Friday September 4, 2020
Today is the beginning of Labor day weekend, and is the
first time in more than 30 years that I am not attending the Rhythm and Roots
festival at Ninigret Park in Charlestown, RI.
(formerly Cajun and Bluegrass festival). In 1987 I went to the Cajun Festival at Stepping
Stone ranch for a day, with a guyfrom work.
That relationship did not pan out, but once I saw Queen Ida and Beausoleil,
among others, I was immediately swept off my feet in a love
affair with Cajun and Zydeco music, and the whole festival vibe. The
following year I returned with some friends, again for just a day. They liked
it but were not as into it as I was. Finally,
in 1989 I decided to sign up as a volunteer, because it was free and I could
camp out there all weekend. The Sunday
before I was going to the ranch for a volunteer meeting, and told Sara about my
plan, and she wanted to join me. So we
both volunteered together. I worked in
the children’s area and she did staff kitchen duty. From then on I was hooked. We went the next few years together as
volunteers, having the most fun possible
in a weekend, with very little sleep and hardly any expenses, except for maybe a
case of beer. The Children’s area duty was fun but
exhausting, (because some people would just drop their kids there while they went
off to party) so in the following years, I moved on to the Information booth
and Ticket Sales, while she stuck with Kitchen duty. When I
would return home on the Monday, I’d sleep and relive the magic of the festival
in my head, riding the rhythms of the Cajun and zydeco music, the way you feel
like when you return from a day at the beach and feel like you’re still riding
the waves. Back then, I would only see
the other festival people once a year and it was so sad knowing you’d have to wait a whole year to do it
again.
In the early 1990’s another festival was born at the ranch,
the Big Easy Bash, which featured Tex-Mex , blues, and other southern music along
with Cajun and Zydeco. With artists like
Marcia Ball and the Subdudes, it had more of a New Orleans feel than the Cajun/
Bluegrass festival, which had more of a country vibe. The first time I went to this one, I
volunteered solo and this was the first time I did a whole weekend fest by
myself, but not really by myself since I was part of the crew. At the
Cajun festival in 1991, I met my (now brother in law) Pete, and on 1992 I went
with (now husband) Joe to the Big Easy
Bash, I as a volunteer and he and Pete as paying customers. By Labor Day they
had both joined the crew with me, selling merchandise. We did that and /or ticket sales for the next few years up until the time the
festival moved to Ninigret Park, in 1998.
That year we worked on the shower crew but decided to quit volunteering
after that in order to have more time to enjoy the festival and hang out with
our non-staff camping friends. Every
year we would get there at the crack of dawn on Friday morning, lining up to get
inside. Seemed like everyone would
always stress over getting “their spot” but we all usually ended up in roughly
the same area, and that’s how I got to know everyone over the years. Every year after the music on the festival stages
ended, I would jam with the people I was camping with, along with friends from RI, Mass, Connecticut , NY, Canada and
elsewhere. Some of them I only saw at this festival, while others I would
come across at other jams and festivals during the year, which became more prevalent.
It got to the point where there would be
a festival almost every weekend in the summer, sometimes 2-3 to choose
from. All good times, and all stemming
from the Cajun & Bluegrass festival in RI on Labor Day weekend. Around 2012 we started volunteering again,
partly because I wanted to avoid the stress of getting there early Friday morning,
since volunteers could show up a day early.
Now, in 2020, this is the first time I am missing out on
this festival (along with all the other ones that have been cancelled or
postponed due to the Coronovirus pandemic. )
I plan to meet up with some of my jamming friends for part of the
weekend, and tuning into the live-stream broadcasts of past Rhythm and Roots festivals for the rest of the weekend as much as possible. And hoping that
everyone stays healthy and safe so we can resume our regularly scheduled Festive
Living next year, in 2021!
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