Life comes in focus as the day approaches

It’s odd how a man facing heart surgery hears from friends who seem to have more on their minds than they’re willing to say — “How are you?” they say and “Thinking about you” in a way that suggests maybe they asked me months ago for a blurb for their new novel (“Recklessly absurd but lyrically sensitive”) or I promised to talk to their creative writing class — and I want to say, “Get to the point,” but these are Minnesotans and we are point-avoiders.
 
The elephant in the room is mortality, of course, and if they’re calling to wish me well, okay, but the novel is unimpressive (“Where confusion collides with revulsion at over-writing”) and my advice to young writers is “Get a life, then think about writing” and that’s enough about that.

Read the rest of the column on SUBSTACK >>>

Garrison Keillor hits the road!

Exciting news!!! The full cast of A Prairie Home Companion (Garrison, the actors, sound effects pro Fred Newman, the house band, and singer Heather Masse) will be reuniting for two upcoming shows at The Anthem in Washington, D.C., and at The Town Hall in New York City. 

Keillor & Company — featuring Prudence Johnson and Dan Chouinard in an evening of song and stories — will return to the road with stops in Bellefontaine, OH; Champaign, IL; Palm Desert, CA; Fort Lauderdale, FL; Maryville, TN; and Frankfort, KY.

And Garrison is flying solo at shows in Mount Tabor, NJ; Peekskill, NY; West Bend, WI; and Torrance, CA, where you will find lots of stories, a few songs or sing-alongs, and a conversation about “Why You Should Go On Getting Older.”

Dates and ticket information for all these events can be found on our website.

VIEW Tour Schedule >>>

 

All about this week's classic show!

This week’s compilation comes from memorable moments from our St. Louis broadcasts, with Jearlyn Steele singing the “St. Louis Blues,” Del McCoury and his band playing “Quicksburg Rendezvous,” and the legendary guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli performing Prince with pianist and singer Tony DeSare. Guy Noir chases around after a nefarious baseball player named Louie Spitui, the pastor’s daughter, Erin Bode, sings “Be Still My Soul,” and the story of one naive 13-year-old Wobegonian’s eye-opening train trip to the Gateway City. The link posts to our Garrison Keillor Facebook page at 5 p.m. CT. But if you simply cannot wait until then, use the link below.

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When Del McCoury was growing up in York County, Pennsylvania, he learned music from his mother, Hazel, a church organist who also played guitar, piano and harmonica. And he never missed a chance to tune in to the Grand Ole Opry. But when his older brother bought a 78-rpm record of Flatt and Scruggs, that sealed the deal. Del started playing bluegrass and, a half-century later, has never looked back. In 1963, Bill Monroe asked McCoury to join his band, The Blue Grass Boys. Del played guitar and sang lead vocals with Monroe and traveled with him for a year before quitting the band and getting married. After a brief stint in California with the Golden State Boys, McCoury ended up back in Pennsylvania, working at a sawmill and playing music on weekends. As his boys got older, they began playing with their dad in his band, the Dixie Pals. Ronnie joined the band in 1981 and Rob followed in 1988. The Del McCoury Band formed in the early 1990s. The group has won numerous honors from the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA), including being named Entertainer of the Year. His most recent album, Almost Proud, is a collection of songs sent to him over the decades from songwriters around the world — and assembled during his COVID lockdown. 

Listen to “All Aboard” >>>

Singer and pianist Tony DeSare and guitar legend Bucky Pizzarelli were born 50 years apart, but in 2002, when the two met at a performance at the historic Apollo Theater, they hit it off and continued to worked together off and on for many years. DeSare's career began while he was still in college. He has played major jazz rooms from Birdland to the Blue Note to the Café Carlyle, and concert halls across the U.S., Australia, and Asia. His most recent project is a series of albums called Song Diaries. At 17, Bucky Pizzarelli joined the Vaughn Monroe dance band. He went on to be a staff musician for NBC and later ABC. In addition to his solo career, he toured with Benny Goodman and played with the biggest names in popular music. 

Listen to “Memories of You” >>>

Erin Bode remembers the day her dad, a Lutheran minister, came home and asked if she wanted to join the church's cherub choir. “At five years old, it was one of the biggest thrills of my life,” she says. All through her school years in the Minneapolis suburb of Wayzata, Erin was a self-described “music geek.” “I was the only one,” she recalls, “who was excited when we took field trips to Orchestra Hall!” The family moved to St. Louis when Erin was 15. In high school, she discovered jazz and big-band music and studied trumpet. She took a degree in music from Webster University, and continued to live in the St. Louis area. These days, she appears in clubs and at festivals across the country and beyond. Her most recent album is YourSong, Vol. 1.

Listen to “Time after Time” >>>

 

Remembering Butch Thompson

Butch Thompson passed away this month. The pianist and clarinetist was known worldwide as a master of ragtime, stride, and classic jazz. Born and raised in Marine-on-St. Croix, Minnesota, Butch was already playing Christmas carols on his mother's upright piano by age three, and he led his first professional jazz group as a teenager. For 12 years, he was A Prairie Home Companion’s house pianist, dating back to the show’s second broadcast, in July 1974. We cannot express how much Butch meant to the staff and how much his music contributed to the success of the show itself. Here is a tribute page that we have put together featuring some of his music.

Butch Thompson Remembered >>>

 

Old Sweet Songs from A Prairie Home Companion

This multi-CD collection from the early years (1974–1976) of A Prairie Home Companion features selections from Butch Thompson, Bill Hinkley & Judy Larson, Dakota Dave Hull, Peter Ostroushko, Vern Sutton, and many more.

Get the CD set >>>
Listen to a sample >>>

 

Tourists

Find music and laughter from the road in this scrapbook of musical highlights, featuring performances by The Butch Thompson Trio, Robin and Linda Williams, The Odessa Balalaikas, The Klezmer Conservatory Band, and Queen Ida and the Bon Temps Zydeco Band, plus “commercials” for Jack’s Auto Repair and Bertha’s Kitty Boutique. Recorded live during the 1981–1982 PHC tour.
 

Contents: Download from iTunes >>>


“Lebedikun Freylekh”; “Rumenye, Rumenye”; Powdermilk Biscuits; “Russian Intermezzo”; Jack’s Auto Repair; “Lovely Streets”; Bertha’s Kitty Boutique; “Roanoke”; “Wheel Hoss”; Ode to Oregon; “Love Songs of the Nile”; “Rosa Majeur”; Iowa Songs; “When I Stop Dreaming”; “The Hangman’s Reel”; Ajua!; Kill It Kid.”

Get the CD>>>
Listen to a sample >>>
 

 

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