Jason McInnes
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Trip to Newcastle, England and the Hexham Gathering 01/18/2012
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My co-teacher and very good friend, Maria McCullough and I visited Newcastle, England last April.  We took part in The Hexham Gathering, which is a festival of young musicians from all over England, hosted by Folkworks at Sage at Gateshead.  You can read about all of our adventures here.
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Arcade Fire with The National - UIC Pavilion - 4/24/11 04/24/2011
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As I had heard, that was a very big sound.  Two guitars, two drum sets on many songs.  Two violins.  Two keyboard/pianos.

But not much in the way of melody or interesting arrangement of all those instruments.

Except this song.  This tune is truly awesome.
Sprawl II
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0L6ZFhZVOx0

Even in this video someone (whoever the main guy) sings over this lady's voice. 

But, I was glad that I was there with my very good friend, John.  It's great to go to a show with a fellow critical ear.

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Polkaholics at The Atlantic 04/24/2011
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Last night Ariel and I went dancing at The Atlantic. The Polkaholics were playing and they're always great.  Just a little loud.  I'm nervous that my ears may never recover.

It was great to dance.  I don't know why more people aren't brave enough.  So much fun!

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Round and round, anticipation and action. 03/20/2011
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The Blue Streak at Cedar Point.
When I was a kid, middle school age, I wanted to build roller coasters and I always got a thrill thinking about other people riding the coasters that I would build.  Up, down, left, right, fast and slow, round and round, anticipation and action.

I ended up being a musician and it dawned on me on Thursday night that it's pretty much the same thing.  And, I still love the thrills. 

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November 26, 2010 - Woody Guthrie: A Life 11/27/2010
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I finished this book this morning.  I got a lot of reading done this week.  A few mornings with nothing to do certainly allows that to happen more. 

It was a great book.  I don't have much to say about it at the moment,  but Woody is definitely on my mind.

I think I've got a bit of him in me, and that makes me feel strong.

Here's to Woody. 

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November 21, 2010 - Tocando con Trio Ollín y The Young Stracke All-Stars 11/23/2010
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Los Maestros - Maria y Jason con Trio Ollín (left to right) Julio, Leonardo y Marco.
I finally got to spend some time with Trio Ollín outside of the regular jams and classes where our paths crossed.  I went to their workshop on Sunday, and although my hand was still kind of busted up, I decided to bring my banjo.  This is a song that I learned from them.  It’s called Las Virginias, and was written by someone in México for the state of Virginia.  I was only able to stay for a little bit, which was disappointing, but I had a great time when I was there.  I hope I can catch up with them soon in México City.


Las Virginias - Trio Ollín with Jason McInnes and Chris Bachmann

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Centro Cultural Ollín Yolitzli - I took this picture when I visited in 2009
I’ll write some more about Trio Ollín later, but I did want to say that they were visiting artists from México City.  They were in residency at the Old Town School of Folk Music for two weeks.  They are from a school called Centro Cultural Ollín Yolitzli, in México City.  I actually got to visit there on my trip to México with other representatives from the Old Town School.


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The Young Stracke All-Stars finish up soundcheck at the Lincoln Restaurant. Photo by Jacob Fishman.
But I couldn’t stay very long at the workshop because the Young Stracke All-Stars had a gig at the Lincoln Restaurant.  We were the supporting act for my friend Skip’s band, Strictly Jug Nuts.  This was an awesome gig.  The crowd was really into it and I think we were a great fit to play with Strictly Jug Nuts.  I hope we get to play there again, soon.

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Saturday, November 20, 2010 El Open House y ¡El Revolucion! 11/23/2010
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Saturday continued what is proving to be one of the most musical months of my life.  It stared with he regular schedule of classes and the Saturday Open Jam at the Armitage building of the Old Town School of Folk Music.  It’s November and there’s been a lot going one.  We might have been a little tired at the jam but we still got in a few rousing dances and welcomed Ariel, the newest fiddle teacher.

