Showing posts with label craponne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label craponne. Show all posts

Sunday, August 5, 2012

France: Georges Carrier steps down as director of Country Rendez-vous



Georges Carrier at Craponne. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber


By Ruth Ellen Gruber

Big news in the French country music scene -- Georges Carrier has announced that he is stepping down as the director of the Country Rendez-vous festival at Craponne, the premier country music festival on the French calendar.

Carrier posted this open letter on his Facebook page, just a few days after the 25th edition of the festival took place at the end of July:

Chers amis,

J’ai décidé ce jour avec effet immédiat de quitter mes fonctions au sein du Conseil d’administration de l’association régissant le Festival.

J’ai été très honoré par la confiance que vous m’avez manifestée durant ces treize années de présidence et ces quatorze années en tant que responsable de la programmation artistique et de la communication. C’est par mon engagement, mon travail, mon intégrité et mes résultats auxquels j’associe Jocelyne, que j’ai réussi, grâce à votre bénévolat et votre soutien à faire du Country Rendez-Vous le premier festival de musique country de France et l’un des tout meilleurs d’Europe, reconnu par toutes les instances, dont la ‘Country Music Association’ de Nashville et Le ‘Texas Music Department’ du Gouverneur Rick Perry.

Je souhaite bon courage à la nouvelle équipe car ce n'est qu'à l’aune de ces mêmes valeurs qu’elle parviendra à maintenir le festival au rang qu’il mérite, en espèrant que ma lettre ne soit pas la chronique d'une mort annoncée.

Cordialement,
Georges Carrier

Here is Georges's English version, with more info:

Dear friends
I have decided today to stop working for the Committee of the Country Rendezvous Festival in Craponne sur Arzon, France. 
It was an honor for me to work with the Craponne festival for 22 years as a volunteer, 13 years as president of the festival and 14 years as their talent spotter and buyer and having a great team to work with in the USA.. For all these years I have been committed in making the festival the number 1 outdoor country music event in Europe acknowledged by ‘The Country Music Association’ in Nashville, the Mayor of Nashville, the Governor of Tennessee and the ‘Texas Music Department’ by governor Rick Perry. Together with my USA team, I definitely put this festival on the map as being the premiere event to play in France and one of the biggest events to play in Europe.

I owe this result to my wife Jocelyne, my dearest friend Trisha Walker-Cunningham in Nashville, who bought all the Nashville artists on my behalf (usually the big headliners) for 25 years and, more recently, Dr Gary Hartman in Austin for some of the Texas artists.

To all the artists who performed at the event, the managers and agents who have helped to produce the best line-ups in France, I thank you so very much.

Unfortunately I regret that I cannot predict how reliable the new Board will be, nor am I able to recommend any of those in charge. Therefore you will have to use your own discretion as to whether you wish to do business with these new people or not.

Trisha and Gary have now told me that without my being the over-all head of the event and as closely as we worked together all these years, that they do not feel comfortable being involved with the event in the future because they only worked with me and not with any members of the Committee. Additionally, Trisha is now managing the fantastic Southern Rock Band, FLYNNVILLE TRAIN. She, Gary and I will continue to work together on different projects.
I want you all to know that I have not retired from the Music business and will soon inform you about my future plans. Again, I want to thank you all for your support these many years and I know our paths will cross again in the future.
Best regards
Georges Carrier
Music Consultant
http://www.gcmusicconsultant.com/


Carrier oversaw the programming of the festival for 14 years. One of his goals was to bring American artists to Europe -- and, unlike most country music festivals in Europe, the great majority of the acts at Craponne have been American, including big names such as Dierks Bentley, Asleep at the Wheel, Joe Ely, Bill Monroe, Marty Stuart, Alison Krauss and many many more.

This is what he told me at the festival the first time I went, in 2007, when I wrote an article about it for the International Herald Tribune:
"We are the only festival that does this - that keeps the music and only the music as the primary goal of the festival," said Georges Carrier, a professor of English in Lyon who has directed the Rendez-Vous for more than a decade and established close links with the music scenes in Nashville, Tennessee, and in Austin, Texas. "Who better than Americans can play their own music?" 
France has developed a number of promising country bands in recent years, he said, but most French artists had trouble singing in English. 
"I think having a festival like this - with the majority American musicians - is a good opportunity to make them learn how to do country music," he said.


Dierks Bentley at Country Rendez-vous. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber


Georges traveled to the States every years to meet with artists and check out the scene. He had representatives/collaborators in Austin and Nashville.

