential Québec Springtime treat! To register, visit the Spring Fling registration page on the Classes and Workshops dropdown menu.

In Portland, OR: Cajun Tune Workshop, SATURDAY, MAY 18, 10:30am-12:30pm. We will start off with Bosco Stomp, that great Cajun tune which, unfortunately, is also often a Total Jam-Buster because there are too many dang different versions. We will get our act together collectively so that Portland’s Cajun jam can rock out on this classic. And then, we will go on to learn a Mazurka (one of the many kinds of waltzes in circulation in Louisiana in days of yore) from Dennis McGee. To register, visit the PDX May 18 Cajun Tune registration page on the Classes and Workshops dropdown menu.

In Seattle: Cajun Tune Workshop, SUNDAY, May 19: 2-4pm. We will focus on upping our game on Eunice Two Step, getting some great variations and a solid “seconding” line. If time allows, we’ll go review “Bon Tempss Rouler,” that Lawrence Walker song we worked on in January. If you missed that workshop, here’s a great chance to catch up! . To register, visit the SEA Cajun Spring Workshop page on the Classes and Workshops dropdown menu.

JUNE: Oregon/California Tour and Northern Heritage Music Camp!

In June, I’ll be heading down the coast with musical partner-in-crime Dan Compton for a series of concerts:
OREGON AND CALIFORNIA TOUR: June 3-8 (details to follow)
June 3: Ashland
June 4: Sebastopol
June 5: Berkeley
June 6: Santa Cruz
June 7: Mountain View
June 8: Eugene

June 23-29: Northeast Heritage Music Camp (Starksboro, VT). I’ll be teaching French-Canadian fiddle along with Yann Falquet and Nicol Williams of Genticorum. The line-up of teachers is stunning: Becky Tracy, Katie McNally, Pete Sutherland, David Surette, Alex Kehler, David Kaynor, and more. I think there are still a couple of slots left, so hustle to the website if you’d like to be part of this amazing week of music, dance, song, great food, and fellowship in beautiful northern Vermont.

Winter 2019: Cajun Workshop Jan. 26

Happy New Year! Here is wishing you hope, good health, resilience, fellowship, and music for 2019.

The holidays went whizzing by with two full-to-the-brim teaching sessions (Olympia and Portland) sharing teaching old-Time mountain tunes for the Xmas Season.

2019 is looking bright already, with a Cajun workshop coming up in Seattle January 26, and concerts with Dan Compton in Olympia and Seattle come March, and Portland in April.

Summer will be busy! Fiddle camps and festivals in Oregon, Vermont, Quebec, and Newfoundland, AND Le Bruit court dans la Ville will launch their new album!

I am taking new students here in Olympia and via Skype. I also occasionally day-teach in Seattle and Portland, so if you’re in one of those places and are interested in a lesson or workshop, let me know!

All the best,
Lisa

Spring 2018 News: Workshops, Camps, Albums, etc.!

WORKSHOPS: Hey Portland, OR, I’ll be doing a Québécois New Tunes Workshop on Saturday, March 31st, 2-4:30pm–you can register right here on the website and catch details on the Classes and Workshops dropdown menu!
CAMPS: I am delighted to report that I’ll be on staff at three music camps in June and July:
Northeast Heritage Music Camp: June 17-23 in Starksboro, VT
Acadia School of Traditional Music and Arts: June 25-29, Bar Harbor, ME
Wallowa Fiddle Tunes Camp: July 8-13, Wallowa, OR

FESTIVALS: I will be teaming up with Genticorum lads Pascal Gemme and Yann Falquet to perform at the First Annual Little Sea Festival in Portland, ME on June 30th! That should be a rafter-shaker, for sure!

ALBUMS:
And…Le Bruit court dans la ville will be recording a new album in May!

PLUS: I’m teaching private lessons by Skype and in person, here in Olympia and (occasionally) in Seattle and Portland, OR.

Those of you on my inside track know tha tI put professional music-making went on the back-burnerDecember 2017 in order to become a volunteer co-founder of a chapter of Indivisible in my hometown of Olympia, WA. Olympia Indivisible now has over 585 members and are a well-organized band of angels working hard for democracy. I’m in for the long haul, until 2020, but doing music when I can…teaching and performing help keep me grounded, so if you’d like to see me doing either where you live, just get in touch! May strength, resolve, love, and commitment attend your days as Spring approaches, Lisa

2017-18 Solstice and Winter News

Winter uses all the blues there are.
One shade of blue for water, one for ice,
Another blue for shadows over snow.

