TCL 5-16-14.indd - Blue Ridge Music Center
Transcription
TCL 5-16-14.indd - Blue Ridge Music Center
THE GAZETTE WEEKEND EDITION, MAY 16-18, 2014 TWIN COUNTY LIVING Blue Ridge Music Center n n n n SECTION B SOMETHING TO DO/3B CHURCH/5B CROSSWORD/3B CLASSIFIEDS/7B-9B AN N OU NC E S 2014 CO NCER T S E R I E S L I N E UP B ands performing during the 2014 Concert Series at the Blue Ridge Music Center near Galax will include Grammy award winners The Carolina Chocolate Drops and The Steep Canyon Rangers. The concert series will begin May 31 with bluegrass and old-time mountain music performed by Chatham County Line of Raleigh, N.C., and The Buckstankle Boys of the and continues through Oct. 11, with a concert featuring The Steep Canyon Rangers of Raleigh, N.C., and The New Spring Valley Boys from Grayson County. “The music center is located at the heart of one of the most musical places on earth, the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia and North Carolina,” said BRMC Program Director Richard Emmett. Concerts are held in the 2,000-seat outdoor amphitheater that lies at the base of Fishers Peak along the Blue Ridge Parkway, at Milepost 213 on the Virginia/ North Carolina state line. “It is one of the most naturally beautiful concert locations in the country,” Emmett said. The BRMC is a major venue and attraction of both The Blue Ridge Music Trails of North Carolina and The Crooked Road: Virginia’s Heritage Music Trail. This year’s performers will include: • Jens Kruger (winner of the 2013 Steve Martin Excellence in Banjo & Bluegrass Award) and The Kruger Brothers • bluegrass notables Junior Sisk & Ramblers Choice • The James King Band and Wyatt Rice • luthier and music maker Wayne Henderson • Piedmont bluesmen Dom Flemons and Boo Hanks • guest hosts Paul Brown (NPR’s Morning Edition) and Kinney Rorrer (WVTF 89.1 FM) • Stevie Barr (Barr’s Fiddle Shop in Galax) and The Mastertones • Big Country Bluegrass • Local and regional favorites like The Slate Mountain Ramblers, The Elkville String Band, The Wolfe Brothers String DOM FLEMONS Band, The New Ballards Branch THE CAROLINA CHOCOLATE DROPS Bogtrotters and Mountain Park String Band • A few younger, up-and-coming acts from North Carolina and Virginia, including Red June, Chatham County Line, Kripplekrunk featuring Rex McGee, The Buckstankle Boys, The New Spring Valley Boys, Jus’ Cauz Bluegrass Band, Hard Cider, Kitty Amaral & The Stray Cats, The Black Twig Pickers and The Indian Run Stringband. Shows are generally scheduled for Saturday evenings from 7-9 p.m., with a few exceptions — a Friday, June 20, show the night before Wayne Henderson’s Festival at Grayson Highlands State Park and a Sunday evening show on Aug. 3 that ties into the arrival of folks for the Galax KRIPPLEKRUNK Old Fiddlers’ Convention the week of Aug. 4-9. Tickets The final four fall shows of the season Visit BlueRidgeMusicCenter.org for (Sept. 20, 27 and Oct. 4, 11) will begin at 4 more detailed information about the season p.m. schedule, including bios, images, web links and videos of the performers, plus advance purchase ticket links. Advance tickets can be purchased online at the BRMC website; through Brown Paper Tickets; by calling or visiting the THE STEEP CANYON RANGERS Blue Ridge Music Center, at the Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation office in Winston-Salem, N.C.; or at Barr’s Fiddle Shop in Galax. Tickets range from $7 to $20, depending on the show. BRMC 2014 Season Ticket Passes are available by contacting the Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation office at (866) 3082773, extension 213. Season passes are $100, a savings of $118 off the full season ticket price. JUNIOR SISK RED JUNE Patrons are encouraged to bring their own lawn chairs and are welcome to bring their own picnic basket. No alcohol is allowed. The Galax Smokehouse will be present on concert nights, serving their Memphis style BBQ and sides. More to Do There is plenty to do at the Blue Ridge Music Center, even when there isn’t a concert going on. “The sounds of the fiddle, banjo and guitar are likely to welcome you when you visit,” Emmett said. Visitors can experience regional traditional music each day of the week with local Mid-Day Mountain Musicians playing for free on the breezeway of the visitors center from noon to 4 p.m. The music center also features the state-of-the-art Roots of American Music, a free, interactive and entertaining exhibition highlighting the historical significance of the region’s music. “Trace the history of Blue Ridge BLACK TWIG PICKERS mountain music through local artists back to the creation of the music generations ago by persons from Europe and West Africa,” Emmet said. The exhibit also shows the music’s “continued influence on many forms of folk, rock and popular music made across America today.” The music center is also the starting point for two beautiful hiking trails — the easy, family-friendly High Meadow Trail, a Kids in Parks TRACK Trail (1.35 miles - one way); and the moderate Fisher Peak Loop Trail (2.24 miles). BIG COUNTRY BLUEGRASS • The center is at 700 Foothills Road in Galax, at milepost 213 on the Blue Ridge Parkway. It is open May 10-19 on Thursday though Monday, and then seven days a week beginning May 22. