I caught this article on the Bluegrass Today website a few days ago:
This program at the Leeds Center for the Arts in Winchester, Kentucky is intended to help middle- and high-school students with learning and performing bluegrass music. The program will take place one evening per week, and is headed by Jayd Raines and Zach Combs, two long-time touring bluegrass musicians.
I have not had a chance to fully check out the syllabus or content yet, but it sounds like a fantastic venture. Equal amounts of fun, learning and discipline, and capture teenagers at the most productive age while gitting them away from the iPhones and tablets for at least one evening per week.
For years, I have always wanted to do such a program in my area. Back around 2000, a friend and I found the perfect building to start a non-profit music education program. The building had a sign on the front that read “Americana Music Studio.” The history of the building was that a Polish immigrant couple after World War II moved to the area and converted the building to a studio that the husband would teach piano and violin, while the wife would instruct ballet. There were practice rooms and a small recital room. Eventually, they passed on, their children had no interest in pursuing the work, and the building’s neighborhood began to crumble around it.
It would have been perfect for our idea. Teaching kids folk, bluegrass, and other roots-music, like a miniature Old Town School of Folk in Chicago. Unfortunately, we could not find financial backing, and the building was eventually sold to a medical clinic.
As you may already know, recently I have been working hard with the Southeast Michigan Bluegrass Music Association to reward scholarships to kids aged 12-18 so that they can receive live or online instruction of bluegrass and other roots-oriented music on stringed instruments. However, we are not as fortunate as areas like Kentucky and the Carolinas where bluegrass music is part of life, and young people pick it up naturally. Since the scholarship program started a few years ago, we have really only sponsored about a half dozen kids. While most of those kids have continued to pursue the music, a few have lost interest, just like any other hobby for kids after a while.
As SEMBMA is a non-profit organization, we have to be extremely concerned on how we use the scholarship money. We have received many applicants, but some have been not what we are striving to fund. Once parent asked if we could provide funding so that the child could record a CD. Another requested scholarship help for a student learning electric rock guitar. We have broadened our scope a bit to help interested youngsters by providing instruction in folk and Celtic, but we also have to limit it at a certain point.
I have posted an advertisement for the scholarship on the local Craigslist. The only response that I have gotten in the past few months has been someone who is 35 years old and requesting money. Really? I also post flyers at music stores around town, but the Association gets very few bites.
Last week at the Charlotte Bluegrass Festival on Saturday morning, SEMBMA set up its “petting zoo,” where we put out guitars, banjos, mandolins and dobros for kids to try out. It is great to see young ones picking up instruments and learning an easy chord, then an easy song. While most kids are there as a pseudo babysitting service for parents to drop them off for an hour, one or two kids do take an interest in playing a stringed instrument. With Billy Strings performing on Thursday, it is great to see younger people getting involved in bluegrass music.
But at this time, it seems that we need more. If parents and grandparents are into bluegrass music, they need to show their kids and grandkids how fun bluegrass music really is. Get them off of the iPhones and interacting with other kids face-to-face by jamming together. Show them not only the younger successful artists like Billy Strings, Sierra Hull, and Wyatt Ellis, but some of the rising unknown bluegrass musicians that are all over YouTube. Schools have music programs, but they are dedicated to orchestra and marching band music. A motivated teacher may be smart to start up a Folk and Bluegrass Music Club (similar to a Chess Club or Drama Club), teaching instruments, jamming, and maybe showing videos of bluegrass performances.
I leave you with a video of my favorite 14-year-old fiddler, Hollace Oakes. At this year’s Abingdon Fiddlers Convention in Virginia, she recently took 1st Place in the Adult Old-Time Fiddle competition, 2nd Place in the Adult Bluegrass Fiddle competition, 3rd Place in the Youth Mandolin competition, 3rd Place in the Adult Flatfoot Dance competition, and her band Denim & Plaid won the Youth Band Bluegrass competition. This is what I would love to see with another hundred 14 year olds!
Chew on it and comment.