Winter solstice is upon us, the nights dark, long and chill. All nature seems a metaphor in this year of deep darkness, so let us bank the flames in our hearts with engagement, love, music, and service, to keep our spirits warm and bright.

So with this in mind, I am planning on sharing as much music as I can in Olympia, Portland and Seattle this winter. Here’s what’s up right now, and there will be more to come!

Sunday, December 17: CAJUN DANCE MUSIC WORKSHOP AND JAM IN SE PORTLAND
Hey all you fans of tabasco-flavored two-steps, stomps, and more…come learn “Empty Bottle Stomp” –a way-cool A-modal dance tune with a lot of old-time fiddle buzz.” What, you may ask, is a stomp? Well, cher, a stomp is like a one-step, but with a healthy extra dose of attitude. After learning the basic melody, we’ll explore how to embellish it and improvise on it — dress it up, dress it down! We’ll also learn fun-to-do, fun-to-listen-to harmony lines and chords for you back-up players. By the time you leave, you’ll be ready to play “Empty Bottle Stomp” at your next dance or jam session! The tune will be taught by ear. To register, go to the Dec. 17, 2017 Cajun Workshop Registration page on the Classes & Workshops drop-down menu.

This workshop will be followed by a snack and beverage potluck at 2:30pm and a jam session and dance from 3-4:30p. (or later, who knows?)

WHAT: Cajun Tune Workshop

WHEN: Sunday, Dec. 17, 1-2:30pm

WHERE: Home of Tia Regan & Ned Leager, 1935 SE 56th Ave., Portland

INSTRUMENTS: Fiddle, mandolin, banjo, guitar, concertina and accordion (piano accordion and button accordion welcome; button accordionists need a D box)

COST: $20-30 sliding scale

WHO IS THIS FOR: If you are able to get your way around your instrument on a dozen or more tunes without your hair catching on fire, can pick up simple tunes by ear (this one is very accessible), and have some background with OT, Cajun, French-Canadian, Irish, or contra tunes, this workshop is for you!

Summer 2017 News: workshops, camps, and more!

Hello folks,
Okay, a couple of quick plugs for events which are coming right up!

This coming Sunday afternoon (June 11) I will be leading a Creole waltz workshop in Seattle. Read on for details!

On Saturday evening, June 17th, I’ll be leading an Acadian and Québécois tune fest workshop, featuring repertory from Robin LeBland and Richard Forest, who will both be on staff at Festival of American Fiddle Tunes in a couple of weeks. We will also squeeze in a jam AND a potluck. And no! You do NOT know these tunes! Read on for details!

And on Sunday afternoon, June 18th, I’ll be leading a Cajun one-step workshop in SE Portland, with jamming to follow. Two awesome tunes from Dennis McGee, The Godfather of Cajun fiddling. Read on for details!

July and August I’ll be all over the place teaching and touring: Festival of American Fiddle Tunes, Wallowa Fiddle Tunes Camp, Boxwood Festival in Lunenberg, Nova Scotia, Best of Boxwood Tour all over Nova Scotia, Atlantic Fiddle Jamboree in PEI, and Robin LeBlanc’s Acadian Fiddle Camp. More about this later.

Meanwhile, most of my life is about resisting. Resisting hate, intolerance, the dismantling of democracy, government protection for hardwood gains in public health, safety, education, racial justice, protection of the elderly, the poor, refugees, immigrants…well, I guess you have the gist. Hope that you also are countering fear and hate with love and tolerance. Keep blooming where you are planted!

