2/22/19 Young musicians rehearsing at Wintergrass |
I probably say this every year, but it’s difficult to sketch while your toes are tapping to
bluegrass! For the sixth year, USk Seattle sketched at Wintergrass, the Seattle area’s annual bluegrass music
festival at the Bellevue Hyatt Regency. It’s an annual favorite for good
reason: Lively music is fun to sketch by, and all the jammers seem to be enjoying
themselves. Their enthusiasm is contagious.
Guitar vendor |
Friday morning seemed quieter than usual this year, and jammers
hadn’t gathered yet. Hearing music from an auditorium,
I slipped in to see what was going on (sketch at top of post). (Ticketed events are ongoing throughout
the festival, but we never attend the scheduled events because so much free,
spontaneous music is happening in the hotel’s public areas.) Several musical
youth groups were rehearsing for later performances, all at the same time, so
the music was . . . cacophonous. Still, it was fun to see fiddles and other
instruments of all sizes to fit their owners.
I found a man selling guitars (he had a lot more for sale
than I show in my sketch) in the vendor area. Some vendors had beautiful handcrafted
mandolins, violins and banjos that were works of art themselves.
By the time I finished those sketches, jammers were starting
to form small groups wherever they could fit a few chairs together. This is what
I come to Wintergrass for: to sketch and listen to people making music
spontaneously. It’s like the musical version of urban sketching!
Jammers |
I wish I'd asked what this instrument was called. . . maybe a type of steel guitar? |
Wow...what a collection of sketches from what sounds like a wonderful day!!!
ReplyDeleteIt was so much fun!! Nothing like sketching to bluegrass to put me in a good mood!
DeleteThe guitar in the musician's lap is called a LAP STEEL guitar. It's strings are raised slightly to make it easier to use a slide.
ReplyDeleteThank you! I was hoping a reader would know!
Delete