Vancouver Folk Music Festival

Date/Time
Date(s) - July 18, 2014 - July 20, 2014
All Day

Location
Jericho Beach Park

Categories No Categories


The Como Mamas and Leo ‘Bud’ Welch will perform at the Gospel Stage Sunday morning. There are dozens of great acts throughout the weekend.

The Como Mamas, Ester Mae Smith and sisters Angela Taylor and Della Daniels have been singing together in church since they were children.

The church is Panola County’s Mt. Mariah Church, a humble wood structure built in the early 1900s. And, surrounding that small house of worship is a cemetery, and in there rests several of the singers’ relatives. Della and Angela’s grandfather Miles Pratcher is there, a guitar player, songwriter, and consummate entertainer who kept the family laughing through good and bad times. He often played music on the porch with fiddlers and other guitar players, including the great Mississippi Fred McDowell. Della and Esther remember when famed folklorist Alan Lomax visited their house in 1959 to record some of these porch sessions.

The Mamas own recording, called Get An Understanding, came out on Daptone Records in 2013. It includes traditional, time-tested gospel hymns, from the most tender to rafter-rattling, full of raw, heartfelt emotion and power. Label founder Gabriel Roth said, “… all music tries to … put feeling into sound. The Como Mamas do that just about as close to perfect as you can.”

Record’s producer Michael Reilly adds, “Della, Ester and Angela believe whole-heartedly that these songs have the power to help and inspire people in their everyday lives.” Get ready for some glorious inspiration!

http://thefestival.bc.ca/artists/the-como-mamas/

Leo “Bud“ Welch waited over 80 years to become an overnight sensation. If his story wasn’t verified as true, you’d think some Hollywood scriptwriter made it up. Here’s how it goes: Bud was born in 1932 in Sabougla (pronounced Shah-BOW-gla) to a family, and lives in Bruce, Mississippi, an unincorporated town of around 2000 in Calhoun County, roughly 30 miles northeast of Elvis’s hometown of Tupelo.

Leo learned guitar as a youth, learning to play the blues from listening to the radio. He went on to play his gospel-spiked brand of rural acoustic blues around the area at local churches, picnics, community gatherings, on local radio and TV, and at other venues near Bruce, where he lived with his family and worked on a logging crew in Mississippi hill country. While at times the wider world beckoned, mostly only locals knew of his prodigious talent.

Welch heard about Oxford-based Fat Possum Records/Big Legal Mess Records turning Junior Kimbrough into a star late in his life, and so he called up the label to see if they wanted to make a record with him. And almost just like that, Leo was a big-time recording artist.

Sabougla Voices was released in November 2013 in Bud’s 81st year. It includes both traditional tunes and some of Welch’s originals. It is blues and it is gospel: fiery, heartfelt, and glorious music. Bud says “I believe in the Lord, but the blues speaks to life, too. Blues has a feeling just like gospel; they just don’t have a [bible].” Neither juke joint nor house of worship, we think the wide-open outdoors of Jericho Beach Park is a perfect setting for Mr. Welch and his music – the real deal worth waiting for.

http://thefestival.bc.ca/artists/leo-bud-welch/

http://thefestival.bc.ca/

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