Love,
Lisa

JUNE 2017 workshops

SUNDAY JUNE 11th AFTERNOON SEATTLE CREOLE WALTZ WORKSHOP
DESCRIPTION. Hey all you lovers of tabasco-flavored waltzes, two-steps, stomps, and more…come learn La valse du père Carriere (Daddy Carrière’s Waltz) a way-cool beautiful Creole three-part tune. After learning the basic melody, we’ll explore how to embellish it and improvise on it — dress it up, dress it down! We’ll also learn fun-to-do, fun-to-listen-to harmony lines. By the time you leave, you’ll be ready to play this waltz at your next dance or jam session! The tune will be taught by ear.
WHAT: Cajun Tune Workshop
WHEN: Sunday, June 11, 3-4:30pm
WHERE: Jeff’s home: NE 85th St., Seattle (details furnished upon registration)

INSTRUMENTS: Fiddle, mandolin, banjo, concertina and accordion (piano accordion and button accordion welcome; button accordionists need a D box);

COST: $20-30 sliding scale
WHO IS THIS FOR: If you are able to get your way around your instrument on a dozen or more tunes without your hair catching on fire, can pick up simple tunes by ear (this one is very accessible), and have some background with OT, Cajun, French-Canadian, Irish, or contra tunes, this workshop is for you!
To Register: contact me via this site!
—————————–
QUEBEC/ACADIE TUNEFEST WORKSHOP and JAM SESSION, Sat. June 17, 7PM, in SW Portland

Hey there all you fans of musique from Québec and Acadie! Come join Lisa Ornstein for a tunefest workshop followed by a jam session. You’ll learn two way-cool tunes: an original composition from Richard Forest and a traditional Acadian tune from Robin LeBlanc. Both these guys are teaching at this year’s Festival of American Fiddle Tunes, so whether you yourself are headed that way, here’s a chance to get a sneak peak at s
DETAILS:
WHAT: Québec/Acadie Tunefest Workshop and Jam
WHEN: Saturday, June 17, 7pm-10pm (optional potluck supper 6-7pm)
WHERE: SW Portland (Hillsdale area; details furnished upon registration)
COST: $20-30 sliding scale
HOW TO REGISTER:contact me via this site!
So that’s June. July brings three camps!
—————————————————
CAJUN MUSIC WORKSHOP Sunday Jun. 18 (1- 2:30 PM) in SE Portland
DESCRIPTION. Hey all you fans of one-steps, two-steps, stomps, and more…come learn a couple of way-cool one-steps (like two-steps, but short and to the point!): One Step des McGees and Happy One Step. After learning each basic melody, we’ll explore how to embellish it and improvise on it — dress it up, dress it down! We’ll also learn fun-to-do, fun-to-listen-to harmony lines. By the time you leave, you’ll be ready to play these one-steps at your next dance or jam session! The tune will be taught by ear.
The workshop will be followed by a snack and beverage potluck at 2:30pm and a jam session from 3-4:30pm.

WHAT: Cajun Tune Workshop
WHEN: Sunday, June 18, 1-2:30pm
WHERE: Home of Tia Regan & Ned Leager, 1935 SE 56th Ave., Portland
INSTRUMENTS: Fiddle, mandolin, banjo, concertina and accordion (piano accordion and button accordion welcome; button accordionists need a D box);

COST: $20-25 sliding scale
WHO IS THIS FOR: If you are able to get your way around your instrument on a dozen or more tunes without your hair catching on fire, can pick up simple tunes by ear (this one is very accessible), and have some background with OT, Cajun, French-Canadian, Irish, or contra tunes, this workshop is for you!

ABOUT THE WORKSHOP LEADER. Fiddler Lisa Ornstein, who launched Portland’s Cajun jam, will lead this workshop. She can’t wait to share this tunes which you may have danced to if you were at the Spare Room in 2015 when she and Suzie, Allegra, and Eric Thompson teamed up with Caleb Klauder, Reeb Williams, for a set of Cajun must at the POTMG.

TO REGISTER: contact me via this site!
—————————————————————–
JULY camps, festivals, and tours
July 2-8: Festival of American Fiddle Tunes. For the first time, I get off the staff merry-round and am tutoring. How could I pass up the opportunity to offer support New Brunswick Acadian fiddlers Robin LeBlanc and Claude Austin? Trust me, if you love Québécois and Acadian music, do NOT miss the opportunity to take classes and band labs with these folks. Are you a fan of Richard Forest tunes? You’re in luck! Not only will he be there, but his whole band (Réveillons) will be there too! Expect dancing and parties to bust out, folks! I’ll be happy to give you a hand on the Acadian band lab repertory!

July 9-14: Wallowa Fiddle Tunes Camp. Wallowa Fiddle Tunes is a gem of a camp: affordable, accessible, family-friendly, with incredible heart and all this set in the unbelievable beauty of eastern Oregon’s high mountain and Alpine region. I’ll be teaching Cajun fiddle…sharing tunes I learned while partnering with David Greely at the Boston Revels last December, and tunes a lonnnng time ago learned from Dewey Balfa and others.

