I’m constantly amazed by the ability of Online Folk Festival listeners to catch on to all the great indies and lesser-known artists by selecting them into the Top 40 (well, this month the Top 42)
Artist – “Song” – Album
1. Robin Flower and Libby McLaren – “Andrei’s First Waltz in America” – Steelhead in the Riffles 2. Radio Tarifa – “Conductus” – Temporal 3. Tom Prasada-Rao – “Ashes of Love” – The Way of the World 4. Iris Dement – “That’s The Way Love Goes” – NPR Studio Cuts vol 1 5. Runrig – “Loch Lomond [Live]” – Beat the Drum 6. Bill Jones – “A Brisk Young Sailor” – Turn To Me 7. Ashley Maher – “Seven” – Flying Over Bridges 8. Annie Gallup – “Red Hair” – Swerve 9. Carol Noonan – “Emma” – Somebody’s Darling: Songs of War, Loss and Remembrance 10. No Fixed Abode – “Sunne Days” – Clearwater 11. Greg Trooper With The Flatirons – “Ireland” – Everywhere 12. Gillian Welch – “Look At Miss Ohio” – Soul Journey 13. Billy Bragg & Wilco – “California Stars” – Mermaid Avenue 14. Pat Wictor – “I Will Walk With You” – Heaven Is So High 15. Lucy Kaplansky – “Amelia” – Over the Hills 16. Jack Williams – “Lay Down By the Water” – Laughing in the Face of the Blues 17. Simon & Garfunkel – “El Condor Pasa” – Old Friends Live On Stage 18. Mary Fahl – “The Dawning of the Day” – The Other Side of Time 19. Ernie Hawkins – “Make Believe Stunt” – Rags & Bones 20. Carrie Newcomer – “Bowling Baby” – Betty’s Diner: The Best of Carrie Newcomer 21. Jeff Black – “Dark as a Dungeon” – The Appalachians: Companion to the Public Television Series 22. Emmylou Harris – “Bang the Drum Slowly” – Red Dirt Girl 23. Tim Harrison – “Prayer Watching” – Sara And The Sea 24. David Mallett – “Dulcimer” – Midnight on the Water (Live) 25. Chris Stuart – “Angels of Mineral Springs” – Angels of Mineral Springs 26. Bruce Cockburn – “All The Diamonds In The World” – Circles In The Stream 27. Donal Clancy – “Garrett Barry’s/The Rumours of Trim” – Close to Home 28. Hem – “The Fire Thief” – Eveningland 29. Wes Weddell – “Hills That I Call Home” – Songs To Get You From Here To There 30. David Bromberg – “Trying to get home” – Try me one more time 31. Christine Lavin – “Good Thing He Can’t Read My Mind” – Good Thing He Can’t Read My Mind 32. Richard Thompson – “1952 Vincent Black Lightning” – Austin City Limits: Live From Austin, TX: Richard Thompson 33. Emily Smith – “Fly We to Some Desert Isle” – The Complete Songs of Robert Tannahill 34. Dry Branch Fire Squad – “Going Up Home to Live in Green Pastures” – Live at the Newburyport Firehouse 35. Chanticleer – “My Soul Is A Witness” – How Sweet The Sound 36. Boiled in Lead – “Robin’s Complaint” – Antler Dance 37. Andy M. Stewart / Manus Lunny – “If I Never Spend a Morning Without You” – At It Again 38. Steve Brooks – “What Would Molly Do? (Molly Ivins Tribute)” – www.stevebrooks.com 39. Chuck Brodsky – “Bonehead Merkle” – The Baseball Ballads 40. Cathie Ryan – “As the Evening Declines” – The Farthest Wave 40. Aoife Clancy – “Banks of Sweet Primroses” – Silvery Moon 40. Andrew Calhoun – “A Hoosier in Paris” – Shadow of a Wing
New adds to the Online Folk Festival since April 6:
Artist – Album
Buddy Mondlock – The Edge of the World Chris Dunnett – It’s Alive One Dan Pokorni – Guitarscapes Devon Sproule – Keep Your Silver Shined Hoots & Hellmouth – Hoots & Hellmouth Mavis Staples – We’ll Never Turn Back No Fixed Abode – Clearwater Oysterband – Meet You There Pamela Ward and Paul Cherrington – Sail On By Radio Free Earth – Crossover Randal Williams – One Night in Louisiana Scott and Michelle Dalziel – Thinking Out Loud Various Artists – The Woodchopper’s Ball Vince Bell – Recado
Of particular note in this batch of CDs, I want to point out The Woodchopper’s Ball, a 2-cd compilation recording of some really fine acoustic guitarists who have played at an annual benefit in Kent, Ohio, for the Northeast Ohio Coalition for the Homeless. Among the guitarists are Neil Jacobs, Brian Henke, Patrick Woods, Alex Bevan and 20+ others.
