May
7, 2009
Two-time grammy winner Bill
Harley to perform at SKC
 Bill Harley (courtesy photo) PABLO — Big Productions, a fundraising adventure
of the Lake County
Youth Home, will bring double Grammy award-winning family entertainer
Bill Harley to the brand new Johnny Arlee/Victor Charlo Theatre
(located on the SKC campus from Hwy 93 at Division Street) on Monday,
May 18, for an earlier than usual 7 PM family show. Dr. Jim Willis at
Big Sky Dental Clinic in Polson is sponsoring this special off series
family performance. Regular Big Productions concertgoers and even
children will need special tickets for this limited seating concert.
Storytellers
were our first magicians, our first history keepers, society builders,
culture shapers and spiritual and emotional filters, making sense of
the world long before written communication. For all our sophisticated
technology and mass electronic entertainment, we still need those
voices in the dark, by the fire, in the hall. A master storyteller
connects us and intimately affirms our lives with resonant truths, no
matter how embroidered, funny, mysterious or horrific the tale.
Bill Harley is a master storyteller. The
nationally touring,
critically-acclaimed singer-songwriter, author, musician and monologist
is considered by fans and peers alike to be one of the best
storytellers in the country for his celebrations of commonality and
humanity through comic narrative songs and confessional spoken works.
Entertainment Weekly labeled Harley, a two-time
Grammy Award
winner and multiple Grammy nominee, “the Mark Twain of contemporary
children’s music.” But tagging Harley with the “children’s artist”
label, even of the top-drawer variety, is as deceptive as this gifted
artist’s Puckish demeanor. In slice-of-life vignettes about school and
family life, Harley uses humor and a fine-tuned sense of the ridiculous
to illuminate compassionate truths, even while inspiring belly laughs.
Adults absorb a Harley performance through a double filter of past and
present. Children respond from the immediacy of their own lives, as
with rubber-faced abandon he examines human foibles, flaws and
embarrassments, common fears and simple pleasures.
Playwright and author David Kranes was artistic
director of the
respected Sundance Playwrights’ Lab when he heard one of Harley’s
National Public Radio performances and invited him to Sundance in 1990
to participate as a “strong and individual voice” outside the
traditional realm of theater. “Even over the radio,” Kranes remembers,
“it was easy to imagine listeners leaning forward to participate in
what Bill was offering. His art was an art of closeness.”
Harley “has an instinctive thing that artists
have, a unique
individuality that transcends any particular box or genre he performs
in,” says Oskar Eustis, Artistic Director of New York’s high profile
Public Theater. (Eustis first met Harley at the Sundance Institute
Theatre Lab and was head of Trinity Repertory Theatre in Providence,
Rhode Island, when Harley’s first musical, “Lunchroom Tales: A Natural
History of the Cafetorium,” was staged there in 1996.) Harley’s work
resonates, Eustis believes, because he is “simultaneously” a son, a
father, a husband, a child and a grown up, and has remained true to all
those facets of his life.
Harley, who lives in Seekonk, Massachusetts, with
his wife and
professional partner Debbie Block with whom he has two grown sons,
graduated from Hamilton College in Clinton, NY, in 1977 with honors and
a religious studies degree. He found his calling in community service,
not the seminary, leading a program in conflict resolution for families
and educators and co-founding with Block and others a community-based
adult education platform.
He was receptive early on to folk
artist/activist Pete Seeger’s use of music as an expression of
community. Supportive, too, of other musicians, Harley and Block were
among the founders of Stone Soup Coffee House in Rhode Island, a music
performance venue now in its 28th season. As a folk musician in the
Seeger and Woody Guthrie tradition, Harley still lends his voice to
social justice, environmental and political causes.
Harley
began his work with children while still in college and released his
first album, “Monsters in the Bathroom,” on Round River Records, the
label he co-founded with Block in 1984. Twenty-eight albums later,
Harley’s work includes song and story collections for adults, and a
diverse mix of world music, reggae, blues, folk, rock, jazz, do-wop and
more. In recent years, Harley has authored eight children’s picture
books and two novels for gradeschoolers. Among his theater projects are
“My Sarajevo,” a full-length play set during the Bosnian war, and
“Stickeen,” a retelling of stories from the life of naturalist John
Muir.
Whatever Harley’s forum, it’s always all about
story,
community and connection. “Storytelling is such a simple art form, but
it goes to the core of who we are as human beings,” says Brian Bemel,
Artistic Director for Performances to Grow On in Ventura and the
founder of the Ojai Storytelling Festival. “When Bill is telling his
story, your own story is happening as you’re listening to his.
Storytelling brings people together because you have this common
experience. I think people hunger for that.”
The lowest-denominator world that is too often
reflected by the
media persuades us to devalue ourselves and weakens our sense of
community. Through his work, Bill Harley appeals to our better angels,
reminding us that we’re human, making us laugh, sometimes making us
cry. “As a rule, I have a hard time figuring out where I fit,” he says
of his multi-faceted career, “but I got into this because I’m trying to
make the world a better place.” ...one story and one song at a time.
Single adult and children tickets for this show
are available
for only $12 ($14 if there are any available the door...due to limited
seating). The Lake County Youth Home usually appreciates the
opportunity to give back to the community by offering free admission to
children at its Big Productions shows. However, the seating is so
limited for this concert that is not possible. All seats require a paid
admission for this family show!
Ticket outlets in Polson are
Shannon Nunlist at the Physical Therapy Storefront (211 Main) and
Fiddle Sticks School of Music. True Value Hardware is the ticket outlet
in Ronan. Concertgoers can also get ticket updates by calling 676-2427
or (800) 823-4386. Do not delay purchasing tickets. 25 percent of the
tickets have been sold already.
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