July 23-29: Boxwood Festival, Lunenburg, Nova Scotia.
Registration for the 2017 Festival & Workshop is still open. Here’s what’s on tap: beautiful Lunenburg, Nova Scotia to discover music, ballad, and dance traditions amid one of North America’s most exquisite 18th century seaside towns. Boxwood presents a full range of classes with world renowned artists in the realms of traditional folk, early music, and dance. The flute is center stage along with a myriad of other instruments, song and dance.

Boxwood will inspire the creative spirit of every participant with its concerts, dances, sessions, classes, and lectures along with handmade local food in the heart of Nova Scotia’s beautiful South Shore. The Boxwood experience brings together kindred spirits from all over the world, creating lasting friendships, nourishing music, and soulful fun in a unique, non-competitive festival and workshop program.
———————————-
AUGUST tours and camps
July 30-August 4: Best of Boxwood Tour, all over Nova Scotia.
Don’t exactly know where I am headed, but I know I will be in good company on this tour featuring staff root he Boxwood Festival!

August 5-6: Off to PEI for the Atlantic Fiddle Jamboree.
Hosted by the Mont-Carmel Parish Hall, the festival is situated in the Evangeline region, a coastline rich in natural landscape and Acadian culture, where the inhabitants proudly share their French language, music, food and “joie de vivre”. A weekend of concerts, workshops and impromptu music sessions ranging from the intimate to the informal.

August 11-13: Acadian Fiddle Camp in northeastern New Brunswick, close to Bathurst.
This 3-day wee-end camp is packed with music workshops, jam sessions, dances, concerts, AND opportunities to socialize, relax, and discover New Brunswick’s beautiful northeastern Acadian Peninsula. Musicians of all ages and playing experience are welcome to this family-friendly, affordable cultural adventure!

Spring 2017 News

It’s been a wonderful and unusual year so far here in Fiddleville. My life changed last November when I realized that I needed to step up my commitment to justice and liberty for all. I was already committed for a monthlong run of playing the Revels in Cambridge, MA (one of the most happy experiences of my musical adventures), but since the day after Xmas, I’ve become an accidental political organizer, full-time and then some. Here’s a shout-out to Olympia Indivisible, the best group of 300 citizen activists anyone could every hope to meet. And to all of you who are out there actively pursuing a path of kindness and fellowship.

Finding balance is a big part of remaining sustainable, so I am figuring out ways of keeping my musical muse alive and well. As an experiment, I squeezed in 6 workshops and concerts in late November and December, with a significant chunk of the proceeds going to Southern Poverty Law Center. Thanks to all who showed up and helped raise over $800 for SPLC. thanks to Mark Simos and Matt Glaser for organizing a blissful day of teaching at Berklee College of Music. January was a solid month of political organization. But in February, Dan Compton and I did a house concert in Olympia (thank you, Carla!) and donated some of our proceeds to the local Habitat for Humanity. My guess is that I’ll be doing a lot more of this kind of profit-sharing work in the next four years. I also did a weeklong residency working with middle and high school students in Pendleton, Oregon, where the multi-talented Emily Callender ably steers at the helm of an incredibly vibrant string program. It was pure joy working with these talented and lively musicians! And, I also taught my first home stay fiddle camp (major fun with Alice and Jeannine!).

For March and April: I’m starting to pick up students in Olympia, Tacoma, and Seattle. Would love to work with you Puget Sound fiddlers! Give me a shout. I’m also offering occasional OT fiddle workshops in Portland and offering individual lessons in SE Portland at least once and sometimes twice a month (let me know if you are interested!). I’ll be working with the wonderful kids in the BRAVO string ensemble in north Portland, prepping some French-Canadian string ensemble magic for an April 15 concert. And, with any luck, Dan Compton and I will be heading to Whidbey Island and the environs for dance music and concerts.

Come May, I’ll be on tour with Le Bruit court dans la Ville in Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine, and Massachusetts. I’ll also be giving the keynote address at the Young Tradition Vermont Week-end, Friday May 5, 2017 at the Bishop Booth Conference Center in Burlington, VT.

