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RMFC Artists 2007!

Artists Attending Both Weeks
Seamus Connolly - Irish Fiddle
William Coulter and John Knowles - leading the Guitar Program
Ken Perlman - Clawhammer Banjo, leading the Banjo Program
Loretta Thompson - Scottish Fiddle
Mary Ann Willis - International Fiddle
Topher Gayle - Mandolin, Guitar
Jennifer Sordyl - Beginning Fiddle
Laurie Riley and Margot Krimmel - leading the Harp Study Program
Arlene & Bruce Patterson - Fiddle, Guitar, Piano, Theory

Additional Artists Week One, August 5-12
Byron Berline - Bluegrass Fiddle
Shona LeMottee - Scottish Fiddle
Andy Stein - Swing Fiddle
Ward MacDonald - Cape Breton Fiddle
Lynn "Chirps" Smith - Old Time Fiddle
Larry Edelman - Dance Calling, Mandolin
Jeff Matheson - Cape Breton Piano, Guitar
Kirk Sutphin - Clawhammer Banjo
Frank Fyock - Orchestra, Composition
Steve Scott - Cello, Bass
Tina Gugeler - Hammered Dulcimer
The Clawhammer Banjo Program

Additional Artists Week Two, August 12-19
Paul Anastasio - Swing Fiddle
Richard Greene - Bluegrass Fiddle
Troy MacGillivray - Cape Breton Fiddle
Laura Risk - Scottish & Quebecois Fiddle
Brad Leftwich - Old Time Fiddle
Rushad Eggleston - Cello
Sabra MacGillivray - Step Dance
Peter Barnes - Piano, Flute, Tin Whistle


Séamus Connolly, Irish Fiddle - Séamus is one of the world's most respected master Irish musicians.  Séamus is not only a talented and world recognized performer but also a fantastic teacher as well.  His teaching method is a refreshing combination of the basic tune, ornamentation and history.  A native of Killaloe, County Clare, Ireland, he now resides in Groton, Massachusetts. Séamus won the Irish National Fiddle Championship 10 times, a feat unequalled by any other musician. He was also the winner of the internationally acclaimed "Fiddler of Dooney" Competition, and he was named "Traditional Irish Musician of 2002". Séamus has had the honor of representing Ireland on three "Masters of the Folk Violin" tours organized by the National Council for the Traditional Arts. He has performed at most major festivals in the United States, including the National Folk Festival, Smithsonian Festival of American Folklife, Wolf Trap Irish Folk Festival and American Roots Fourth of July Celebration at the Washington Monument. He also performed on the "Folk Masters" radio series, which was broadcast nationwide on National Public Radio. As a performer, teacher and lecturer, he has traveled to places as far afield as Australia, Spain, France, England, Canada, Alaska, and Ireland. Visit Séamus' Website.
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Richard Greene, Bluegrass & Celtic Crossover Fiddle - In the words of one of his fellow fiddlers, Richard is "one of the most innovative and influential fiddle players of all time". Growing up in Los Angeles, he dabbled in classical music until his encounter with the pyrotechnic fiddling of Scotty Stoneman which permanently changed his musical direction. He first attained prominence with Bill Monroe and the Bluegrass Boys in 1966 as one of Monroe's first "northern" band members. His advanced technique and intense yet "cool" tone shocked audiences and prefigured such players as Jean-Luc Ponty and others, influencing a generation of fiddle players including Darol Anger, Alison Krauss and Stuart Duncan. His latest CD is “Hands Across The Pond”, melodies from the British-American tradition. He currently leads seminars on all aspects of fiddling and violin playing nationwide, teaching courses at The Mancini Institute, the RockyGrass Academy, the Festival of Fiddle Tunes, the Mark O'Connor Fiddle Camp and dozens of workshops throughout the year. Visit Richard's website.
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Lynn “Chirps” Smith has played fiddle for more than thirty years.  He specializes in playing Midwestern dance tunes and has played in many Old Time dance bands.  Early on he cultivated a strong interest in Midwestern fiddle music -- he is a lifelong resident of Illinois after all.  As a member of the Indian Creek Delta Boys, he searched out senior fiddlers in Illinois and collected and learned many fine old tunes.  He has learned a lot from fiddlers in the surrounding states as well.  He has taught classes at Augusta Heritage Workshops, the University of Wisconsin String-Along Weekend, the Festival of American Fiddle Tunes, the Montana Fiddle Camp, Blue Ridge Old-Time Week, and numerous weekend workshops at festivals and dance weekends across the country.  In 1997 he was recognized as a master Illinois fiddler and awarded an Illinois Arts Council Apprenticeship Grant with teenager Stephanie Coleman (now an acclaimed fiddler in her own right).  His love of playing dances has enabled him to develop a strong sense of rhythm and his love of Midwestern fiddling has enabled him to develop a fairly large repertory of familiar to obscure dance tunes.  Visit Chirps' Website.

