Sunday, May 30, 2010

Riverfest 2010

From: Riverfest Arkansas
Miller Lite Stage

Friday, May 28th
Saturday, May 29th
  • 6:00 PM - Ryan Couron
  • 7:45 PM - JIMMY WAYNE
  • 9:30 PM - BLAKE SHELTON

Sunday, May 30th
  • 6:30 PM - Tawanna Campbell
  • 8:00 PM - 607
  • 10:00 PM -LUDACRIS 

Triple-S Alarm Stage

Friday, May 28th

* 6:15 PM - Whalefire
* 7:45 PM - The Hippie Holler Band
* 9:15 PM - LITTLE RIVER BAND

Saturday, May 29th

* 6:00 PM - Loveghost
* 7:45 PM - Suga City
* 9:15 PM - BELL BIV DEVOE


Sunday, May 30th

* 7:30 PM - Cedric Burnside & Lightnin' Malcolm
* 9:00 PM - The Osborne Family Fireworks
* 9:30 PM - ROBERT CRAY BAND


Bud Light Stage
Friday, May 28th - Radio Parnters

* 6:30 PM - Good Time Ramblers
* 8:00 PM - CROSS CANADIAN RAGWEED
* 9:30 PM - GARY ALLAN


Saturday, May 29th
* 6:00 PM - UNCLE KRACKER
* 7:45 PM - LUCERO
* 9:30 PM - THE BLACK CROWES


Sunday, May 30th
* 7:45 PM - Truth & Salvage Co.
* 9:00 PM - The Osborne Family Fireworks
* 9:30 PM - STEVE MILLER BAND

Riverfest 2005

From: Sells Agency

FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2005

ACXIOM / MILLER LITE AMPHITHEATRE STAGE IN LITTLE ROCK
6:15 p.m. Oreo Blue
7:30 p.m. Ramona & the Soul Rhythms
9:15 p.m. B.B. King

TRIPLE-S ALARM STAGE IN LITTLE ROCK
5:15 p.m. Steve Davison
7:00 p.m. Brave Combo
9:00 p.m. Richard Thompson

BUDWEISER STAGE IN NORTH LITTLE ROCK
5:15 p.m. Lookback Marys
6:15 p.m. The Odds
7:30 p.m. Robert Randolph & the Family Band
9:30 p.m. The Wallflowers
 

SATURDAY, MAY 28, 2005

ACXIOM / MILLER LITE AMPHITHEATRE STAGE IN LITTLE ROCK
6:00 p.m. Sum of Us
7:45 p.m. Andy Childs
9:30 p.m. Hank Williams, Jr.

TRIPLE-S ALARM STAGE IN LITTLE ROCK
6:00 p.m. Rhonda Richmond
7:45 p.m. Jupiter Jazz
9:15 p.m. 4th Avenue Jones


BUDWEISER STAGE IN NORTH LITTLE ROCK
7:15 p.m. Seether
9:00 p.m. The Black Crowes



SUNDAY, MAY 29, 2005
ACXIOM / MILLER LITE AMPHITHEATRE STAGE IN LITTLE ROCK
2:30 p.m. You Before Me
4:00 p.m. The Afters
6:00 p.m. Trapt
8:15 p.m. Arkansas Symphony Orchestra


TRIPLE-S ALARM STAGE IN LITTLE ROCK
1:00 p.m. Ben Harris Trio
2:00 p.m. Bonerama
3:30 p.m. Free Verse
5:00 p.m. Terrence Simeon
6:30 p.m. Grease Factor
8:15 p.m. Sonny Landreth

BUDWEISER STAGE IN NORTH LITTLE ROCK
5:00 p.m. Joe Nichols
6:45 p.m. Lord Tracy
8:15 p.m. REO Speedwagon

Riverfest 2007

From: The Arkansas Times

The music covers every style: headliners include revered bluesman Keb’ Mo’; ’80s rocker Pat Benatar and husband-guitarist Neil Giraldo; ’90s hitmakers Smash Mouth and Soul Asylum; country acts Montgomery Gentry, Keith Anderson and Blake Shelton; classic rock bands the Georgia Satellites and Marshall Tucker; jam-craze fave Robert Randolph and the Family Band; “American Idol” Ruben Studdard; veteran rapper LL Cool J; new hip-hop act Gym Class Heroes; new rockers the Red Jumpsuit Apparatus; and the godfather of funk, George Clinton, with his P-Funk Allstars.

