Wintergrass and an unexpected Clark A5
Before this gets rolling, let me say that when I left for Wintergrass last Tuesday evening, I had no idea what was going to unfold over the weekend. As usual, NFI, try before you buy, and keep your stick on the ice.
We arrived in Seattle Wednesday morning and checked into the Hyatt Regency, the home of Wintergrass. Last year we waited too long and had to get a room at a nearby hotel. It's so much easier having a room there and looked forward to the festival ahead. It's our 4th time there and we had never been to Dusty Strings, so we went over and got there just as they opened. We had the place to ourselves for a while and the acoustics are very nice in there. If you have never been, it's well worth visiting and amongst the best music stores I have visited. They had a nice wall of mandolins on offer and we tried everything. The standout was a Northfield Big Mon that we all agreed sounded the nicest. They had a Flatiron round hole mandola that really surprised me. They had some nice vintage Gibsons including a snakehead. There were also a few Collings and Webers that sounded and felt like what you would expect. I can see why Northfields are popular here on the cafe. The rest of the day we explored Bellevue and took it easy. My oldest son had a meeting/workshop in the evening.
Thursday Wintergrass kicked off and the people started coming. We got the kids to the room where the Youth Academy hosts their yearly program. If you have kids, or know of people who have kids in the area and play music, get them involved! It's such a great, well run program that is so inspiring to watch. The teaching staff are excellent and it's amazing what they accomplish in just 2 days. At the end of the 2nd day (Friday), they put on a show that was truly wonderful.
Once we got the kids organized my wife and I had the rest of the day to ourselves to explore. After picking up the kids, we went into the Luthiers Room to and found ourselves catching up with Austin Clark and trying out what he brought this year. I've been fortunate in that I've had opportunity and pleasure to play quite a few of Austin's mandolins over the past 4 year and this year's batch that he brought were phenomenal! Every single one of them! My wife, (Norie) played one of the A5's that caught here eye, while my son and I played the others. We all walked away very impressed. Jayson Bowerman also had a couple of mandolins that were really good. The rest of the evening was spent watching the Jacob Joliff Band, Dawg and Del, and jamming. My wife mentioned the Clark A5 a couple of times, and vaguely I started to pick up on the hints.
The next morning I found myself back in the Luthier's Room and bumped into fellow cafe member Mandobart at Austin Clark's table. It was a lot of fun catching up and passing mandolins back and forth. I played the A5 that my wife played the night before and was blown away. It felt so lively/resonant/woody and you could feel it vibrate in your hands and against your chest when you played it. Being a brand new instrument, it had the tone and volume to spare already there! I realized now why my wife had dropped a couple of remarks about it the night before. Maybe Mandobart will post his thoughts on it ...
My wife said that she'd like to try it again so we arranged with Austin to take it up to our room and try it out Saturday morning. Keep in mind that my wife is usually the voice of reason in our house when it comes to instruments, so it was kind of surprising to see MAS coming from her for the 1st time. After an hour or so we took it back to Austin and told him we would think about it. Basically we tried to figure out how to move some money around to pay for it as this was totally unexpected. I've never been in a position/situation where I would regret not buying an instrument, and I knew that would be the case if we let this one go. I was just too good of a mandolin to pass up.
With that said, Saturday evening we went and saw Austin and bought the mandolin. This will be my wife's first mandolin that was specifically bought for her ~ and the first NEW mandolin that we've bought. She has been playing a great Old Wave oval hole that I got in a trade, but I know that she prefers the f hole tone compared to an oval (expect it to hit the classifieds soon). I also think that she likes that it's brand new and that it was also built by Austin, who has become a friend of ours over the years. Needless to say, she is a very happy picker.
I know that you're going to ask for a video ... After leaving Austin, we bumped into our son jamming in the hallway and let him try it out. Keep in mind that there's a lot of background noise, but it will give you an idea. He's playing with the talented Ella Korth from Nelson BC, and Zander Huston from Ashland, Oregon. They were all in the Wintergrass Teacher Training program this year.
Early Sunday morning we went to Greg Boyd's room to get a pick for my youngest son and ended up getting to play a Nugget, Gilchrist, and an Ellis side by side. It was a nice feeling leaving there knowing that we made the right choice.
Thank you so much Austin!
... not all those who wander are lost ...
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