ESQUIRE PREMIERES FIRST TRACK OUT FROM SOLO LP OUT JULY 22 ON MUSIC MAKER RELIEF FOUNDATION
As January 27 became January 28,
folk and bluesman and Prairie Home Companion favorite Guy Davis stepped
onto a redeye flight from New York to meet Dom Flemons and perform on
the first recording sessions for the latter’s album ‘Prospect Hill,’ out
July 22
on Music Maker Relief Foundation. Flemons recalls, “Guy was a guiding
light within the whole process. The day before he came, he was at Pete
Seeger's bedside saying goodbye. Guy has a long history with Pete
Seeger: he was one of the singers in the Sloop Singers in the '70s. Guy
had known Pete since he was a little kid. They were very close. Guy was
torn up about it but he said, let's do this, that what Pete would've
wanted. It was a heavy sort of thing to have at beginning of session.”
Esquire Magazine premiered “But They Got It Fixed Right On” today.
Brooklyn Vegan has previewed ‘Prospect Hill’ and Flemons’ set at the Brooklyn Folk Festival, which drew a standing ovation.
The connection between Flemons and Davis and the Seegers grew deeper as
Davis playing a six-string banjo of Flemons’ that belonged to Pete’s
half-brother and fellow musician and folklorist Mike Seeger, a mentor
whom Flemons had met years earlier at the Black Banjo Gathering. He
remembers, “We played together at his house in Lexington, VA. I went
over there about a dozen times. He was very open to sharing his library,
his information, his stories. I’d call Mike, ask him about stuff. He
was a wonderful confidante and a good friend. He was also the first
major person I’d met who I’d known from recordings. He took a lot of
delight that I could quote liner notes and talk critically about music
he produced. We got to be pretty close.”
Ultimately, Seeger’s passing helped bring the project into harmony with
the missions of the Seegers. Flemons says, “Pete was never insular about
getting music out there. A single person can help organize. Like-minded
musicians organized together.”
In the liner notes for ‘Prospect Hill,’ Flemons writes, “As the year has
progressed, I can proudly proclaim I see 2014 as the year of the
Folksinger… When Pete Seeger passed the night before we began recording
this record I knew that notion was a reality.”
Flemons tour dates, including NYC, Philadelphia, and Boston.
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