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BEN HUNTER & JOE SEAMONS
Phippsburg Congregational Church
Phippsburg, ME
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BEN HUNTER & JOE SEAMONS
The Seattle-based duo have been acclaimed for their unique blend of pre-blues a cappella field hollers, fiddle & banjo breakdowns, and duet distillations of early jazz.   Ever since Dom Flemons, a founding member of the Carolina Chocolate Drops, invited them to tour and appear on his album, Prospect Hill, their star has been rising.  In January of this year, they released their second album and were awarded first place at the 26th annual International Blues Challenge in Memphis in the solo/duo category, competing against 94 acts representing 16 countries.  

Their new album, The North Wind & The Sun, includes songs that range from Memphis Jug Band blues, Southern prison work songs, an 1861 song used to recruit black soldiers for the Civil War, and an early jazz piece by Duke Ellington.  They also recently launched a documentary project that explores modern day music along the Mississippi River.

Hunter, born in the African nation of Lesotho and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, is a classically trained violinist who studied music around the world.   Living with his globe-trotting mother, he also spent two of his formative years in Zimbabwe. There, at the age of seven, his love of rhythm began to blossom as he learned to play the marimba and perform traditional Shona music. Throughout his early travels, Hunter was introduced to a large variety of music, ranging from the folk traditions of the United States, down through Latin America, and across the seas to the continent of Africa.  Adopting the Pacific Northwest as his new home, in 2011 he joined Renegade Stringband, a bluegrass band, after meeting its banjo player, Joe Seamons, at Oregons String Summit festival.

Seamons traveled a very different road, geographically and musically, being raised in the backwoods of Northwestern Oregon in a house built by his parents. There, he was exposed to local folk music of sawmill workers, loggers and fishermen whose music reflected the character of the region. As he heard these songs in living rooms, around campfires, and at cider pressing parties, he also attended school in the small nearby town of Rainier.  He credits living between two cultures - the environmentalist passion of his parents and the quiet conservatism of a tiny town full of paper mill workers and longshoremen - as helping him to relate to the outsider perspective of the great early blues artists, whose music he discovered after taking up guitar at age 16 when he was exploring the influences of his local folk heroes.

College allowed Seamons to travel to London, where, during the day, he spent four months pursuing an independent study of British folk song and its influences on American balladry and busking on train platforms at night.  After graduating, he worked to deepen his knowledge of the history of Northwest folk songs by applying for and receiving a Woody Guthrie Fellowship from the BMI Foundation. In New York, he worked in the Woody Guthrie Archives uncovering manuscripts and letters written by Guthrie.  This intensive study of Guthries Columbia River songs greatly enhanced his appreciation of the power and value of the obscure music he had heard growing up. To properly perform and interpret this music, he soon took up the banjo.

After two years of national touring with Renegade Stringband, Hunter and Seamons attended the Port Townsend Acoustic Blues Festival, where living legends of traditional blues and ragtime showed them a new musical direction.  It led to them setting out as a duo.

They have toured widely in the United States, playing leading festivals and such storied venues as the Orpheum Theater in Memphis and Club Passim in Boston.

The show will be performed at the historic 1802 Phippsburg Congregational Church.

Location

Phippsburg Congregational Church (View)
10 Church Lane (at Parker Head Rd.)
Phippsburg, ME 04562
United States
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Categories

Music > Americana
Music > Bluegrass
Music > Blues
Music > Folk

Kid Friendly: Yes!
Dog Friendly: No
Non-Smoking: Yes!

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