to the PDF - Wallsburg Music Festival

Transcription

to the PDF - Wallsburg Music Festival
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VOLUME
1
Richard Erickson’s Antique Power Show & TedFest Wallsburg Music Festival
Coming July
15, 16, 17, 2016
Richard Erickson Antique Power Wallsburg Music Festival
www.richardericksonfoundation.org
www. wallsburgmusicfestival.com
Ryan Shupe and the
BEST ANTIQUE POWER SHOW
WEST OF THE MISSISSIPPI!
Rubberband
Over 100 Antique Cars and Trucks
Over 100 Antique Gas & Steam Tractors
Over 100 Scooters & Motorcycles
Vintage Buildings From Yesteryear
Working Demonstrations
Working Demonstration
Hay-Baling - Plowing - Saw Mill
Blacksmith - Shingle Mill - Train
Rides - Lath Mill - Machine Shop
Gas Engines - Tractor Pulls
Songs Of The Fall
Songs of the Fall
Colorado based
Americana band
features 5 time
Grammy nominee
Cia Cherryholmes on banjo and
vocals and Stetson Adkisson on
guitar and vocals. Cherryholmes
records for Skaggs Family Records
and won the 2005 IBMA
Award for Entertainer of the Year.
National Model T, A, B,
Drag Races
People from all around the councountry will be gathering at
the Richard Erickson ranch for
this spectacular event. Drivers
will test their skills, speed and
endurance of their old cherished
vintage cars as they speed down
a one mile runway for the gold.
Buildings Of Yesteryear
Shoe Shop - Blacksmith Shop,
Filling Station - Print Shop
Log Cabin - Ladies Display
Vintage Church and service.
Family Entertainment
Live Entertainment
Children’s Backyard Display
Friday: Songwriter Showcase
Princess Fearless Kids Show
Kids Train Rides & Playgrounds Saturday: Songwriter Contest
Featuring some of Utah’s best.
Treasure Hunt with prizes
Index
Antique Power Show: Page 2 -3
Sponsors, Vendors
Page 6 -7
Cia Cherryholmes
Music Festival: Page 4 -5
Wallsburg History Page 8
Ryan Shupe and the Rubberband
Entertaining folks coast to coast
for over 20 years, Ryan’s song
“Dream Big”made top 40 billboard
chart with Capital Records. CBMA
& Pearl Award’s Songwriter of the
Year, Group of the Year and Best
Bluegrass 1999, 2000, 2001, Salt
Lake City Weekly.
The BarefootSince
Movement
winning
first runner
up
at the 2013
Telluride
Bluegrass Festival’s New
Band Competition, Barefoot
Movement has been touring
the US almost non-stop. In
September, 2014 they received a Momentum Award
naming them Band of the
Year by the International
Bluegrass Music Association.
OVER 25 NATIONAL
AND LOCAL BANDS
FROM NASHVILLE TO
PORTLAND, OREGON
Finnders & Youngberg
Colorado has
become a mag
net for great
musicians look
ing to find themselves. So is it
with Finnders & Youngberg who
are now playing festivals around
the country, their songs hitting
in the top 20 on the charts and
they are considered one of the
best coming out of Colorado.
Ultimate 3 Day Family Campout
Lots of great music, food & fun
KICKOFF THURSDAY:
Polynesian, Pig Roast, Pot luck Dinner, FREE for all 3
day campers, 6:00pm
Richard Erickson Antique Power Show
Richard Erickson “Dick” is a self made man with dreams and a passion, his motto: “NEWER IS NOT ALWAYS BETTER”
Richard Erickson Story
When Dick Erickson moved
from Minnesota to Utah in
1955, he drove a yellow 1947
Ford convertible with his first
motorcycle, a 5200 Harley Davidson, chopped and stroked,
strapped to the rear bumper.
