Article by David Menconi via the Orange County Arts Commission

 

For the past two years, Music Maker’s Freight Train Blues concert season in Orange County has been a strictly virtual experience with performances available online-only due to concerns about the Coronavirus pandemic. But the series is back to being a live event in 2022 with its eighth edition, kicking off May 13 at Carrboro Town Commons. And this time around, it’s in-person only.

“We’re not filming this at all,” says Tim Duffy, founding president of Hillsborough-based Music Maker Foundation. “We looked into that but decided all the gear would not make for a good experience for attendees. So this time, you’ve got to show up.”

Sponsored by WUNC and the Town of Carrboro, the free five-show series will run from mid-May to mid-June on five consecutive Friday evenings, with shows starting at 6:30 p.m. at Carrboro Town Commons. And the schedule breaks down like this:

Overall, this year’s Freight Train series features an eclectic lineup of mostly local acts, spanning a stylistic palette that goes well beyond the traditional blues usually associated with Music Maker. Duffy sees that as appropriate, given the series’ inspirational namesake roots – the late great Piedmont blueswoman Elizabeth “Libba” Cotten, who was born in what is now Carrboro in 1893 and wrote her oft-covered signature composition “Freight Train” before she was even a teenager. Murals of her decorate various walls around Carrboro.

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“We’re trying to represent more of the Triangle and North Carolina, which is a great musical state,” says Duffy. “And we’re honoring Libba Cotten, who to us represents North Carolina at its best. It’s in the spirit of trying to introduce these wonderful musicians from our community as the national treasures they are. North Carolina is not a state that jumps up and down saying, ‘We’re the greatest!’ But these are musicians who could be onstage at Carnegie Hall, they’re that good. And it’s free!”


Chapelboro.com has partnered with the Orange County Arts Commission to bring more arts-focused content to our readers through columns written by local people about some of the fantastic things happening in our local arts scene! Since 1985, the OCAC has worked to to promote and strengthen the artistic and cultural development of Orange County, North Carolina.