User:MrPrecise/Smithfield Fair
Smithfield Fair | |
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Background information | |
Genres | Scottish heritage, folk |
Occupation(s) | Musicians, songwriters |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, guitar, bass, accordian |
Years active | 1973–2020 |
Labels | Stevenson Productions |
Website | http://www.smithfieldfair.com/ |
Smithfield Fair is a group of three musicians from Baton-Rouge, Louisiana. The members are Dudley-Brian Smith on vocals and guitar, Jan Smith, Dudley-Brian's wife on vocals and accordian, and Bobby Smith, Dudley-Brian's brother on vocals and bass.
According to R.U. Eddy in GrisGris Magazine, 2008, "Smithfield Fair, an almost-impossible-to-categorize folk/roots band has mesmerized audiences worldwide over the radio, television, film, clubs and concert halls...has earned praise for its tight arrangements, elegant song selection and some of the most haunting vocal harmonies this side of heaven."
Career
[edit]Smithfield Fair began in Pensacola, Florida in 1973[1] under the name 'Laughter' as a project by Dudley-Brian[2] Smith and Dwight Beebe[3] to promote original songs sung with harmony and backed by acoustic instrumentation.[4] Joined by bassist Tom English, the trio’s first recording contract came in 1974 when they worked with famed producer Bud Reneau (songwriter/producer, Dobie Gray and others) in Nashville. Dubbed by one reviewer as “the perfect café band”,[5] Laughter moved home in 1976 to Alexandria, Louisiana where Dudley’s brothers Joel and Bob, auxiliary members since the start, joined full time. The group changed its name to 'Charmer' and released its first single, 'A Place In Your Heart' in 1977 on legendary Floyd Soileau's One Way Records, expanding recognition regionally.[6]
Founding the independent Rapides Records in 1980, they issued their first album, 'Only the Wind' in 1981[7] followed by ‘Must Be The Gypsy’ in 1982 which boosted them into concert openings for such artists as Louisiana’s LeRoux, Zachary Richard and Arlo Guthrie.[8] In 1983, Joel left to pursue other projects, but rejoined in 1985 for a time.[9] Also in 1983 singer/songwriter Jan Dedon Smith[10] joined brothers Dudley-Brian and Bob and the group continued concert appearances with artists such as Jesse Winchester, John Prine, John Fahey, Nancy Griffith; touring the South with New York’s The Washington Squares;[11] and appearing at such legendary venues as Storyville Jazz Hall in New Orleans, Rockafella’s in Houston, and even the 1984 World’s Fair.[12]
By 1989 the group had moved toward the Scottish music[13] of their shared heritage,[14] and the group once more changed its name, this time to 'Smithfield Fair', blending traditional and original songs.[15] They were soon joined by nephew Frank Bladen on bodhran; who remained until late 2008. Smithfield Fair became recognized world-wide[16] as one of the foremost presenters of Scottish music in North America.[17] During this period, the group signed a four-album deal with Centaur World Records,[18] giving them international distribution.[19] Described by critics as “a folksy Supertramp” with a “definite Peter Gabriel vibe”,[20] they continued a busy performance schedule regularly working with a Who’s Who of celebrated Celtic performers that included Alasdair Fraser, Eileen Ivers, Brian McNeill, the Battlefield Band, the Tannahill Weavers, Archie Fisher, Andy M. Stewart and Alex Beaton. For twenty years, they received continual critical praise for the group’s strong, seamless pairing of traditional and original songs, and enjoyed international radio and internet airplay.[21] However, the heritage movement began to wind down in the early part of the new millennium, so Smithfield Fair again focused on its original music.[22]
Performances continued at such venues as the Manship Theatre[23] and New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival,[24] and Smithfield Fair’s music was increasingly used nationally in movies, television and web programs and radio campaigns.[25] Since 2015, the group’s original song 'Sweet Sugar Cane' has been licensed by the Louisiana-based American Sugar Cane League and continues as a promotional theme.[26] Today, the group’s longest-standing line-up[27] of Jan (vocals, accordion, guitar, piano), Bob (vocals, acoustic bass, percussion) and Dudley-Brian Smith (vocals, acoustic guitars, mandolin) continues to actively perform and release new, original music – with album number 35 slated for an early 2021 release.