Dick later served in the Army
and traveled the globe with
his wife Rita visiting every
continent and developing an
eye for antique collecting. In
1971 they purchased the Wallsburg farm as a retreat from
his construction business and
as a place to store some of the
antiques he was acquiring.
With 43 years of hard work,
Dick and his wife Rita built
Power Show
Demonstrations
the finest antique collection
this side of the Mississippi. Over the years, Dick has
amassed a veritable treasure
trove of antique tractors,
motorcycles, automobiles and
buildings. To give an idea of
the massiveness: Dick’s collection of Indian Motorcycles
starts with the 1914 model,
and extends up to a 1940 Indian Chief, and a 1941 WWII
Indian side car model. That is
just one collection!
Part of Dick’s vision for
his antique collection is to
create a place where the past
seems to come alive with authentic buildings, actual tools
and period machinery. This
year he is adding a church and
trading post.
“Some people collect
stamps,” Erickson says. “But I
collect buildings.” He has two
Wallsburg
log cabins
restored from
1887, a shoe
shop brought
over from North Temple and
778 West in Salt Lake with
original tools and equipment,
a polygamist house from 4th
West and 18th South in SLC
has been converted to an oldtime cafe, a filling station is
complete with motor oil cans,
spark plugs and other needs.
There’s an old
print shop, a
blacksmith
building and
more. This
is more than
an antique collection; it’s an
entire antique town.
The title Power Show
comes from the working farm
machinery demonstrations,
antique airplane fly by, and
Model T, A, and B drag races.
Dick has opened his 300
acre ranch once a year since
2003 so the public can step
back in time. He is still an
avid collector so there are
new items every year. Wife
Rita passed away in 2007. A
few years later Dick met Faye
Murray in Lake Havasu who
fell in love with his bright
blue eyes and boyish grin. She
works as hard as he does, cataloging Rita’s treasures and
sprucing up the grounds of the
town.
If you are lucky, you may
meet Dick Erickson in person,
81 years old, skin weathered
from a lifetime of work outside, stopping work just long
enough to offer a quick insight into one of his antiques.
He might give you the story
behind a 1911 Excelsior or a
1916 Harley
Davidson
61CI.
This will be
the 3rd year
the Wallsburg Music Festival
has joined the Power Show (an
easy sell) by Ted Shupe and
Rob O’Driscoll to Dick who
himself is an accomplished
guitar player. The two events
are a true heritage festival.
One price gets you all of the
wonderful antique displays,
and into the Music Festival.
Hangar Stage Schedule
Friday
Hangar Stage Schedule
Saturday
Hangar Stage Schedule
Sunday
10:00am Band TBA
10:00am Open Mic/Sponsored 10:00am
Band TBA
11:00am
Muddy Boots & the
Saturday
8:00am
Model A, B, T, Races
12:00noon
Gas Engines
11:00am Songwriter Showcase
12:30pm
Shingle/Lath Mill
12:00am Songwriter Showcase
11:00am
1:00pm
Saw Mill
1:00am
Songwriter Showcase
12:00noon Songwriter Contest
12:00noon Olde Time Mischief
by Utah Old Time Fiddlers
Songwriter Contest
Porch Pounders
3:30pm
Parade of Power
2:00pm
Mindy’s Kids Show
1:00am:
Songwriter Contest
1:00pm
Mindy’s Kids Show
5:00pm
Tractor Pull
3:00pm
Lonesome Oak
2:00pm:
Mindy’s Kids Show
2:00pm
Michelle Moonshine
All Days:
Blacksmithing
4:00pm
Hoof Hearted
3:00pm
Open Mic
3:00pm
Stevie T. Review
All Days:
Train Ride
4:00pm
Time River 5
4:00pm
Whisky Buzzards
Singer Songwriter Showcase and Contes t at the Hangar Stage!!
Alex Booth has organized the first Singer Songwriter Contest for the 3rd Annual Ted Fest Wallsburg Music Festival.