Summer’s a ways away, but just so you know, I’ll be tutoring at Fiddle Tunes and teaching Cajun fiddle at Wallowa Fiddle Tunes, and teaching all Kinds of Fiddle at the Boxwood Festival in Lunenberg, NS in July and then touring with the Best of Boxwood in early August. More on that later!

Late Fall, Early Winter News 2016

First of all, to all of you, a hug and thoughts of fellowship and resolve and love.

Late November and December, I’ll be doing concerts, workshops, and shows on both the west and east coasts. Here’s the scoop:

WEST COAST

THANKSGIVING WEEK-END TUNE WORKSHOPS in PORTLAND AND OLYMPIA: I’ll be offering workshops in Portland (Friday, Nov. 25 2-4pm) and Olympia (Sunday, Nov. 27, 2-4pm) on Thanksgiving week-end. On the program: 3 great tunes from eastern Quebec and New Brunswick, including a lovely new waltz from accordionist Keven Desrosiers and two great tunes from Acadian fiddler Robin LeBlanc. Tunes will be taught by ear. Sheet music will be furnished at the workshop.

Don’t play fiddle? If you’d just like to learn some tunes, play a melody instrument (mandolin, flute, tenor banjo, melodic claw-hammer banjo, concertina, accordion, etc.), can pick up tunes easily by ear or with sheet music (not tablature), and don’t mind sitting through some discussion of bowing, welcome aboard! Tunes are in A modal, D, and G-C.

Level: (intermediate to advanced). If you are comfortable with your instrument, can play a dozen or so tunes close to or at dance speed without your hair catching on fire, and have facility picking up tunes either from sheet music or by ear, these workshops are for you!
WHAT DOES IT COST? I am suggesting a $25-35 sliding scale. If that is simply out of your range, please come anyways and contribute what is affordable for you. I will be donating 25% of the proceeds to the Southern Poverty Law Center, a non-profit organization with a long history of upholding civil rights and peacefully, effectively combatting hate crimes throughout the nation.
HOW TO REGISTER: E-mail me via this site. I’ll send you details.

EAST COAST (DEC. 4-23)

Come December, I’ll be heading to Cambridge, MA where I’ll be playing fiddle in the Boston Revels, which is celebrating Acadian and Cajun cultures. It’s my first Revels experience, and I’m not exactly a dress-up-in-costumes type, but I had a heckuva good time recording the cast album in May, and the repertory is really on the mark. What’s more, the children and adult choirs sing with polish and heart, the staff are kind and incredibly good at what they do, and the back-up musicians include dear-friends-and-stellar-musicians Josée Vachon, Keith Murphy, and David Greely. Laissez les bon temps rouler!

In addition to doing the Revels (I’ll be doing performances Dec. 9-23), I’ll also be doing a fiddle workshop in Arlington, MA on December 4 . The workshop will be held at a private residence in Arlington, near Route 2 and accessible by public transportation (within a half-mile of the 77, 62, and 76 buses). For details and to register, e-mail Adrienne at adriennehoward88@yahoo.com.
and a day of teaching at Berklee College of Music December 5th. If you are a Berklee fiddle student, check this out!

AND, David Greely and I will be doing a house concert in Arlington, MA on Thursday, December 15.The concert will be held at a private residence in Arlington, near Route 2 and accessible by public transportation (within a half-mile of the 77, 62, and 76 buses).

AND THEN BACK TO THE WEST COAST! (Dec. 24 – January)
Come January 2017, I plan to stay close to my new home in Olympia and organize a teaching schedule to provide regular lesson and workshop opportunities in Olympia, Portland, and Seattle. I also teach by Skype. Please feel free to get in touch if you are interested in any of these options.

So here is wishing you all the very best. Stay safe, take care, get involved. There is plenty for all of us to do!

Late Summer News 2016

Hello folks! Greetings from Fiddleville. Hope you have been having a good summer, staying cool, taking good care of yourself, playing up a storm, and reaching out locally and globally for all of us.

It’s been a momentous summer for me–moving into a new chapter in my life, with a new location: Olympia, WA, home to the beautiful southern tip of Puget Sound, a vibrant community of musicians and upstarts of all kinds, and (so far) much more affordable living spaces than Portland, OR. I’ve been officially in Olympia since early July, but teaching at Festival of American Fiddle Tunes, Wallowa Fiddle Tune Camp,and the Swannanoa Gathering Fiddle Week have kept me pretty busy!

