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Friday, October 14th, 2011

News received via e-mail from Jeff Warner:

Jeff Warner has a new album! It’s called “Long Time Travelling,” and is just out on the English label, WildGoose.

WildGoose Records is a respected UK label, focusing on traditional folk music, mostly English. They asked Jeff to record because of his many appearances at UK folk clubs and festivals, and because much of his music shows its British roots. Nine of the eighteen songs on “Long Time Travelling” were originally English or Scottish – or are American songs that became popular in 19th-century Britain.

In England, Keith Kendrick added his peerless Anglo concertina work to five tracks, and Vicki Swan offered her flute accompaniments and the ancient-sounding nyckelharpa to several songs. In America, Pete Sutherland contributed authentic East Coast fiddle backing and David Surrette displayed his New England’s-best mandolin playing.

Vocal harmonies were provided by Barbara Benn, who also appeared on Jeff’s Jolly Tinker (Gumstump, 2005), and Carolyn Robson from the northeast of England, widely recorded and known for her work with the harmony singing group Craig; Morgan; Robson.

The songs on “Long Time Travelling” are from the California Gold Rush, the American Civil War, 19th-century seafaring, mountain churches of North Carolina and from men who worked on America’s rivers. All eighteen songs are out of American tradition. Half of them are from the Anne and Frank Warner Collection, recorded by Jeff’s parents in rural America between 1938 and 1966. “Travelling” reflects their work and the respect they had for the tradition bearers.

Samples of the songs can be heard at the WildGoose website:

Jeff Warner with his dancing toy
Jeff Warner at a concert in Hampstead, NH in 2009. Photo by James Cummings
See Jeff performing some of his songs on YouTube. A favorite of ours, using this toy, is “Buffalo Gals.”

In the US and Canada, the album can be ordered from

Click “Music.”

We also want to mention another WildGoose album called “Short Sharp Shanties,” released this past May. It brings together several folk revival artists from the UK – and Jeff – to give their interpretations of work songs sung on Yankee sailing ships in the 1860s.

In 1914, Cecil Sharp collected some sixty shanties from English sailor John Short. Devon Folklorists Tom and Barbara Brown have worked tirelessly to make these often unique versions available to us all. Jeff leads a couple of songs on this album and lends concertina, banjo and vocal harmonies to others.

You can read a great deal about it on the WildGoose website:

Currently, the only place to get the album in North America is on Jeff’s website: http://www.jeffwarner.com

We hope to see you again this coming year, at home or abroad.


Jeff Warner – American Traditions
Portsmouth, NH, USA
Office e-mail: jeffwarner.office@comcast.net
Jeff’s e-mail: jeff@jeffwarner.com
Jeff’s website: http://www.jeffwarner.com

This is a courtesy announcement by Quilter’s Muse Publications. We have seen Jeff Warner in concert and thoroughly enjoyed the experience. If you love music in the folk art tradition, you will appreciate his efforts to keep these songs in the public realm. A one word description of any performance by Jeff would be “wonderful!”.

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Tuesday, January 11th, 2011

Jeff Warner photo by James Cummings

Jeff Warner, a photo by James Cummings taken in 2009

We enjoy promoting local musical artists. Jeff Warner will be performing traditional folk music four times in January 2011 at the following locations.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011, 7:00 PM
“Songs of Old New Hampshire”

http://www.hampstead.lib.nh.us/

Friends of Hampstead Public Library, 9 Mary E. Clark Drive, Hampstead, NH
No charge, courtesy NH Humanities Council’s Humanities To Go
Contact Louise Pryor: 603-329-6411

Friday, January 21, 2011, 10:00 AM
“Banjos, Bones and Ballads”
Newcomers Club at Community Church of Durham, 17 Main Street, Durham, NH
No charge, courtesy NH Humanities Council’s Humanities To Go
Contact Gayle Hylen: 603-659-2422

Monday, January 24, 2011, 12:30 PM
“Songs of Old New Hampshire”
Kearsarge Council on Aging, 37 Pleasant Street, New London, NH
No charge, courtesy NH Humanities Council’s Humanities To Go
Contact Maria Barnett: 603-927-4673

Saturday, January 29, 2011, All Day & Evening
Northern Roots Traditional Music Festival

http://www.bmcvt.org/northernroots

100 Flat Street, Brattleboro, VT
Day $18/ Evening $18/ Both $30; discount for youth
Further information: 802-257-4523


Jeff Warner – American Traditions
Portsmouth, NH, USA
Office e-mail: jeffwarner.office@comcast.net
Jeff’s e-mail: jeff@jeffwarner.com
Jeff’s website:

This is an unpaid advertisement brought to you as a courtesy of . Don’t miss the chance to see this performing artist!

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Monday, July 27th, 2009

Jeff Warner, a seasoned musician, entertained a very interested audience at the Hampstead Public Library in New Hampshire, on July 27, 2009. He is proficient on guitar, banjo, mountain dulcimer, and concertina and credits his parents with encouraging his interest in music, from an early age, due to their own love of folk music. This particular program, titled, “Music in Our Pockets,” is a look at the way people entertained themselves in the nineteenth century (1800s) by voice, instrumental music, and additional instruments like spoons, bones (of cows), and the “Jew’s harp” (that has nothing to do with Jewish people, by the way). Part of his focus was music from Appalachia; and North Carolina, where he grew up.

Jeff Warner

Jeff Warner on July 27, 2009 at Hampstead Public Library (NH)

For more than an hour, Warner discussed and played folk music and revealed the nature of the folklore tradition, saying that two components, “continuity and variation,” are integral to the understanding of folk music. Lyrics change over time. So, instead of being static, or fixed, the music is like a flowing river that can change course at any time (my words, not his). Jeff provides programs for school children, and is well-versed in providing appealing lyrics that children enjoy. Sometimes, he lets kids make up their own lyrics.

We loved his wooden toy in the shape of a human figure that he knew how to make dance.

Jeff Warner with his dancing toy

Jeff Warner with his dancing toy

I also liked his answer to a story told by someone in the audience who stated, in conclusion, that her garnet ring had been stolen and all she has is the memory of it. Without missing a beat, Warner retorted something to this effect: “Isn’t that the most important thing that any of us has … our memories?” That is so true. We cannot keep material goods forever, or even loved ones, but we can hold people and things close, in memory.

One could readily see how much this musician connects with his art and enjoys it. He travels throughout the country, performing and sharing his musical talent and scholarship. We were very lucky to hear this presentation that was sponsored by the . We can always count on that organization to provide quality programs. Many thanks to for a very fun evening of American music. You can find out more about Jeff on his website where he has music CDs available for sale.

Patricia Cummings