Added since March 26 to the Online Folk Festival:
Artist – Album
Shooglenifty – Troots Nancy Cassidy – So Much Weather Peggy Seeger – Three Score and Ten Jake Armerding -Walking on the World Lucy Kaplansky – Over the Hills
And, kudos to Red House Records for making their catalog available on emusic.com. Good stuff there – if you like Greg Brown, The Wailin’ Jennys, Eliza Gilkyson, Lucy Kaplansky, or Robin and Linda Williams and you don’t subscribe to emusic, you are missing out. Most Compass Records releases are there as well. It’s a very reasonable resource – my subscription costs about $0.23 per song.
As rated by listeners to the Online Folk Festival. Not surprisingly, there’s a lot of Celtic music on the list. Who woulda thunk it?
Artist – Song – Album
1. Mark Erelli – Theresa – The Memorial Hall Recordings 2. Railroad Earth – Long Way To Go – Elko 3. Julie Miller – By Way Of Sorrow – Blue Pony 4. Clive Batkin and Joel McDermott – Don’t Touch My Pig – G-Force Trousers 5. Tom Russell – St. Olav’s Gate – The Long Way Around 6. Robert Earl Keen – Mr. Wolf And Mamabear – What I Really Mean 7. Runrig – Loch Lomond [Live] – Beat the Drum 8. Emmylou Harris – Bang the Drum Slowly – Red Dirt Girl 9. Oysterband – Dark Eyed Sailor – Freedom and Rain 10. Chuck Brodsky – Bonehead Merkle – The Baseball Ballads 11. Bob Dylan – Desolation Row – Highway 61 Revisited 12. Rise – Cold Glencoe – Uncertain Wonders 13. Chris Stuart and Backcountry – Dollar Bill Blues – Mojave River 14. The Crossing – There Were Roses – Dancing at the Crossroads 15. Mary Fahl – The Dawning of the Day – The Other Side of Time 16. James McMurtry – Levelland – Live in Aught-Three 17. Wolfstone – Glass & The Can – Pick of The Litter 18. Sam Pacetti & Gabriel Valla – Wildwood Flower – Union 19. John Batdorf – Home Again – Home Again 20. Ian Tyson – Road to Las Cruces – Songs From the Gravel Road 21. Deirdre Flint – Cheerleader – The Shuffleboard Queens 22. Odetta – If Anybody Asks You – Gonna Let it Shine 23. Brobdingnagian Bards – Greensleeves Medley – A Faire To Remember 24. Black 47 – Green Suede Shoes – Live in New York City 25. The Chieftains – Lilly Bolero/The White Cockade – An Irish Evening – Live At The Grand Opera House, Belfast 26. Hair of the Dog – Raggle Taggle Gypsy – Let It Flow 27. Alison Krauss and Union Station – A Living Prayer – Lonely Runs Both Ways 28. Buddy Miller – With God on Our Side – Universal United House of Prayer 29. Sean Doyle – The Flying Cloud – Light and the Half Light 30. Kate Campbell – Ave Maria Grotto – Sing Me Out 31. Gaelic Storm – Rocky Road To Dublin/Kid on the Mountain – Gaelic Storm 32. Oysterband – Blood Wedding – Holy Bandits 33. Mick McAuley and Winifred Horan – The Joyous Waltz – Serenade 34. Tiller’s Folly – Farewell to Ardoon – A Ripple In Time 35. Jez Lowe & The Bad Pennies – Glad Rags Again – The Parish Notices 36. Grada – Diamantina Drover – Endeavour 37. Karan Casey – Distant Shore – Distant Shore 38. Iona – Reels – Heaven’s Bright Sun 39. Aoife Clancy – Banks of Sweet Primroses – Silvery Moon 40. Flogging Molly – Rebels Of The Sacred Heart – Drunken Lullabies 40. Fairport Convention – Who Knows Where the Time Goes? – Meet on the Ledge – The Classic Years 1967-75 40. Capercaillie – Finlay’s – Beautiful Wasteland
Recent new adds to the Online Folk Festival, February 18-March 26, in no particular order:
Artist – Album
- Small Potatoes – Small Potatoes Alive! at WVBR’s Bound for Glory
- Pam Tillis – Rhinestoned
- John Batdorf – Home Again
- Jed Marum – Lonestar Stout
- Jay Einhorn – Start Over
- Jan Seides – Family Album
- The Sevens – Valiant
- Susan Werner – The Gospel Truth
- Steven Gellman – Love, Loss, Longing
- Jerimoth Hill – The Halfway Ground
- Gina Villalobos – Miles Away
- The Innocence Mission – We Walked in Song
- John Gorka – Writing in the Margins
- Ellis Paul – Essentials
- Tamara Lewis – Long Time No See
St. Patrick’s Day has come and gone, and so has the Online Folk Festival’s Celtapalooza Celtic music extravaganzorama blowout. Thanks to all who listened, and for those of you who like Celtic music in smaller, more scattered doses – you can come back now. We’re back to the freeform mix of Celtic, folk, singer/songwriter, bluegrass, cajun/zydeoc, world folk, technofolk, etc. that we play 51 weeks a year.
