Augusta Heritage Center, "Irish Week,"
1996Davis Elkins College, West Virginia, is the site for an annual
gathering of students of Irish music, dance, and culture. Folks
of all age and experience levels sign up for classes on topics
including fiddle, voice, flute, piano, step dancing, harp, and
more. Most of the faculty, although of Irish background, live
in the US. Many of them have traveled back to Ireland to win prestigious
awards in music competition.
The class format at Augusta includes both morning and afternoon
sessions with a particular instructor during the course of a week.
Evenings are spent at concerts and dances featuring faculty ensembles.
Most participants stay in student dorms with a meal plan at the
cafeteria although there are camping and motel options. My favorite
part of the day is the informal music making in the evenings after
the scheduled events. These late night sessions commonly go to
3 or 4 am. Breakfast soon follows from 7-9 am, and so sleep is
sometimes neglected for serious music makers who don't wish to
miss a meal.
My first Irish week at Augusta was spent in a workshop with Kevin
Burke. I was in a small class of enthusiastic fiddlers who collectively
picked Kevin's brain for tips for playing rolls, bowed triplets,
and other tricks of the fiddling trade. A classmate brought in
a camcorder and we studied slow motion recordings of Kevin's fingering
patterns. We spent an enjoyable week learning an appreciation
for the fine subtleties of Irish style fiddling. I still played
fiddle right handed at the time although I was soon to retire
from playing as I became disabled. As I became determined to learn
to play the fiddle again, I decided to start out where I had left
off, in a serious study of Irish fiddling.
Last year at Augusta, my second year as a left handed player,
I took an intermediate level class with Willie Kelly and spent
my week learning tunes in the style of County Clare players. This
year, having improved quite rapidly, I opted for Brian Conway's
advanced class in Sligo style fiddling. Both Willie and Brian
are players of excellent technique who take teaching seriously.
Although I learned several new tunes in Brian's class, his emphasis
was more on bowing techniques than repertoire. I was very happy
with the progress I made, and other students seemed similarly
satisfied.

Our class picture
That's Brian in the white T-shirt. I've got my bow to the fiddle
above him.
At the end of Irish week was a student concert featuring selected
pieces by each class.
Augusta Heritage Center also features other fine programs of traditional
music including that of West Virginia and other regions. I've
been attending events at Augusta since 1977, and have covered
the gamut from celtic, cajun, swing, old time, and dance calling.
My annual 15 hour drive(each way) from New Hampshire is proof
of my satisfaction with the Augusta experience.