Riverfest 2009

 From: Fox 16

Headline Acts

  • Willie Nelson
  • 3 Doors Down
  • Heart
  • The B-52s
  • Jason Aldean
  • Tone Loc
  • Little River Band
  • Heads of State featuring Bobby Brown
  • Johnny Gill & Ralph Tresvant
  • Gavin Rossdale
  • Hinder
  • Buddy Guy
  • The Benjy Davis Project





From: The Examiner

Miller Lite Amphitheatre Stage in Little Rock


Friday, May 22nd
6:30 p.m. Frown Pow'r
8:00 p.m. The Moving Front
9:30 p.m. The B-52's

Saturday, May 23rd

6:00 p.m. RiverBilly
7:45 p.m. JAMES OTTO
9:30 p.m. JASON ALDEAN

Sunday, May 24th
8:15 p.m. HEADS OF STATE FEATURING BOBBY BROWN, JOHNNY GILL & RALPH TRESVANT



Triple-S Alarm Stagein North Little Rock

Friday, May 22nd

6:15 p.m. One Lone Car
7:45 p.m. American Princes
9:30 p.m. GAVIN ROSSDALE

Saturday, May 23rd

6:00 p.m. Velvet Kente
7:45 p.m. Patrick Sweany
9:15 p.m. BUDDY GUY

Sunday, May 24th
6:30 p.m. The Hippie Holler Band
8:15 p.m. LITTLE RIVER BAND


Bud Light Stage at the Clinton Presidential Center Park in Little Rock
Friday, May 22nd
6:30 p.m. The Salty Dogs
8:00 p.m. Brittany Quaranto
9:30 p.m. WILLIE NELSON Presented by Bad Boy Mowers

Saturday, May 23rd
5:00 p.m. BENJY DAVIS PROJECT
7:00 p.m. HINDER
9:30 p.m. HEART

Sunday, May 24th
6:00 p.m. FLYLEAF
8:15 p.m. 3 DOORS DOWN




Arkansas Music Tent in North Little Rock

Friday, May 22nd

6:30 p.m. Gina Gee
8:00 p.m. Eclipse Glasses
9:30 p.m. COOL SHOES

Saturday, May 23rd

6:00 p.m. Amy Garland Band
7:30 p.m. Chris Denny
9:30 p.m. DALE HAWKINS

Sunday, May 24th
6:30 p.m. The See
8:00 p.m. KEVIN KERBY + BATTERY
9:30 p.m. The Osborne Family Fireworks Display

Riverfest 2008

From: CW Arkansas

Headline Acts

FRIDAY, MAY 23rd
Huey Lewis & the News - Acxiom/Miller Lite Stage
Paul Thorn - Acxiom/Miller Lite Stage
Shooter Jennings - Budweiser Stage (NLR)
Arrested Development - Triple S Alarm Stage
SATURDAY, MAY 24th
Miranda Lambert - Acxiom/Miller Lite Stage
Jake Owen - Acxiom/Miller Lite Stage
Saving Abel - Budweiser Stage (NLR)
Better Than Ezra - Budweiser Stage (NLR)
One Republic - Budweiser Stage (NLR)
Jonny Lang - Triple S Alarm Stage
SUNDAY, MAY 25th
Arkansas Symphony Orchestra -AcxiomMiller Lite Stage
Chaka Khan -Acxiom/Miller Lite Stage
.38 Special presented by 103.7 The Buzz - Budweiser Stage (NLR)
ZZ Top presented by Allied Technology - Budweiser Stage (NLR)
Robert Earl Keen - Triple S Alarm Stage

