American Roots Concert

 

 

Alan Jabber

Fiddle

Alan Jabbour was born in 1942 in Jacksonville, Florida. A violinist by early training, he put himself through college at the University of Miami playing classical music. While a graduate student at Duke University in the 1960s, he began documenting oldtime fiddlers in the Upper South. Documentation turned to apprenticeship, and he relearned the fiddle in the style of the Upper South from musicians like Henry Reed of Glen Lyn, Virginia, and Tommy Jarrell of Toast, North Carolina. He taught a repertory of oldtime fiddle tunes to his band, the Hollow Rock String Band, which was an important link in the instrumental music revival in the 1960s. After receiving his Ph.D. in 1968, he taught English, folklore, and ethnomusicology at UCLA in 1968-69. He then moved to Washington, D.C., for over thirty years of service with Federal cultural agencies. He was head of the Archive of Folk Song at the Library of Congress 1969-74, director of the folk arts program at the National Endowment for the Arts 1974-76, and director of the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress 1976-99. Since his retirement, he has turned enthusiastically to a life of writing, consulting, lecturing, and playing the fiddle.

 

 

 

Radim Zenkl

Mandolin

Originally from the Czech Republic, Radim resides in California since 1989. He is the US Mandolin Champion, equally versatile in folk, bluegrass, jazz, classical and other music styles. He has invented a masterful technique, the ‘Zenkl style,’ in which a single mandolin sounds like two. Radim is also an avid teacher having taught at many music camps and schools including guest appearances at Berklee College of Music in Boston. www.zenkl.com

 

Back to Events