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UPDATED FROM THE FOLK RAG no 71 - DECEMBER/JANUARY 2002/2003
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It was 1955 and after a month's courtship, my parents
eloped. A year later (with baby in arms that being me) they
returned home to Colorado (USA) to tell their respective parents (who
weren't too impressed). My father had the wanderlust, a pilot by profession,
so our family of five moved with great regularity. My family wasn't musical,
but Dad had a passion for state of the art musical systems, so music, albeit
recorded (mainly classical and musicals) was a constant in our home.
Shortly before moving to Australia in 1965, I remember
seeing the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show. I was mesmerised
a profound moment I have never forgotten. We settled on a rural property
in Armadale WA and our earlier teenage years were spent riding horses, dancing
rock and roll on a Friday night and travelling the NW with the family in
Dad's plane.
I travelled to England and parts of Europe when I was
21. Fell in love with Ireland, the people, the music and the pubs and the
fact that music was an integral living part of everyone's daily life. On
my return to Australia I shifted to Victoria, to study Horticulture and
discovered Redgum, a band that combined folk, with an environmental
political message. I was involved with the Tasmanian Wilderness Society,
their rallies and then the Franklin Blockade. Always somewhere
- the music with the message. Using music to make change has stayed with
me.
I met Bill Burvill at the Geraldton Folk Club on a return visit
to WA where my folks lived, and we moved east to his stomping ground, the
Sunshine Coast. A wonderful new life waited. I met, and started up the
Cooroora Folk Club at Pomona with, Sam Breen, Shanti Martin, Marty
and Errol Collins. A move to Bundaberg in 1982/83 was like a mass exodus
with all the Sunshine Coast folk crew heading north. It wasn't long till
the Burnett River Folk Club was born and began an incredible time
full of music song and lifelong friendships. It became more than a folk club,
it was a lifestyle with people like John Wright, Zemmie Sharrock, Molly
Cox, Monica and Ian and Don Wilson and Marveen Ash. We met up
with the Maryborough Folk Club crew - Bill and Ingrid Hauritz,
Mark Nightingale and Annie McMullen. Our Folk Club had booked
concerts every fortnight and on weekends we had a market stall selling billy
tea and damper and our bush band, Muddy Creak, providing the
ever-present Australian traditional music. Swags of yachties from all over
the world visited our Folk Club, as Bundy was a popular place to layover
in cyclone season. We had cricket matches, street parades, taught bush dancing
in the schools and had camping weekends, one being a magical mystery tour
where we visited all the pubs outlying Bundy by bus. The bars became gigantic
sessions. The annual Bucca Folk Festival was born - an outdoor festival
melding music, dance, workshops and THE ANNUAL LID OLYMPICS. These
were games with a difference! The trophy was a wooden toilet seat. The
Burnett River Folk Club developed a very public face. It was a dynamic
time.
When I met Bill Burvill he introduced me to the contemporary
folk music of the US. I was drawn to the words of Pete Seeger and
Woodie Guthrie, speaking the language of the working class and
disadvantaged. I began reading about their lives and an early music archivist
named Alan Lomax and his son John. My mothers maiden name was
Lomax and I wondered if we were related until fairly recently when my mother
received a family tree book and confirmed this family link.
What I discovered about Folk music wasn't simply the
words, profound poetry may it be, or even the wondrous melody. It was the
sense of finding a second family. Moving from Bundy back to Cooroy was via
Geraldton in WA where our son Zak was born. We returned in time to
attend and become a part of the first Maleny Folk Festival. It was
a mixture of old friends and new like Noel Gardner, Frank Ramsden, Banno,
Amanda Jackes, Leanne McFadyen, Peter Auty, Doug Worth and Mick O'Hagan
to name a few. The festival was to become that tangent of life that can
take you suddenly at a right angle from where you thought you were going.V
Not being a musician or even a good singer (great
audience though) I wondered what my niche could be. Enter Bill Hauritz,
whose special gift was and still is, in being able to recognise potential
in people and nurture it. Bill said "Why don't you write and co-ordinate
the Children's Programme?" (Judy Gardner had been my predecessor).
"Why not?" said I, quaking at the thought of having no experience apart
from being the mother of now 2 children (Toshi being born - how
dare she! - during the National in '89). The Children's Festival has
been a joy and a passion for me since that fateful time, as we head into
the 17th Woodford/Maleny Folk Festival and my 12th Children's
Festival.
The Cooroy Folk Club, which began as a promotion
for the National in 1989, became a monthly gathering for North Coast
folkies for the next 7 years with fellow organisers Bill, Gerry and
Linda, Debbie and Don Campbell and Sue Collins. I enjoyed a
few years of Morris dancing with the Wild Mountain Morris group. In
more recent times myself and Bruce Forsyth organised folk gatherings
at Lake MacDonald Camping grounds.
I've continued to work part time in administration
for the QFF since then, becoming more involved in recent times with
the environmental project at the Woodford site, the Tree Planting
Festival held annually in May. I presently serve on the QFF Committee.
Working and being a part of this incredible Woodford team of staff,
volunteers and performers is an honour. I feel proud to be part of this folk
movement which allows the voice of the contemporary message by the ordinary
person.
I feel almost as if I've come full circle. Zak
is, as I write, finishing grade 12 with the ambition of a sound engineering
occupation. He plays several instruments, is in two bands and has a swag
of music achievements under his belt. Toshi was born with a song in
her throat, sings with the school choir and is learning the guitar and baritone.
Zak and Toshi have been on this incredible folk journey and
wouldn't know life without it. And I wouldn't have had it any other
way.
Becky Wandell
FROM THE FOLK RAG no 71 - DECEMBER/JANUARY 2002/2003
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