Musicians Share Love of Bluegrass
By Erika
Jacobson
September 20, 2006
For More
Information
To learn more about
Flint Hollow, their performance schedule and how to
purchase their new compact disc, visit
www.flinthollow.com.

Photos
Contributed
Local
bluegrass band Flint Hollow released its first
compact disc in June.

Flint Hollow
plays the Bluemont Concert Series in Winchester. |
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Next month, local bluegrass band Flint Hollow will be playing at
the Lucketts Community Center. And while playing the local
community center might not seem like a landmark event, for a
bluegrass band that is exactly what it is.
"This is a venue that has been played by every major act across
the country," Randy Collins, Flint Hollow's guitar and vocalist,
said. "I am not going to say it's like the Grand Ole Opry of
bluegrass, but it's a major national venue."
For a band that formed mostly for the fun of playing bluegrass
music, being able to play at the Lucketts Community Center is
quite an honor.
"They are very careful about who they hire to play," Collins
said. "So we are quite grateful and are really looking forward
to the opportunity."
The Lucketts performance is only one of the things happening for
the band. Throughout the summer the band played events in
Loudoun and Fairfax counties, Maryland and even Pennsylvania,
and has performances booked through next spring and into summer
2007. Most exciting perhaps, is that in June the band released
its debut compact disc, Flint Hollow.
"It is just surpassing all of the milestones that I had ever
dreamt of," Vince Diem, the band's mandolin player and vocalist,
said. "We just wanted to be known as a regional act."
FLINT HOLLOW WAS founded more than two years ago by Diem and
Collins, who met while playing at jam sessions. They were what
Collins calls, picking buddies.
"Vince was really the instigator there," Leesburg resident
Collins said. "He convinced me to give it a try. To get together
and see what happens."
To start their bluegrass band, Diem, a Winchester resident, and
Collins knew they would need a banjo player. The two found
Ashburn resident Chris Athey, a lieutenant in the Loudoun County
Sheriff's Office, who had played with bluegrass band Vintage
Blend until 2002.
Last year, after losing other members of the original lineup,
fiddle player Dave Miner joined the band and, six months ago,
stand-up bass musician Mike Marceau made the current lineup
complete.
"We're like any other group," Collins said. "It is rare that a
whole group stay together the whole time. We feel like there is
connection, a synergy here."
ALL FIVE MEMBERS of Flint Hollow have full-time jobs, but each
man has had a love of music and bluegrass through most of their
lives.
"I went to see bluegrass shows with my parents, when I was
really young," Diem said. "Then I got away from it because it
just wasn't the cool music to listen to."
After getting out of the Army, Diem began listening to bluegrass
music exclusively and immersed himself into the bluegrass scene
in his Pennsylvania hometown.
"I had no experience with the guitar or mandolin or really
bluegrass music before then," he said.
Collins grew up surrounded by music, learning to play and
appreciate music from his father and grandfather, as did Miner,
who learned the fiddle from his great-grandfather growing up in
Pennsylvania. Both Athey and Marceau discovered music on their
own, picking up instruments as younger men and falling in love
with bluegrass music.
Collins compares bluegrass to opera, a music form people can
relate to, but can only listen to it for short periods of time.
"But eventually," he said, "it becomes a part of you."
Friend and fan Bev Barker did not know much about bluegrass when
she first heard Flint Hollow perform, only that fellow Chamber
of Commerce member, Collins, played in band.
"I thought it would just be a fun thing to go and hear him
play," she said. "But I loved what I heard. It was realistic.
Telling real stories filled with music that you can tap your
foot to or could bring a tear to your eye."
THERE IS NO universal method for teaching bluegrass. Instead it
is handed down, generation to generation, often learned on the
fly, Collins said.
"That's what makes it interesting," he said. "It is so
eclectic."
While bluegrass has never experienced long-term public
popularity there has been resurgence recently, sparked in part
by the 2000 movie "O Brother, Where Art Thou?"
"Like any type of music people stumble on, they can relate to
it," Collins said. "It's not for everyone, but the population
seems to be growing, which is great."
Because Flint Hollow plays for the love of bluegrass, the band
plays wherever music is "wanted or needed," playing private
parties, weddings, festivals and fairs.
"We decided early on that we didn't want to play in bars or
taverns," Diem said.
The decision was part of Flint Hollow's attempt to keep their
music accessible to everyone.
"It really is music that people of all ages can enjoy," Barker
said. "[A performance] is just a wonderful way to spend an
evening with your family and friends."
IT WAS AT their performances that the idea of putting out a CD
first came about.
"People who were coming to performances wanted to buy a CD,"
Collins said. "It was really surprising to me and quite
humbling."
Originally the idea was to put together a demo CD, Diem said,
recording just three or four songs, but it soon morphed into
creating a full-blown recording. For 18 months, the band worked
when they could at the Echoes Recording Studio in Sharpsburg,
Md., a studio that specializes in acoustic recordings.
"We are happy with how we were progressing through that 18
months and we learned a lot during the entire process," Diem
said. "Because we took the time and care we did, we have a
product that we are really proud of."
The 10-song disc contains five original compositions and five
covers of traditional bluegrass songs. Of the five original
songs, three were written by Diem and an instrumental piece was
written by Athey. The songs range from stories about love lost
and people from the men's own lives to gospel music and upbeat
banjo numbers.
"We really wanted to create a mix," Collins said. "We always try
to have instrumental, fast and slow songs in every performance
so we wanted that in the CD as well. A lot of the songs tell a
tale, like a folk song."
The band has other original compositions that they are working
on for a possible second CD, Diem said, but for now the band
members are just enjoying the experience.
"We didn't have any ideas of it getting to this point," Diem
said. "Now within a year we are playing at premium venues before
premium audiences. It is really kind of larger than life." |