If you want a story, sit down and I'll find one for you

 
Storytelling is an art of necessity that you learn when you are young and come home rather late from lying in the grass with Corinne in her backyard talking and holding her hand, your head on her shoulder, observing the slight rise of her breasts as she breathes,  and your mother is at the door, wanting an explanation, and rather than get Corinne on your mother’s list of Temptresses, you invent a story in which you were hitchhiking and a drunk picked you up and he was a veteran of D-Day, wounded by the Nazis in defense of democracy, a good man fallen on hard times, and he was too drunk to drive so you took the wheel and drove him home and listened to his long list of troubles and then had to walk home. True? No. Sinful? Hardly....

Go to Garrison Keillor and Friends on Substack   
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This week on A Prairie Home Companion

This week on A Prairie Home Companion
This week, we travel back to 2005, which saw us headed to Wisconsin for a show at our neighboring state’s capital city. Joining us in Madison, from Canada, singers/songwriters 
The Wailin’ Jennys; and from the Shetland Islands, Ale Möller and Aly Bain. Plus, from right here at home: the Guy’s All-Star Shoe Band and our Royal Academy of Radio Acting.

Highlights include an out-of-this-world experience as Garrison talks to astronaut John Phillips in the space station, The Wailin’ Jennys enchant the audience with “Arlington” and “One Voice,” Aly Bain and Ale Möller pick “The Crying Waltz,” there’s a grad script, in addition to Catchup, Guy Noir, and the News from Lake Wobegon. The link is posted on Saturdays at 5 p.m. CT each week on our Facebook page.

Listen to the Show >>>
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Bios & Videos for this week’s featured guest performers:

They were three solo acts brought together for a show on a cold Winnipeg night in January of 2002. The collaboration was a great success and they quickly scheduled another performance. Soon they were on tour, calling themselves The Wailin’ Jennys, and within a month people were calling them “a bona fide Canadian sensation.” Their first full-length album, 40 Days, won the 2005 Juno Award (Canadian Grammy) for Roots & Traditional Album of the Year — and their recording Bright Morning Stars did the same in 2012.

“Birdsong” >>>
View available music >>>

Aly Bain, MBE (Member of the Order of the British Empire), holds four doctorates in Britain and is an Honorary Citizen of quite a few U.S. cities, none of which has detracted from his being regarded as Scotland’s supreme traditional fiddler. He was a founding member of the Boys of the Lough, has toured the world many times over, and played on dozens of albums. He is also in demand as a producer and a collaborator.

“Bonaparte’s Retreat” >>>

Ale Möller is another of the leading figures in Swedish traditional music. He was a founding member of the influential and groundbreaking band Filarfolket in the 1980s, and his energy and multi-instrument virtuosity continue to mark bands and recordings in the “new Nordic folk” genre today. Some twenty-five years ago, he told an interviewer: “I am always looking for a sound where one note tells a story. One must find the right note, and play it.” Count on Ale Möller to find the right notes.

“Willow Flute” >>>

 
A Prairie Home Companion welcomed over 10,000 musical guests to its stage over the four-plus decades the show was on the air. Through that time, there were more than a few performers and songs that continued to resonate with listeners. Stations around the country would report the impact or the number of calls that had come in, and it was instantly apparent when a song “popped.” For the 40th Anniversary Festival, the Friday show was intended to mark the musical effect that the radio show had by welcoming back many of the guests that had graced the PHC stage and have them again perform songs that resonated the most with listeners. One of these songs was featured on last week’s show: “Wagon Wheel” by Old Crow Medicine Show. Another song that created an immediate impression with fans is from this week’s classic show. That’s “One Voice,” featuring the crisp harmonies of The Wailin’ Jennys — with one voice being added with each verse until the full trio shines. It’s a song that made the group a fan favorite for over a decade of performances.

Listen to “One Voice” >>>

 


Some more news

A Prairie Home Companion American Revival show in Denver was a great success and now plans are underway for a few more stops. Next up is the “Mother Church of Country Music” on July 10th, as the show visits the Ryman Auditorium, original home of the Grand Ole Opry. Garrison first got the idea for A Prairie Home Companion after writing an article about the Opry as it was moving from the Ryman to its newly constructed home. Tickets are on sale for the July 10th Ryman performance now. 

Prairie Home will then travel to Bayfield, Wisconsin, for a show at Big Top Chautauqua on the shores of Lake Superior. Tickets for the August 20th event go on sale on May 24th.

Tickets for the Ryman on July 10th >>>
More information about Big Top on August 20th >>>


Of note:
We have a few shirts and bandanas remaining from our American Revival show in Denver. You can view them on our website
>>>.

After joining the Eagles the past few years, Vince Gill will embark on a few solo dates this summer. What a great musician! Visit his website for location and dates.

Visit his website https://vincegill.com/>>>

The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band has a new album that has piqued our interest. Dirt Does Dylan tackles the catalog of the Nobel Prize winner from Minnesota. The new single features Bob Dylan’s “Forever Young”; the full album is released on May 20th. 

Listen to “Forever Young” >>>

 


'Boom Town: A Lake Wobegon Novel' news

Garrison Keillor and his most recent book were featured on CBS News Sunday Morning this past weekend. They even shared an excerpt from the book. Garrison states that this is the best book he has written and we sure hope that you will enjoy one final return to the “little town that time forgot and decades could not improve.” Read the excerpt below:

 

Read the excerpt >>>


Garrison also read a few excerpts from the book at the Virginia Street Swedenborgian Church in St. Paul.

Watch excerpt 1 >>>
Watch excerpt 2 >>>
Watch excerpt 3 >>>


The books are available everywhere, but we do maintain the best price available and also have autographed copies in our store.

Get the Book >>>
Get an autographed copy >>>

 

 

A Year in Lake Wobegon

 

Here is a story from our last visit to the Ryman Auditorium. It’s a story called “Mattress” and is featured on the A Year in Lake Wobegon release.
NOTE: Garrison and A Prairie Home Companion American Revival will journey to the “Mother Church of Country Music” again on July 10th.Tickets go on sale this Friday morning. See you there!


Here’s a summary:
“It’s been sunny and warm up there, warm enough for us anyway, and it’s just been absolutely beautiful –– been paradise, gorgeous.” Clarence Bunsen gets a haircut, the Lutheran church council deals with a few small issues, and Duane Bunsen and his wife repair their relationship.
Get the CDs >>>
Listen >>>
 

 

 

Serenity at 70. Gaiety at 80

Described by The Saturday Evening Post as “a 90-page self-­published masterwork about the inexorable decrepitude that accompanies old age — but, more importantly, also the manifold pleasures that accrue as you arrive there,” Serenity at 70, Gaiety at 80 is a playful yet deeply felt meditation that ought to be a standard in the literature of human aging. Asked how she’d characterize the work, Kate Gustafson (who heads up Keillor’s production company) paused for a while and then ventured this brief summation: “It’s a novelty book, a gift book.” No, no, Keillor corrected, it’s actually “a memoir with an essay wrapped around it.” Whatever, Serenity at 70 is a must-have humorous take on getting older, complete with rules for aging. 

Get the book >>>
Read The Saturday Evening Post >>>

 

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