SEARCH Submit
 

SPOTLIGHT on OUTREACH

S2S

Source to Sea Cleanup: Massive job, ginormous satisfaction! Volunteer for our annual Cleanup event

Tree watercolor

Root for Your River: A special campaign to help replanting throughout the watershed

WQM

Water Monitoring: Volunteers monitor river sites in Massachusetts

Lab

Water Laboratory: CRWC's new testing facility opened in 2010

EPA Hazmat

Eyes and Ears: Volunteers assist Stewards by monitoring environment

River Music Logo

Music - Living Along the River: The last 3 years have seen an outpouring of musical passion for the River

A watershed refuge: The Conte Refuge encompasses the entire watershed. Get involved

Toxins in our water: Fish advisories and compounds of emerging concern

water chestnut

Invasive Species: Health, recreation and local economy

15 Mile Falls dam

15 Mile Falls Mitigation & Enhancement Fund: The Fund makes grants to local community organizations

Events

Exploring our rivers and region: Splash, paddle, dive, fish, frolic — join events throughout the watershed

Hamburg Cove

River Currents: A monthly column of river-related articles

 


LIVING ALONG THE RIVER
Songwriting Contests in 2008 and 2009

Cole's Oxbow paintingRead about the concert
of these songs
November 2010

Watersheds link people.  Our watershed links four states and hundreds of cities, towns and villages.  We drink the same water.  We swim, fish, and paddle waterways that constitute our shared jewels.  A common history and culture also enriches our lives.  And we share art.  In 1836, Thomas Cole’s Connecticut River painting The Oxbow helped tie people to the shared bounties of our landscape in a new and unique way.

We don’t have landscape artists here at CRWC, but we have Pat LaMountain — long-time singer and songwriter — who is also our Finance Director.  In the winter of 2008 Pat thought we might use art to strengthen ties to our shared environmental wealth.  She had an idea: a Living Along the River Songwriting Contest.  Publicised throughout our region, it caught on like wildfire by late spring.  Entries had to be original songs about our river, and artists had to be available to perform them at a fall “finals concert” where prizes would be awarded and the public would attend.

LIVING ALONG THE RIVER Songwriting Contest in 2008

Montague, MA.  September 15, 2008. A panel of judges chose John Currie of Orange, MA, for the $500 first prize for his song The River, a personal history of growing up along the Connecticut and witnessing its changing moods and seasons.  Currie’s simple opening line, “It’s two parts hydrogen, one part oxygen,” and a refrain that took listeners through a river year seemed to resonate with the judges.  It also captured the fancy of the crowd, who dubbed it their “audience favorite.”

Songwriter Claire Dacey of Easthampton, MA, notched second honors with her travelogue, This River, and Charlie Conant of Greenfield, MA, garnered third place for his, River Day.  The packed audience was enthusiastic throughout, and cheered loudly when Chelsea Rancourt of West Stewardston, NH, was awarded a special $50 prize honoring her work and her song Coming Back, as the youngest finalist in the concert.  Rancourt is 16 years old.  All twelve finalists received prizes for their efforts and artistry—ranging from cash to recording time, to gift certificates, and a Connecticut River Boating Guide.

The twelve finalists that performed Friday night were: Thomas Anderson, Putney, VT; Charlie Conant, Greenfield, MA; John Currie, Orange, MA; Claire Dacey, Easthampton, MA; Grayson Hugh, Danbury, CT; Davis Johnson, Monson, MA; Roland Lapierre, Greenfield, MA; Tony Lechner, South Hadley, MA; Chelsea Rancourt, West Stewartstown, NH; Emily Samuels, Gill, MA; Rob Skelton, Montague, MA; and Russ Thomas, Greenfield, MA.  The contest judges were Greenfield Community College President Bob Pura; long-time regional radio DJ Johnny Memphis; Klondike (John Koehler), founder of renowned, Greenfield-based Klondike Sound; Sue Merrow, Connecticut River Watershed Council Board member (and former Sierra Club Board President); and Sheryl Hunter, music and arts columnist for the Greenfield Recorder.

 

LIVING ALONG THE RIVER Songwriting Contest in 2009

Greenfield, MA, October 25, 2009. The contest’s five official judges chose the lyrics of Chicopee’s Sparkie Allison’s “River Daze” as the contest’s first prize song. “River Daze” weaves together a story of Allison’s impressions from time spent boating on the Westfield and Connecticut Rivers. Contest judges included State Representative Stephen Kulik, The Greenfield Recorder’s music and arts columnist Sheryl Hunter, community arts advocate Karl Bittenbender of Orange, MA; ecologist and musician Elizabeth Farnsworth and John Sinton from CRWC’s Board who–along with Wendy Sinton and Farnsworth authored The Connecticut River Boating Guide.

Sparkie Allison’s first prize brought $300 and a new soprano ukulele donated by Maple Leaf Music of Brattleboro, VT. All of the song entries paid homage to the Connecticut and its tributaries. Varied styles showcased lyrics touting special connections to a river’s wetland plants, aquatic species and fish, as well as historic floods, log drives, and fossils. Ultimately, second place and a check for $200 went to Greenfield’s Charlie Conant for a driving bluegrass song of the Connecticut’s changing end of winter extremes in “Ice Out”; while long-time Greenfield singer/songwriter and physician Russ Thomas was awarded $100 and third place for his thoughtfully-whimsical treatment of the predicament facing an endangered freshwater bivalve on the river, “Russell the Dwarf Wedgemussel.”

An attentive audience also recognized Thomas’s crowd appeal in audience balloting that was basically a snap poll of the evening’s overall performances. The dwarf wedgemussel song received recognition as “audience favorite,” followed closely by a tie for second place in voting between Sheila Moschen’s “Near Where the River Flows” and John Currie’s “Seems to Know.” Keiran Minor of Danbury, CT won the “under 18” category. Minor accompanied himself on piano as he shared “Legends of the River” with the audience. Minor received a $50 check for winning, and each of the twelve finalists went home with a prize.

Recording from 2008

CD coverThree top songs from the 2008 contest have been released on this short CD: John Currie’s “The River”, Claire Dacey’s “This River” and Charlie Conant’s “River Day”. The CD is available from the Connecticut River Watershed Council. “People really love the river music people are making right here in the Valley,” Pat LaMountain says. The CD is available at our main office in Greenfield, MA, or through our online merchandise page.

 

MCCThis project was supported in part by grants from the following local agencies: the Bernardston Arts Council; the Blandford Arts Council; the Cummington Arts Council; the Gill Arts Council; the Goshen Arts Council; the Greenfield Arts Council; the Hadley Arts Council; the Huntington Arts Council; the Montague Arts Council; the Northfield Arts Council; the Orange Arts Council; the Petersham Arts Council; the Warwick Arts Council; the Washington Arts Council; the Wendell Arts Council; the Westhampton Arts Council; the Whately Arts Council; the Wilbraham Arts Council & the Williamsburg Arts Council. These local agencies are supported by the Massachusetts Arts Council, a state agency.

____________

Photo credits (above): "The Oxbow" by Thomas Cole 1836; "River Music" by Tom Dudley, Greenfield Recorder 2008
Image Credits at Right - Illustrations: Bill Singleton; Photos: Elisabeth Cianciola, David Deen, ©Chris Hardie, ©Al Braden www.albradenphoto.com, River Music drawn by Tom Dudley - Greenfield Recorder, CRWC Staff.