I don't know the ins and outs behind Georges's decision to step down -- but he has already started up a new direction, as a representative of bands and "music consultant" helping festivals and events program country music artists.

See his new web site GC-Music Consultant for more information.

Interestingly -- the Country Rendez-vous web site, which used to have an English language section and also had archives on the past editions of the festival now only has promotional information relating to next year's festival........the English site has disappeared, as have the archived articles....






Saturday, July 28, 2012

French Festivals!!

It was at Equiblues that I photographed (but alas did not buy) this iconic Heritage Authentic T-shirt. Photo (c) with Ellen Gruber



By Ruth Ellen Gruber

Wow, a whole month has gone by since I said I had a lot of catching up to do .... which means I have even more catching up to do!

But -- it's a good moment to do so, as three of Europe's best Country/Western/Etc festivals are beginning -- all three of them in France, one weekend after the next: the Country Rendez-vous in Craponne; the La Roche Bluegrass Festival in La Roche sur Foron; and Equiblues in St. Agreve.

I've been to all three in the past -- I posted from Craponne and La Roche.   Each festival is quite different, and it would be fantastic to be able to spend three weeks in France going from one to the next and taking them all in. This year, though, it looks as if I will only be able to make it to Equiblues -- which combines concerts, line-dancing and a "scene" with a rodeo.

COUNTRY RENDEZ-VOUS, CRAPONNE

Country Rendez-vous  Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber
The annual Country Rendez-vous in Craponne got under way last night, with a five-band set including  ERIK SITBON & THE GHOST BAND (France), CROOKS & STRAIGHTS (Croatia!!), THE STEELDRIVERS (USA), THE TURNPIKE TROUBADOURS (USA) and TWO TONS OF STEEL (USA).

Country Rendez-vous is probably the most prestigious of the dozens of country music and western scene festivals that take place in France each year. Most of the bands are from the U.S., and the Festival's savvy director and guiding spirit, Georges Carrier,  travels to the U.S. each year to make contacts and see bands. The Festival also has representatives on the ground in Nashville and Austin.

A couple of festival-goers at the Country Rendez-vous, 2007 Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber

LA ROCHE BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

The La Roche Bluegrass Festival is one of the biggest and friendliest of the scores of bluegrass festivals that take place each year around Europe. This year there are 30 bands from 14 countries. All the concerts are free, and there are lots of street events in the lovely town of La Roche. The festival also entails a band contest.






EQUIBLUES, ST. AGREVE



If all goes well, I will make it to Equiblues for the first time in some years.

Different from the other two festivals, it combines country music with a full-fledged rodeo -- there is lots of line-dancing and a colorful "western market" scene. Equiblues was one of the first European western festivals I attended, and I am eager to see it again. I still have a special bottle of Equiblues wine that I purchased the first time!

Line dancers at Equiblues. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber




Sunday, March 20, 2011

France -- Craponne Country Rendez-vous Festival Schedule is up

Country Rendez-vous, Craponne. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber

By Ruth Ellen Gruber

I haven't posted much lately, as I've been in the USA on a fellowship and then running around on a rather full lecture schedule. But -- I thought I'd just post a note that the line up for the Country Rendez-vous festival in Craponne, France -- one of the top country and western festivals in Europe -- is now up. Click HERE

Georges Carrier has put together a very rich program highlighted by Aaron Watson, Tanya Tucker, and Rhonda Vincent. I couldn't get to the festival the past two summers, but I hope I can this year.

MC Johnny Da Piedade (The Big Cactus Country radio show)

Friday 29 July 2011
7.00PM-1.30AM (4 BANDS)

7.00PM-8.00PM: TENNESSEE STUD (F)
8.15PM-9.20PM: THE SWEETBACK SISTERS (USA)
9.35PM-10.40PM: WHITEY MORGAN & THE 78'S (USA)
10.55PM-00.05AM: JOSH ABBOTT BAND with Kacey MUSGRAVES (USA)
00.20AM-1.30AM: AARON WATSON (USA)

txbar

Saturday 30 July 2011

6.00PM-1.00AM (5 BANDS)


6.00PM-7.10PM: TRUCK STOP RULES (F)
7.25PM-8.35PM: BOBBY FLORES (USA)
  8.50PM-10.00PM: FLYNNVILLE TRAIN (USA)
10.15PM-11.30PM: RHONDA VINCENT (USA)
11.45PM-01.00AM: LISA HALEY (USA)

txbar
Sunday 31 July 2011
3.00PM-11.00PM (5 BANDS)
3.00PM-4.05PM: THE RANCH HOUSE FAVORITES (NL)
4.20PM-5.30PM: KATHY KALLICK BAND (USA)
5.45PM-6.55PM: KYLE PARK (USA)
7.10PM-8.30PM: TANYA TUCKER (USA)
8.45PM-10.00 PM: LOS PACAMINOS (UK)
txbar
Free Concerts (downtown Sat and Sun)
 