Riverfest 2006

From Fox 16
Friday, May 26
Acxiom/Miller Lite Amphitheatre Stage
6:30 p.m. Lagniappe
7:45 p.m. Phat Phunktion
9:30 p.m. Kool & the Gang

Triple-S Alarm Stage
5:15 p.m. Nik & Sam
6:15 p.m. Capitol Offense
7:15 p.m. Hannah Blaylock & Eden's Edge
9:00 p.m. The Del McCoury Band

Budweiser Stage
5:15 p.m. Eliot Morris
6:30 p.m. Zac Brown Band
8:00 p.m. Needtobreathe
9:30 p.m. Train

USA Drug/Radio Disney Kidzone Stage
5:30 p.m. Patches the Clown
6:00 p.m. The Kazoobie Kazoo Show with Rick Hubbard
7:00 p.m. Brian Kinder's Rollicking Music Show
8:00 p.m. Monster Shop Bumpn'
9:00 p.m. Thirteen X
10:00 p.m. Shadowline

Yarnell Ice Cream Family Stage
6:00 p.m. Ms. Karen's Dance Studio
6:40 p.m. Sharon's Dance
7:20 p.m. The Boehmer Family
8:00 p.m. The Jesse White Tumblers


Saturday, May 27
Acxiom/Miller Lite Amphitheatre Stage
12:00 p.m. Watoto Children's Choir
1:30 p.m. Happy Tymes Jazz Band
3:00 p.m. The Dempseys
4:30 p.m. Famous Unknowns
6:00 p.m. Whitney Williams
6:30 p.m. RiverBilly
7:45 p.m. Rebecca Lynn Howard
9:30 p.m. Dwight Yoakam

Triple-S Alarm Stage
12:00 p.m. Rockin' Guys
1:30 p.m. Crisis!
3:00 p.m. Brothers with Different Mothers
4:30 p.m. Ted Ludwig
6:00 p.m. Ivan Neville's Dumpstaphunk
7:45 p.m. The Lee Boys
9:15 p.m. The Neville Brothers

Budweiser Stage
1:00 p.m. The Cosmonauts
2:30 p.m. Further Down
4:00 p.m. Starkz
6:00 p.m. Switchfoot
7:45 p.m. Spiraling
9:30 p.m. Live

Sunday, May 28
Acxiom/Miller Lite Amphitheatre Stage
6:00 p.m. Arkansas Symphony Orchestra
8:15 p.m. Lifehouse
9:30 p.m. The Osborne Family Fireworks

Triple-S Alarm Stage
6:30 p.m. Sisters Morales
8:15 p.m. Pat Green
9:30 p.m. The Osborne Family Fireworks

Budweiser Stage
6:45 p.m. The Odds
8:15 p.m. The Doobie Brothers

USA Drug/Radio Disney Kidzone Stage
6:15 p.m. Wayne Francis, Ventriloquist
7:00 p.m. Nik & Sam
8:15 p.m. Starroy

Not exactly Ozarks, but certainly Arkansas...

I was trying to remember who we had seen at Riverfest in Little Rock last time we went, and really couldn't. Then I started trying to find a list of previous headliners, and couldn't find that either. So I am going to search around and any lists, I am going to repost here for posterity. 

Saturday, May 22, 2010

More blogs...

From Shiloh Museum: Ozark funeral customs

Ozarks Trail Guide -- Mostly about Missouri Ozarks

Down in the Ozark Hills-- Personal blog

Ozarks moonshiners at Ozarks' History

 Living on the Little Mulberry-- Rural life

 

 

Chinquapin

Evidently, the Chinquapin is making a comeback.

