Acadian Tune of the Month for March 2018: Claude Austin’s Jig (#2)

Here is a graceful jig from New Brunswick Acadian fiddler, Claude Austin, whom some of you had the pleasure of spending time with last summer along with Robin LeBlanc at the Festival of American Fiddle Tunes. Claude was born and raised in Sheila, in northeastern New Brunswick, in a family where traditional music and dance were deeply woven into daily life: fifteen of his father’s seventeen siblings played fiddle! Claude took up fiddle at the age of nine on a homemade fiddle, a present from his father, which came with a somewhat daunting admonition: “Si tu peux pas le jouer comme il faut, ne le joues pas” (if you can’t play it right, don’t play at all”). Claude worked very hard to play it right and built up a large repertory, playing 10-12 six-part quadrilles of an evening at the local dance without repeating a single tune. Claude still plays for his own pleasure and is a fine, exacting teacher–let’s hope we can “play it right” too!

Claude Austin’s Jig (#2)

Spring 2018 News: Workshops, Camps, Albums, etc.!

WORKSHOPS: Hey Portland, OR, I’ll be doing a Québécois New Tunes Workshop on Saturday, March 31st, 2-4:30pm–you can register right here on the website and catch details on the Classes and Workshops dropdown menu!
CAMPS: I am delighted to report that I’ll be on staff at three music camps in June and July:
Northeast Heritage Music Camp: June 17-23 in Starksboro, VT
Acadia School of Traditional Music and Arts: June 25-29, Bar Harbor, ME
Wallowa Fiddle Tunes Camp: July 8-13, Wallowa, OR

FESTIVALS: I will be teaming up with Genticorum lads Pascal Gemme and Yann Falquet to perform at the First Annual Little Sea Festival in Portland, ME on June 30th! That should be a rafter-shaker, for sure!

ALBUMS:
And…Le Bruit court dans la ville will be recording a new album in May!

PLUS: I’m teaching private lessons by Skype and in person, here in Olympia and (occasionally) in Seattle and Portland, OR.

Those of you on my inside track know tha tI put professional music-making went on the back-burnerDecember 2017 in order to become a volunteer co-founder of a chapter of Indivisible in my hometown of Olympia, WA. Olympia Indivisible now has over 585 members and are a well-organized band of angels working hard for democracy. I’m in for the long haul, until 2020, but doing music when I can…teaching and performing help keep me grounded, so if you’d like to see me doing either where you live, just get in touch! May strength, resolve, love, and commitment attend your days as Spring approaches, Lisa