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  • The Pilot Independent

    Train hoppers reunite for Oct. 18 concert

    By staff reports,

    2 hours ago

    NISSWA — Grassroots Concerts welcomes two freight-train-hopping acoustic balladeers and a bassist for a concert Oct. 18.

    The show is set for 7:30 p.m. in the Live Well Nightclub and Coffee Bar at the Journey Church, 5459 Lakers Lane.

    Larry Long, Fiddlin’ Pete Watercott, and Larry Dalton celebrate five decades of friendship rooted in the tradition of Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, Hank Williams and Bob Wills.

    Long is an American singer-songwriter who has made his life’s work the celebration of everyday heroes. Author, historian, actor, and broadcaster Studs Terkel called Larry “a true American Troubadour.”

    Watercott has been playing music for over 50 years. At age 10 he began playing the viola. In 1964 his sister, Kit, brought a plywood sunburst “Stella” guitar into the Watercott home. Pete took to strummin’ out the folk ballads of Woody Guthrie, Joan Baez, Phil Oaks, Pete Seeger, and anything that Sing Out! Magazine would print.

    Dalton, a symphony musician, is one-third of the trio of brothers Dalton from the Illinois-Wisconsin area.

    Through their early 20s, Long and Watercott hitched and hopped freight trains through the West performing music deeply rooted in American song tradition. Now 50 years later, both have had successful solo careers.

    In the course of their travels they joined up with bassist Dalton, whom they met in the High Sierra Mountain Range town of Truckee, Calif., in 1976.

    Long has written and performed hundreds of ballads celebrating community and history makers. His work has taken him from rural Alabama to the Lakota communities in South Dakota.

    He has given musical voice to struggling Midwest farmers, embattled workers and veterans. He was the troubadour for peace on Soviet/American peace cruises, sang for Mrs. Rosa Parks at the 45th anniversary of the Montgomery Bus Boycott and organized the Mississippi River Revival, a decade-long campaign to clean up the Mississippi River.

    Long assembled the first hometown tribute to Woody Guthrie in Okemah, Okla., which today has evolved into the annual Woody Guthrie Folk Festival. In 2014 Larry was inducted into the National Old Time Music Hall of Fame.

    Celebrating the wild mustangs’ heritage in the West, Watercott has led horseback songwriting groups with Rock Creek Pack Station, drawing inspiration from the wild horses. Now in a seventh season, Pete has self-produced a popular summer dinner concert series at the Pokonobe Lodge in Mammoth Lakes, Calif.

    Dalton has been performing and recording with bluegrass, jazz, rock, rockabilly, gypsy jazz, big band and orchestral groups.

    General admission to the concert is $15 at the door for adults and $5 for children under 12 with listening attention, when accompanied by an adult. Seating is first-come, first-served. Doors open at 6:30.

    Grassroots Concerts, which has been going since 1988, is a 501(c)(3) non- profit organization.

    The concert series welcomes your nonperishable food or cash donation to a local food shelf. For more information, go to grassrootsconcerts.org

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