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LIFE
Conference celebrates all things Appalachian, including music
A wellspring of Appalachian music will bubble over at Marshall University where it is hosting the Appalachian Studies Association Conference.
At 8 p.m. today, check out a free show at Smith Recital Hall that pays homage to the long-standing Appalachian trademark of raising hell for social justice through music.
"Fighting For Tradition" features music by dulcimer players Dave Haas and Katie Stricker, folkgrass by Public Outcry and punk by Killer Panther.
Public Outcry is made up of Kentucky writers, songwriters and musicians including the Cosmic Mamaws (Kate Larken and George Ella Lyon) and The Doolittles (Jason Howard and Silas House). Check out the band at www.myspace.com/publicoutcryky and www.myspace.com/ thedoolittes.
House, who I think is one of the best contemporary Appalachian authors, gives a keynote address at 7 p.m., at the Student Center's Don Morris Room.
Killer Panther, of Whitesburg, Ky., has created a soundtrack about mountaintop removal using the chaos of metal along with projected footage of this practice.
At 8 p.m. Saturday at Smith Recital Hall, there will be a mountain music showcase with Bernard Cyrus and The Bing Brothers.
Both nights, the after-party heads across Hal Greer to the Java Joint, 1555 3rd Ave., where there will be a 10 p.m. to midnight picking party going on.
At 8 p.m. tonight, The Buttonflies, a band with enough room in the musical inn for banjo and trumpet, hits the Java Joint stage.
The Early Bird has flown
Early Bird tickets for West Virginia's largest jam fest, All Good Music Festival, are now sold out, but tickets are still available at the rate of $129 and are offered through http://allgood.musictoday.com or charge by phone at (800) 594-TIXX.
Last year, All Good, drew in 18,000 music fans from around the states, and drew ink in Rolling Stone.
This year, just added to the bill is Mike Gordon, Dark Star Orchestra, The Avett Brothers, SOJA, Perpetual Groove and Scrapomatic.
All Good is set for July 11-13, at Marvin's Mountaintop in Masontown, W.Va.
If you can't wait for your Perpetual Groove festival fix, you can boogie with the band indoors.
They are coming to the V Club, corner of 8th Street and 6th Avenue, on April 18. That's a huge weekend at the V since Billy Joe Shaver is there the night before.
Let's all get dixie-fried
Speaking of big shows coming up, Hank Williams Jr., pries himself away from his Paris (Tenn.) farm to hook up with Lynyrd Skynyrd for the Rowdy Frynds Tour.
The 2008 portion of this tour kicks off April 4, and hits 17 arenas through late May before the notching up festival gigs.
The tour hits the Big Sandy Superstore Arena on Friday, May 16.
Tickets will go on sale at 10 a.m. Saturday at the arena box office, as well as all Ticketmaster outlets and by phone at (304) 523-5757 or (304) 342-5757 in Charleston.
The Planet, 92.7-FM here in downtown Huntington, will get the Rebel yell started at 6 p.m. today as it hosts The Planet's Southern Fried Weekend by playing both kinds of music, Southern and Rock with a good whitewater stream of Lynyrd Skynyrd, Outlaws, Allman Brothers Band, Hank Williams Jr., Black Crowes, Little Feat, Atlanta Rhythm Section, Point Blank, Pure Prairie League, ZZ Top, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Molly Hatchet, Eagles and much more.
And the award goes to ...
'Tis the season for awards shows, and I've got to give some props to WMUL-FM, Marshall University's station that took home 18 awards at a recent National Broadcasting Society competition in Anaheim, Calif.
"Up Late," Marshall's student-run, late-night television show, received an honorable mention in the Best Television Musical Performance category for the performance of "A Nickel Ain't Worth a Dime" by The Good Ol' Boys and a Girl, a super cool contemporary grass band that ain't afraid of rap, rock or surf drum breakdowns on the banjo.
Also winning was the ultra cool "Snob Rock Live! for its Warped Tour Special," with hosts Terry Bartley, a senior from Foster, W.Va.; Haley Keller, a senior from Franklin Furnace, Ohio; Whitney Thomas; Joe Merkel, a senior from Ironton, Ohio; and Kyle Johnson, a senior from Ironton, Ohio.
You can hear "Snob Rock Live!" at 6 p.m. each Thursday.
Another recent award-winner is Dwight Yoakam, who was recently inducted into the Kentucky Music Hall of Fame, located in Renfro Valley, Ky.
Yoakam is currently filming "Four Christmases," which is coming out holiday 2008 and starring Tim McGraw, Reese Witherspoon and Vince Vaughn. Yoakam has a great supporting role in the movie, along with Robert Duvall, Sissy Spacek, Mary Steenburgen, Jon Favreau and Kristen Chenoweth.
If you want to see Yoakam rip up his hillbilly deluxe Betsy Lane, Ky., via Bakersfield, Calif., sound, you can live at this summer's CMA Music Festival in Nashville.
Yoakam plays the fest for the first time since 1988.
About time.
The four-day fest runs June 5-8. Last year's event drew 191,000 people over four days.
Dave Lavender writes about music and other entertainment for The Herald-Dispatch. Contact him at (304) 526-6686 or via e-mail at lavender@herald-dispatch.com.
1940s Radio Hour
J. Chris Newberg
First Friday and Second Look Saturday
Lions Arts and Crafts Show
"The Nutcracker"
Christmas Tour of Homes
2nd annual Holiday Candlelight Tour
Marshall Artists Series: "Wizard of Oz"
16th annual Joy to the World Holiday Concert
"Cowboy" Bill Martin