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Byron Berline's early career included playing fiddle with bluegrass legends such as Bill Monroe, Dillard and Clark and Country Gazette. After moving to Los Angeles in 1969, he soon became one of the most popular fiddlers in the music business. His long list of performing and recording credits includes The Rolling Stones, The Eagles, The Band, The Byrds, Elton John, Alabama, Mary Chapin Carpenter, The Flying Burrito Brothers, Rod Stewart, John Denver, Earl Scruggs, Emmylou Harris, Tammy Wynette, Mason Williams, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson and Vince Gill. He also has extensive television and movie sound track credits and has appeared in Star Trek, Blaze, Back to the Future III, and Basic Instinct. Berline has recorded seven solo albums including his highly acclaimed "FIDDLE & A SONG" with guest performances from Vince Gill, Mason Williams, Earl Scruggs and Bill Monroe. In 1996 the album was nominated for two Grammy awards, 'Best Album of the Year' and 'Best Song of the Year'. In 1995 Byron returned to his home state of Oklahoma where he opened a Fiddle Shop in the town of Guthrie, for the purpose of "visiting, trading and jamming" with folks who enjoy their music. (Stones Fans, that's Byron on Country Honk, cut three of Let It Bleed!!) Visit Byron's website.
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Shona LeMottee, Scottish Fiddle - Vancouver- based fiddler, Shona Le Mottee originally hails from the tiny Island of Jersey in the English Channel, UK.  Highlights of Shona’s career include: Touring and recording a Juno Award winning album with “The Paperboys”, performing with “Michael Flatley’s Lord of The Dance” and the 4x World Champion “SFU Pipe Band”.  Shona has also performed and recorded with Juno Award winning West African vocalist, “Alpha Yaya Diallo” and Celtic Funk Masters, “Mad Pudding”.  After several years of teaching and performing internationally, Shona released her own album, “Destination Grouville” in 2005.  Shona is also in great demand as a fiddle teacher. She has been teaching privately for over 15 years and was the founder and director of the Vancouver Scottish Fiddle Club which ran successfully for six years.  Shona has been invited to teach at several fiddle camps and workshops over the last several years and this is her 3rd year teaching at RMFC.
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Andy Stein, Swing Fiddle, is best known as the "Powder Milk Biscuit" fiddler on A Prairie Home Companion, where he has been heard for the last 14 years. Often compared with jazz greats Stephane Grappelli and Joe Venuti, he was a founding member of Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen, he recorded and won a Grammy with Asleep at the Wheel, and he has worked with a wide range of musicians, including Itzhak Perlman, Bob Dylan, Paul McCartney, André Watts, Mariah Carey, and Smashing Pumpkins. A native and resident of Manhattan, his arrangements and compositions have been performed by orchestras across the country, including an opera with libretticist Garrison Keillor, and he has composed film scores for Roger Corman and National Lampoon. Visit Andy's Website. More about Andy.
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Known for the purity of his sound and his devotion to tradition, Brad Leftwich has been sharing his love of old-time music with audiences for some 30 years. His virtuoso fiddling has been acclaimed by critics in such journals as Billboard, Fiddler Magazine, Bluegrass Unlimited, and The Old-Time Herald. He is also an accomplished banjo player and singer.  Brad is especially regarded for his teaching of traditional fiddle and banjo style. He is a frequent staff member at the major workshops and teaching camps throughout the country. He has a book on Round Peak style clawhammer banjo published by Mel Bay, and two old-time fiddle teaching videos released by Homespun TapesVisit Brad's Website.
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Paul Anastasio, Swing Fiddle, began studying the violin at age nine. He moved from classical training to the world of American popular and fiddle music, performing in a bluegrass band and competing in many fiddling contests while still in his teens. An opportunity to perform and study with the legendary jazz violinist Joe Venuti in the mid-1970s helped shape Paul’s swing jazz style. At about the same time, Paul’s friendship with electric mandolinist Tiny Moore resulted in a successful audition with country music legend Merle Haggard. Jumping at the chance to join The Strangers, Paul was able to tour the U.S. and Europe for six unforgettable months.  Paul is not only a fine performer but a respected popular music historian and teacher as well, with close to forty years spent researching the role of the violin in American popular music. He has studied and performed with the top fiddlers in popular music, including Western swing and country legends Joe Holley, Cliff Bruner, Johnny Gimble and Buddy Spicher.  Paul has taught at Mark O’Connor’s Fiddle Camp, Johnny Gimble Swing Week, Centrum’s Festival of American Fiddle Tunes, The Swannanoa Gathering and Augusta Heritage Swing Week.  Paul’s discography, with sound bites, can be found on the Web at www.SwingCatEnterprises.com