Discography
[edit]- 1977: A Place In Your Heart/Crazy With the Wind (One Way 45-2040)
- 1981: Only The Wind (Rapides Records RR01)
- 1982: Must Be The Gypsy (Rapides Records RR002)
- 1983: Dudley-Brian - The Eleventh Hour Tango (Lunatunes LEP01)
- 1983: From the Cradle to the Grave (Lunatunes RR003)
- 1984: Dancing In The Dust (Lunatunes RR004)
- 1985: Retrospect (Lunatunes RR005)
- 1986: Another Southern Summer (Lunatunes RR006)
- 1987: Living In The Mainstreat (Lunatunes RR007)
- 1989: Old Souls & Ancient Hearts (Lunatunes RR008)
- 1990: Old Souls (Reissue, Lunatunes RR008B)
- 1990: From Hebridean Shores (Lunatunes RR009)
- 1992: Moon Over Caledonia (Stevenson Productions RR010)
- 1993: A Long Way From Bonnie Argyll (Stevenson Productions SP73154)
- 1995: Scotland Owns Me (Stevenson Productions SP82853)
- 1997: Scattered Seeds of Scotland (Centaur World CRC5021)
- 1998: Highland Call (Centaur World CRC5023 – 1998/re-issue)
- 2000: Cairdeas/Kinship (Centaur World CRC5024)
- 2001: The Winter Kirk (Stevenson Productions SP122890)
- 2002: Jacobites By Name (Centaur World SP5025)
- 2002: Burns Night Out! (Stevenson Productions SP73154B)
- 2004: Winds of Time (Stevenson Productions SP121873)
- 2005: Swept Away (Stevenson Productions SP122284)
- 2006: Walking Through This World (Stevenson Productions SP81715)
- 2007: Twenty For Twenty (Stevenson Productions SP20420)
- 2008: Charmer: The Perfect Café (Music from the early days of Smithfield Fair) Stevenson Productions SP32956)
- 2009: The Longing (Stevenson Productions SP901919)
- 2010: Scotland, Fair Scotland (Stevenson Productions SP901920)
- 2011: Every New Day (Stevenson Productions SP 901921)
- 2013: Stick, Brick & Mortar (Stevenson Productions SP 901922)
- 2014: Companions (Stevenson Productions SP901923)
- 2015: Marbles: Music for the Little Cinema (Stevenson Productions SP901924)
- 2017: Evermore (Stevenson Productions SP901925)
- 2019: Gospelesque (Stevenson Productions SP901926)
- 2020: In The Air (Stevenson Productions SP901927)
Festival appearances
[edit]- New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival
- Tom Peyton Memorial Arts Festival (Alexandria, Louisiana)
- Kerrville Folk Festival (Kerrville, Texas)
- Dallas International Festival (Dallas, Texas)
- McPherson Festival of Cultures (McPherson, Kansas)
- Texas Scottish Festival (Decatur, Texas)
- Louisiana Folklife Festival (Natchitoches, Louisiana)
- Celticfest Mississippi (Jackson, Mississippi)
- FestforAll (Baton Rouge, Louisiana)
- Clanjamfry (Memphis, Tennessee)
- Ebb and Flow Festival (Baton Rouge, Louisiana)
- Panama City Scottish Festival (Panama City Beach, Florida)
- The 1984 World's Fair (New Orleans, Louisiana)
- North Texas Irish Festival (Dallas, Texas)
- Northeast Florida Scottish Highland Games and Festival (Jacksonville, Florida)
- Charleston Scottish Games & Highland Gathering (Charleston, South Carolina)
- Houston Highland Games (Houston, Texas)
- Murray State University Highland Faire (Murray, Kentucky)
- Savannah Scottish Games (Savannah, Georgia)
- Virginia Highlands Festival (Abingdon, Virginia)
- Taste of Scotland Festival (Franklin, North Carolina)
References
[edit]- ^ Folk Group Will Play ‘RadioLive’, Troy Moon, Pensacola News Journal, Pensacola, Florida, September 1, 2017
- ^ ‘Fair’ Plays, David Dinsmore, Alexandria Daily Town Talk, Alexandria, Louisiana, August 28, 2009
- ^ Talent Winners, NAS Pensacola, GOSPORT, Pensacola, Florida, September 1975
- ^ RadioLive Returns, Julio Diaz, Pensacola New Journal, Pensacola, Florida, September 3, 2017
- ^ CUMTUX, A Little Bit Of The Best, ECLIPSE, Pensacola, Florida, December 18, 1975.
