Freitag, 31. Januar 2020

Better than Nashville: Great Music in Elko

Today we've had it all: good music, creative poetry, big crowds. Boy, it got packed today and there were long lines forming to get into shows of the "old hands" in the business - e.g. Waddie Mitchell or Randy Rieman. Therefore, we switched to panels with new-to-us poets or musicians instead. Even they were packed, but we got in. In Elko, where all is a "big family affair", operated by volunteers mostly, press doesn't have any privileges. Which is fine.

Started the morning with a panel of "literary poetry" from master cowboy poet John Dofflemyer, paired with two young poets - Odermann and Forrest VanTuyl and female singer/songwriter Tracy Morrison.


There are different types of poets, the more "literary" like Dofflemyer, the funny ones, like Rodney Nelson, the "dark", pensive ones like Joel Nelson, and, many young ones somewhere inbetween. Some recite other famous peoples' poems, some only there own ones, some by heart, some reading. Some improvise, some are highly professional, most get along really well and there is big camaraderie, most are really approachable and intermingle with the public. Got to know a couple of real good young poets, like Jonathan Odermann from ND, Tom Swearingen from OR or musician & poet Forrest VanTuyl, who we also heard in concert with his band yesterday.

Fantastic music, too, especially the trio of the "3 generations": Michael Stevens, Andy Hedges and Dylan Clough, representing different styles of Western music. Loved Dylan for carrying on cowboy music with a unique voice and bluesy notes.


When it comes to musicality by far the best is "The American Songster" and Black cowboy Dom Flemons, GRAMMY Award Winner, music scholar, historian (for black cowboy music, a project for the Smithsonian Institution) and a multi-instrumentalist. He played on the banjo, fife, guitar, harmonica and with rhythm bones.


Next was an interesting presentation by historian Dr. Taylor (pic left) about African Americans in the West/in Nevada, followed by two other poetry panels in the afternoon, mostly poets we didn't know yet, among them Doris Daley from Alberta/Canada (pic below on left) and, Tom Swearingen (right pic). All rooms packed now to the limit. Lots of first-time visitors, mostly from California, many of them retired, not too many young people in the audience. Over the years we noticed that there are more young performers on stage, but audience remained the same: "Golden Agers", white couples, from all over the Western States and beyond.


Donnerstag, 30. Januar 2020

Cowboy Poetry all day

Snow in the morning, car was snow-covered, but warmer than yesterday. 9 am to 10 pm - nothing else but cowboy poetry and songs,,, One show, panel, discussion, concert after the other, we stayed in the Convention Center/Conference Center complex all day. In Germany we would have walked over from our hotel, here, wouldn't know where to walk at all.


After the Keynote Address (the opening speeches) in the large auditorium with an Native American drum group, music, poems and the Elko Highschool Band



We started off with a panel of five fine young Oregon poets


,,, on to a panel of four rodeo cowboys (saddle bronc riders) - very young and very old



,,, to a mixed show of young musicians, youngest, Marianna Mori 11 years old - on left pic - as well as Jessie Veeder, a young lady with a powerful voice


,,, and finishing with "Cyles of Live" with great Oklahoma poet Jay Snyder among others.

Not only learned about ranching and rodeoing, but also about the McKay family from Oregon - a white ranching couple who adopted six kids from Haiti. Four of them are at the NCPG, two boys as rodeo cowboys (pics above), one girl as a filmmaker, artist and poet (pic above), one girl as a singer/songwriter. We discussed world politics and nowaday's morals with famous poet John Dofflemyer and met our friends Jack & Anita from Elko/Boise. Inbetween checked out the "Mercantile" - vendors of jewelry, art work, leather stuff, etc.



Had a quick bite to eat (a nicely roasted whole Albertson's chicken) in the hotel before quitting again for one of the evening shows in the G Three Bar Theater in downtown. Burned some time at the bar with a local beer before doors were opened and three great young musicians performed: Cat Clifford, An American Forrest (pics below) und Dylan Clough (last pic below).