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Laura Risk, Scottish Fiddle - Laura's imaginatively expressive interpretations of Scottish, Irish, and Cape Breton fiddle music have garnered international acclaim. "A virtuoso fiddler. Her fluency in fiddle styles from Cape Breton to Appalachia is remarkable," raves The Boston Globe, while Folk Roots (U.K.) calls her playing "technically excellent and highly expressive." Says Grammy-winning filmmaker Ken Burns, "Laura Risk's fiddle is a revelation and achingly beautiful." She has appeared at many of North America's most prestigious acoustic music festivals, including the Newport, Winnipeg, and Philadelphia Folk Festivals; Celtic Colors (Cape Breton Island); and City Stages (Birmingham, AL). She is in high demand as a fiddling instructor and has taught at the Valley of the Moon Scottish Fiddling School, The Swannanoa Gathering and the Festival of American Fiddle Tunes. Visit Laura's website.
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Mary Ann Willis wrote the book on violin - literally!  She is truly a world artist, performer and teacher.  She is able to engage her students with a knowledgeable yet friendly style of teaching.  She performs and teaches tunes from around the world but her "Gypsy Jams" are especially fun!  She has authored seven book/recording volumes (http://www.melbay.com/authors.asp?author=304) of ethnic, fiddle and classical music for Mel Bay Publications. She teaches at www.witr.org and plays with www.moodafaruka.com, in Houston, TX.  She holds California and Texas all-level music teaching credentials and frequently presents at the American String Teachers National conference. She is dedicated to helping fellow fiddlers/violinists realize their musical dreams in all styles.
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Ward MacDonald, Cape Breton Fiddle - At 28 years of age and steeped in Scottish tradition, Ward MacDonald is one of the most accomplished and well-rounded young fiddlers on Prince Edward Island. With the fiddling gene present on both sides of his family, Ward’s musical roots run back four generations, including his father Allan, both grandfathers, and his great grandfather and namesake, Ward Crane.  Ward has played concerts, festivals, and square dances across the Maritimes and other parts of Canada including Ontario, Quebec, and the Yukon. He is also an emerging composer having had some of his tunes published or recorded by other Maritime musicians including Jerry Holland, Andrea Beaton, Sheila MacKenzie, and Vishten.  Ward has been instrumental in promoting and developing the traditional fiddle music scene on PEI for over a decade. His passion for passing on the tradition is carried on through performance and teaching. As a teacher he possesses a very thorough technical understanding of the music with a knack for being able to explain it well. His methods include intense ear training aided by written sheet music.