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Photo by Julie Futterer.
November 20 was also the night of the Old Town School of Folk Music Open House.  This is the second year of the event and is proving to be a highlight of the year.  There were over 50 free classes and jams. 


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Photo by Julie Futterer.
Lindsay and I hosted the Community Jam, which was kind of like the Gather-All or the Saturday jam, but really different at the same time.     Lindsay brings so much in terms of songs for singers.  She has a great ability to get people involved who aren’t playing an instrument.

I also invited some kids from my group guitar classes to lead some tunes and they all did great.  Those tunes were Blue Suede Shoes, Bile ‘em Cabbage Down, Shortnin’ Bread, Old Joe Clark and Snake Baked a Hoe Cake.  Lindsay lead a great song about a yodeling mountain man, The Welcome Table and a bluesy version of Old John the Rabbit that gets everybody “skit-skating” and “a-do-do-doing” along.

Maria lead a beginning fiddle class and Jonas co-hosted a room with some other teachers where students could try out a bunch of different instruments.  Jonas’ jug band also played on the main stage.  But I missed all of that because . . .

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After the Community Jam I headed downtown to the House of Blues for the ¡ REVOLUCIÓN! Centennial Concert: Chicago Celebrates 100 Years of the Mexican Revolution.  This concert was an awesome surprise.  I missed all of the visiting acts like Mariachi de Real Guadalajara and my friends in Trio Ollín, but I got there just in time to catch the first set by Sones de México, who are great and are teachers at the Old Town School of Folk Music.  It was so cool to see them up on the big stage at the House of Blues.



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The second set by Sones was the one to catch.  It featured a composition that Victor Pichardo, the groups musical director, and a huge influence on my interest in Mexican music, wrote inspired by the revolution.  It was very theatrical with a ton of dancing from the Mexican Folkloric Dance Company of Chicago, Mexican Dance Ensemble, and Ballet Folklórico Nacional de Victor Soria, an appearance of Emiliano Zapata and a ton of music by Sones backed by two vocalists, the Irish  Music School of Chicago and Victor García & the Chicago Afro-Latin Jazz Ensemble Horn Section. 



The music was fantastic.  It reminded me of third stream music, which is the name given to music that is a mix between classical and jazz.  But instead of jazz, it was folk music.  What an incredible, powerful sound.



My most treasured moment was hearing Guillermo Velázquez & Los Leones de la Sierra de Xichú.  Maria had told me of the legend of Guillermo.  I didn’t understand a word he said, but it didn’t matter.  The passion is what came through.  He played the lllorana like Neil Young plays the electric guitar and you couldn’t help but cheer at the end of his stanzas.  When the concert was over many people stayed chanting “¡Guillermo!  ¡Gillermo!”  Eventually he did come out and great some of his fans.  I was very glad to say, “Gracias” and shake his hand.



The night ended and I was happy to be as wore out as I was.  Sunday was going to be a big day, too, and I was so glad that even with all the excitement I was still able to fall sleep.

Hasta manaña,

Jason


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Cimarrón at the Old Town School of Folk Music - September 24 09/25/2010
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¡Eso!

This concert has been on my calendar forever!  Cimarrón is one of my favorite bands.  They play joropo.  Joropo is music that originates in the plains region of Colombia and Venezuela.

Cimarrón is a very important band in my musical development.  It was the fall of 2002 and I had just started working in the shop of the Old Town School of Folk Music.  The store was given a promotional copy of an album called Sí, Soy Llanero: Joropo Music from the Orinoco Plains of Colombia (you can listen to it there).  Cimmarrón is the band on the album.  Eight years later I still listen to this CD all the time.  I can't remember if it was given to me or if I just took it, but it was one of the first CDs of music from South America that I had ever heard.  It was my first step in an interest in the music and culture of Colombia, which is an interest that continues to grow. 