I’m about to take off for my last teaching gig of the summer: Camp de Souches à oreilles (Aug. 25-28). This wonderful, very affordable, family-friendly music camp in eastern Quebec is run by our friends from Tidal Wave. It’s a great way to immerse yourself in Québec culture and music! Late August is a wonderful time of year to be in Quebec–it’s the tail end of summer and the weather tends to be fair and pleasant (right now the forecast is for the low 70s, with cool evenings and clear skies). There are 75-minute classes in fiddle, accordion, piano, guitar, and dancing, with LOTS of jamming. The setting, a newly-renovated classical music festival site, is welcoming, and a number of Americans and Anglo-Canadians attending, with strong turn-outs from New England. The camp is filled for this year–check out the website for 2017!

After the camp, I’ll be headed to Joliette to spend a couple of weeks with Le Bruit court dans la Ville (André Marchand and Normand Miron), digging into some new repertory for a new show and album…we’ll make a very brief appearance at the Carrefour mondial de l’accordéon (September 1-5), an annual massive seismic outburst of accordions of every conceivable kind (and a few you would never even conjure up in your wildest dreams) from all over the planet, holding forth for three days of buttons and bellows, to say nothing of a lot of rhinestone and mother-of-toilet-seat blingosity.

In October, I’ll be back to eastern Quebec and the Magdelan Islands with Le Bruit for workshops and festivals, and then staffing at Janie Rothfield’s Jumpstart Camp in the Philadelphia area (October 21-23rd). Janie’s camp is a great way to get a LOT of learning and jamming in an intimate setting, with gourmet meals and a small coterie of equally passionate folks from all over. There will be classes in Cajun and Old-Time music as well, with Janie and Michelle Kaminsky.

In November, Dan Compton and I will be doing a quick tour up to Vancouver, BC, with stops in Mount Vernon and Seattle. Stay tuned for details.

And in December, I’ll be playing the Boston Revels, which this year celebrates Acadian and Cajun traditions. Couldn’t be in better company (Keith Murphy, David Greely, and Josée Vachon, with the children and adult choruses and some amazing brass players to boot!).

The Portland Québécois and Cajun jams (monthly on first Tuesday evenings and third Sunday afternoons respectively) continue to celebrate the joys of music and community in Stumptown, and there is a lively, third-Thursday Québécois jam here in Olympia as well.
I have a lot to learn about my new community–will keep you posted on what’s shaking here as I learn the ropes.

Meanwhile, if you live in Olympia, Seattle, or Portland, OR (or points in between) and would like to set up a lesson or workshop, let me know. I’ll be setting up a teaching schedule for the fall and winter and would love to sign you on board! And if you live further afield, just get in touch. I teach by Skype!

Cheers and all the best,

Lisa

September, October, and November 2013 News

Hello all! It’s been a great Fall season to date beginning with a great Cajun session class in September, Celtic Colours International Festival and studio sessions with Le Bruit court dans la ville in October, and coming up shortly, a November 7-13 tour down to the California Bay area with Dan Compton. Read on for details on upcoming events!

September got off to a rousing start with a great Cajun session class. The studio was jam-packed with fiddles, mandolin, banjos, accordions, and guitars and we sang and played up a storm. Looks like we’ll have to do that one again. Meanwhile, there’s the monthly Cajun jam.

In October, André Marchand, Normand Miron and I returned for the third time as guest artists at Celtic Colours International Festival. This nine-day festival in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia presents dozens of concerts and workshops all over the island, an extensive line-up of community events, and a nightly Festival Club. It is without a doubt one of Canada’s premier music events, combining outstanding artists, great staff and volunteers, and wonderful venues–from a reconstructed 300-year old French fortress to community theaters and parish halls–all over the beautiful island of Cape Breton at the height of leaf season.

We got to play wonderful concerts with friends old and new, including Dave Greely, Dirk Powell, Riley Baugus, Mairi MacInnes, Rona Lightfoot, J.P. Cormier, and Colin Grant. Highlights included an amazing Thanksgiving feast and session hosted by luthier Otis Thomas and music with Paul Cranford, Sarah Beck, Frode Haltli and Vegar Vårdal, plus tunes all night long with Riley Baugus (with some wicked local moonshine thanks to Paul MacDonald). To cap it off, we returned to Joliette, QC for session work on a new CD which we hope to have ready to go by next Spring.