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Jeff Matheson, Cape Breton Guitar, Piano - Jeff has been actively involved in music since childhood and has become fluent in many music genres including folk, country, gospel, Celtic and rock. this diversity has strengthened his natural gift to compose and arrange unique and powerful melodies.  Jeff has written a very successful instruction booklet entitled "Piano Accompaniment Secrets for the Fiddle" and has used this as a teaching tool at fiddling workshops throughout Atlantic Canada.
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William Coulter's love of traditional melody is framed by a classical sense of composition and realized with an impeccable and sensitive guitar technique. William's well exercised craftsmanship and his unusual ability to direct the voices of the guitar as if they were a steel-string choir make the music come to life in his hands.  With his extensive discography and history of acclaimed performances, William Coulter continues to approach the music he makes on the guitar with an essential humility. He lets the music speak and sing for itself. He creates the impression that his music rises up from the curved wood and shining strings on its own spirited impulse, a song made by the wind rather than by frets and fingers. Visit William's Website.
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John Knowles, got his start on a plastic ukulele, purchased with paper-route money. A few years later, he bought his first Chet Atkins records and began playing along. John has worked with Nashville's finest guitarists including Chet Atkins, Jerry Reed and Lenny Breau. His compositions and arrangements have been recorded by Chet, Jerry, the Romero Family, James Galway, and Raffi. His work has earned a Grammy and two Emmy nominations. In 1996, Chet Atkins awarded John an Honorary CGP (Certified Guitar Player) and recently, John was inducted into the National Thumb Pickers Hall of Fame for the second time. John publishes FingerStyle Quarterly and teaches at workshops around the world.  Visit John's Website.
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Rushad Eggleston is an inventive cellist and composer.  He was the first string player awarded a full scholarship to the Berklee college of music, and while still there he became their first active student ever to be nominated for a Grammy award! (with Fiddlers 4, including Bruce Molsky, Michael Doucet, and Darol Anger).  Besides touring regularly with fiddler Darol Anger and neo bluegrass band Crooked Still, Rushad has been a guest with many famous artists including Mark O’Connor and Tim O’Brien.  He has also played at many marvelous venues such as Carnegie Hall and The Kennedy Center.  In addition, Rushad has made frequent appearances on national radio (including A Prairie Home Companion), taught cello at workshops and camps, written the music to a film, and performed at summer festivals from Jacksonville to Seattle.  Visit Rushad's Website.

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Kirk Sutphin will be joining Ken Perlman in the Banjo Program. His talents on the banjo are matched with his exceptional skill on the fiddle. As a young boy, Kirk was the protégé of the famous Surry County fiddler, Tommy Jarrell. Kirk to Tommy’s own admission captured the nuance of his fiddling more than anyone.  Kirk didn’t rest there. He dug deeper into the older mountain fiddling sounds of Tommy Jarrell’s dad, Ben Jarrell and the old Galax Fiddler Emmett Lundy. His focus also extends to the Piedmont. Kirk is truly a master of the music of Charlie Poole.  For the past several years Kirk has been distilling this varied musical interest into “Grandpa’s Favorites”, a new CD on Old 97 Wrecords.  Visit Kirk's Website.
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Peter Barnes has been playing piano, flute and assorted other instruments for traditional dancing since 1971, and has been invited to most major contra, square, British Isles and vintage dance events throughout the United States, performing for dances and concerts, leading ensemble workshops, and generally acting in a crazy and often undignified manner. Averaging over 250 engagements per year since 1980 he is arguably one of Boston's busiest musicians, and has also played for festivals and tours in England, France, Denmark, Shetland, Scotland and Czechoslovakia. He works with the bands Bare Necessities, Yankee Ingenuity, Culchullan, Fresh Fish, A Panel of Experts, and B.L.T. and has performed with many traditional greats including Seamus Connolly, Joe Derrane, Cathie Ryan, Chris Norman, Alasdair Fraser, Rodney Miller, and Joe Cormier. Visit Peter's Website.
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Sabra MacGillivray is a champion highland dancer, step dancer, choreographer and percussionist. Featured on many Nova Scotia tourism commercials and television specials, Sabra MacGillivray is one of the Atlantic region's leading ambassadors of Highland and Scottish step dancing.  A dance instructor as well as a choreographer, Sabra is also a member of the award-winning group, the Macquarrie Dancers. With her cutting-edge choreography and breathtaking performances, Sabra adds an exhilarating visual and rhythmic dimension to the music of Ferintosh.  She often performs frequently with her siblings, Troy and Kendra. Visit Sabra's website.
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Troy MacGillivray, Cape Breton Fiddle - Troy is Sabra's very talented brother.  Troy's musical prowess can be attributed to an especially rare combination of commitment and bloodline. By the age of six, Troy was already impressing audiences with his step dancing skills. By 13 he was teaching piano at the renowned Gaelic College of Celtic Arts and Crafts in St. Anne's, Cape Breton. He has completed grade seven of the Toronto Conservatory of Music for classical piano, has spent four years in a stringed orchestra and has earned a Bachelor of Arts degree with a major in music from St. Francis Xavier University.  Visit Troy's website.