Mindy Dillard, a very talented musician and songwriter and winner of the Susan Milsap award and who will also put
on a Kid’s workshop for all three days and will be helping with the contest. Elizabeth Hareza a talented musician from
Park City will be on board to help as well. She will also be conducting a Singer Songwriter Circle.
Rob O’ Driscoll
Board Member, Stage Artist and Musician
Rob O’Driscoll lives in
Wallsburg and it was he that
introduced Richard Erickson
and Ted Shupe when the
Wallsburg Music Festival was
born. He also has many other
claims to fame. First of all, he
is the builder of the beautiful
Old Mill Stage. He had helpers
in the construction, but it was
his vision that led the work.
Rob has been interested in
wood since early childhood
when his father built their
home. The home was in Kamas
near the lumber mills where
he, as a boy, played and could
easily find pieces of wood to
create things. Later, he worked
in the lumber mills. As a
young man he began building
custom furniture.
He married Sheri Ford
and they moved to Wallsburg.
Sheri passed away in 2005
and Rob remarried Korby
Atkinson. Rob inherited an
old family chicken coop where
he could continue building
furniture. That became the
Old Mill Woodworking founded
in 1974. He built furniture
for a time but now the
business specializes in custom
stairways, moldings and doors
for residential homes. It’s
a work of art, design, and
creativity to help people build
their dream homes. Rob raised
his sons Rusty, Andy and
Rycklee who were working
with him. Now they have taken
over the shop for themselves.
Rob’s father played trumpet
in the local dance band. As a
youth Rob was taught trumpet
as well, but when he heard
Earl Scruggs play the banjo
he told his dad that’s what he
wanted to play. And his dad
brought him home a banjo.
Now Rob plays a banjo he
crafted himself, highlighted
with gold plating. Yes it is
beautiful! It is obvious that
Rob is well respected in the
Wasatch County communities
as he has been the most
successful board member at
enrolling business sponsors
in the festival. Without Rob
there wouldn’t be the beautiful
stage and there would be less
money to bring in the touring
bands. Thanks to Rob for
the beautiful stage and great
lineup.
Rob’s Beautiful Stage
The Shupe Family
The Wallsburg Music Festival was born in 2014 when
Ted Shupe was looking for
a place to do a festival and
Rob O’Driscoll suggested the
Erickson Ranch in Wallsburg,
Utah, near Rob’s home. Together they approached Richard
Erickson about bringing music
to his annual Power Show. It
looked like a possible fit and
the 1st ever Wallsburg Music
Festival was pulled together in
60 days under the umbrella of
Vibrant America, Inc., a 501
(c) 3 organization that already
existed for promoting live music. Rob O’Driscoll designed
and headed the team to build
the beautiful Old Mill Stage.
Talented local bands played for
free and patrons paid to camp
and see dedicated musicians
on stage and jam into the
night.
Now we have arrived at the
3rd Annual Wallsburg Music
Festival (short title Ted Fest)
and we have an impressive
group of talented touring
bands, educational workshops,
dedicated local bands, and a
singer-songwriter contest and
showcase. It is rumored that
festivals that survive at least
3 years should thrive thereafter. Hopefully this year proves
this true.
Chairman of the Board is
Ted Shupe, who has a forty
year history of music production that includes playing
upright bass, music teacher,
band organizer, band promoter,
music contest director, festival
promoter, and venue operator.
You could say he has dedicated
his life to mentoring musicians
and inviting audiences to enjoy. He knows talent and good
music and works hard to book
the best music to fit the budget. Ever the eternal optimist,
he is sure there is a way to
bring divergent ideas together
and make it work.
His lifelong companion, Sandy Shupe, brings additional
insight to the Vibrant America
team. With a degree in Communication, she has spent 30
years in event management at
the Weber County Fairgrounds,
David Eccles Conference Center and Thanksgiving Point.
