Janine Smith
Lenore Robinson Dance Stage noon
Janine Smith calls square, contra, and family dances in the D.C. area.
She shares her humorous and infectious (OK, sometimes goofy) style and love
of music and dance with dancers from Glen Echo, Maryland, to Seattle,
Washington, and specializes in "Singing Squares." She is one of the "Hot
Square Babes," a quintet of callers who throw a monthly Square Dance Party
in College Park, Maryland. Come on and get your hoedown on, darlin'!
Return to top
SONiA
Grove Stage 3:00pm
http://www.soniadf.com
Whether in the bomb shelters "Miklats" in Israel or summer camps in
Palestine, colleges, festivals or venues around the world, SONiA is always
striving to disappear fear and spread her message of peace. She has been
nominated for a Grammy and has won numerous awards for her albums. She
named her last studio CD No Bomb Is Smart and has used every
opportunity to let people know that war is not the answer. She Loves Out
Loud and Proud and donates 18 percent of all downloads of her music to end
world hunger. Jeep named her as one of 8 troubadours for their new
National Campaign, and video of the tour is currently on MTV.
Among her new projects, SONiA has written the soundtrack for the
documentary "Autumn's Harvest." Directed by Dave Marshall, the short film
chronicles the life of Douglas, a migrant worker who is HIV-positive. The
documentary is currently being shown at film festivals around the world.
Return to top
Soul In Motion
World Stage noon
Lenore Robinson Dance Stage 2:00pm
http://www.simpinc.org
Soul In Motion African Dancers & Drummers, a non-profit performing-arts
organization, was founded in 1984 by percussionist Michael Friend. The
group is led by Associate Director/Choreographer Pam Lassiter Rhone.
This multi-talented ensemble has performed for thousands at various
festivals and corporate events including Dance Africa, Kunta Kinte
Festival, and BlackRock Center for the Arts.
Return to top
Storm the Unpredictable
Field Stage noon
http://www.myspace.com/stormtheunpredictable
Storm the Unpredictable is a hip-hop artist with a lyrical style that
can instantly change the mood of any crowd, as the weather quickly changes
with an approaching violent storm. His musical style, as seen on his first
single, MCs Be Killin' Me, is party-oriented but still gives listeners
something intellectual to think about. "My music reflects the two sides in
one person. I'm a quiet person because I like to observe. But when making
noise is truly necessary, I can make a comment out of nowhere and have the
crowd falling out laughing or thinking seriously about something," Storm
explains. He sharpened his stage skills by continually performing at
clubs, colleges, and showcases including Showtime at the Apollo, Nuyorican
Cafe, the Philadelphia Music Conference, and Motown's Black History Month
Conference. Storm could also be regularly found building his MC talents
with the Freestyle Union, a D.C. hip-hop organization that held monthly
ciphers, rhyming workshops, and shows.
Storm's infinite presence in the
MD/DC/VA hip-hop underground has generated a huge local fan-base. Fans
credit the artist with spitfire lyrical delivery. Additionally, they
praise his style, which embraces the essence of late-'80s and
early/mid-'90s hip-hop, while at the same time still making it accessible
to today's new generation of listeners. His music reminds fans of "a much
happier, feel-good and conscious hip-hop," a time when having fun and
getting uplifted by hip-hop music was part of the norm.
The Washington
Area Music Association named Storm the 2002, 2003, and 2004 Hip Hop Artist
of the Year. He also received the 2002 and 2003 Hip Hop Recording of the
Year award given by that same organization. Storm's music has received
praise from XXL, The Source, Elemental and
Insomniac magazines as well as The Washington Post,
Washington City Paper, and various other print and Internet
magazines/newspapers. Radio listeners across the country and worldwide
have heard his songs on stations such as Hot 97FM in New York and both WPGC
and WKYS in Washington, D.C. His previous single, Get Your Weight Up (Big
Girl Anthem), won the WPGC 95.5 Homejam's competition enabling him to open
up for their Springjam concert alongside Ludacris, Fabolous, Ashanti, and
others. The single was released in October 2002 and rose to number 2 on
the national college charts. It was followed by Storm's first full-length
CD, Amalgamation, in February 2003. His latest single, Y'All Know
the Name, off the 3 Piece Extra Mumbo EP rose to number one on both
the Rapattacklives and Rapnetwork national college radio/mixshow charts the
week of January 24, 2005.
Return to top
Michelle Swan
Grove Stage 11:00am
http://www.michelleswan.com
Introduced to the guitar at age 9 by her father, Michelle Swan has
pursued a musical path ever since. After studying classical musical and
clarinet performance at Towson State University in Maryland, Michelle
entered the Baltimore-Washington music scene in 1990, performing at local
open-mikes and coffeehouses.