Mittwoch, 29. Januar 2020

Kick-off of the NCPG 2020 with Wylie

Frost in the morning, sun during the day, bright and nice. Since we weren't part of this year's ranch tour, we instead explored downtown a little and then watched cowboy movies (pic) in the 3G Theater, part of the NCPG's (National Cowboy Poetry Gathering) program. This year's motto is "Afro-American Cowboy Culture" and correspondingly movies were shown about black cowboys of all kinds, in rodeo, as part of cowboy outfits, trailriders, jockeys, being a cowboy during segregation and nowadays, in different parts of the country: Lousiana (Cajuns), Texas and, Oklahoma. The last film was the best, a new movie by Bud Force and John Langmore (2019) called "Cowboys", featuring cowboys on remote and huge ranches all over the U.S. Probably never before we watched movies for about 5 hours in one piece ,,, and lerned a lot.


Drove to the California Trail Interpretive Center outside of town, but - other than mentioned in the program - it was closed. On to the Northeastern Nevada Museum with an additional exhibiton on the movie "Cowboys" before we freshened up (and caught up with work) before attending the evening show on the large stage in the Convention Center at 7 pm, called "Western Vernecular". The Munsick Boys, R.W. Hampton, and (pics further below) Wylie & The Wild West kicked off the Gathering. We only knew Wylie Gustavson, the famous (Yahoo) "yodeler", from previous Gatherings, and, not only being the best-looking cowboy by far, he proved again to be a fantastic entertainer and musician. Wylie is a Montana cowboy, roper, cutter and horse trainer and his performances - dancing, yodeling, playing guitar, singing and telling stories - are big fun.



Dienstag, 28. Januar 2020

Into the Great Wide Open

SLC - the Latter Day Saints' ("mormon") headquarters - has become a much more attractive city with high-rises, shopping centers, theaters and culinary infrastructure in the last couple of years. We've been to SLC quite frequently in the past and therefore our first stop this morning was Eva's (French) Bakery in downtown, for breakfast, to refuel and wake up. On to the Cherry Creek Shopping Center passing by the walled-in Mormon headquarters with the huge cathedral and the Tabernacle (where the famous choir performs). On to a bookstore in Trolley Square - great historic architecture transformed into a Shopping/Entertainment Center - to buy some literature before we headed out to the cowboy country.

Downtown SLC, a mural there and winter sports sculptures in the Cherry Creek Shopping Center:


Trolley Square and Weller bookstore, a paradise for book lovers!


All the way straight on, 3.5 hours with a break, on Interstate Hwy. 80 - cloudy with some sun, around 40 deg. F. - wide open land, sparsely populated! We passed the Big Salt Lake and Bonneville Salt Flats, a dessert-like area of sand, salt and water (on the pic below reflection of the water). It's known for land speed records on the "Bonneville Speedway", a race track.

Wendover(UT) and West Wendover (NV) are divided by the Utah-Nevada border and, of course, casinos are on the Nevada side. Wendover Will, a 63 ft (over 20 m) high cowboy still greets people "where the west begins."
Passing Silverzone Pass (5,000 ft) and Pequop Pass (7,000 ft) with blowing snow but clear roads before heading down towards Elko, passing Beverly Hills (!) and the gorgeous Ruby Mountains (pic). Wish we could once visit in summer and enjoy the hiking and fishing there!

Around 3 pm we arrived to Elko, NV, population about 20,000, picked up our media passes at the Western Folklife Center in the historic Pioneer Hotel (left picture), saw the first cowboy poets in the 3G Bar, went for a downtown "check-out walk"(pics below), followed by grocery shopping at Albertsons for basic provisions before checking in the Red Lion Hotel & Casino, our "home" for five nights. Got a clean and roomy, pleasantly furnished and nicely equipped room with fridge, microwave, balcony (= window to open!) and bathtub! What else could we wish?

Elko's main street with famous Capriola's (tackle, saddles, leather stuff) and a mural showing the rich Basque heritage: