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If you have never played hardingfele or
danced Norwegian folk dances before, you are welcome at the
HFAA Annual Wokshops!
Our 17th annual HFAA Annual Workshops are bigger and better than
ever. Our expanded roster of teachers and extended sessions guarantee
that dancers, fiddlers and luthiers will have the most intensive,
satisfying learning experience of the year 2000. Come and share an
environment with us that has been called "the warmest and most supportive
in North America"! Information and downloadable
registration forms can be found on this page.
HARDANGER FIDDLE PROJECT
Members
of Norway's Hardanger Fiddle Project (HFP) will be here on a grant
from the Norwegian government to research older hardingfeler (Hardanger
fiddles) in America and lend their expertise.
- Jan Petter Blom, anthropologist, hardingfele player, dancer,
and one of the most sought-after authorities in folk music research
today
- Bjørn Aksdal, Committee for Folk Music and Folk Dance,
University of Trondheim, expert in older folk instruments
- Olav Vindal and
- Sigvald Rørlien, two of the best hardingfele makers in
the world.
The HFP will be in residence at the HFAA Annual Workshops to share
their expertise via lectures and demonstrations in all areas of Norwegian
folk music, dance and
hardingfele construction. They will also be on site to identify, describe,
measure, record, photograph and register hardingfeler. You can bring a Hardanger
fiddle in for evaluation without attending the HFAA Workshops (although you are
welcome to join us!). There are no charges for these services. Advance registration
is requested on the registration form. If you or someone you know has a Hardanger
fiddle that you would like to have looked at, come and take advantage of this
great opportunity!
THE TEACHERS
MASTER DANCERS: LEIKNY AASEN & VIDAR UNDERSETH
Leikny
Aasen and Vidar Underseth from Ålesund in western Norway are not only
prize-winning dancers but also performers on the hardingfele and regular
fiddle. Vidar was born in Solund, an island community in outer Sognefjord.
Vidar (partnered with Hilde Bjørkum) has won the Landskappleik three
times dancing the parhalling, the first of which (in 1989) included the Kongepokal
(King's Trophy). Vidar and Leikny have also placed in the upper ranks of
Class A dance at the Landskappleik with the Springar from Solund. Vidar is
a full-time musician/dancer, both in Sogn og Fjordane and Møre og
Romsdal provinces. He is also the leader of the Ålesund Spelemannslag.
Leikny was born in Bergen and began playing hardingfele as a child, focusing
on the traditions of Sogn og Fjordane. She has won the district competition
in Møre og Romsdal several times, and has been working seriously with
old traditional music from Sunnmøre. Leikny and Vidar have had many
years of teaching experience in music and dance;Vidar
is one of the most sought-after dance teachers in Western Norway. Besides
teaching the Springar from Solund and the rull from their area, they will
be teaching reinlender, springpolka, masurka, skotsk, pariserpolka, and other
couple dances from Sogn, Sunnmøre and Nordfjord. Leikny and Vidar
taught at the San Francisco-area Skandia Festival in 1992, and in 1996 they
performed together with the Ålesund Spelemannslag at the Nordic Fest
in Decorah, and taught at workshops in Minneapolis and Seattle. Vidar has
also taught at the Fall Scandinavian Weekend at Buffalo Gap Camp in West
Virginia.
MASTER FIDDLER: HÅKON HØGEMO
We are proud to present Håkon Hgemo from vre rdal in Sogn, teaching
for the first time in the USA. Håkon is one of the foremost fiddlers
in Norway today, and plays and teaches the traditions of Sogn, Voss, and
Hardanger. He has won the Landskappleik (the Norwegian national folk music
and dance competition) twice, in 1989 and 1995. He has performed at the Olympic
Games in the U.S. and in Nagano, Japan, as well as touring in the U.S., Germany,
Belgium, Sweden, Finland, Austria, Czechoslovakia and England. Håkon
has performed with the group UTLA (with Terje Isungset and Karl Seglem) since
1992; their recording, "UTLA", was nominated for the Spelemannsprisen (the
Norwegian Grammy award). Håkon is known not only for his sensitive
musicianship and ravishing tone, but also for his excellent teaching skills.
He has taught hardingfele at the Ole Bull Academy in Voss since 1993, and
at the Osterøy community music school since 1994. In 1999, he received
a state stipend for his work in performing and teaching.
MASTER FIDDLER: VIDAR LANDE
Vidar Lande is recognized not only as one of the best hardingfele players
in Norway, but as a dedicated researcher and collector who has accumulated
a vast store of tunes and knowledge from his home area of Bygland in central
Setesdal and from Telemark and other hardingfele areas. He has an encyclopedic
knowledge of the hardingfele tradition, combined with an exceptional ability
to analyze differences in playing styles and traditions. Some of you may
remember Vidar from his appearances in the 1970s on the Prairie Home Companion,
and he was the teacher at the very first HFAA Annual Workshops in 1984 and
again in 1999. Vidar is in high demand in Norway both as a concert performer
and as a judge in fiddling competitions. He has produced at least two CDs
and several cassettes of his playing, and was also featured on the CD, "Norway:
Fiddle Music from Agder," from the UNESCO Collection of Musics and Musicians
of the World. He is the author of two landmark collections of hardingfele
transcriptions, "Slåttar og Spelemenn i Bygland", and "Otto Furholt
- Slåttar".