Classifying herself as an "urban acoustic singer/songwriter," Michelle's
influences include artists as divergent as Cheryl Wheeler, Cat Stevens and
Lucinda Williams, but her performances center around her own compositions,
displaying both a prolific talent for song-writing and an infectious love
of music. Self-reflective and acutely observant, Michelle deftly weaves
lyric and note together to create intensely personal songs that tell of
sentiments and circumstances nonetheless familiar to everyone.
Return to top
Takoma Mandoleers
Abbott Stage 11:00am
http://www.mandoleers.org
The Takoma Mandoleers performed in the first Takoma Park Folk Festival
in 1978. The orchestra was established in 1923 in Takoma Park as an
offshoot of the larger Nordica Club. The orchestra has rehearsed in
Arlington, Virginia, since 1953 and currently meets at the Clarendon United
Methodist Church.
Playing instruments of the mandolin family (mandolin, mandola, and
mandocello) and guitar, the Mandoleers continue the musical traditions of
the early 20th century, when many towns, schools and colleges had a
mandolin orchestra. Their repertoire includes marches, dances, ragtime,
and international and classical music.
The orchestra has hosted conventions of the Fretted Instrument Guild of
America and the Classical Mandolin Society of America, and has organized
two pairs of exchanges with L'Ensemble à Plectre de Toulouse, France.
Recent performance venues include churches, retirement communities,
Brookside Gardens (Maryland), Lake Accotink Park (Virginia), Mason District
Park (Virginia), the Washington Folk Festival at Glen Echo, Maryland, and
the Classical Mandolin Society of America's convention in Philadephia,
Pennsylvania.
Return to top
Tinsmith
Grove Stage 2:00pm
http://www.tinsmith.net
Tinsmith is a high-energy folk band playing traditional music of
Ireland, Scotland and Appalachia. Citing influences from blues to
bluegrass, from funk to jazz to mountain music, they bring traditional
songs and tunes into the new century. Known for their fun and energetic
performances and for the taste and delicacy of their arrangements, Tinsmith
has been making audiences dance since 1997. They are three-time invitees
at the North Texas Irish Festival in Dallas and have played prestigious
gigs as The Barns at Wolf Trap Park for the Performing Arts, Potomac Celtic
Festival, the Institute of Musical Traditions and BlackRock Center for the
Arts. Tinsmith has numerous Wammie (Washington Area Music Association)
awards to its credit.
Led by core members, multi-talented Rowan Corbett (guitar, bouzouki, bones,
djembe) and vocalist Brooke Parkhurst (banjo, Irish flue, tinwhistles), the
group also includes superb bassist Henry Cross and their talented
guitar-and-mandolin virtuoso, Avril Smith.
Return to top
Justin Trawick
Seventh Heaven 2:00pm
http://www.justintrawick.com
Justin Trawick's performances are a full-bodied blend of silky tune,
gritty vocals and shoulder-dancing beats. Walking the tightrope between
various genres, Justin's music fluently balances between sometimes rowdy,
other times consoling, forms of folk, bluegrass, and hip hop, bestowing
upon listeners an incorporated and organic form of poetry.
Justin has been tunefully hitting local clubs, coffeehouses, and bars since
November 2004, quickly expanding his range to larger venues up and down the
East Coast and opening for the honorable likes of Pat McGee, Bob Schneider
and Brett Dennen. He plays both solo and with his band, The Justin Trawick
Group, consisting of quite the velvety brew of piano, cello, violin,
mandolin, upright bass, hand percussion, and drums. Trawick's debut album,
How to Build a Life With a Lemonade Stand was recorded live in 2006
and warmly eased its way into the driver's seat of a fine folk, hip-hop
combination, taking all thirteen tracks on a first-rate
drums-on-the-steering-wheel ride. With smoothed-out Dylanesque vocals
skipping over his effortless guitar playing, Justin released the CD in
March 2007 and has continued to bolster individual lives ever since.
Return to top
Triple Goddess Tribal Belly Dance
Lenore Robinson Dance Stage 3:00pm
http://www.bodylovebellydance.com
Triple Goddess Tribal Belly Dance was founded by artistic director Maya
Taahira in 2006 and is derived from several previous belly-dance classes
and troupes in the D.C. area. Triple Goddess Tribal gets its name from a
celebration of the three stages of a woman's life innocent youth,
fertile middle-age, and wise elder years. Triple Goddess Tribal performs
traditional folk dances of the Middle East and North Africa, updated with
elements of American Tribal Style (ATS) belly dance. Triple Goddess Tribal
seeks to empower its performers and delight its audiences with dances that
are both exquisite and playful, that connect performer and audience, and
that stay true to their folkloric roots.
Return to top
Joe Uehlein
Abbott Stage noon
http://www.uliners.com
Joe Uehlein has lived his life at the confluence of art and activism.