She brings skills in working
with a board of directors, contract negotiation, ticket sales
management, event planning
and execution, and working
with a team to pull all the
elements together. As Secretary/Treasurer of the Vibrant
America board, it is her job to
worry about the details.
Parents of 5 musical children, they have recruited them
not only to play, but to take on
festival responsibilities. Daron
Shupe, banjoist and web developer, has been key in developing the website. Tara Shupe,
fiddler and mandolin expert,
is also a marketing director
and a top computer designer ,
now managing the website and
facebook page. Bonie Shupe,
bass player, who comes all the
way from Nederland, Colorado, will be handling the Green
Room. Ryan Shupe will be
bringing his Rubberband to
the main stage. Also Tara and
Daron will play on main stage
with Pony Ride.
Salute To Alex Booth
Alex Booth is the Board
Member heading up the Singer/Songwriter Contest this year
at the Hangar Stage. Every
hit once had a premier. Songwriting is a talent all of us
can encourage if we want the
world flooded with beautiful,
meaningful songs. Taking entries, getting judges, encouraging the timid is no easy task.
Thanks to Alex for his efforts
and check out the contest on
Saturday at the Hangar Stage.
He is also co-hosting the
Singer/Songwriter Showcase
on Friday with talented Singer/Songwriters Mindy Dillard
and Elizabeth Hareza.
But there is more to Alex’s
efforts. He and his brother
Nathanial “Tigger” Booth work
overtime supporting acoustic
music in Utah County. Calling their organization J.A.M
(Just Acoustic Music), they
are creating enthusiasm for
Roots Music. Between them
they can teach most acoustic
instruments in their home in
Mapleton or your home. They
also host jams, sponsor Battle
of Acoustic Bands contests,
present acoustic performers
in concert, write articles for
their web site www.justacousticmusic.com and breathe life
into the acoustic music scene
in and around Provo, Orem,
Payson, and Springville.
If you attended the Wallsburg Music Festival last year,
their band Whiskey Tree did
a professional and lively performance. They also rent out
sound equipment for small and
medium gigs or will engineer
sound for larger engagements.
Recently they taught a sound
engineering course. Join them
on their website or Facebook
page to keep up with all the
opportunities to support
Roots Music.
Old Mill Stage Schedule: Friday: July 15 2016
Over 25 National Bands and Local Bands
10:00
12:00
1:00
2:00
3:00
3:45
4:00
5:00
6:15
7:30
8:45
to 11:45am
to 12:45pm
to 1:45pm
to 2:45pm
to 3:30pm
to 3:45pm
to 4:45pm
to 6:00pm
to 7:15pm
to 8:15pm
to 10:00pm
Ryan Shupe and the Rubberband
Ryan Shupe and the Rubberband enter taining folks coast to coast for over 20
years, Ryan’s song “Dream Big”made top 40 bill-board chart
with Capital Records. CBMA & Pearl Award’s Songwriter of
the Year, Group of the Year and Utah’s Best Bluegrass Band
of the years 1999, 2000, 2001, Salt Lake City Weekly.
Songs Of The Fall - Cia Cherryholmes
Songs of the Fall is a Colorado based Americana
band features Cia Cherryholmes, 5 time Grammy
nominee on banjo and vocals and Stetson Adkisson on guitar and vocals. Cherryholmes records for Skaggs
Family Records and won the 2005 IBMA Award for Entertainer of the Year.
Free The Honey
This new young band from Colorado is on the rize playing honest Americana with hints of old-time, blues, bluegrass, gospel,
gypsy, and jazz. Featuring the band’s original tunes, twin
fiddles, banjo, mandolin, guitar, upright bass, and richly
layered harmonies. This group you don’t want to miss.
Blackberry Bushes String Band
The Barefoot Movement
Since winning first runner up at the 2013
Telluride Bluegrass Festival’s New Band
Competition, Barefoot Movement has been
touring the US almost non-stop. In September, 2014 they
received a Momentum Award naming them Band of theYear
by the International Bluegrass Music Association.
