"Frailin with Friends" the CD

 

Craig Evans frailin’ on the banjo - A celebration of happy music assembled as a fund raiser for Autism Hangout (dotcom).

 

"If you like the happy banjo music you hear at the beginning of any Autism Hangout Podcast, you'll love this CD!"

 

"Hello again, everybody!" My name is Craig Evans. I am one, blessed human being. I’ve had the good fortune of living a life surrounded by family and friends in music. But these aren’t just any friends, and this isn’t just any music. These tunes are from a simpler time… a time when fiddles, banjos and guitars were brought out to celebrate life events. And the friends that play this music (both then and now) know the power, camaraderie and love it generates.

 

This CD is about that love. We want you to share in its joy.

 

A few years back, I discovered some new friends… special ones that need a special kind of attention. These are children with autism. Families touched by this baffling condition are faced with an extraordinary set of daily challenges. Life can sometimes be very tough. When those moments occur, it’s my fervent hope that folks will play this CD and listen to the happy tunes and encouragement on its tracks. It was put together with joy by my friends - some very special, caring people that want to bring a little happiness into the lives of those facing such challenges.
 

The proceeds of the sale of this CD go to benefit Autism Hangout (dotcom). Autism Hangout is an online community designed to bring timely, relevant information on how to live with autism (thrive, even) to family, care-takers, educators, medical professionals and others dealing daily with those with the condition. Come and see!

 

 

Most of these tunes have been played in front of friends, family and compete strangers for over 100 years! In all those places and at all those times, we know for sure one thing happened… folks smiled. This CD contains some wonderfully happy music. And the musical friends gathered here are simply playin’ it as we feel it… with joy! I sincerely hope this music lifts your spirits and puts a smile on your face.

 

Craig Evans
  

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3/19/09 - First Reviews are IN! 

"Joanchek" (Joan Radell) from Banjohangout.org

 

Frailin’ with Friends
Rootbass Records
Reviewed 3/19/2009 by Joan Radell

 

 

We often refer to a “circle of friends.” And circle is the perfect metaphor. It only takes two people to start that circle, and as we journey through life we make our circle bigger one person at a time. When times are tough, we pull that circle close for the support we need. And in happy times, our circle expands exponentially as we share our joy. A circle of friends is an ever-changing, living thing that breathes love.

 

Craig “Frailin’” Evans, well known in old-time music circles for his lyrical banjo style, is one of those folks whose circle just keeps getting better and stronger every day. Craig has gathered a circle of his musical friends to compile a collection of songs that conveys just how he feels about life. His amazing banjo is the musical thread that ties each musician and each song together.

 

Frailin’ with Friends was produced for a special group of Craig’s friends--the online community at AutismHangout.com. Autism spectrum disorder is a catch-all term for a wide variety of brain-development disorders. Families touched by autism face special challenges every day, and the support and empathy they can give and receive at the Autism Hangout makes life a little easier. Craig opened his circle to include those with autism, their families, friends, and caregivers, and is using the proceeds of the sale of the album to benefit this online community.

 

Frailin’ is a busy guy. He plays regularly with his two bands, Singleton Street and The Eelpout Stringers. Both bands and their widely differing styles are well represented here. Singleton Street is a quartet featuring Sherri and Chuck Leyda and Jimmy Newkirk that favors upbeat old-time gospel tunes. Their tight harmony, exceptional instrumentals and grinning delivery is quintessentially happy music. Of the four Singleton Street tunes on the album, the standout is “Red Clay Halo.” It is simply impossible to listen to this bubbly arrangement of Gillian Welch’s tune without tapping at least one toe. With voices that blend effortlessly in classic 4-part harmony without a trace of muddiness, “Angel Band” is a rich treatment of the 1860’s era gospel standard. And the revival-style “Get in Line Brother” is a hand-clapping ripsnort of a ride.

 

Craig’s exuberant clawhammer banjo fronts the Eelpout Stringers. Loyd Mitchell, Karl Burke and Nick Rowse fill out this quartet. The band takes their name from the Eelpout Festival, held annually on frozen Leech Lake in Walker, Minnesota. After entertaining the cold crowd with their fish-kissing antics, the foursome has been known to sing for their supper--busking a few tunes in exchange for a welcome hot meal and cold glass. The Stringers are masters of old-time standards and appear four times on the album. Their straightforward arrangements highlight the influence of ancient Celtic musical themes on traditional Appalachian-roots music. But Craig’s musical circle encompasses more than classic old-time-genre foursomes.