He is the founding President of the Labor Heritage Foundation, and recently
founded a new organization, CultureWorks, dedicated to integrating art and
activism in ways that help unite and inspire people to achieve progressive
change. Joe spent over 30 years working as a labor organizer, and as a
musician, and currently fronts his roots-rock ensemble, The U-Liners. Joe
is a 42-year member of the American Federation of Musicians. As a solo
artist, Joe has performed in a dozen countries on three continents, and The
U-Liners have played the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, the
Mercury Ballroom in New York City, at Yale University, and in all of the
D.C. area's finest venues, including the Birchmere, the IOTA Club, and
Jammin' Java. Joe met Joe Glazer in January of 1960 at a party celebrating
the Steelworkers' victory following the longest strike in the history of
the steel industry. Joe Uehlein's dad worked in the steel mills in Lorain,
Ohio, and Joe later went to work in an aluminum mill in Mechanicsburg,
Pennsylvania. Joe started playing guitar at the age of 12. Work and music
have always played a central role in his life.
Return to top
The U-Liners
Field Stage 3:00pm
http://www.uliners.com
The U-Liners play a wide variety of music in the roots-rock genre
including country, rock'n roll, swing, bluegrass, rock, folk, folk-rock,
country-rock, blues, rhythm & blues, soul, and more. The U-Liners have a
broad and deep repertoire ideal for dancing or listening. From their
sold-out shows at the IOTA Club in August '05 and '06, paying tribute to
Jerry Garcia, to their performance at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in
Cleveland, to energetic standing-room-only crowds at Jammin' Java, Half
Moon Barbeque, the Birchmere, the Rodeo, and McGinty's in Silver Spring,
The U-Liners always offer up a full dose of variety and energy! The
U-Liners have also performed at the Mansion on O Street, The Millennium
Arts Center, the AFL-CIO, the Mercury Ballroom in NYC, and Bally's in Las
Vegas; and individually members of the band have also performed at the
Birchmere, the IOTA Club, the State Theater, Wolf Trap, and many other fine
venues throughout the country. The U-Liners have performed several times
with Lester Chambers of The Chambers Brothers, and with Jill Sobule, Boots
Riley of The Coup, Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave,
Pete Seeger, Cathy Fink & Marcy Marxer, and Sarah Lee Guthrie & Johnny
Irion. A rare specialty of this group is songs of hope, peace, justice and
equality political and protest songs both old and new.
The U-Liners have
performed at many rallies, conventions, conferences, educational seminars,
and other places where people gather to create a more just and humane
society. The U-Liners consist of Joe Uehlein (guitar & vocals), Avril
Smith (guitar, mandolin, & vocals), Larry Ferguson (drums), Mindy
McWilliams (fiddle & vocals), and Barry Warsaw (bass & vocals).
Return to top
Les Waltzniks
Lenore Robinson Dance Stage 5:00pm
Les Waltzniks members Jim Besser on concertina, Mia Boynton on brac and
guitar, Catherine Chapman on fiddle, and Larry Robinson on bazouki and prim
are familiar figures in the Washington-area music scene. They are
dedicated to the idea of music "lifting the feet" of the dancers. Their
waltzes come from all traditions, although they have been known to sigh in
rhapsody when they play a French waltz.
Return to top
Washington Revels' Young Revelers
Grassy Nook 1:00pm
http://revelsdc.org
An established cultural institution in the greater Washington area since
1983, Washington Revels creates community celebrations based on traditional
music, dance, stories and drama from around the world, often handed down
over centuries. Staged or informal, large or small, Revels celebrations
involve adults and children of all ages, mixing professionals and
nonprofessionals alike. Audience participation is a hallmark: whether
singing, dancing or becoming part of the drama, Revels audiences are always
an integral part of the community. For the 2007 TPFF, the Young Revelers
will present "Saint George and the Dragon," a compilation of several
medieval mummers' plays and traditional English folk songs celebrating the
seasons, with children selected from the audience as the dragon's tail!
Return to top
Ziva Spanish Dance Ensemble
World Stage 4:30pm
http://www.ZISD.org
Ziva explores the roots of flamenco while also incorporating other dance
forms into the Ensemble's performances. Guest artists have come from a
variety of dance and musical fields such as jazz, modern, tap, Indian,
African, and Moorish.
The Ensemble was established in 1995 by Ziva Cohen, its artistic director.
The Ensemble's dancers have diverse and international backgrounds. Most
have previous experience in dance forms such as ballet, modem, ballroom,
and folkorico.
The Ensemble has appeared in a variety of venues in the D.C. area including
the Kennedy Center's Millennium Stage, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, the
Publick Playhouse, Lisner Auditorium, the Alden Theatre, First Night
Annapolis, and the Jack Guidone Theater at the Joy of Motion Dance Center.
Return to top