From KSMU:


Once Thought Extinct, Ozark Chestnut Tree Sees Slow Revival

Written by Jennifer Moore


In the mid-1900s, the nearly 4 billion American Chestnut trees in North America were almost wiped out by the chestnut blight fungus. A smaller tree, known as the Ozark Chinquapin, or Ozark Chestnut, was thought to have become extinct as a result of that blight. But it wasn’t, and now there’s an effort sprouting up to bring that tree back. KSMU’s Jennifer Moore reports.

On Friday afternoon, conservationists and researchers from a wide swath of states—including Tennessee, Missouri, and Arkansas—got together to talk about how to save the Ozark Chinquapin Tree, or Ozark Chestnut. Steven Bost sees it as his mission now.

“Years ago, I had a degree in history and science, and I thought I knew everything. And I met this gentleman, who turns 91 this year…telling me about this tree that used to be here in the Ozarks,” he says.

The tree, the older man told him, produced sweet nuts that were so plentiful you could scoop them up and load them into a wagon. Each year, the people would wait for the crop like they waited for the corn to grow. Bost, who was familiar with the American Chestnut, had never heard of the Ozark Chestnut.

“I was going to prove him wrong,” Bost recalls. But it turned out there were almost no American Chestnuts west of the Mississippi River, unless they had been transplanted.

So he set out trying to find whether any Ozark Chestnut trees had survived the Chestnut blight fungus.

“I was told I was wasting my time trying to find a tree,” Bost said. But based on science and history, he knew it was rare for any such disease to kill out 100 percent of any population.

Finally, through research and networking, someone showed him his first Ozark Chestnut tree. It was in the Arkansas Ozarks. Then he began finding more, several in Missouri.

Soon, Bost was putting all of his energy into finding more. He created his own website to bring others in on the effort, and organized events like this one to raise awareness about the Ozark Chestnut tree, and to help it grow again.

Bost says this tree is like the “miracle tree,” because it can grow in dry, rocky conditions, and it produces a plentiful yield year after year. He believes it could become, once again, an economic benefit to the Ozarks, and a wonderful food for wildlife, too. He says his dream is to have the Ozark Chinquapin, or Ozark Chestnut, so bountiful again one day, that locals are singing about roasting the nuts over an open fire.

Bost has a lovely website with pictures here: http://www.ozarkchinquapin.com/

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Bits of living history...


Ellison white oak basket
Originally uploaded by kevin wofford


From the Joplin Globe
May 1, 2010

May 1, 2010
Silver Dollar City offers glimpse into Ozarks past

By Andy Ostmeyer Globe Metro Editor

BRANSON, Mo. — Leslie Jones told his apprentice — a young Donnie Ellison — that Ellison could never expect to become a master craftsman unless he started from the ground up.

Literally.

Jones and his wife, Gussie, had made white oak baskets in the Ozarks for years, selling for as little as a quarter the large baskets that had sometimes taken them hours to make.

Good baskets start with the tree, Jones taught Ellison.

If Ellison was ever to learn to make bushel and other sorts of baskets, he had to first find the right kinds of trees — white oak is preferred — but not just any white oak would do.

White oaks on Ozark hillsides facing north and east were needed. Trees there received less sunlight and didn’t dry out as quickly, and they also were sheltered from the wind, which means wood in them wasn’t twisted.

“Once I brought back a piece of timber and it wasn’t white oak, it was black gum. You couldn’t split it,” said Ellison. “Oh, I tried. I was just trying to prove to (Jones) that I knew what I was doing. He just sat there and laughed, and said, ‘Go ahead and split that.’ I didn’t end up with nothing.”

Ellison learned the rest of the craft, too, through trial, error and sweat.

For a while, Ellison said, “I did nothing but split logs and shape up the wood with a draw knife, and cut the strips and hand the strips to them.”

Shingle sawing

Thirty-eight years later, Ellison, now 61, is a master craftsman of his own. He has worked at Silver Dollar City all those years, and is one of 100 resident craftsmen — nine of them classified as masters — demonstrating skills that have long since become obsolete in a world where people can just run to Wal-Mart to grab what is mass produced.