Mike Iverson - Blue Sage
Mike Iverson, considered one of the best clawhammer banjo player in the world. His music has been featured in movies,televis- i
ion series, and a PBS documentary. Mike’s
band “Blue Sage” will feature his wife Shauna on bass and
guest artist Ryan Shupe on fiddle.
il
This Northwest Acoustic Americana and
Bluegrass band is gaining national attention showcasing at IBMA and the 2016
Folk Alliance Convention in Kansas City, MO. This string
band plays an assortment of jazz, classical, pop, old-time
and bluegrass, sure to please all audiences of all ages.
Folk Hogan
Finnders & Youngberg
Colorado has become a magnet for great musicians looking to find themselves. So is it with Finnders & Youngberg who are
now playing festivals around the country, their songs hitting in the top 20 on the music charts and they are considered one of the best bluegrass bands in the west.
Band Scramble
The K-Tones
South Bound Routes
New Folk Revival
Free The Honey
Pony Ride
Lash LaRue
Finders & Youngberg
Mike Iverson & Blue Sage
Songs Of The Fall
Ryan Shupe & The Rubberband
on, mandolin,
won’t forget.
Folk Hogan: A high velocity, folkpunk band with a lively stage show that is widely appealing, and downright awesome.
The six-piece lineup consists of accordibanjo, guitar, bass, and drums. A band you
Lash LaRue
Lash LaRue is a Park City band that infuses
a wonderful mixture of driving original
tunes with old country blues, rock n’ roll and
good ol’ Americana. Coming together in 2009
they are some of Park City’s best musicians and have
become one of the favorite bands in the area.
The Holy Water Buffalo
Since the beginning people have enjoyed sound, the sound that you can feel, the kinda sound that soothes your soul, eases you into serenity, opens you to a new world, pushes
you through it, helps you on the other side, gives you a craving for more. This is music you can feel.
Old Mill Stage Schedule: Saturday: July 16 2016
10:00
10:45
12:00
1:15
2:30
3:45
5:00
6:15
7:30
9:00
to 10:30am
to 11:45am
to 1:00pm
to 2:15pm
to 3:30pm
to 4:45pm
to 6:00pm
to 7:15pm
to 8:45pm
to 10:00pm
Old Mill Stage Schedule: Sunday: July 17, 2016
Bonnie & Wayne
Lab Dogs
Mike Iverson & Blue Sage
Finnders & Youngberg
Free The Honey
Blackberry Bushes String Band
Barefoot Movement
Songs Of The Fall
Ryan Shupe & The Rubberband
Folk Hogan
Bonnie and Wayne
New Folk Revival
Caleb and Amanda have over 25 years of
music experience between them. They've been writing and performing together as
Southbound Routes since 2010. They take pride in embracing the lost sounds of country music and bluegrass.
Workshop Schedule On Next Page
Six Feet In The Pine
Tara and Daron Shupe, former members of
String Fever, Telluride’s 1994 National Band
Champions are joined with Brian Thurber
and Lyle Nay playing high energy contemporary and traditional bluegrass.
Their homegrown, wild grown, honky tonk,
bluegrass and grassroots acoustic music,
harnessing the bluegrass standards of Bill
Monroe to the rock n roll of JJ Cale. Will get your feet
movin' and your boots stompin’.
Southbound Routes
PonyRide
Honky Blue Tonky
No one has ever left a Lab Dogs concert
with a frown on their face, and that includes the Lab Dogs themselves. They love
performing and playing music, but most of all love
entertaining and interacting with our audiences.
Honky Blue Tonky Puddle Mountain Ramblers
Free The Honey
Six Feet In the Pine
Barefoot Movement
Blackberry Bushes String Band
Mountain Country
The Holy Water Buffalo
Not your daddy’s bluegrass. Rated by
Re
ReverbNation.com as the 2015 #1 bluegrass
band in Salt band in Salt Lake City. This motley ragtag
gang play their own brand of bluegrass.
