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Arts Council of Princeton Presents World Famous Blues Duo Cephas and Wiggins two Performances.
Saturday, September 13th About
Cephas and Wiggins (From: www.cephasandwiggins.net) Cephas
& Wiggins are leading exponents of the Piedmont Blues - specifically
the Piedmont-style guitar, featuring alternating thumb and finger, with
the thumb creating a steady, loping bass as the melody is simultaneously
picked out on the treble strings. The two met in 1977 at the Smithsonian
Folklife Festival in Washington, D.C., where Cephas was playing in the
band of pianist Big Chief Ellis and Wiggins was accompanying gospel
singer-guitarist Flora Melton. Along with pianist Wilber "Big Chief"
Ellis and bassist James Bellamy, John and Phil formed the Barrelhouse
Rockers. A year after Ellis' death, the duo of Cephas & Wiggins
was born. Almost
immediately after the two musicians joined forces, the blues community
proclaimed them as the new champions of the East Coast Piedmont style
of blues first popularized by artists like Blind Boy Fuller, Rev. Gary
Davis, Blind Willie McTell and Blind Blake. Since teaming up, they have
toured the world, including the former Soviet Union, where they were
the first Americans to perform at the Russian National Folk Festival
in Moscow. In 1987, they were awarded the "W.C. Handy Blues Entertainers
of the Year" and "Best Traditional Album of the Year."
After
hundreds of concerts at major festivals, concert halls and colleges
(not to mention the many workshops the two conduct), Cephas & Wiggins
continue to bring energetic good times to each performance, winning
new fans everywhere they go. They have performed in living rooms for
only a handful of people and in front of thousands at blues festivals
all over the world. They even entertained at President Clinton's inaugural
party in 1997. They choose their repertoire carefully, not only for musical impact, but also to highlight the cultural and historical content of their genre. Their concert performance evokes life in the post-Reconstruction South. Hard work, celebration, joy, and struggle are all there. A verse that may sound like a straightforward love song may also contain an allusion to African tribal culture or the indignities of racism or an optimistic assertion of a better future. Cephas & Wiggins provide their audiences with a very special treat - a powerful and intelligent performance of a wonderful, American treasure, the blues. |
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This program is made possible by grants from the Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts and a generous sponsorship from Bloomberg LP. This tour engagement of Cephas and Wiggins is funded through Mid Alantic Arts Foundation's Mid Atlantic Tours program in partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts Regional Touring Program and the Maryland State Arts Council's American Masterpieces Program. www.midatlanticarts.org |
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