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

France -- Media on the French Country Festivals

At the Country Rendez-vous in Craponne, 2008. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber

I was sorry that I could not make it this year to the great Country Rendez-vous festival at Craponne in south-central France, where I had had such a wonderful time last year and the year before. I posted some items about last year's festival on this blog, including a photo slide show. Last year's scene looked pretty much as it did in 2007, when I wrote an article for the International Herald Tribune on Craponne and some of the other more than 50 country music festivals around France each year. So I suppose is was much the same this year, too!

Last week the New York Times ran a piece about another big French country festival -- that at Mirande, in the southwest. It reads remarkably similar to my piece about Craponne the year before. In a way, Mirande and the Country Rendez-vous are sort of rivals -- Mirande draws more people (estimates go as high as 150,000 or more) but Craponne is considered the most prestigious, partly because almost all the acts at Craponne are American. This year's headliners were the Texas-based group The Flatlanders, featuring Joe Ely -- who performed solo at Craponne two years ago.

Joe Ely on the screen next to the stage, Craponne 2007. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber

This year, Le Monde discovered the Country Rendez-vous, with a long article by Stephane Davet who notes how the festival compound -- a Wild Western Space par excellence -- resembles a theme park, and how the line dance craze has has an impact.


05 août 2009

Les Flatlanders se posent en Auvergne (Le Monde)


Avec son saloon, son bureau du shérif, son mur d'enceinte digne de Fort Alamo, l'entrée du festival Country Rendez-vous ressemble à celle d'un parc à thème. Tels de grands enfants, souvent costumés en cow-boy, ils sont près de 8 000 spectateurs à envahir chaque soir, du 24 au 26 juillet, le terrain en pente douce qui surplombe la petite ville de Craponne-sur-Arzon. A l'horizon, le relief couvert de sapins pourrait évoquer les Appalaches, mais à gauche de la scène s'étendent les monts du Forez, à sa droite les monts du Velay. C'est en Auvergne que se déroule l'un des deux plus grands rassemblements de musique country de l'Hexagone.

Longtemps, on a imaginé les Français réfractaires à ces chansons de l'Amérique profonde. Pourtant, il existerait aujourd'hui près d'une soixantaine de festivals country au pays de Brassens. "Nous avons commencé en 1988, devant 200 spectateurs, se souvient Georges Carrier, le président du Country rendez-vous. L'an dernier, nous avons dépassé les 25 000 entrées."
La convivialité d'un événement organisé par des bénévoles, son environnement campagnard, une programmation artistique fière de sa diversité et de ses exclusivités expliquent sans doute ce succès. Tous les styles ont droit de cité : Bluegrass, honky tonk, western swing, new country, country rock...

Le succès du Rendez-vous correspond aussi à la popularité exponentielle du phénomène "line dance". Au milieu d'un public souvent assis sur des chaises pliantes, deux parquets ont été installés, face à la scène. Dans des tenues plus pittoresques que celles de la plupart des musiciens, près de 200 danseurs se sont alignés et synchronisent leur chorégraphie pendant les concerts.

Relancées aux Etats-Unis au début des années 1990 par le chanteur Billy Ray Cyrus, ces danses en ligne (aujourd'hui passées de mode en Amérique), ont commencé à prendre en France, il y a une dizaine d'années. On y compterait plus de 500 clubs spécialisés.

Stetson noir et santiags

"Ce qui m'a plu, explique Véronique, pimpante quinqua, en Stetson noir, jeans à franges et santiags, c'est la convivialité, le côté physique de l'exercice, la possibilité de danser sans cavalier et l'impression de se retrouver aux Etats-Unis sans avoir à payer le voyage."
Pour ces danseurs, qui ont souvent dépassé la quarantaine, les festivals sont aussi l'occasion de faire des emplettes sur les multiples stands de vêtements, chapeaux, bijoux, bottes, qui voyagent au gré de ces événements.

A Craponne, la programmation essaie aussi de limiter la puérilité du pittoresque. Vendredi 24 juillet, le plus beau concert de la soirée d'ouverture n'était pas le plus dansant. Originaires de Lubbock, Texas, la ville natale de Buddy Holly, les trois fondateurs des Flatlanders - Joe Ely, Jimmie Dale Gilmore et Butch Hancock - ont grandi artistiquement à Austin, cité refuge pour les musiciens allergiques au conformisme de Nashville.

