CANNONSBURG —
Even though the toilets backed up, someone called in a noise complaint and a bitterly cold wind ushered in a brief shower of snow, everyone at the 4th annual Junk Jam Fest agreed it was a great weekend to be outdoors.
Rather than being a turn off, the snow served as inspiration to those who stayed up through the early morning Saturday tending fires and sharing songs while playing acoustic instruments.
“It snowed! It snowed! It snowed for the first time of the year and it was the last great outdoor party of the year,” said property owner and festival organizer Clifton Gifford as he welcomed people at the main gate Saturday afternoon.
Allen White, a longtime Genuine Junk Band fan and friend, came from Lexington for this year’s event.
“I’ve been to all four of the Junk Jams,” White said while finding a bit of shelter from the wind inside a van. White said he was looking forward to Sasha Collete’s show that afternoon, as well as a performance by Detective Yeah during today’s festival finale. White said he had minimal gear, but wasn’t afraid of the cold forecast for the night.
“I’m camping out tonight ... braving the cold. I’ve got my sleeping bag and my tent. I think I’ll be alright,” he said.
Gifford said the festival did have a visit from Boyd County deputies Friday evening in response to a complaint about the sound levels, and praised the officers for working with festival staff to take care of the problem. Oddly, Gifford said the noise complain coincided with the end of the evening’s amplified entertainment.
“It was getting ready to go acoustic anyway,” he said with a smile.
Despite a million tasks including an effort to get the toilets unclogged, Gifford said the music from the hand-constructed stage was outstanding Friday night and Saturday afternoon.
“The G-Tones played earlier and Nathan Gillum is a rock star on a banjo,” Gifford said, earning the approval of other fans nearby who said Gillum han an unusual guitar-style approach to playing banjo.
Gillum, who is also a member of the host group Genuine Junk Band, said he was “warm and cozy” when the early morning snow hit the festival, although news of the weather event still amused him.
“It was the first snow of the year for us,” he said with a grin before adding, “Who’d be crazy enough to put on a festival?”
As a soft but crippling cold wind wafted across the 37-acre festival site Saturday, guitarist Josh Woods did his best to make jokes, smile and keep on playing as his nearly frozen fingers found their way across his fretboard. The thumbstyle player, whose approach relies upon extreme dexterity between the left and right hand, chuckled and said, “I sound like two bad guitar players.”
Less critical of Woods playing, audience members enjoyed his often aggressive technique as he performed tunes including “Blue Smoke,” or dropped his tuning for a requested rendition of “Kentucky” before launching into his own arrangement of Lawrence Welk’s “Calcutta.”
“Shaking his left hand, Woods said, “It’s hard to play in the cold,” before launching into a complex arrangement of “In the Good Ol’ Summertime,” causing his mother in the front row to remark to his wife, “I think that was wishful thinking on his part!”
In addition to a headline performance by the Genuine Junk Band, the festival included shows by the Hard Quartet, Sasha Collete, the Judy Chops, the Tracy Brothers, Deadbeats and Barkers, Mark Smith, the Dead Sea, Zack Kouns, the G-TONES, Soul Mountain, Luna, Detective Yeah, Aaron Lewis, the Neverly Brothers and Josh Woods. The festival concludes today with an open-mic jam session following band and solo performances. For more information, call (606) 465-1681.
TIM PRESTON can be reached at tpreston@dailyindependent.com or (606) 326-2651.
Local News
Festival crowd embraces cold, snow
- Local News
-
-
Dancing with Daddy
On Saturday, David Greene and his daughter, Hannah, 8, got all dressed up — he wore a boutonniere, she carried flowers — and went out for dinner and to the father/daughter dance at Paul G. Blazer High School.
-
New Year attack suspects plead not guilty
The alleged New Year’s Day attackers of a man who died of his injuries pleaded not guilty Tuesday in Carter Circuit Court.
-
City candidates outline plans to women’s club
Chuck Charles spoke to a group of potential Democratic voters about forming strong
-
Airport's future flights up in the air
Flights and services at Tri-State Airport are certain to change and adapt to economic concerns in the days ahead, although airport officials say they remain uncertain about the nature of flight from the local facility as the airline industry shifts strategies.
-
Local briefs: 2/22/12
The Our Lady of Bellefonte Hospital Foundation has published its annual report documenting the 2011 fiscal year.
-
Another raid; 2 charged with making meth
Authorities have charged two Catlettsburg men with manufacturing methamphetamine after the third meth lab raid in a week in Boyd County.
-
Flatwoods OKs fire department purchases
The city council on Tuesday authorized the Flatwoods Volunteer Fire Department to buy a Jaws of Life rescue tool system, five sets of protective clothing for firefighters and new radios, and to upgrade the department’s computer.
-
Quick thinking thwarts would-be fire disaster
Mary Ellen May has a tough time reading her newspaper these days, although she now describes Rodney Opell, who delivers her copy of The Independent, as a hero after his quick action to save a horse and extinguish a barn fire he noticed while making his early-morning deliveries last week.
- Bill would close loophole on viewing child porn
-
Local briefs: 2/21/12
A doctor’s office worker has been charged with 86 counts of fraudulently obtaining drugs, according to the Kentucky State Police Ashland post.
- More Local News Headlines
-
Dancing with Daddy








