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Programs & Activities
Music & Dance

link to online donation page


Information

Special Thanks to Our Major Music Sponsor, City of East Lansing

The Michigan State University Museum presents the annual event celebrating culture, tradition and community. Music and dance stages -- sponsored by the City of East Lansing -- feature rhythm, sound and spectacular musicianship and combine for nearly 50 performances over the free, three-day festival.


The Great Lakes Folk Festival celebrates the rich traditional folk, ethnic and tribal music and dances of the people of Michigan, the Great Lakes region, and the United States. The nation’s earliest immigrants and settlers brought the performing arts of their countries of origin with them to their new homeland, where they encountered the land’s First Nations. Each of these peoples worked to maintain their unique traditions while at the same time adapting to new conditions and a rich confluence of cultures. Those musical traditions which we think of as quintessentially “American”—jazz, blues, gospel, bluegrass, old-time, Tex-Mex, Cajun, zydeco, cowboy and others—spring from the interaction and intertwining of these varied cultural roots. Today, renewed emigration from a wide range of nations brings new sounds and performance traditions to enrich our American cultural landscape.


The Great Lakes Folk Festival celebrates this musical legacy through performances by masters who learned their skills within distinct communities and who remain rooted in their communities. Their exposure to their performance skills is usually at an early age, learned firsthand (often within their own families), and what they perform is an integral part of their particular culture.

Traditions Showcases

The Great Lakes Folk Festival features "Traditions Showcases," comparative sessions featuring specific instruments like the fiddle or accordion and explorations of cultural and geographical differences and similarities in musical traditions.

illagevoice.com/issues/0147/gehr.php
Music Performers for 2005

(posted April 28)

Click on the names in blue for more information about each performer.  Sound clips will be available in mid-July!


Artist 
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Carey and Lurrie Bell

Charlotte, N. C. and Chicago, Ill.

Chicago Blues music

play

Diouf

Montreal, Quebec

"Quebegalese" percussion

play

Georgia Sea Island Singers

St. Simons Island, GA

Gullah music, dance, and stories

Kiyoshi Nagata Ensemble

Toronto, Canada

Japanese taiko drumming

Bob Kravos and the Boys in the Band

Cleveland, Ohio

Slovenian-American style polka music

Mountain Heart

Nashville, Tennessee

Bluegrass

Lee Murdock, Singer, songwriter; Kaneville, Illinois and
Joe Grimm, Writer; Bloomfield Hills, Michigan (Great Lakes Folk Songs from the Ivan Walton Collection)

Gumbi Ortiz and the Latino Projekt

Gulfport, Florida

Latin/Afro-Cuban music

Quebe Sisters

Burleson, Texas

Western swing, honky-tonk, and old-style Texas fiddle music

Steve Riley and the Mamou Playboys

Mamou, La.

Cajun music

Roots Vibration

Detroit, Michigan

Reggae

Bob Seeley & "Boogie" Bob Baldori

Detroit and Lansing, Mich.

Boogie-woogie music

Bill Stevens

Fairbanks, Alaska

Athabascan fiddle music

Téada

Dublin, Ireland

Irish music

Ana & José Vinagre

New Bedford, Massachusetts

Portuguese fado singing

 






 

 

 

 


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