Award winning songwriter Jim “Fish” Svend
sen and his band of talented musicians play original music with roots that break ground
in Bluegrass, Country, and Americana Folk! Their stylized cover tunes of popular artists and you’ve got yourself
a full order of stomp with a side of twang!
Lab Dogs
to 11:45am
to 11:45am
to 1:00pm
to 2:00pm
to 3:15pm
to 4:30pm
to 5:30pm
to 6:30pm
Six Feet In
The Pine
Mountain Country
While the band is new, the members have
over 50 years combined musical experience
playing mostly folk with some Celtic music
thrown in the mix. New Folk Revival is a soothing mixture
of rich vocal harmony and tasteful instrumentation.
10:00
11:00
12:00
1:15
2:15
3:30
4:45
545
Playing and singing socially in small groups or
large jam circles, Bonnie met Wayne. A shared
love of music led to courtship and marriage, and
now the duo Bonnie and Wayne.
Puddle Mt. Ramblers
One of the hottest bluegrass bands in the
Salt Lake Valley. Something about this
band just makes you want to grab the
nearest instrument and play right along.
The K- Tones
The K-Tone motto is All Fun No Trouble
and that’s just what you get. You will hear
a combination of different kinds of music,
country, bluegrass, blues, and rock with
acoustic style, all for your listening pleasure.
Food Vendors
Lolas Street
Kitchen
Po-boy Sandwiches
Fresh Salads
Tacos - Great Fries
Rotating Munu
Miss Kitty’s
Outlaw BBQ
Smoked Pork Pulled
Spare Ribs - Nachos
BBQ Baked Beans Coleslaw, & More
Aso Acai
Brazilian Sorbet
Desserts
Tropical Fruits into a smooth puree
Other Yummies.
Lee Music
Heber City Music Store
Lee Music is participating
at the festival with 2 major
contributions. First, the store
is sponsor of an outreach
program featuring headliner
band Finders and Youngberg.
Students at Lee Music, families and store customers may
attend Friday, 1:00 pm. Secong, manager Winston Lee
will also be hosting open mic
time at the Workshop Stage.
Lee Music was established
in the year 2000. He loves
owning a music store, but
loves teaching even more.
“The team of instructors
(including me) at Lee Music
are passing on to students
our own love and knowledge
of music. We are introducing
young student minds to artists and composers - broadening their musical pallets
with great music. The study
of music sparks cognitive
and social development - and
we are building pathways to
achieve that development.
Teachers open doors so that
music can be discovered.
That makes students happy,
and it makes teachers happy.
The practice of teaching adds
value to our lives - we pass on
knowledge and love of an art
form. What could be a better
profession?”
Lee Music is located at 55
West 100 South in Heber City,
Utah where he feels supported
by Heber, Kamas and Park
City residents. He explains
that Lee Music stayed open
during the recession of 2008.
When times got really tough,
people still valued music
enough to keep our doors
open and we are grateful for
that. We are very grateful for
that.
Workshop Stage Schedule:
Friday:
1:00
2:00
3:00
to 2:00pm
to 3:00pm
to 4:00pm
Saturday:
Ryan Shupe : Improvisation
Winston Lee: Rock Star 101
Songs Of The Fall: Harmony Vocals
1:30 to 2:30pm
Winston Lee: Rock Star 101
2:30 to 3:30pm
Barefoot Movement: Song Writing
3:45 to 4:45pm
Finnders & Youngberg:
Creative Band Arrangements
Sunday:
11:00 to 12:00noon Blackberry Bushes String Band
From Practice to Rehearal to Perforrmance
12:00
to 2:00pm
Winston Lee: Rock Star 101
2:00
to 3:00pm
Free The Honey: Twin Fiddles
(IAMA)
The Intermountain Acoustic Music Association (IAMA)
has been an advertising
sponsor. IAMA is nonprofit
completely run by volunteers.