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. For information, call (276) 2365309 or visit blueridgemusiccenter.org/. The Blue Ridge Music Center is operated by The National Park Service, with programming coordinated through a partnership with The Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation. Eating on the clock Despite my reputation as the suave and sophisticated man about town, I really don’t go out to very many nice eating establishments. Thus I generally forget how to act when I get there. From seattodd ing to tipping, I’m jennings never quite sure if I’m doing the right thing. To enjoy fine dining one needs to be accepting of the things they cannot change. The costs, for instance. ”Omigosh! Look at these prices!” “Well, you’re paying for the atmosphere!” “Atmosphere? Geez, I could have breathed before I got here!” We went to one fancy restaurant and I was stunned by the sheer number of employees. An amazing array of culinary foot soldiers whose very existence depended on whether or not I got fed. First, there was the über-perky receptionist who greeted us and asked us how many were in our party. Then we were handed over to a slightly less chipper girl who directed us to our table. Then someone asked us our drink preferences. Finally, a smartly-dressed waitress arrived to guide us mere mortals through the ordering process. Visiting new establishments means several minutes of staring at unfamiliar menus, trying to get a feel for the house specialties. But when the waitress asks for the third time, “Should I give you folks a few more minutes to decide?” she actually means, “Ya know, there’s a Wendy’s just down the street!” And lately I have become keenly aware that restaurants have an unspoken customer time limit. Here’s the gist. You’re out to dinner. The food was great, the drinks were great, the napkins su-PERB! You’re having a lovely time basking in your post-consumption after- glow and discussing the latest Mower Babe sightings when, all of a sudden, you get this feeling. It’s like you’re being watched. And then it hits you: You ARE being watched. The manager is inexplicably giving you an evil glare. And this is long before your debit card gets declined. The waiter keeps asking, “How are we doing over here? Can I get you anything else? Some more Similac, perhaps?” No, thanks, we’re fine. Five minutes later, the same routine. “Are you folks still doing okay?” Seriously, dude, we’re fine. By the fourth check-in, I wanted to ask if he’d care to sit down and join us for leftover appetizers. I didn’t, though, because I figured he had other tables to harass. Yep! That’s when the writing’s on the wall — you’ve overstayed your welcome. A fresh herd of paying customers are waiting for your table, and it’s high time for you to move your overfed backside to the parking lot. Ya sap! You missed the clues early on! When that check voucher hit the table, the restaurant etiquette time bomb started ticking. LOUDLY! So how long after your meal do you have to actually pay the check? How long after you pay the check can you still sit at the table? By my estimation, if even 16 seconds elapse after the check arrives, a cash tip better be lying under your napkin and your feet pointing to the nearest exit. If not, the busboy will be swiping salt and pepper shakers out from under your nose in hopes you’ll take the hint. I hate that feeling. Nobody likes being rushed. My take: When you’re paying to eat out, you’re entitled to stay for as long or as little as you’d like. Set up residence if you want. Pick out curtains. Declare the men’s room a Third World nation and appoint the maitre` d’ as secretary of state. That’s just part of the social contract of restaurants. Sure there’s a line at the door but the über-perky receptionist can handle it. She’s young and hot and wearing a necktie. The situation can be very uncomfort- able for everyone involved, server and diner alike. The server doesn’t want to kick anyone out. That’s not in their job description. Especially when confronted with several dozen half-drunk patrons armed with steak knives. They’re just college kids trying to make enough money to pay their share on this weekend’s kegger. They just want the table free so another group can come in and tip ‘em again. The crux of the biscuit is this: I paid for my meal. With REAL money, might I add, not the stuff I usually pass around to the local merchants. That price doesn’t just include the cost of my food, it’s basically rent money for all the goods and services I received while still in the restaurant. Including, but not limited to, the luxury of enjoying the company of my fellow diners. Even the ones standing in line who, along with Miss Über-perky, are busy flipping me off. Todd’s weekly column: If you had a choice you’d still be here.