Celtapalooza! is on the air.
For St. Patrick’s Day, The Online F0lk Festival is wearin’ green and takin’ names. A wide variety of Celtic music will be on the air, from traditional (Altan) to PaddyPunk (Flogging Molly) to Celtic world fusion (Afro Celt Sound System) to new agey (Enya) to progressive (Iona) and Irish pop masters (Van the Man).
This week, it’s easy being green!
Received this via e-mail today:
Hi Greg
Just a quick note to say a big thank you to you and your listeners for voting our track “The Black Dog” into the February Top 40 at No. 17! We’re thrilled that people are enjoying our stuff and thanks once again for all of your support, it is priceless. Hopefully we can get higher in the charts in the future!
We will be entering the studios in June to start work on the follow up to ‘The Black Dog and Other Stories’ – due out in January 2008, again on Fellside Recordings. Hope all is well with you, we often call by and listen in to your show and find it thoroughly enjoyable on each occasion - Keep it up.
All the best to you and yours
Gary The Queensberry Rules Stoke-on-Trent, England
Getting exposure for talented bands like The Queensberry Rules that would otherwise fall through the cracks is one of the rewards of this job. And, for those of you who subscribe to emusic, I noticed that The Black Dog and Other Stories is now available for download there.
I am amazed by the number of artists who contact me who have no idea that they are sabotaging their own chances to get airplay on my station, or on folk radio in general. Here are some mistakes I see artists making all the time.
- Failure to do research or read submission guidelines. Every station has a different submission policy. Mine is very clearly stated on my website at http://www.onlinefolkfestival.com/submissions.html. If you follow the guidelines, I will follow through by listening to your CD. If not, I won’t, and to be honest, I’ve stopped feeling bad about that.
- Failure to provide professional level product. The folk radio world is very competitive because it is a relatively limited format. Most radio hosts have only two or three hours a week to fill, and unless you give them reason to include you, they will fill those slots with professionally produced, high-quality records they get from labels such as Rounder, Compass, Appleseed, and Signature Sounds. You may be able to connect with a local DJ in your area, but DJs in other areas won’t give you the time of day unless your record sounds professional. You might be able to send a demo you cut in your basement to your local DJ whom you know from hanging out at the local folk club, but the vast majority of DJs with which you have not established a relationship are going to use it as a coaster. The wide availability of home recording equipment has led to the rise of people recording who are, frankly, getting a lot of bad advice regarding their talent level.
- Believing that an e-mail referring a DJ to a website where they can download a track will entice the DJ to play your music. Since most folk DJs do it as a side gig (in other words, they have a day job), many barely have time to keep up with the actual CDs they get in the mail from established labels who have good quality control standards and sign excellent, talented acts. I wish I had the time to visit every artist website and preview their tracks online. I don’t. Some DJs do, and more power to them. If Christine Lavin or Tom Paxton puts a topical mp3 on their website, I might download that, if I read about it on the Folk DJ list. But, chances are, you’re not Christine Lavin or Tom Paxton, and don’t merit the same consideration. I know that sending out CDs can be expensive, but hey, if you don’t believe in yourself that much, then I won’t either.
- Failure to remember that you need us more than we need you. I recently sent an address change to the Indie Bible people, who have graciously listed my radio station, and then was overwhelmed by emails from artists asking me to check out their website. I replied, graciously, I thought, to each one pointing out my submissions guidelines page and asking them to send me a CD for consideration. One artist responded to me, quite rudely, I thought, that if I didn’t go to his website and listen to his samples, then I wasn’t going to get a CD. You know what? That’s fine with me. I don’t need his CD. I have plenty of quality programming that I can put on it its place. I’ll be happy to add another Woody Guthrie tune to the playlist if you don’t want to play by my rules. If you can’t be polite to me, I’m not going to give your CD the time of day.