- ^ Brothers Make Folk Music, Nannette Russell, Alexandria Daily Town Talk, Alexandria, Louisiana, December 19,
- ^ Charmer: Only The Wind, R.U. Eddy, FUN, The Morning Advocate, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, January 1981
- ^ Tuning In To The Times, Douglas L. Leblanc, The Mornings Advocate, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, February 6, 1982
- ^ Sweet Music: The Family That Plays Together, Rick Bentley, Alexandria Daily Town Talk, Alexandria, Louisiana August 19, 1988
- ^ From the Cradle to the Grave, Calvin Gilbert, FUN, The State Times, Baton Rouge, LA April 14, 1984
- ^ A New Generation of Folk, Russell Smith, Dallas Morning News, Dallas, Texas, January 25, 1988
- ^ Charmer, Promotional Brochure from Rapides Records, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 1987
- ^ Old Souls, Barry Docherty, No Cover Magazine, New Orleans, Louisiana, Volume 1, Number 11, November 1989
- ^ Band Gets Closer to Celtic Roots, Danny Heitman, State-Times, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, April 27, 1990
- ^ Smithfield Fair: An Account of Traditions Passed on From Father to Son, Barry Docherty, No Cover Magazine, New Orleans, Louisiana, June 1990
- ^ Smithfield Fair, Bruce MacWilliam, SCOTS – Celebrating Our Heritage, Australia, Winter 2002
- ^ The Reel World, Tom Nelligan, Dirty Linen Magazine, October/November 2001. #96
- ^ Scattered Seeds of Scotland, Donna Fitch, Ceili Magazine, Dallas, Texas, March-April 1998
- ^ Music Review: Scattered Seeds on Centaur Records, U.S. SCOTS Magazine, February 1998
- ^ Ibid.
- ^ Rainsound Scottish Music, Soundsnew Magazine, Italy, October 22, 1999
- ^ Smithfield Fair: 20420/Charmer: The Perfect Café, Review by Lahri Bond, Dirty Linen Magazine, March/April 2009
- ^ B.R.’s World Famous Smithfield Fair to Perform at Manship Theatre, Mallory Keating, Neighbors Magazine, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, April 2007
- ^ Only a Southern Song: Smithfield Fair Bring Big Harmonies to Jazz Fest, Kevin Yeanoplos, AXS Music, April 9, 2014
- ^ The Perfect Café, Gail Roberts, Ceili Magazine, Dallas, Texas, December 2008
- ^ Sugar News, Sam Irwin, American Sugar Cane League, April 2015
- ^ Evermore, Dan Willging, OffBeat Magazine, New Orleans, Louisiana, October 2017
Category:Living people
Category:People from Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Category:Louisiana musicians
Category:Singers from Louisiana
Category:American folk singers
Category:Scottish music singers
Category:Celtic music musicians
Category:20th-century American women accordianists
Category:20th-century American accordianists
Category:20th-century American singers
Category:21st-century American singers
Category:21st-century American women accordianists
Category:21st-century American accordianists