| 2010 Blues Fest -- Workshop/BlueSKool Artist Biographies |
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| Music - Mississippi Valley Blues Festival | |||
| Written by Administrator | |||
| Wednesday, 23 June 2010 05:41 | |||
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David Horwitz, Workshop at 2:30 p.m. Sunday
David Berntson, BlueSKool 2:30 p.m. Saturday and 5 p.m. Sunday What would the IH Mississippi Valley Blues Festival be without blues educator and harpist David Berntson? Three words: David brings it. Originally hailing from Galesburg, Illinois, this Tulsa, Oklahoma, blues-club founder, prevention educator, and drug/alcohol counselor continually shares his enthusiasm and passion for the blues with young people and adults. David presents Blues in the Schools at a number of schools, including alternative schools for at-risk students. Look out when he digs out his gigantic harmonica. His passion and love for kids is unstoppable, and he leaves kids of all ages with something more than what they came with.
The Mississippi Valley Blues Society thanks its educational sponsors for their continuing support: the Riverboat Development Authority, The Lodge, KALA-FM, Illinois Arts Council, Alcoa, and the River Music Experience. -- Ann Ring Hal Reed & Ellis Kell, BlueSKool 3:45 p.m. Saturday and Sunday
In 2009 and also in 2007, Hal Reed was MVBS Blues in the Schools artist-in-residence along with guitar player Donald Kinsey. Their "Generations of Blues" program was popular in the schools and all the public venues they played. Hal Reed is also a veteran musician on the Quad Cities scene. He's fronted various bands, and took one of them to the International Blues Challenge in Memphis. This is Hal's third year moderating the Winter Blues Kids performance at BlueSKool along with Ellis Kell. For a third year, Hal was one of the instructors at the River Music Experience's Winter Blues program this past December.
Ellis is also the director of programming and education at the River Music Experience, where he was one of the major architects of the Winter Blues program for kids, as well as organizer and instructor for the program's third year. -- Karen McFarland Charles "Wsir" Johnson, BlueSKool 5 p.m. Saturday and 2:30 p.m. Sunday
For part of the Blues in the Schools program in Durham, North Carolina, Johnson guided youth in making more than 60 diddley bows. The same with a blues summer camp in Mississippi. In 2008, he was invited to make more than 80 diddley bows at the Chicago Blues Festival. That's where Nate Lawrence of the MVBS Education Committee first saw Johnson. Nate was so impressed with Johnson's artistry and teaching abilities that we contacted Johnson to see if he could do a mini blues-education residency in the days before the Fest. Johnson will be spending three days at the Martin Luther King Jr. Community Center in Rock Island, helping the kids to each make a diddley bow and learn how to play it. A didley bow is a one-stringed instrument made out of common materials; it mimics the instruments made in the South by virtually all bluesmen starting out in the 20th Century, with a piece of baling wire nailed to the side of a house or porch and then tightened so that it can be plucked for music. The Education Committee is excited to welcome this educator and instrument-maker to BlueSKool! -- Karen McFarland
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