These craftsmen have made Silver Dollar City, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary, more than a business or an amusement park with water-soaking, teeth-rattling rides. Silver Dollar City also is a living museum, a cultural storehouse where the skills of our ancestors are on full display.

“I don’t know of any place that does log hewing besides us. Or shingle sawing. Or shingle splitting,” said Peter Herschend, one of the co-founders and co-owners of Silver Dollar City, now part of Herschend Family Entertainment.

SDC craftsmen, for example, use a 1915 J.S. Case Steam Tractor to power their Bremen Horizontal Shingle Saw, which is more than 100 years old, in order to cut cedar shingles.

At the Wilderness Road Blacksmith Shop, the smithy still pounds out iron nails, which were harder to come by before Big Box stores.

There’s a steam-powered duplicating lathe, also more than a century old, where craftsmen make everything from rolling pins to biscuit cutters.

The candlemaker still uses animal fat called tallow. That fat was boiled in large kettles over an open fire. Wicks made of linen or cotton were dipped in the tallow. And just as early Ozark basket makers learned how to select the right white oak trees, early candle makers learned to keep their tallow candles in metal boxes, lest mice eat them.

Visitors also still find lye soap — used for cleaning everything from people to dishes to clothing — made from lard and lye made from wood ash.

And there is Ellison, weaving strips of white oak together.

You’ll find just about everything but moonshine being made in Silver Dollar City today.

‘Heritage’

“The word ‘heritage’ really means something,” Herschend explained. “It is the window to see how the men and women who actually preceded us had to live.”

He emphasizes the word “had.” These skills were necessary for survival in the hardscrabble Ozarks, which even into the 1940s had few paved roads and large areas without electricity.

Herschend credits two men with making Silver Dollar City a living museum: His father, Hugo, and Peter Engler, a master woodcarver from Branson.

Herschend said his parents, Hugo and Mary, who were originally from Chicago, came to the Ozarks because they appreciated the beauty of the place and, as they got to know them, the people. Ultimately, the family ended up leasing Marvel Cave in the 1950s.

Hugo had the “genesis thought” about preserving the crafts and lifeways of the region, Herschend said, but died in 1955. In the earliest days, Silver Dollar City remained focused on the cave, and it wasn’t until a few years later that the craft theme evolved.

“We were much more in the entertainment business,” Herschend said.

‘True crafts’

But in 1963, under the direction Pete Engler, the park began holding the Missouri Festival of Ozark Craftsmen, which eventually evolved into the National Harvest Festival which Silver Dollar City now bills as the “granddaddy of all crafts festivals in America’s Heartland.”

The show brings more than 100 craftsmen to the park every fall. (It is set for Sept. 11 to Oct. 30 this year.)

One of those regular visitors over the years has been Violet Hensley, now in her 90s, who is known as the “Whittlin’ Fiddler” of Yellville, Ark. She whittled her first fiddle at the age of 15.

Herschend works to keep some of the crafts alive via an apprentice program, training the next generation in the ways of their grandparents and great-grandparents.

“It’s a hard program to maintain,” Herschend said. “People are not falling all over themselves to do it. These are physical skills.”

Ellison today is looking for an apprentice, someone willing to learn where to find the exact right white oak, and build a career out of sweat and calluses.

“There ain’t many people wanting to get into this,” he said. “It’s hard to do.”

But worth it.

“The people who are looking for true crafts, that’s what it’s all about, Silver Dollar City,” said Ellison.

Saddlebag

Visitors to Silver Dollar City also get a glimpse into the past through some authentic buildings, too, such as the Wilderness Church. The log chapel was built in 1849 near Galena and in 1955 it was dismantled, log by log. Those logs were marked with chalk and brought to the park and later painstakingly reconstructed.

There’s also an 1843 saddlebag cabin that was found near Forsyth. Opal McHaffie Parnell gave the cabin to the Herschends and solicited their promise they would preserve it.