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Ken Perlman, Banjo, Guitar - Ken again leads the Rocky Mountain Banjo Program for the first week of camp (August 7-14). Ken is both a pioneer of the banjo style known as "melodic clawhammer," and a master of finger style guitar. He draws his material from traditional sources -- the music of Scotland, Ireland, Cape Breton, Prince Edward Island and the American South. He has written some of the most widely respected banjo and guitar instruction books of modern times, and he has been on staff at prestigious teaching festivals around the world. He has toured much of the world and made several recordings. Visit Ken's Website
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Margot Krimmel, Harp – Denver native, Margot Krimmel began her musical career at the age of three singing whatever came into her head.   As a kid she ‘took’ piano lessons by copying everything her older sister Ruth learned at her lessons.  As a teenager she mastered guitar by watching and listening to her older brother, Max, fingerpick his own handcrafted guitars.  As an adult, she wizened up and actually studied harp. Accolades include first place awards from the Longs Peak Scottish Highland Festival and the Pop and Jazz Harp Festival.  She has two solo recordings, ‘Songlines’ and ‘St John’s Tide’ and guest appearances with a diversity of artists including Runaway Express’s ‘Woodstock’, cowboy songster Lon Hannah (#2 on the April 2006 Western Music Album charts), prepared guitar wiz, Janet Feder, devotional chant master Robert Gass and the European release ‘The Art Of Harp’.  Her latest CD and book, ‘White Birds’ is with Irish singer Beth Leachman. www.whitebirdsmusic.com She is a prolific and creative composer-arranger.  Visit Margot’s Website.
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Steve Scott, Cello, Bass - Steve is a talented multi-instrumentalist who has broad professional experience, including chamber/symphonic, jazz and Dixieland, folk, and Celtic.  He has performed at many Celtic, jazz and folk festivals in the Northwest, and has numerous recordings to his credit, with his own bands and as a studio player.  An experienced dance musician, Steve's playing is driving and rhythmic, and he continues to expand the cello's possibilities in traditional and folk music.  Steve is highly regarded as a teacher, and has been named to several "Who's Who" lists in education. Steve also brings with him over 25 years of pro bass experience with various bands and symphony orchestras, and has something to offer everyone.
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Laurie Riley, Harp - Laurie Riley is known for her ability to make a harp sound like a whole new instrument, playing several types of harps including double-strung, wire-strung, and lever harp in many styles including Celtic, Swedish, soft jazz, folk, classical, and South American. A professional musician since the age of ten, Laurie has toured throughout the US and Canada. She has played as harpist to the Chieftains, has been featured on American Airlines in-flight music selections, and was the first American harpist to be invited to judge and perform at the prestigious O'Carolan International Festival in Ireland. She has recorded a dozen albums of harp music and has authored numerous books and instructional videos. Visit Laurie's Website.
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Jennifer Sordyl, Beginning Fiddle - Jennifer was literally "raised in the music business" along with her 8 brothers and sisters in the family music store in the Midwest. These days you'll find her enthusiastically teaching fiddle and beginning violin at three rural charter schools in Southern Arizona. She especially loves teaching the Montessori preschoolers and their parents, in the arts community of Tubac, where she sponsors regular jam sessions as well as playing professionally with an "eclectic-traditional" string band at a local Bistro.
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Loretta Thompson, Fiddle & More - Loretta Thompson is a high-spirited musician and singer whose versatile performances captivate audiences everywhere. Dynamic fiddling and a radiant voice echo the fervor of her Scottish-Irish and American heritage. She possesses a passionate and spontaneous enthusiasm for traditional music and dance which shines in every aspect of her life. Combining fiddle, guitar, and whistles with moving vocals, Loretta entertains with repertoires in Celtic music, American Historic and Nostalgia, Old Time Country, and more. She literally fiddled her way across Scotland and Ireland and is embraced wherever she travels for her talented fiddling and enthusiastic charm. Loretta has been featured for many years at local, state, and national Scottish and Irish gatherings, Celtic Festivals, and in concerts with a long list of leading Celtic entertainers. Loretta majored in music education and conducting, has experience as a full-time public school orchestra director, clinician, and general music teacher, and is a member of the Evergreen (CO) Chamber Orchestra. Loretta is a full-time entertainer, composer, private teacher, and plays for all forms of Scottish and Irish dance. Visit Loretta's Website.