The HFAA is also proud to be able to include on our staff some of the best
that the American traditional Norwegian folk music and dance community has
to offer..
BILL BOYD, hardingfele
Bill Boyd, from Seattle, Washington, began playing the hardingfele in 1983.
He has been a musician for Leikarringen in Seattle since then, and regularly
plays for dances in the Seattle area. He is most experienced with the hardingfele
traditions of Telemark and with gamaldans (vals, reinlender, polka, etc.).
He has taught often at the Norsk Stemne in Seattle, and at the Nordahl Greig
Leikarring's Camp Norge Stemne (Alta, CA) weekend three times, as well as
at local Seattle weekend events.
SARAH KIRTON, hardingfele
Sarah Kirton, from the San Francisco Bay area, has been playing Scandinavian
fiddle music since 1983, beginning with Swedish polskor on regular violin.
She's been teaching Scandinavian fiddle playing in the San Francisco Bay
area since early 1986. Sarah began serious study of the hardingfele in 1989,
and spent a year and a half in Valdres studying with Olav Jrgen Hegge and
Harald Rine during the years 1996-1998. She also plays some music in the
Telemark tradition. She plays regularly for SF Bay area dances on both violin
and hardingfele. Sarah also plays with the Scandinavian band "Nattergal," founded
in 1991.
RON POAST, hardingfele construction
The featured instructor in hardingfele construction will be Ron Poast, from
Black Earth, Wisconsin. He has been making instruments for 26 years and Hardanger
fiddles for 14 years. Recently Ron was nominated for a National Living Treasure
Award by the governor of Wisconsin. His instruments have been featured in
several important exhibitions, most notably in the summer of 1998 where he
appeared in the Wisconsin exhibit at the American Folklife Festival on the
mall in Washington D.C., demonstrating his art to tens of thousands of spectators.
He has also exhibited at the Vesterheim Museum in Decorah, Iowa, at the Wisconsin
Folklife Festival in Madison, and with a touring exhibition of Wisconsin
folk art organized by Wisconsin's John M. Kohler Arts Center. In 19998, Ron
received a grant from the North Dakota Arts Board to give private instruction
in hardingfele making. He has been a regular staff teacher at the HFAA Stevne,
and his instruments are in high demand, especially among HFAA members--he
now has a waiting list several years long.
MIKKEL THOMPSON, dance
Mikkel Thompson of San Jose, CA, has been dancing all his life. He learned
gammaldans (waltz, reinlander) through family tradition, growing up in northern
Minnesota. He started dancing other types of folk dances in the early 1980s
and began dancing springar and gangar in 1985. Mikkel has been the Artistic
Director of the Nordahl Grieg Leikarring (40 active members) and Barneleikkaring
(40 active members) since 1985. The Leikarring has performed at the prestigious
San Francisco Ethnic Dance Festival multiple times, danced for the King and
Queen of Norway and is regularly featured at every major local Norwegian
event. Mikkel also plays torader and accordion with the Nordahl Grieg Spelemannslag.
In addition, he teaches three classes a week in the Bay area, and dances
with Red Thistle, the Bay area's internationally recognized Scottish dance
performance group. Mikkel has traveled to Norway five times to study dance,
and has learned from Karin Brennesvik and Olav Sem, among many others. He
began to learn the Setesdalganger in 1988-89 and has studied the dance in
Setesdal.
THE PROGRAM
PRE-WORKSHOP
WARM-UP, Thursday, August 17, 1:00-5:00 p.m. This optional session includes
reviews of last year's teaching, private hardingfele lessons, and beginner's
dance and hardingfele workshops. Get a head start! Especially recommended
for beginners in hardingfele or Norwegian dance.
REGULAR WORKSHOP SESSIONS, Friday and Saturday, August 1819, 9:00
a.m.5:00 p.m. both days.The regular workshop sessions begin on Friday morning,
and conclude with the banquet, concert and party on Saturday evening. There
are approximately six hours of instruction per day. Our instructors will try
to accommodate Saturday-only enrollees; however, we highly recommend that students
attend both Friday and Saturday, as Saturday's teaching builds on Fridays
lessons.
Scandinavian Dance
Friday, August 18, 2000 7:30 P.M.
Featuring all live music by instructors and staff at the HFAA
Annual Workshops: Håkon Høgemo, Vidar Lande, Leikny Aasen, Vidar
Underseth, Sarah Kirton, Bill Boyd, Karin Code, Loretta Kelley, Andrea Een,
and more! Playing all your favorites: vals, reinlender, pols, springar, vossarull,
polka, and more! Donation: $5.00 For more information contact: Paula Goode,
goode@uwccc.wisc.edu (608)
232-7052; Loretta Kelley, loretta.kelley@ibm.net,
(301) 270-4925; Lucy Ghastin, secretary@hfaa.org,
(608) 836-1697. For information on Folklore Village or directions call them
at (608) 924-4000.
