Episode 137: Harry Bolick (The Completely Lost Mississippi Fiddle Tunes)

Welcome to Get Up in the Cool: Old Time Music with Cameron DeWhitt and Friends! This week’s friend is Harry Bolick! We recorded this last June at the Brandywine Revival. Tunes in this episode: Mississippi Hills Flirting with the Men Syrup Pudding Susan Jones 1817 Bonus track: Cotton Chopping Dick Download The Completely Lost Mississippi Fiddle Tunes on Bandcamp: https://harrybolick.bandcamp.com/album/the-completely-lost-mississippi-fiddle-tunes Harry Bolick’s recorded works: http://www.harrybolick.com/recordings Harry Bolick’s website: http://mississippifiddle.com Order physical CDs: http://www.harrybolick.com/recordings/to-order Cameron is going on tour with Jake Blount in April! Follow the links below and RSVP: D.C. Baltimore Lancaster Brooklyn New Haven Portland Providence (Message Get Up in the Cool on Facebook for invitation to the private event) Boston This episode is brought to you by the Earful of Fiddle Music & Dance Camp! Earful of Fiddle is an immersive lakeside music and dance camp in Rodney, Michigan, whose mission is the use of traditional music and dance as community-building entertainment fostering creative arts practice. Now in its eleventh year, Earful of Fiddle provides instruction in percussive dance, song, fiddle, guitar, banjo, mandolin, cello and uke as well as informal music sessions and evening dances from June 23-28, 2019. This year’s instructors include: Ruby John, Bruce Bauman, Jake Blount, Micah Ling, Nic Gareiss and Danielle Enblom. To register, visit www.earfuloffiddle.com. Thanks to Elderly Instruments in Lansing, Michigan for sharing the show with their customers. Visit their website: https://www.elderly.com/.Support Get Up in the Cool

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Get Up in the Cool features conversations and musical collaborations with some of Old Time music's heaviest hitters, like Ken Perlman, Adam Hurt, Spencer & Rains, and Jake Blount. As an interviewer, Cameron balances an effusive curiosity for the potential of traditional music with a dogged respect for its origins. Serving as audience surrogate, Cameron asks illuminating questions to Old Time's best and brightest while telling the larger story of the tradition's modern era.