
Cameron Cromwell played a rockin' blues guitar.
Musical events at the Oakdene Centre in Bear River usually happen once a month. It’s a great chance to get together with friends and to enjoy an evening of live entertainment for a mere six dollars (with a $10 membership). This year Larry is on the Board of Directors for the Bear Rhythm Music and he designs all of their posters.

Larry's poster design.
Last weekend we went to the monthly coffeehouse at the Oakdene Centre. It was much more than a musical performance. A group of area musicians and friends have banded together to present music with a strong social message. Their musical styles are as diverse as their origins, so there was everything from African drums to Irish ballads to Acadian folk songs and Mi’kmaq music.

Patrick brought his hand crafted drums. He even cuts down the trees.
Together they celebrated their love of music and shared with the community a message about economic and social equality, and self-sufficiency within coastal communities.

Many musicians are in "The Same Boat"
Terry Farnsworth, one of the last hand-lining fisherman in Nova Scotia, talked to us about the struggle of fisher people in coastal communities to preserve their way of life. Part of their battle is with corporations who want to strip away both fishing and natural resources that are the life blood of coastal communities. He told us about a conference he had attended online with his counterparts in South Africa who are also trying to create a sustainable way of life that includes many of the original skills of the fisher people in South Africa. And then he played a couple of tunes on his guitar.
Drummer Patrick Jarvis gave a high energy performance by playing several of his handmade drums. He carves them from oak, birch, apple and other woods and he finishes them off with a drum of goat skin which apparently is very thin and very strong – more so than deerskin which he also uses. Usually he will choose his tree and cuts it down when it is still in leaf. When the leaves have dried out, he knows that they have drawn much of the sap from the tree and then he can begin carving. Here is Patrick playing a tune for us.
Jeanne Doucet-Currie is an Acadian singer-songwriter who writes about the history of the area. One of her songs was a ballad about a legless fellow who was found on the shores of Sandy Cove in the 1800’s. He was never able to communicate with the people who rescued him and the rumors about his origins grew over the years. Jeanne put it all together in a wonderful song called Jerome.
There were more wonderful performances that I haven’t touched upon in this post. You’ll have to go to an event or invite them over. It was a true celebration of music, diversity and human fellowship.

Wanda St. Louis sings beautiful Celtic ballads.
This group of friends who will bring song, dance, drama, cultural workshops, and storytelling to your community. call themselves The Same Boat Traveling Coffeehouse. Check out their website. http://bridgebuilding.wordpress.com/
They fired us up so much that afterwards a group of us headed down the hall to our studio for a couple of hours to wind down with a glass of wine and some more stories.

Enjoying the Experience.




