Coming up in November, I’ll hit the road for one last tour this year with Portland musical partner-in-crime Dan Compton down to sunny California. We will play house concerts in Arcata, Mountain View, Bonny Doon, and Grass Valley, plus a concert in Ashland, OR on the way home. I’ll be doing fiddle workshops in Los Altos, CA and Ashland, OR. Dan and I will also be doing a week-end of concerts, workshops, and a contradance in Eugene, OR (Nov. 22-23). See the calendar for details.

Pinot, Pie, Camps, and Discount Fiddle Lessons!

It’s July! In the Pacific Northwest, that means gardens full of vegetables, raspberries and marionberries and blueberries, sunshine, clear skies galore, and lots of music.  Festival of American Fiddle Tunes starts today, the Waterfront Blues Festival is coming right up. What could be better?

Here in Fiddleville, July also means pinot, pie, camps, and special prices on private lessons.

On July 4th, I’m gigging with Marionberry Jam at the

Pinot and Pie on the 4th of July, an afternoon of old-time music, pie, and wine tasting at the beautiful Bethel Heights Winery just outside of Salem, OR.  Mmmmmmm!

Then it’s camp time!  I’m on staff at two camps here in Oregon:
the Wallowa Fiddle Tunes Camp out in Wallowa (July 7-12) and the West Cascades Fiddle Camp & Workshop down in Oakridge (July 22-25). There is still room at West Cascades, and it’s a steal of a deal, so check it out!

Here in Portland,  I’ll be offering discount lesson packages for the months of July and August. It’s a great way to invest in  your fiddle chops, polish up the tunes you love and/ or learn some new ones, at bargain rates.

News for June 2013

It’s June, it’s June, it’s June! Here in Bridgetown, that means gardens full of snow peas, greens, and strawberries, and enough sunshine to play outdoors! What could be nicer?

It’s going to be a great month in Fiddleville. For starters, on Sunday, June 2nd, I’ll be playing for the Every Sunday Square Dance with Crankset: Scott Killops on banjo, Joe Moore on guitar, and Robin Wilcox on bass. Straight-at-you, gotta-dance old-time music is what we do. I can’t wait! Put on your dancing shoes and catch us at the Village Ballroom, 700 NE Dekum St., 7-9pm.

Then on Friday, June 14, it’s a house concert in SE Portland at the home of Abbie and Harold Weisenbloom. It’s their (drumroll, please) 100th house concert! What an incredible, generous gift. Over the past three years, Abbie and her family have given thousands of Portlanders an opportunity to hear some of the very best traditional musicians in an intimate living room setting. Thank you, Abbie & Cie.! To celebrate, I’ll be teaming up with Johnny Connolly (Irish button accordionist extraordinaire) and Dan Compton (ace guitarist and multi-instrumentalist/vocalist–it’s our newly formed trio’s debut concert!

Johnny, Dan, and I got together a few months back to kick around a few tunes just for fun and poof! instant musical chemistry. Turns out that Johnny, in addition to being one of the best Irish button accordionists on the planet, is an accomplished old-time musician in love with crookedy, honking old-time fiddle tunes (wait til you hear his killer take on “John Brown’s Dream”). It’s been pure joy working up duets of old mountain tunes. As if that weren’t enough, we’re now deep, deep into tune-swapping Irish and French-Canadian repertories. The synergy has been amazing. Dan, Johnny, and I are clearly on the same musical page–it feels like we’ve been playing together for years. Please join us for this debut concert of fresh takes on time-honored tunes and songs from Appalachia, Quebec, and Ireland (see calendar for details).

March 2013 classes, workshops, and concerts!

It’s going to be a great month of March here in Fiddleville! I’ll be offering a new class and doing some Quebec session workshops, team-teaching a fiddle and banjo duet workshop, and playing two local concerts. Read on for the details!

On the workshop front:

Fiddle and Banjo Duet workshops  on Saturday, Mar. 2nd and 16th from 1-3pm: Back by popular demand after a hugely successful debut series last fall, banjo goddess and teacher extraordinaire Leela Grace and I will once again team up to offer a two-part workshop on the magic of playing fiddle and banjo duets. The workshops will focus on the basics of duet playing, on demonstration of techniques and tunes, separate fiddle and banjo instruction, and chances to play in smaller fiddle/banjo ensembles and try out the new music, with Leela and Lisa dropping in to visit and help as needed.  Participants will have access to mp3s of the tunes before the first weekend. If you took the workshop series in the fall, please join us again! We will be offering all new tunes (key of G, standard tuning for fiddle). Sliding scale $45-90, pre-registration required. For more information and registration, click here.

