Musicians jam during the 2022 Fiddlers’ Rendezvous event in Kennedy Park. Submitted photo by Gary Stallsworth

The 3rd Annual Fiddlers’ Rendezvous, presented by LA Arts, will be held from 1-4 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 13, at the gazebo in Kennedy Park in Lewiston. The lineup of accomplished musicians includes Steve Muise (fiddle), Elsie Gawler (cello, banjo and fiddle), Molly Gawler (fiddle and dance), Ethan Tischler (guitar and fiddle), Willy Clemetson (fiddle), Aidan Boardman (guitar), and Greg Boardman (fiddle).

“I am delighted to be sharing the stage with so many of our state’s finest and most inspired traditional musicians,” said Fiddlers’ Rendezvous founder and master of ceremonies, Greg Boardman. Jim Parakilas, chair of LA Arts, adds “our organization is thrilled to be supporting this gathering of incredibly talented musicians and sharing such a rich musical experience with our local community.”

The event is free and open to the public. Attendees are encouraged to set up chairs and blankets for seating. In the event of rain, the performance will be moved to the Trinity Commons (Trinity Church) located at 247 Bates St., Lewiston.

Since 1973, LA Arts, the arts agency for the cities of Lewiston and Auburn Maine, has pursued a mission to engage and inspire a vibrant community through arts and culture. The agency works with governments, businesses, schools and local arts and cultural organizations to create opportunities for community members across the generations to experience, learn, and participate in the arts. LA Arts organizes arts programs and initiatives, supports the work of local artists and arts organizations, and highlights the essential role the arts play in shaping an economically vital, socially integrated, and forward-looking future for its community. Learn more at www.laarts.org.

Musicians

Steve Muise
Steve Muise has been fiddling with his family’s Downeast Style for many years. (His parents are 1st and 2nd generation Nova Scotians) He founded the Franklin County Fiddlers, a group of high school musicians that tours around Maine and way beyond displaying, promoting and learning about fiddle styles. Steve is a graduate of Berklee College of Music, and is a stringed instrument teacher in the MBRSD schools (Farmington area). Steve was honored with the “Maine Music Educator of the Year” award in 2007 from MMEA. Steve enjoys playing all styles, ranging from Downeast (maritime), Québécois, Celtic, and jazz, and can be seen playing music with his dad Paul, Boréal Tordu, Frigate, Muisette and the Franklin County Fiddlers.

Elsie Gawler
Elsie Gawler is a multi-instrumentalist and songster rooted in Maine’s traditional folk music and culture. With her family, the Gawler Family Band, she has played throughout the state and beyond, sharing traditional fiddle tunes, songs, and original works since she was 6 years old. From this foundation she has branched out and launched her debut solo album, “Sweet As Honey.” The album is a collection of 9 original songs inspired by sacred connection to earth and community. While continuing to play regularly with The Gawler Family Band, her other projects include duo Elsie & Ethan, and trio The Gawler Sisters. She has also been a long-time member of the group Childsplay.

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Molly Gawler
Molly Gawler is a dancer, musician and mom. She founded her own company in 2012 called Droplet Dance, a collection of solo dance works with elements of acrobatics and story told by movement created with live music from the folk traditions of Maine. As a youngster, Molly studied ballet with Andrei Bossov in Pittsfield and furthered her dance training in college with contemporary and modern at SUNY Purchase in New York. She danced with various choreographers in New York City such as Corbin Dances and Nøa Dance. After that, she toured the world with Pilobolus Dance Theater and starred in the lead role of the ‘dog-girl’ in the show Shadowland. While a part of Pilobolus she appeared on Oprah, the Golden Globes, the Royal Variety Show and the Academy Awards. Her life led her to study circus at New England Center for Circus Arts in Brattleboro, Vermont, where she learned Cyr Wheel, Aerial Arts and acrobatics. Molly came full circle, back home to Maine where she performs, plays fiddle, sings and teaches movement of all types. One of her greatest joys is being a mother to four year old Caspian, and baby Mica.

Ethan Stokes Tischler
Ethan Stokes Tischler has been singing and playing music since about the age of 2, and teaching professionally for the last 5 years, alongside performances with the Gawler Family Band, folk duo Elsie & Ethan, and family music group Mr. Chris & Friends. Whether in private lessons, or sharing music in school/outdoor environments, he delights in meeting students right where they’re at, and working together to find music that feels exciting and energizing. Ethan values a slow, organic approach to musical growth, that allows students to take things at their own pace and avoids a sense of rush or pressure. Given that the music is already inside all of us, Ethan feels his role is simply to help each student discover and gain confidence in their own unique and valuable voice.

Aiden Boardman
Aidan Boardman is a vocalist/multi-instrumentalist and teacher, teaching primarily at Greene Hill School in Fort Greene, Brooklyn. He is also pursuing songwriting and recording under the pseudonyms, anguid and Dreamt. Aidan’s teaching focuses on developing guitar technique, posture, creative harmonies, and ear-training.

Greg Boardman
Greg Boardman traded his electric guitar for a fiddle upon hearing Dave Swarbrick play with Fairport Convention at the King’s Rook, in Ipswich, Massachusetts, back in 1970. Roving out later from my home in central Maine, he soon discovered a cadre of peer fiddling expeditionaries (including many Maine Fiddle Camp staffers) and a couple of older generations boasting of some very fine country and traditional musicians. Among these, Cherry Frechette, Otto Soper, Fred Pike, Leo Murphy, Simon St. Pierre, Ben Guillemette and Lucien Matthieu, to mention a few, made a great impact upon Greg’s life and music. Dudley Laufman of Canterbury, New Hampshire, whose itinerant musician’s license still brings him frequently to Maine, has also been a seminal musical influence, not to mention the very welcome new wave of younger musicians who are infusing our scene with great energy, creativity and feeling. Greg continues to teach bowed strings to elementary school children, produce music events, assist in music for worship, and perform around the state from his family base in Lewiston.


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