Showing posts with label folk music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label folk music. Show all posts

Friday, June 27, 2025

Behind the Song: Valley Bounty

 

Every songwriter knows that sometimes, inspiration doesn’t strike from some far-off, abstract place — it rises right up from the heart of your own community. That’s exactly how Valley Bounty came to life.

The spark for this song came after reading about the Great Falls Farmers Market in Turners Falls. I’ve always believed that music, like good food, grows best when it’s rooted in real places and real people. The article by Jim Simon reminded me how powerful small, local markets can be — not just as a place to buy produce, but as a space where neighbors connect, stories get shared, and traditions are kept alive.

The Great Falls Market may be small compared to some of the Valley’s legacy markets, but its impact runs deep. I was struck by how it supports not just farmers, but the whole fabric of the town — from SNAP and HIP accessibility to the welcoming space it creates for folks of all ages and backgrounds. It’s not just about veggies and maple syrup (though those are pretty great too) — it’s about community, resilience, and that old-fashioned, face-to-face kind of connection that feels increasingly rare.

Musically, Valley Bounty weaves those themes together. The verses paint the picture of market day: fields waking under the morning sun, tomatoes ripening, kids dancing, and neighbors trading goods and stories. I wanted the chorus to feel like a celebration — simple but heartfelt — reminding us that the "roots run deep" in places like this, where food, music, and friendship all grow side by side.

The bridge reflects what I love most about markets like Great Falls — they’re not just about commerce, they’re about dreams, tradition, and shared history. Every jar of jam, every fiddle tune, every bunch of fresh greens carries with it a story — and that’s what I set out to capture in the song.

Valley Bounty is my little tribute to the folks who show up — rain or shine — to keep local food and community spirit alive. If you’ve ever walked through a farmers market and felt that mix of pride, belonging, and gratitude, I hope this song brings that feeling back to you.

See you at the market.

— Adam Sweet

🎧 Listen now: https://tinyurl.com/ValleyBounty

#ValleyBounty #FolkMusic #SupportLocal #GreatFallsFarmersMarket #TurnersFalls

Thursday, February 15, 2018

The Folk Music Group - Thursday, Feb. 22nd

The Folk Music Group will be starting up again next Thursday, the 22nd of February.

This group is open to all levels and abilities and is not restricted to just mandolins, welcome guitars, fiddles, flutes and percussion!

If you would like to join the Folk Music Group, please use the form on this page to contact us.  Include your email and we'll send you a PDF of all of the sheet music with chords!

The cost of the class is $15 per person.

Hope to see you next week!

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Pete Seeger, Prolific Folk Singer, Dies At 94

by Paul Brown

A tireless campaigner for his own vision of a utopia marked by peace and togetherness, 's tools were his songs, his voice, his enthusiasm and his musical instruments. A major advocate for the folk-style five-string banjo and one of the most prominent folk music icons of his generation, Seeger was also a political and environmental activist. He died Monday at age 94.

Pete Seeger came by his beliefs honestly. His father, Charles Seeger, was an ethnomusicologist and a pioneering folkorist whose left-wing views got him into trouble at the University of California, Berkeley. Charles Seeger introduced his son to some of the most important musicians of the Depression era — including and

Seeger and Guthrie eventually became fast friends — though they didn't agree on all things — and crisscrossed the country performing together. Seeger said that as early as 1941, they found themselves blacklisted as communists. Seeger actually was a member of the Communist Party in those early days, though he later said he quit after coming to understand the evils of Josef Stalin.
Pete Seeger leads the crowd at Newport Folk.

Following World War II and service entertaining the troops, Seeger teamed up with Lee Hays, Ronnie Gilbert and Fred Hellerman to form the astonishingly successful folk group . Ronnie Gilbert said that from the start, Seeger's performances were transcendent — whether you were on stage with him or in the audience.

"You got the sense that he was saying and singing way beyond the moment that he was in, the place that he was in. Alone on a stage in front of thousands of people ... everybody got it, everybody got his passion for music, his passion for being on the stage, making people sing, having people listen to each other's music. He was a passionate person, and that was what people saw. People absorbed his passion and his ideals," Gilbert says.

The Weavers' version of Leadbelly's "Goodnight Irene" hit the top of the pop charts in 1950. Other hits followed, including "On Top of Old Smokey," "So Long (It's Been Good to Know You)" and "Wimoweh."

If The Weavers hit an emotional and cultural sweet spot in postwar America, the Red Scare quickly soured it. Seeger refused to answer questions before Congress in 1955 about his political beliefs and associations. He was held in contempt and nearly served a jail sentence before charges were finally dropped in 1962 on a technicality.

But his troubles with Congress finished The Weavers as a major touring and recording group, so Seeger went out on his own again. Shut out of the big gigs, he played coffeehouses, union halls and college campuses to support his family. His wife, Toshi, managed his affairs and raised their children in the cabin they had built in Beacon, N.Y.

He co-founded and wrote for Sing Out, one of the first and most important magazines to grow out of the folk revival. He produced children's songs and books. But his commitment to political and social causes never waned. Seeger sang and marched nationwide for civil rights and against the Vietnam War. As he told NPR in 1971, "Sometimes I think [about] that old saying,'The pen is mightier than the sword.' Well, my one hope is the guitar is gonna be mightier than the bomb."

In 1968 he went local, but, of course, in a big way. Upset at the filth clogging the Hudson River near his home, he spearheaded the building of the Sloop Clearwater, which volunteers sailed up and down the Hudson. Politicians and polluters had to take notice. Seeger, not surprisingly, saw a larger purpose: "Bringing these people together, all these people, is the essential thing, and this is what the Clearwater almost miraculously has started to do on the Hudson," he said.

For all of his social activism, Seeger said more than once that if he had done nothing more than write his slim book How to Play the 5-String Banjo, his life's work would have been complete. Seeger's grandson Tao Rodriguez Seeger plays banjo and performed with his grandfather. He says the paperback, which is chock-full of chords and techniques, is a challenge.

"It's not a thick book but it's thick stuff. He doesn't really explain it too well. It's sort of quick, it's got a little diagram, 'Here's how you do it.' But it's great. It's an awesome resource. I have a copy," Rodriguez Seeger says.

Not just through his books but also through his sheer force of presence, Seeger became a model for younger folk musicians. Singer and songwriter Tom Paxton said he learned invaluable lessons from Seeger about how to reach an audience. "Look 'em in the eye. Make a gesture of inclusion, which he did all the time. And above all, have a chorus," Paxton says. "So I learned from Pete to have something for them to sing."

Bringing people together and getting them to sing out may be one of Pete Seeger's greatest legacies. But when it came to saving the world, Tao Rodriguez Seeger says, his grandfather ultimately seemed to question whether the guitar was mightier than the sword.

"[It] troubled him, troubled him deeply that technology was so advanced but our emotional state was so inadequate to cope, that with a push of a button, in a fit of rage, we could wipe ourselves off the face of the Earth. And he really wanted to fix that and always felt like he failed," Rodriguez Seeger says.

But if Pete Seeger didn't save the world, he certainly did change the lives of millions of people by leading them to sing, to take action and to at least consider his dream of what society could be.