- Failure to provide a quality one-sheet. Tell me something about yourself that will make me want to really listen to your music. Where do you come from? Who have you opened for? Who produced your album? Send your CD to every name artist you every opened for and solicit their comments and then add their quote prominently to your one-sheet. You may think it crass, but it separates you from the artists recording bad demos in their basement. If you don’t “hitch your wagon to the stars,” nobody else will.
- Failure to remove the shrink wrap. All the major folk labels do. It’s a courtesy, really. Just one more hassle that must be overcome to get to your disk.
- Failure to submit the CD to freedb. Internet radio stations use ripping software to generate the files for airplay. I use CDex, which uses the freedb lookup to generate track information. If you’ve not submitted your CD to freedb, then I need to type in the information myself. It’s another hassle. If your CD is good enough, I’m happy to do it, but sometimes, I’ll let a CD sit in the ripping pile for a week or two because I don’t have enough time to input the tracks. It’s in your best interest to submit to freedb and cddb (Gracenote) as soon as you have a physical copy of your CD so you can control what it looks like when people put that CD in their computer to play or rip, and then you can add all the pertinent track and label information. Otherwise, someone else will do it for you and the information may be incomplete or inaccurate.
To summarize – Play by the rules and provide professional-level product on CD, be polite, and promote yourself and most folk DJs will give your CD consideration. If you are rude, amateurish, and unable to follow the rules, even if your talent is massive then your CD will likely end up as somebody’s coaster and your mp3s will go undownloaded and unplayed on the radio.
Online Folk Festival Top 40 February 2007 Based on listener ratings
Artist – Song – Album 1. Cara Dillon – Garden Valley – After the Morning 2. Karen Ashbrook & Paul Oorts – Breton Dance/Star of Munster – Celtic Cafe 3. Victoria Williams – Train Song (Demise Of The Caboose) – Musings of a Creek Dipper 4. Patty Griffin – Heavenly Day – Children Running Through 5. Iain Campbell Smith – Maryanne – Ballads and Barsongs 6. Switchback – Falling Water River – Falling Water River 7. Enoch Kent – The Calton Weaver (Nancy Whiskey) – I’m a Rover 8. Iris Dement – Walking Home – The Way I Should 9. Paul Brady – The Lakes of Pontchartrain (New Recording) – Nobody Knows 10. Mary Fahl – In the Great Unknown – The Other Side of Time 11. Gina Forsyth – Talking Hurricane Refugee Blues – Waterbug Anthology Eight: Born into the Whisper 12. Ana Moura – Hoje Rudo Me Entristece – Aconteceu 13. Solas with Mindy Smith – Reasonland – Hands Across the Water: A Benefit For the Children of the Tsunami 14. Kate Rusby – The Wild Goose – 10 15. Fiamma Fumanda – Mariuleina – Onda 16. Chuck Brodsky – Come Heres and the Been Heres – Radio 17. The Queensberry Rules – The Black Dog – The Black Dog and Other Stories 18. The Lost Dogs – Lord, Protect My Child – Scenic Routes 19. The Foremen – Workin’ on an MBA – The Best of the Foremen 20. Rodrigo Y Gabriela – Diablo Rojo – Rodrigo Y Gabriela 21. John Parkes – This Tonight – Faithlessnessless 22. Francis Dunnery – My old friend love – The Gulley Flats Boys 23. Devon Sproule – Plea for a Good Night’s Rest – Waterbug Anthology Eight: Born into the Whisper 24. David Mallett – Somewhere in Time – Midnight on the Water (Live) 25. Buddy Miller – Worry Too Much – Universal United House of Prayer 26. Steve Earle – Fearless Heart – Austin City Limits: Live From Austin, TX: Steve Earle 27. Nathan – The Wind – Key Principles 28. Eva Tree – Heavy Load – Sail Away 29. Carbon Leaf – Grey Sky Eyes – Indian Summer 30. Bruce Cockburn – This Is Baghdad – Life Short Call Now 31. Al Petteway – Maggie’s Reel – Caledon Wood 32. John Flynn – Trust The Rope – Two Wolves 33. Dougie MacLean – Ready For The Storm – The Dougie MacLean Collection 34. Rodrigo Y Gabriela – Ixtapa – Rodrigo Y Gabriela 35. Terence Martin – Sleeper on a Westbound Train – Sleeper 36. Joyce Andersen – You Were the One – Love and Thirst 37. Jeff Daniels – If I Weren’t so Stupid, You Wouldn’t be so Smart – Live and Unplugged To Benefit The Purple Rose Theatre 38. Mark Erelli – Seeds Of Peace – Hope & Other Casualties 39. The Byrds – My Back Pages – Greatest Hits 40. John Cowan Band – In Bristol Town – New Tattoo
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