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Larry Edelman, Dance Caller, Mandolin - Larry Edelman has traveled throughout the U.S. and Europe playing, teaching, and calling for traditional dancing. Larry’s colorful calling delights both novice and veteran dancers through his humor, enthusiasm, skillful teaching, and knowledge of dance history. He currently plays fiddle, mandolin, and guitar with The Percolators (click here to visit), Poultry in Motion, and the Soda Rock Ramblers. Larry has taught at dozens of music and dance camps and festivals including the Festival of American Fiddle Tunes, Ashokan, Augusta, Pinewoods, Lady of the Lake, and many more. Again this year, Larry will be conducting his very popular Southwest tunes workshop for all instruments.
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Frank Fyock, Orchestra, Composition - Frank is the director of the orchestra at Denver School of the Arts and conductor of the Jefferson Young Artists Orchestra. He is a composer and song writer and has directed choirs, orchestras, and drum & bugle corps. He has his own recording studio and played fiddle professionally with a touring country band for ten years. After his stay at RMFC in 2001, he wrote "Escapes for Fiddlers," a collection of original solo fiddle tunes, which will be available at the camp store.  He will again be teaching his fascinating and popular course in music history and composing.
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Topher Gayle - Mandolin, Guitar - Topher is a long time RMFC camper who has now become an instructor.  As a youngster, he took piano lessons, then taught himself guitar, mandolin, mandola, ukulele, string bass and percussion. Topher studied composition and luthiery at Boston University.  Now, he plays bluegrass, contra-dance, swing, rock & roll, country, and blues in several SF Bay area bands. His versatility has also made him a popular accompanist to several local singer/songwriters. He gives private lessons in guitar and mandolin, and has presented workshops at music camps. He enjoys recording original tunes in his home studio, building musical instruments, and abusing music genres. Topher wrote The Orkney Companion (a chord book for guitars tuned to C-G-D-G-C-D.)  Visit Topher's Website.
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Tina Gugeler, Hammered Dulcimer - Tina first heard a hammered dulcimer in 1986 while living in Ketchikan, Alaska. It quickly became her passion and soon it seemed everyone on the island had heard Tina and her band, BearFoot. Since moving to the Denver area in 1990, Tina has become a full time musician; performing solo and in small combos with fiddle, guitar or piano, and in several local contra dance bands. Along with her busy performance schedule, she teaches students on the dulcimer and bodhran. Tina has published a book of her arrangements, “Arrangements for the Hammered Dulcimer." She has taught at several festivals including Dulcimer Festival in Fort Collins, CO, Irish week at Augusta in Elkins, WV, the California Traditional Music Society Annual Summer Solstice Festival, Winterfest in Irving, TX, the Sawdust Festival in Bennington, OK, and was a jam session leader and teacher at the Southwest Dulcimer Festival in Dewey, AZ. Over the years, Tina has won many local and regional competitions, and in the year 2000 she won the U.S. National Hammered Dulcimer Championship. She appears on recordings by Denver's High Strung and the dance band Contrafusion.
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Arlene Patterson, Fiddle & Guitar - A native of Glasgow, Scotland, Arlene's creative approach to teaching is well known. A regular clinician for the Suzuki Association of America, she is also a national judge for Scottish fiddle competitions and performs for dancing and Scottish events with her husband, pianist Bruce Patterson. Her day job is general music teacher in an elementary school. Come to class prepared to have fun.

Bruce Patterson, Piano & Theory - A very popular teacher, Bruce will be joining us again to teach his very effective piano and theory classes.

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From the archives:
Artists 2006
Artists 2005
Artists 2004
Artists 2003
Artists 2002
Artists 2001