The band is made up of cuatro, arpa llanera (harp of the plains), bandola, bajo, maracas, cajón and a tamor (drum) which rests on it's side kind of like a dunun drum from West Africa.  The songs are super-fact, with the cuatro taking lead, rhythmic and harmonic responsibility.  They said during the concert that the cuatro is the most important instrument in joropo music.

I think I want to get a cuatro and learn to play it.  It's similar to a ukulele and jarana. 

A couple things that I like about joropo are the speed of the songs, the strength of the vocals, the incredible rhythms of the maracas and the percussive use of the harp. 

I also love the dancing.  It's very percussive and reminds me of zapateado from Veracruz, but has a different kind of kick to it.  The dancers in Cimerrón are incredible.  I've never heard percussive dance that fast before! 

Here is a video that represents their music pretty well.

Another thing I like about the music is the singing.  It's super passionate and the words come flying out of the singers mouths quicker than I can hear them.  From translations that I have read, most of the songs are about the life some the men raising cattle on the plains or about the animals on the plains.

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El Comunidad de Niños - August 25 - Day 12 - Cuernavaca 2010 08/29/2010
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Brian (center in black) and Irving (back right with the mohawk) and El Comunidad de Niños.
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This is the building for Comunidad de Niños
It seems so long ago already, but was just last Wednesday.  That morning I skipped my morning Spanish classes to play some music with these young men.  They go to a school called Communidad de Niños, which is just a couple blocks from where I've been staying.  It's a school where all the kids only have on parent.  Nicholas, who is one of the people that run the school, and I met at Mario's taco stand the week before.  I volunteered to come in and share my music.  Nicholas and I made plans using my broken español and a lot of smiles.  I didn't know what to expect, but I really wanted to visit a school and share my music.

It was great to be there.  The kids, who's ages range from 4 to 10, were all very excited to have a visitor.  The room we were in just happened to have a giant picture book style atlas.  So we looked at the map and found Chicago, and then found Cuernavaca.  The older kids, particularly Brian and Irving, where very curious about learning words in English, and they were very understanding and helped a when I didn't know a word in Spanish. 

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So, we sang in íngles y español and learned about the banjo. One of my proudest moments of the trip was being able to share Jump Jim Joe, which is a dance that my students and I do all the time in Chicago.  First you find a partner and tomen sus manos (hold h.  Then it goes,

Jump, jump, jump Jim Joe.
Shake your head and nod your head
and tap your toe.
Round, round, round you go
Then you find another partner and you
Jump Jim Joe!
                       and then it starts again.

This is a picture of the cheat sheet I used.  I was so nervous to try it, but I'm very glad I did!  And of course, like everybody who jumps Jim Joe, there was so much laughter and smiles and hugging, we could have Jumped Jim Joe all morning.

This was a great experience and in it's own way similar to the experience Shana and I had in Morelia. What if there was a way for me to do this all the time?  Hum . . . . .

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El Laudero Pavel - August 24 - Day 12 - Cuernavaca 2010 08/25/2010
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This is Pavel outside his workshop in Santa Maria, a puebla just outside of Cuernavaca.  I met Pavel last Friday night at El Manojo.

Pavel is a Laudero, a person that makes instruments.  En íngles = luthier.

This is his taller.  Taller = workshop.

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We played a bunch and he gave me a great lesson in the basic rhythms of jarocha.  A funny moment happened when he was talking about playing in 6/8 time.  As the beginning he used the phrase "sies octavos" which I took to mean six octaves.

I didn't understand what he was talking about, but I kept thinking, "Six octaves.  Wow.  That's a lot."

About five minutes later after much more miscommunication, "Oh.  6/8 time.  Yes, I understand that."  Very funny.

One thing that I didn't expect was for me to go through the beginning process of making a jarana.  This is going to be a mosquito - a very small jarana.
In addition, I really appreciated the patience he had with my lack of español.  It's still very frustrating that I can't say so much, and it takes so long for me to understand anything other than the simplest statements and questions.  I think we were both pretty wore out by the end, but it got done.  I was very glad to get to know him and his work and I hope we stay in touch. 
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