Quebec Spring Tune Workshops: Mar. 24 and April 7, 2013
Spring into Spring with a bagful of great Quebec dance tunes! Six tunes in two sessions, plus  access to downloadable mp3 recordings and sheet music. It is going to be a LOT of fun, focusing primarily on the repertory of eastern Quebec left-handed fiddler/composer/woodcarver/life-of-the-party Yvon Mimeault: jigs, reels, step dance tunes, some old, some new, some major, some minor modal. Yvon will be the featured Quebecois fiddler at the 2013 Festival of American Fiddle Tunes in  Port Townsend–taking these workshops will give you a headstart on his music (or–if you can’t go to Fiddle Tunes–a great way to learn some Yvon tunes!). You can sign up for one , workshop for $30 or take both for $50 (that’s a bargain!).

WHAT:  Quebec Spring Tune Workshops
WHEN: Sunday, Mar. 24 and Apr. 7, from 3:30-5:45pm
WHERE: My music studio in SE Portland
COST: One workshop for $30 or 2 for $50
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED  click here (it’s easy!)

On the concert front:

Tuesday, Mar. 19th, 8pm at the Alberta Rose Theatre:  Dan Compton and I will play the opening set for for Cape Breton Scottish trad divas Mary Jane Lamond (Gaelic singer) and Wendy MacIsaac (powerhouse fiddler, pianist, and step dancer). Wendy and Mary Jane are internationally renowned, award-winning musicians. A great evening awaits! You can purchase tickets on-line at the Alberta Rose Theatre website.

On Friday, Mar. 22nd, 7:30pm  in Southeast Portland: I’ll be doing a house concert with the wickedly multi-talented and hilarious Betsy Branch and Leela Grace. A great evening of instrumentals and songs, new and old, from near and far, delivered up fresh. For more information and reservations, e-mail abbiew@froggie.com

On the classroom front:

Fiddle 2  Back-Up Harmonies and Chords (Part 2), Mondays, 6:30-7:30pm on Mar. 4, 11, 18, 25, April 1 and 8

By popular demand! This 6-week class will solidify and build on the previous 7-week session. You will become more skilled and comfortable playing back-up chord progressions and fills for tunes and songs in the keys of G, D, and A. We’ll work with old-time, Scottish, bluegrass, and Cajun repertories.  As always, there will be opportunities to strengthen core technique: tone production, fingering, bowing, and string crossings. Downloadable recordings and hand-outs to support material covered in class will be posted to a class webpage.

Classes take place in my music studio in SE Portland (a cozy room with great ambiance!). If you did not take the first session, please contact me before registering. Cost: $100-130 sliding scale. Pre-registration required (don’t worry, it’s easy!) Just click here.

New Classes and Workshops for the New Year!

With short days, long nights, and crisp weather, we’re about to enter the winter season. Hope you are staying warm and enjoying those miraculous, occasional blue-sky days. It’s been a busy and fun fall for teaching and performing. I am fortunate to journey with people (like you!) who are discovering the joy of making music and rising to the challenge of doing so on a great musical instrument with some truly medieval design flaws (aka the fiddle!).

I am planning an exciting bunch of classes and workshops for January-March 2013, including a first-ever Intro to Cajun music class, a Quebec Session class, Fiddle 2, and a Fiddle/Banjo duet class (with co-teacher and banjo diva Leela Grace). Read on for details on just what these classes will be, and more!

Concert at Yachats Celtic Festival 2012

On Saturday November 10, I’ll be back at Yachats Celtic Festival with Dan Compton for a return performance–on the main stage evening concert. We’ll be sharing that stage with Aoife Clancy (Co. Tipperary, Ireland) and Town Pants (Vancouver, BC). Should be a great night! I’ll also lead a late-morning workshop on fiddle tunes from Round Peak (Galax, VA and Mt. Airy, NC)…there will be a lot of music, song, and dance in Yachats Nov. 9-11,  a great line-up of performers, and plenty of sessions. Hope to see you there!