Norwegian Concert/Dance
Saturday, August 19, 2000 8:00 P.M.
With Hardingfele masters Håkon Høgemo and Vidar
Lande, Master dancers/fiddlers Leikny Aasen and Vidar Underseth Followed by
dancing until dawn to Hkon Hgemo, Vidar Lande, Leikny Aasen, Vidar Underseth,
Sarah Kirton, Bill Boyd, Karin Code, Loretta Kelley, Andrea Een, and more!
Donation: $10.00 concert and dance, $7.00 dance only. For more information
contact: Paula Goode, goode@uwccc.wisc.edu (608)
232-7052; Loretta Kelley, loretta.kelley@ibm.net,
(301) 270-4925; Lucy Ghastin, secretary@hfaa.org,
(608) 836-1697. For information on Folklore Village or directions call them
at (608) 924-4000.
POST-WORKSHOP
REVIEW, Sunday, August 20, 10:00 a.m.1:00 p.m. . This optional session
includes a review of workshop lessons for fiddlers and dancers, with private
problem-solving sessions. Get personal advice on how to maximize your learning
experience.
Fiddle Concert
Monday, August 21, 2000 7:30 P.M.
Vidar Lande and Haakon Hoegemo in concert at Trinity Lutheran
Church, 1904 Winnebago Street, Madison, WI, $12 suggested donation, $6 suggested
donation for kids 5 and over. Tickets available at the door. CDs will be on
sale. For further information/directions contact Inna Larsen at ivlarsen@facstaff.wisc.edu, (608)
236-0468.
NOTE: The hardingfele, dance, and hardingfele construction classes
are taught concurrently. If a student desires to take classes in both fiddling
and dancing, it is recommended that the student sign up for fiddling on Friday
and dancing on Saturday.
DANS | DANCE
The HFAA does not set any gender limitations or previous dance experience
pre-requisites for our dance workshops. All are welcome to come and learn
the HFAA way! Dance students will have the opportunity to dance to live fiddle
music and learn more about it. Individual instruction will be offered tailored
to both beginning and experienced dancers. Also included are special lectures
on dance traditions, videotapes, and question and answer sessions.
HARDINGFELE | HARDANGER FIDDLE
All hardingfele classes are small, with lots of opportunity for individual
attention. You need not have played hardingfele or Scandinavian fiddle before,
but you should have some solid fiddling skills. It helps to have some degree
of proficiency in learning by ear, although this is not a requirementsome
written music will be available. Fiddlers who would like to try hardingfele
but do not have an instrument are welcome. See the information on the HFAAs
Fiddle Loan Program in the registration information.
![[Ron Poast]](../graphics/ron_poast.jpg) |
Hardingfele construction teacher Ron Poast
of Black Earth, Wisconsin, playing one of his own hardingfele. Photo
by Richard Strauss. Used by permission of the Smithsonian
Institution.
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HARDANGER FIDDLE CONSTRUCTION
This course, the only one in North America, will look at some selected aspects
of hardingfele construction. The construction class lasts all day on Friday
and Saturday (no Thursday session), and includes the Sunday morning 10:001:00
session. No part-time enrollees are allowed. There will be opportunity for
hands-on practice with carving, inlay and ink drawing. The cost of supplies
is included in the registration fee. Registrants are encouraged to buy and
review Sverre Sandviks book, Vi byggjer hardingfele (available from
the HFAA Catalog), before the workshop. The text is
in Norwegian, but the book contains copious photographs and full-sized fold-out
patterns for the instruments and the rosing decorations.
ADDITIONAL OPPORTUNITIES
Our staff will present lectures and demonstrations on a number of aspects
of Norwegian folk music and dance during the workshops. Private 20-minute coaching
sessions with the teachers are scheduled throughout the weekend to help participants
solve individual fiddling problems. Evenings include dance parties with live
music, and Saturday evening includes a festive banquet and concert with Workshop
staff members..
NON-PARTICIPANTS AND CHILDREN
Non-Participants and Children are most welcome at HFAA! Advanced registration
is required for all. The Non-Participant category includes anyone over age
14 who would like to observe the workshops and/or family members or friends
who may wish to accompany an active participant. A small fee is charged and
meal options are available. As music and dance are activities for children "of
all ages", so no special children's program is planned and there are no childcare
facilities available. Children may participate in the regular HFAA Workshop
activities or parents should be prepared to watch their children and/or take
turns doing so with others. The fee for children ages 514 is approximately
40% of the adult participants fee. Children under age five may attend at no
charge.
THE VENUE
We will be returning to our beautiful location at the Folklore
Village, located seven miles east of Dodgeville,
Wisconsin, about a hour's drive west of Madison. Located in a peaceful
rural setting, we will have the opportunity to learn new tunes, receive individualized
instruction, ask questions, visit, share stories, and dance. All of the activities
will take place in the air-conditioned and spacious music and dance facility
with a great dance floor and many classrooms on the lower floor.
Information on meal plans can be found in the Registration
Information. The Folklore Village cooks have had extensive experience
preparing sumptuous Scandinavian smorgasbords and desserts, and we will be
treated to a Norwegian feast Saturday night at our festive banquet.
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