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Floydfest is an extraordinarily special event, and each guest has the opportunity to personalize his/her visit. One could come to the festival with the intent of taking in all of the healing arts offerings, and gain experience with Chinese Dietary Therapy, Reflexology, and Ayurvedic Health Principles to name a few. That guest could take yoga in the morning, eat a vegetarian curry for lunch, get massages of varying types in the evening and top it off with some fine world music sounds, retiring early in order to rise for the next class in the a.m. yoga series. Or, a guest could stake claim at the Pink Floyd Garden stage, sampling wines from the finest local wineries and beers from some outstanding micro-brewers, all the while enjoying the enchanted garden and some fine, fine sounds, venturing out a few times here and there to catch the major shows. Or one could set out to explore the sounds of the world from stage to stage, stopping to snack on some sushi or climb the rock wall, or choose to set up station at one of the stages and enjoy the full programming schedule it has to offer.
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I opted to highlight my schedule for must-sees, and do my best to stick to it without rushing... The dilemma is that everything is a must see!!! The Floydfest lineup of performers is of such high quality, that every act you stumble upon has that "Wow!" factor. I discover my musical favorites time and time again here. So I dive into the weekend knowing that any schedule I make is subject to unexpected and extremely satisfying detours.
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I headed to the food vendors for some fried calamari that makes my mouth water right now as I am writing this. I ate it as I enjoyed the Alliens world funk fusion music on the Global Village stage. This was extremely pleasant. The next time I walked down the moist mulch path towards Dreaming Creek stage I was met by the most triumphant, inspired sound. It was Devotchka, an epic mixture of Eastern European, Southwestern, South American and American roots music, both punk and folk. These highly skilled musicians use a sousaphone, accordion, piano, violin, and a bouzouki to make one flavorful and intense sound. On one particularly rocking song, my neighbor said it sounded like Keith Richards on a bouzouki. This performance was on fire!
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The next time I walked down that beautiful path towards DC stage I was greeted by "Love the Life You Live," the smooth and inspiring reggae sound of Midnite. "Look what Jah Jah gave you," they sang, speaking truth and lifting us up. I got chill bumps and realized that this feeling was one I would feel again and again until the culmination of this magical weekend.
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I woke to the sweet sounds of Paul Curreri on the Garden stage. After taking in the beautiful nature of our surroundings in the Blue Ridge mountains we began our journey to the stage area. Walking through the Floydfest site is a highly pleasurable experience. Each corner holds its own charm; there is so much to take it and be enchanted by. We walked from our campsite
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We walked past the porch onto the beautiful mulch path, past the nonprofit organizations and some fine, fine artisans. Then we passed the delicious wine garden, so charming...
Next it was on to the main stage for our second round. "From the pasture to the future," the Waybacks took us on a rock n roll adventure that transcends genre from newgrass to swing and jazz with masterful finger picking and improvisation. Mr. Hank Sinatra, as the guitar player called him, wowed me with his ultra-smooth tenor voice and star-quality presence.
The Hackensaw Boys lit up Hill Holler stage; there was tons of dust flying down front. Their energy is contagious. My partner said they were like the heavy metal of bluegrass.
Everyone was flocking at this point to Dreaming Creek for Donna the Buffalo, and they did not disappoint. Loyal fans lapped it up. The sun was shining, and they were dancing; you could tell it was so special to these folks, something they look forward to all year. The festival was packed at this point, with one of the largest crowds I've seen here. It was such a great crowd of people, too, it always is: diverse, thoughtful, friendly.
We'd heard tons of buzz about American Dumpster so we scurried over to the BR to Bayou dance tent to check them out. This was one rocking show. It was theatrical and carnivalesque, other-worldly even. Led by wild songwriter Christian Breeden whose life in the junkyard inspires a musical and lyrical landscape that is all his own, American Dumpster had us jumping. At one point they brought out belly dancers; Christian said he liked all this Eastern-Western fusion, all this Appalachian belly dance... :)
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We made it back to Dreaming Creek for another shockingly good performance by the Cat Empire of Australia. This turned out to be one of my favorite shows of the weekend, full of soul and free as the wind. The funk filled fusion was constantly shifting form; the guys switched from drums to vocals to trumpet and even some funky dance. Their message was extremely positive. They sang, "Our weapons are our instruments..." These guys were very high octane performers with some serious spirit.
Now we knew we had to be back to Dreaming Creek for Andy Palacio & the Garifuna Collective; we just didn't know why or what to expect. We walked upon a One Love sound so profound, it was like a revival. Andy Palacio found a deep calling to preserve the Garifuna culture, a unique blend of West African and Indigenous Carib and Arawak Indian language and heritage, when he saw it was disappearing in Nicaragua. The culture originated when two large ships with a delivery of West African slaves sunk off the coast of St. Vincent in the Caribbean in 1635. Some of the slaves survived and intermingled with the indigenous people creating a hybrid culture. His deep calling to protect the culture of his people is evident; this show was one of the most moving and soulful performances of the festival, especially when 75 yr. old Garifuna legend Paul Nabor joined him on stage.
Now this is it! This man's calling to carry the music of his people forward, becomes the survival of their spirit. Aligning ourselves at the spirit through music is what is going to save us.
Floydfest In the Mix is about dissolving boundaries, meshing, intermingling... Finding common ground to dance on. From Africa to Appalachia, the commonalities we share are profoundly symbolized in the fusion of our traditional rhythms... When Justin of Toubab Krewe was giving his Kora workshop he noted that, in his exploration of Appalachian and African fusion, the meshing of the rhythms was uncanny, like a perfect fit.
Saturday night at our campsite we could hear the sounds of Toubab Krewe in the distance, rhythms that have been traveling through the wind for thousands of years...
It poured early Sunday, I mean really pounded. I felt for the organizers and admired their diligence from year to year; the event has been plagued by storm. But it always makes that sunshine so welcome, and so spiritual. Once the rain let up, we began our last day's trek to the stage area, Hill Holler to be exact.
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Before the Railroad Earth finale, we decided to check out Kundalinii Express in the Global Village. We'd walked past their tent in the Healing Arts village several times over the weekend and were very interested in their mission. The performance was a very young group of devotees who had come from far & wide to travel and share the Kundalinii message. While the performers were very young in experience, they delivered the spirit of the mantras to us with grace. I swayed and prayed under the beautiful Global Village sky.
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Floydfest In the Mix celebrated the spirit of humanity. Rather than being afraid of our differences, we've got to lift each other up, and appreciate our kaleidoscope of spirit. Thank you to the organizers for providing this enlightening and highly entertaining journey through the music of our increasingly connected world. It's folks like you who light the way.
~ Review by: Lori McKinney
~ Photography by: Robert Blankenship