Nashville Folk Festival and
Gibson Original Acoustic Instruments will be giving away
a new Gibson A-9 Mandolin during the weekend of
September 12 and 13 at the first annual Nashville Folk Festival
which will be held at the old Jordon Farm in Wilson County Tennessee. The
Mandolin Celebration give-a-way is through the generosity
of Gibson and is the brainchild of festival founder; recording artist, musician
and recording studio owner Tabby Crabb of Lebanon, TN.
Crabb came to the Nashville area twenty years ago with Mickey Gilley and
The Urban Cowboy Band to play Hew Haw and
just stayed. "I loved passing through the Cedar trees along the interstate
when we would pass through Wilson and thought I'd like to live
around here someday," Crabb states. He and his family moved to Wilson
County in 1990.
The idea for a folk festival at the farm has been in the
works since the 1990s but it wasn't until Crabb met Dr. Robert
Cogswell who is a folklorist with the State of Tennessee that the idea
really started taking shape and with the help of Gypsy
Carns, Jim Calvin and Andy May
Nashville Folk Festival Inc. was formed as a non profit entity and the
festival made some headway toward reality as site preparation work and
finding just the right entertainers and artists began in 2002. All the acts have
connections to the Nashville Tennessee area and either live here or work out of
here. "It's all about being local or having local connections," Crabb
states.
The all acoustic line up features bluegrass, old timey and
contemporary folk based music and includes these fine area, regional,
national and international artists: Jim Calvin, Gypsy Carns, Mark Dyer,
Curtis McPeake, Andy May, Cindy Kalmenson, Clive Gregson, Richard
Ferreira, Toni Catlin, Suzanna Spring, Dutch, Tirk Wilder, Michael Kelsh, Rod
Picott, Tom Roznowski, Jon Byrd, Sara Beck, Chris Crofton, Tucson Simpson Band,
Joe Nolan, Celeste Krenz, Dave Cannon, Melmac Lickers, Buddy Ingram, Digger Lou,
Larry Newgent, The Hedges Family, GeorgeBlack, Toby Steele, Johnny
Bellar, 80 year old story teller Gladys Crabb. The
festival is family friendly and spans two days opening at 2 PM on Friday and
going till just after dark. On Saturday the festival starts in the morning
performances around 10 AM and continues through around 9:30 pm with the
presentation first Nashville Folk Festival Lifetime Achievement
Award.
Epiphone Musical Instruments joins Gibson
in their sponsorship of Nashville Folk Festival 2003 and the
festival directors will be presenting a new Epiphone EP-200 to
a lucky ticket holder on Saturday afternoon.
Please visit the website for details at
http://nashvillefolkfestival.com
Tickets will be limited to 300 and are available through the website or by
calling sponsor
Flatwood Studio at (615) 444-0171. Festival
proceeds go to the artists themselves, Nashville Folk Festival Inc. for festival
operation and the Lifetime of Achievement Award and to Friends of Cedars of
Lebanon State Park (FOCOL).