Photos from Newell Lodge

The March edition of the Newell Lodge Bluegrass Festival in Folkston, GA kicked off Thursday evening with an open stage which featured Clint Wilson and Brandon Bostic. The evening’s show was given by two popular local bands – The King Family and Big Cypress Bluegrass. Harvin Carter, owner of Newell Lodge, has provided a tent for audience convenience.

Friday morning saw a few showers in the Newell Lodge area, but they had departed by show time. Big Cypress Bluegrass opened the show to an appreciative crowd. Relatively new Georgia band Blue Road performed next. They presented a mixture of original and standard bluegrass tunes that keep the audience clapping.

Mountain Faith is one of the young bands on the bluegrass circuit. They may be young, but are all experienced performers. They bring a lot of original Gospel and secular bluegrass to the stage, and are rapidly becoming one of the “must see” bands in contemporary bluegrass.

There are few superlatives left to describe the Gary Waldrep Band. The powerful singing of Mindy Rakestraw, the wonderful claw hammer work of Gary Waldrep, and the antics of Mickey Boles leaves a happy audience asking for more. Saturday will bring the Amanda Cook Band and the Lonesome River Band to the Newell stage in addition to some of today’s bands.

Music Politics from Mickey Boles

Don’t bring up religion or politics in polite company. That’s what they always say.

But Tennessee bluegrass singer/songwriter Mickey Boles is breaking both those rules in his new song, Music Politics. It examines the eternal question of who makes it in the music business and who doesn’t, with an ultimate certainty in faith.

Boles shared a few words about the song, along with this video of the song, recorded with the assistance of Jason Carter on fiddle, Cody Kilby on guitar, Mark Fain on bass, Scott Vestal on banjo, and Randy Kohrs on reso. Mickey sings the lead and play mandolin.

“All my life I have watched how good good pickers and singers have had to remain independant artists, and sit in the dugout (so to speak) in every genre of music, and watch everything land in the hands of artists that either payed their way through, primped and pimped their way through, lied their way through, or all the above to gain a label… gig… award… you name it. So I wrote this song to let them know that God is going to let me walk right through the lying political game of music, and receive national musical success without sacrificing integrity to do so.

That’s my humble view and thought, which I will stand on ’til the bitter end.”

 

You can find out more about Mickey and his music on Facebook.

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