The Kennedy Creek Old-Time Festival

The Kennedy Creek Old-Time Festival

Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 at 11:00am

  Free
  Website

The Kennedy Creek Old-Time Music Festival takes place every autumn at the Kennedy Creek Resort  in Suches, GA. Participants are invited to reserve cabins, yurts, or campsites, and food is available at the resort restaurant. Guest artists lead jams, teach workshops, and present concerts, but the main event is always jamming with friends. Admission is free.

Mickey Nelligan is a multi-instrumentalist from the Atlanta area. He grew up learning traditional music from his father Mick Kinney, and was steeped in the stringband music of the South. Best known for his greasy Georgia-style fiddle playing, he also can be heard playing the banjo, guitar, button accordion, and more, with a repertoire that ranges from old time to traditional Irish, Cajun, and blues.

Originally from Los Angeles, Sasha Hsuczyk is now based in Atlanta. A fiddler, guitar player, and singer, she learned to play the traditional stringband music of Georgia from her partner's family, the Kinneys. Previously, she studied traditional music at the University of Limerick, and finished her degree with a certificate in ethnomusicology at Hampshire College, where she did a research project on legendary fiddler Julia Clifford. She is also known for her leadership in the Sacred Harp community, and is a counselor and teacher at Camp Fasola in Alabama.

Together, Mickey and Sasha have a shared history of playing music in New Orleans, where they performed around the city with their Cajun honkytonk band, the Sister Street Aces. Currently they are performing as a duo sharing their repertoire of old time fiddle tunes and early Carter Family songs.

Henry Barnes has played Old-Time fiddle his entire life and has dozens of blue ribbons, cultural accolades, and successful students to show for it. His love for culture and the folk process are still evident to this day as he digitizes field recordings and visits with his elders. Henry specializes in the music of the Ohio River Valley, where commercial music heavies of the early 20th century like Clark Kessinger, Cowboy Copas, and Doc Roberts of the left their mark, as well as the local folk traditions that arose from migrants during the revolutionary war, reconstruction, and industrialization whose legacies are harder to document yet tell a familiar story of life in America.

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