Jayme Stone brings his “Folklife” concert to Field Arts & Events Hall this Friday. (photo courtesy of Jayme Stone)

Jayme Stone brings his “Folklife” concert to Field Arts & Events Hall this Friday. (photo courtesy of Jayme Stone)

‘Folklife’ to unfold at Field Hall on Friday

PORT ANGELES — There’s so much good music out there — songs from across America and beyond, said Jayme Stone, who’ll bring his “Folklife” performance to Port Angeles this week.

“I think about an entire show being as much like a theater piece as a concert,” added Stone, who looks for a balance between creating a spell with the music and sharing the stories behind the songs.

He’s out on tour for the first time in more than a year and will appear at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Field Arts & Events Hall, 201 W. Front St.; tickets are on sale at fieldhallevents.org.

The renowned father-and-son recording team of John and Alan Lomax are among Stone’s strongest inspirations.

During the 1930s, the Lomax project brought forward the first field recordings of Muddy Waters, Woody Guthrie, Leadbelly and Jelly Roll Morton, among others.

Stone and his musical companions use these gems as jumping-off points, making an album titled “Folklife” full of fresh takes on traditionals along with new songs.

When it comes time to take the stage, he hopes to “create a container inside a performance space that invites people to drop in and feel community,” Stone said. This is the place where he and his audience find out where music can take them together.

In a review of “Folklife” in the magazine RootsWorld, critic Greg Harness wrote that Stone’s “Folklife” record is studded not only with good old tunes but also “sparkling new treasures.”

This aligns with Stone and friends’ desire to treat the traditional songs like heirloom recipes: They’ve cultivated Sea Island spirituals, Appalachian dance tunes and Creole calypsos in their sets.

The group cooks up a participatory concert, picking out a ballad from the British Isles, a song Stone learned in Mali, West Africa, and “I Want to Hear Somebody Pray,” a tune Alan Lomax recorded when he was supposed to be on vacation in the Caribbean.

“Alan had a thirsty mind, a thirsty ear,” Stone said. “He spent his whole vacation recording people singing a capella and clapping.”

Stone wrote a banjo part for “I Want to Hear Somebody Pray,” and found that, in concert, the audience picks up their singing part easily.

This Friday, Stone also plans to stir in “Blackjack Davey,” a traditional that has been sung by Bob Dylan and Taj Mahal.

“It’s a feminist power ballad,” Stone said, about a woman who falls in love with an itinerant musician and runs off with him.

“A lot of this music is older than a lot of us,” said Stone, adding he hopes to keep planting these folk-song seeds in fresh soil, “so they can keep spreading and sprouting.”

Stone, who is from Toronto, Canada, and now lives in Longmont, Colo., acknowledged that he tends to love music from outside the community he was born in.

Hence his study of music makers, melodies and stories from across lands and oceans.

“That seems to be a quirk of my lifetime,” he noted: Whenever Stone hears something foreign, he wants to learn all about it.

________

Diane Urbani de la Paz is a freelance writer and photographer living in Port Townsend.

More in Entertainment

Grand Olympics Chorus to host guest night

The Grand Olympic Chorus will host guest night from 6:15… Continue reading

Marine science, ecosystem to be discussed at Studium Generale

Clallam Marine Resources Committee members will speak at 12:35… Continue reading

Quimper’s Watch will present “Songs of the Sea” at Candlelight Concerts on Thursday in Port Townsend.
Quimper’s Watch to perform at Candlelight Concerts series

Quimper’s Watch will present “Songs of the Sea” during… Continue reading

Mary Delany’s life and art will be the topic of a Northwind Art School class on Friday. (Northwind Art)
New class added to Women in Art History series

Mary Delany lived a life of reinvention. At age… Continue reading

Film fundraiser to benefit Port Angeles High School orchestra

Zoe Omega and Sarah Tucker Zone will host “Charlie… Continue reading

Symphony, film screenings set for this weekend

Symphony performances, a garden discussion and film screenings highlight weekend events on… Continue reading

Tuba player Tyler Benedict is the featured soloist in concerts this week in Port Angeles and Sequim. (Diane Urbani de la Paz)
‘Music to warm the soul’ in Sequim and Port Angeles

Tuba soloist, orchestra to present first concerts of ’26

Panel discussion set to honor Dr. Martin Luther King’s legacy

Migizi Miigwan/Nicole Nesberg will facilitate a panel discussion during… Continue reading

“Jazz Club” will be among the hundreds of works in Northwind Art’s benefit pop-up sale this weekend at Jeanette Best Gallery, 701 Water St. in Port Townsend. (Northwind Art)
Northwind sale brings multitude of art, supplies to Port Townsend

Hundreds of bargains on artwork, books, materials and craft… Continue reading

Sorin to present first Yard and Garden series lecture

Marni Sorin will present “Growing Practices for a Resilient… Continue reading

Garden lecture, arts exhibits this weekend

A gardening lecture, photography and art exhibits highlight weekend events on the… Continue reading

Auditions to be conducted for ‘Cinderella’ production

Ghostlight Productions will conduct auditions for its production of… Continue reading