 

The precise bass and rippling guitar of renaissance man David Tousley weaves through more than a few songs on Frailin’ with Friends. Whether counter-pointing a fresh, plaintive duet arrangement of the ancient tune “Greensleeves” on guitar, or providing a strong thump of foundation for the camp-song handclapper “I’ve Got Two Hands,” David is a versatile musician who understands the complexity of frailed banjo. His delicate, sparkling guitar enhances but never overpowers. (Beyond his performance talent, Tousley also mixed and mastered the album.)

 

The album’s show stealer, however, is Debbie Sorenson-Boeh. She’s a master fiddler and evocative vocalist. With a controlled hand and light touch on the bow, Debbie has found the Holy Grail of violin: a timbre and tone that parallels that of the human voice. Debbie started playing the violin at the tender age of 11, and trained in classical performance. After a decade’s break to raise her family, Debbie again picked up her violin and took a bluegrass path. She discovered that traditional roots music allowed her to connect with an audience in the way she wanted to. “The thing I love most is cutting to the core of a song/feeling/story,” Debbie says. “I don't like a lot of fancy stuff - I want something honest and unique.” Honest and unique perfectly describes Debbie’s stellar vocals on “A Mother’s Dying Words to Her Daughter.” Although the song title seems bleak for an album about the joys of friendship, Debbie’s soaring, true alto raises this 1920’s tune from maudlin to masterpiece. Reminiscent of American folk-music icons Hazel Dickens, Maybelle Carter, and yes, Joan Baez, Debbie’s vocal performances exemplify old-time music while redefining it in a modern, relevant way.

 

Rounding out “Frailin’ with Friends” are two tracks featuring Craig and his “festival friends.” These impromptu, live recordings took place under a rain tarp in a field in central Minnesota (it was a June festival jam), and embody all that is great about old-time traditional music. Fiddler Debbie Sorensen-Boeh, award-winning autoharpist Karen Mueller, singer/songwriter/guitarist Geoff Shannon and bassist Terry Sullivan join Craig in rousing renditions of “Soldier’s Joy,” a tune that dates at least as far back as the Civil War, and the old-time standard “Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss.” The exuberance of al fresco jamming, artfully pre-mastered by Geoff Shannon, shines through these two songs.

 

Frailin’ with Friends ends with a solo by our Frailin’ friend himself. Craig plays “Raising Arizona,” a composition that begins with the theme from Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 in D minor, better known as “Ode to Joy.” The song drifts into the Sons of the Pioneers “Way Out There”… an ethereal melody, set off by a wordless descant that brings to mind cowboys and vivid sunsets. Is Frailin’s high lonesome cry a yodel? A prayer? A whoop of joy? Perhaps it’s a call to music-lovers near and far, young and old, to join hands and form a circle: a circle of friends.

 

This happy album is available for purchase at www.AutismHangout.com. All proceeds from the album’s sale will benefit the Autism Hangout. For more information on the musicians featured on “Frailin’ with Friends,” check the following websites:

 

Craig Evans: www.myspace.com/frailin


Singleton Street: www.myspace.com/singletonstreet


The Eelpout Stringers: www.myspace.com/eelpout


Debbie Sorensen-Boeh: www.myspace.com/debsorensenboeh


David Tousley and Marty Marrone: www.tangledrootsbluegrass.com


Geoff Shannon: www.myspace.com/maryhendersonampgeoffshannon


Karen Mueller: www.karenmueller.com

 

Joan Radell is a music lover who follows the bluegrass and old-time music scene from a lovely perch high in the Poconos of Pennsylvania. Contact her at joanchek@aol.com.

 

Overall Rating 10


Original cover art by the Lovely Ms. DeAnne L. Parks (my talented wife!).  Click for bigger image.

 

If you don't want to use PayPal or a credit card, a personal check or MO is fine.  Make it out for $16.75 ($15 for the CD and $1.75 for postage).  Be sure and include your mailing address!  Here's my address: 

 

Frailin' with Friends CD
14585 Cameo Ave. W.
Rosemount, MN  55068

 

Friends Joining Craig Include!

 

Singleton Street

Craig Evans (banjo)
Sherri Leyda (guitar)
Chuck Leyda (guitar and mandolin)
Jimmy Newkirk (bass)

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Eelpout Stringers

Loyd Mitchell (guitar)
Craig Evans (banjo)
Karl Burke (bass)
Nick Rowse (fiddle)

 

 

 

Debbie Sorensen-Boeh

 

 

 

 

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Festival Friends

Geoff Shannon       Karen Mueller            Terry Sullivan

 

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And Studio Friends

Marty Marrone            David Tousley

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Recorded and Mixed at Rootbass Records, MPLS, MN  

 

 

 

 

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As reported in This Week Live - Friday, 27 March 2009

Bluegrass for a cause

New album from Rosemount bluegrass musician to benefit AutismHangout.com

 

by Andrew Miller - Thisweek Newspapers

 

Craig Evans is putting his banjo skills to work for the autism community.

