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A Sonnet for Spring from 1997featuring Kate MacKenzie and The Nashville Bluegrass Band
Tickets will go on sale March 21 for live show of A Prairie Home Companion with Garrison Keillor on June 18 in Bethesda, Maryland.CLICK HERE to buy tickets when they go on sale!Listen to this week’s classic showThis week, we revisit a show from March 22, 1997, which was a tribute to the father of bluegrass, Bill Monroe, featuring bluegrass performers: Kate MacKenzie, Peter Rowan, and the Nashville Bluegrass Band. It’s a bluegrass bonanza that will have your feet tapping. Listen. Highlights include talk of St. Patrick’s Day and the spring weather. The band plays a few polkas, including “Don’t Pick on Lutherans” and “Kentucky Waltz.” And Garrison talks about Bill Monroe’s early life and career before turning the show over to the music, where your ears are treated to “Blue Moon of Kentucky,” “Rawhide,” and “Muleskinner Blues.” Plus, a few sketches and the latest News from Lake Wobegon. Kate MacKenzie was a favorite guest of A Prairie Home Companion starting in 1981. For many years, she was lead singer of Stoney Lonesome, with whom she recorded six bluegrass albums, toured Japan and North America, and was featured in the public television series Showcase. With the Hopeful Gospel Quartet, Kate recorded a live album from Carnegie Hall, performed at folk festivals in Scotland and Denmark, and performed on PBS’s Austin City Limits. Her work with A Prairie Home Companion included coast-to-coast tours, 20 Disney Channel television broadcasts, and a recurring dramatic role as Sheila, the Christian Jungle girl (wild, yet pure). After a 20-year recording hiatus, Kate returned with the new album called MacKenzie-Adkins, featuring the Bob Dylan tune below and Kate’s stunning vocals. Read our guest interview with Kate here » With its debut in 1984, The Nashville Bluegrass Band became one of the most popular and widely respected bluegrass outfits around. In the United States, the band appeared in a variety of venues, including a sold-out 1991 concert at Carnegie Hall and a series of performances from Nashville’s Grand Ole Opry. The Nashville Bluegrass Band was the first of its genre to play in mainland China, and the group appeared before international audiences in Europe, the Middle East, South America, and Asia. The band's first music video, “Blue Train,” was frequently seen on the Country Music Television cable network, and they have also appeared on several of that network's most popular programs, including Crook & Chase, New Country, and Fire on the Mountain. Here is Sonnet to Spring, which is featured as part of a sketch on this week’s classic show: When in Minnesota we arrive at the vernal equinox, I am not complaining, though if I did, I could go on all day, If it snows in April, we don’t curse, except to say, “Uff-da.” And when the crocuses do come up, and the tulips, and the purple gentian, Old Man Winter has another few weeks to go, and while he’s here, he is trying to tell us something, and you know he is a realist. Winter tells you no lies. Winter tells you the cold hard truth. Serenity at 70, Gaiety at 80 |
Beautiful Dreamer (Heather Masse and Garrison Keillor)
Click below to hear Heather and Garrison perform a duet version of “Wild Horses.” Written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards — and ranked 334 on Billboard’s list of the 500 best songs of all time — “Wild Horses” first appeared on the Rolling Stones’ album Sticky Fingers.
Listen to “Wild Horses”>>>
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Our limited-edition Garrison quotation product selection continues with this classic shirt highlighting a simple life mantra: “Giving thanks is the key to happiness.” That’s exactly where it’s at — being happy and appreciative for everything you have in your life. Lightweight cotton/poly blend shirt is available in sizes S–XXL
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