Headquartered in Salt Lake
City, it serves musicians and
music lovers throughout the
Great Basin and Rocky Mountain region. They provide a
monthly concert series during
the winter months and a Friday night coffee house. They
sponsor the Utah State Instrument Contest and sponsor
a stage at the Utah Arts Festival. A monthly newsletter is
still available at music stores
and by subscription. www.
iamaweb.org keeps everyone
up to date.
Support Our Local
Art Vendors
Jewelry Garden
Handmade jewelry, purses
and jewelry stands
The Home Artisan
Metal Crafted Art and
Mountainman Chairs,
Judy Calhoun
Artist in residence:
Painting as you watch
What is Woodsongs Coffeehouse?
WoodSongs Coffeehouses
are volunteer run, community
venues presented in homes,
schools, theaters, cafes, garages or wherever else that can
be used to provide a platform
for music. The purpose is to
create a national network of
venues for artists and their
audiences. This project is a
public outreach of Woodsongs
Old-Time Radio Hour (Broadcast on PBS television every
week).
WoodSongs Coffeehouse
Sessions is a music series that
started on Friday, October
10th in Ogden, UT. This will
be a unique music venue for
artists to perform and connect with their audience. It is
also a great place for music
exploration to hear music you
may not have heard before.
WoodSongs Coffeehouse highlight the music and the artist
with the goal of encouraging
individuals who attend to create their own art to express
themselves.
WoodSongs Coffeehouse is a
family friendly venue for everyone to enjoy quality music
from national touring artists
to local favorites and up-incomers. It’s a throwback to a
time when music was played
to bring family and community together.
Additional information
directly from WoodSongs, Inc:
A word from the WoodSongs,
Inc about the WoodSongs
Coffeehouse project. Folksinger Michael Johnathon has
devoted his career to spreading the artistic ideals of folk
music worldwide, and his syndicated radio show, the WoodSongs Old-TimeRadio Hour is
his musical gift to those who
care to listen. The WoodSongs
Coffeehouse is the natural,
next step in this effort. Each
local chapter will provide an
independent stage for regional artists and give the audience a chance to explore
the rich world of music that
exists in their own hometowns.
WoodSongs, Inc., a 501(c)3
non-profit private foundation,
is the national administrator
of the WoodSongs Coffeehouse
project and seeks to enter into
agreements with passionate,
qualified folks who will strive
to promote this concept in
their home towns, and will
devote the time and resources
necessary to produce quality
musical performances.
Wallsburg Bugle
Editors:
Lisa and John Bascom
[email protected]
Ted Shupe
[email protected]
Sandy Shupe
[email protected]
Webmaster - Daron Shupe
[email protected]
Thanks to Our Many Great Sponsors
Ace Rents Inc.- Providing
the festival quiet generators so
you can hear the music.
Intermountain Acoustic
Music Association
Utah Arts and Museums
Rocky Mountain Power
- Providing grants for the arts. Awarding grants in their service areas. Our festival was
chosen for support.
Past supporter and hopefully
continuous supporter of our
fine touring musicians.
Summerfield Retirement
Assisted and independent
living in Orem, Utah.
Wasatch Musician
Located in Sandy Utah with
fine collection of acoustic
instruments. Check out their
booth in the vendor area.
Timpanogos
Harley Davidson
Get your free test run at the
Festival. Ask for directions to
their location.
Old Mill
Wordworking Builder of our beautiful Old
Mill Stage.
Wallsburg location for finest in custom
woodworking.
Probst Electric
Jack B. Parson Co.
Jason B. Binggli and Jack Parsons Cement, Heber City Plant.
- Heber
Valley location with a highly-trained, professional work
force delivering high-quality
service in a wide range of
projects through communty
oriented, environmentally conscious practices.
Towne Place Suites
Marriott
Park City Title Company
The Orem location is sponsor
of rooms for our touring band
members.