 

A clawhammer banjo player and organizer of the bluegrass festival at Rosemount’s annual Leprechaun Days celebration, Evans has released “Frailin’ with Friends,” a 21-track CD of upbeat bluegrass standards, as a fundraiser for his Web site AutismHangout.com.

 

Evans is joined on the album by his bandmates in Singleton Street and the Eelpout Stringers, along with other friends in the Minnesota bluegrass community.

 

All proceeds from sales of the CD will be used to maintain and operate the Web site, which Evans runs out of his Rosemount home.

 

AutismHangout.com offers social networking forums as well as “meta news” – articles and videos from experts that cover everything from help with medications and treatment options to anecdotes about living with autism.

 

“If you’ve been touched by autism, it’s a major part of your life. There is no road map,” said Evans, whose 17-year-old stepson Nolan has Asperger’s syndrome, a “high functioning” variety of autism.

 

“To me, the greatest benefit I can offer this audience is to tap the leading minds so we’re not walking in the dark.”

 

Evans launched Autism-Hangout.com last summer and the Web site receives about 1,000 hits per day.

 

The popularity of Autism-Hangout.com has prompted Evans, a Web developer who’s designed sites for 3M and Peace Corps, to explore other possibilities for medical-related “community hangout” forums on the Internet. Currently, he’s looking into launching Heart Hangout and Cancer Hangout sites.

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AddThis
Comments (2)
...
written by Bensr, March 28, 2009
Craig's great efforts and actions are truly a ministry of love and perserverance.
...
written by michelle , March 27, 2009
Mixing music with autism.....brilliant
 

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Song List!

Click on title for sample of tune.

 

 

1 - Star Spangled Banner

2 - Woodchopper's Reel

3 - Chased Old Satan

4 - Lady Of The Lake

5 - Get In Line Brother

6 - Old Hymn Medley

7 - A Mother's Last Words To Her Daughter

8 - Soldier's Joy

 

 

See video here:

 

9 - Over The Waterfall

10 - Colored Aristocracy

11 - Morpeth's Rant

12 - Fisher's Hornpipe

13 - Boatman

14 - Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss

15 - Red Clay Halo

16 - Johnny Don't Get Drunk

17 - Midnight On The Water

18 - I Got Two Hands

19 - Angel Band

20 - Greensleeves

21 - Raising Arizona

 

If you don't want to use PayPal or a credit card, a personal check or MO is fine.  Make it out for $16.75 ($15 for the CD and $1.75 for postage).  Be sure and include your mailing address!  Here's my address: 

 

Frailin' with Friends CD

14585 Cameo Ave. W.

Rosemount, MN  55068

 

 

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FEEDBACK!

 

We love hearing from you!  Especially if this CD did indeed brighten your day.  Here's a hand-made beauty that tells us "happy" is what this music is all about...

 

 

Thank you folks, for your cards/letters and email!

 

Craig Evans

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"Frailin with Friends!" Happy music to brighten your day! 

(The Infomercial!)

Autism Hangout founder Craig Evans talks about his recently released "Frailin' with Friends" CD. "This CD of happy music was assembled as a day-brightener for those living with the daily challenges of autism. I'm also using all the proceeds from sales to fund Autism Hangout.

 

 

 

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More Friend's Music!

 

Here's fiddler Debbie Sorensen-Boeh, bassist Karl Burke and Craig (frailin) Evans playing "Better Get In That Number" for a very young audience member at a late July farmers market at Lakewinds Natural Foods in Chanhassen, MN. 

 

 

Here's a video of a cut from Singleton Street's Gospel CD. This is "Get In Line Brother" as performed at the 2/23/07 CD release concert. Enjoy!

 

 

 

Here's the Eelpout Stringers playin' Yellow Rose of Texas at 2009 Rosemount Leprechaun Days. Don't miss Nick's cloggin'!

 

 

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An 8/28/09 comment from "Wrangler" at www.banjohangout.org

Pro:

1) I ordered the CD and it was delivered very quickly.
2) Great cover and presentation materials
3) Excellent sound quality
4) Wonderful playing
5) Fantistic vocals
6) Very worthy cause

 

Con:

1) The music gave me happy feet. Don't try to train a cutting horse if you have happy feet.

 

Over all: Great buy, just don't dance on a green horse. It is difficult to listen to this CD and not move around and grin like a possum eating grits.

 

Five Stars plus

 

Mike

 

To peace, happiness, banjos that stay in tune and people likewise


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