J H & L Inc. - The
Jepperson Brothers precision
machine shop.
Thanks for helping with our Pig
Roast.
John Morland:Thanks
for your support in giving your
community fine music.
Local Songwriters Give Support
Who is a Songwriter? By Elizbeth Hareza
Elizabeth Hareza is a touring
singer/songwriter and actively
engaged in our music community. She hosts bi-monthly songwriter meetings in the Salt Lake
City, Utah area with help from
her friend Bill McGinnis, other
local songwriters and music lovers. Learn more about her and
the songwriters at www.ElizabethHareza.com.
Who is a songwriter? What I
have come to is : “Songwriter
equals anyone who has something to say.” Songwriting is not
just lyrical. It could be a chord
progression, a beat, two notes, a
hum, a funny line or phrase you
come up with or come across, a
pleasant reaction to the roar of a
powerful river - it is inspiration.
Songwriting is a way to heal and
a way to empower. It requires the
songwriter to feel all the emo-
tions so that the bad is overcome
and the listener can embrace the
beautiful in the song. Songs are
a way of chronicling experiences
and making room for more ideas
to flood our brain waves. It is
incredibly cathartic.
So, I set out on a journey to
grow a songwriting community.
I wanted it to be a group where
anyone would feel welcome,
respected and encouraged to engage. When our group meets, we
strip down our walls and learn
that the world is so much big-
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Three
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ger than us. I encourage all to
embrace their inner songwriter
and use that inspiration to speak
their minds, influence change
and listen to others. We all have
incredible power within us. After
a meeting, we feel refreshed, revitalized and inspired.
Wallsburg His tory
1853 to 2016
s
Re
eek
r
C
r
Dee
To Provo
20 Miles
William Wall and his family
were the first people to make
their home in “round valley.”
They moved here from Provo,
Utah, in 1853. He had a small
band of sheep he usually
summered in Round Valley
when the grass was high and
made good feed. He finally
decided to move his family to
this valley. Enoch Gurr, Dixon
Greer and James Gurr came
soon afterwards bringing
their families.
A few years later J.W. Boren,
Morse Mecham, Edward Stoker, Guy Kaiser, George Bowen,
Luke Berdick and Francis
Kirby built homes. These few
settlers thought they could
easily cultivate what land
there was. They thought the
water supply was not sufficient to supply more farms
yet more people came and
were welcomed.
In the early sixties the Batty’s, Mechams, Bigelows and
Allreds moved into the valley.
In the early seventies came
the Davis, Burns, Thompsons,
Stokers and Wheelers. A few
Indians had been stealing
cattle from the settlers. In
1864 a fort was built around
the head of Spring Creek so
Highway
189
Wa
l
Tu lsbur
rn
g
off
Highway
222
that the people might protect
themselves from the Indians.
Houses of logs and mud were
built along the fort walls. A
monument stands there today
in memory of the old fort.
The homes had one small
window and one door opening
into the fort and the roof was
made of dirt.
These settlers were anxious
to have their children attend
school. A schoolhouse was
built in the fort out of logs
and mud. Mrs. L. M. Boren
was the first schoolteacher.
When the schoolhouse was
finished, they celebrated by
dancing all night to keep a
fire going to dry the mud
walls. Brother Stokes fur-
Wallsburg
Antique
Power Show
Music Festival
Starks
A Short History of
Wallsburg, Utah
Taken from a history
by Emeda Taylor
Heber City
13 Miles
ir
ervo
nished the music. The only
tunes they knew were “Soldiers Joy” and “Irish Washer
Woman.”
The second schoolhouse was
built of rocks with two rooms
and still stands as part of
our historical buildings today. In 1904 Bishop George P.
Garph had our present schoolhouse built joining the rock
building.
The name of the settlement
was changed from Round
Valley to Wallsburg to honor
William M. Wall, it’s founder.
The population at one time
was over five hundred people but today it is only three
hundred.