Après un premier essai commun infructueux en 1972 (avec un album magnifique qui ressortira, en 1990, sous le titre parlant de More a Legend Than a Band), les membres du trio se sont taillé de belles carrières solos - Ely, en country rocker côtoyant Springsteen et les Clash ; Gilmore, en ténor métaphysique disciple de Roy Orbison ; Hancock en conteur métaphorique - avant de retrouver, par épisode, l'alchimie des Flatlanders.

A 60 ans passés, chacun maîtrise son art avec un sens infini de l'épure, de la mélodie et de la narration. Morceaux anciens ou issus d'un nouvel album, Hills and Valleys, leur concert rayonnait d'une classe qui éclipsait tous les habits de lumière des cow-boy fantaisies.
Country Rendez-vous à Craponne-sur-Arzon. Tél. : 04-71-03-25-52. Le 25 juillet : The Figs, Paul Eason, Jo Dee Messina... ; le 26 : Star of Azlan, Jeff Griffith, The Matt Skinner Band... 35 euros. www.festivaldecraponne.com
Stéphane Davet (Le Monde)

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Craponne -- Country Rendez-vous program now online

Country Rendez-vous Craponne, 2008. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber


The program for this year's Country Rendez-vous festival in Craponne, France -- the 22nd edition of the festival -- is now online. the Festival, regarded as the top country music festival in France, takes place July 24-26 and features mainly American groups. It draws as many as 25,000-30,000 fans each year. Click HERE for more information on the program.

Friday 24 July 2009
7.00PM-1.30AM (5 BANDS)
7.00PM-8.00PM: TAHIANA (F)
8.15PM-9.15PM: PAULA NELSON (USA)
9.30PM-10.35PM: W. C. EDGAR (USA)
10.50PM-00.00AM: OWEN TEMPLE (USA)
00.15AM-1.20AM: THE FLATLANDERS (USA)
txbar
Saturday 25 July 2009
6.00PM-1.00AM (6 BANDS)
6.00PM-7.00PM: DAZZLER & LAYNE (F)
7.15PM-8.15PM: THE FIGS (USA)
8.30PM-9.30PM: PAUL EASON (USA)
9.45PM-10.50PM: CARRIE HASSLER & HARD RAIN (USA)
11.05PM-0.15AM: JO DEE MESSINA (USA)
0.30AM-1.40AM: ERIC CHURCH (USA)
txbar
Sunday 26 July 2009
3.00PM-10.00PM (5 BANDS)
3.00PM-4.05PM: THE TOY HEARTS (UK)
4.20PM-5.30PM: BASTARD SONS OF JOHNNY CASH (USA)
5.45PM-6.55PM: STAR DE AZLAN (USA)
7.10PM-8.55PM: JEFF GRIFFITH (USA)
8.40PM-10.00 PM: MATT SKINNER & DOUG MORELAND (USA)

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Jewish Texan Country Singer (NOT Kinky Friedman)


In a previous post I posted a slideshow of pictures of the Austin, Texas-based Western Swing band Asleep at the Wheel, whose leader and anchor over the past more than 35 years is my old friend Ray Benson, performing at the Country Rendez-vous festival in Craponne, France. I've known Ray since we were teen-agers. He, like me, hails from suburban Philadelphia, but he moved to Texas in the early 1970s and has transformed himself from an east coast suburban Jewish boy to one of the top country music performers around -- he's won nine Grammy awards as the leader of Asleep at the Wheel and maintains a full-throttle recording and performance schedule.

Ray is not a "Sauerkraut Cowboy." But he is an example of how people can transform themselves, reinvent themselves, even "live their dreams". I've talked to him several times about this. And this, of course, is "the American way." People immigrated to America from all over the world and became Americans. Texas, too, is an "immigrant state." My own great-grandparents immigrated there from what is now Lithuania.

The imaginary wild west is an immigrant state of mind. People I've met in the European country and western scene immigrate internally, for a variety of reasons, into an imaginary wild west that they make real.

Here's an article I wrote about Ray -- it's for the Jewish media, so it focuses on his Jewish background.


A Jewish singer towers over country western scene

Ruth Ellen Gruber

By Ruth Ellen Gruber Published: 09/26/2008

CRAPONNE SUR ARZON, France (JTA) -- Think Jews and country music and you'll probably come up with Kinky Friedman, the cigar-chomping frontman of the iconoclastic Texas Jewboys, who is also a humorist, mystery novelist and failed but flamboyant candidate for Texas governor.

The real Jewish king of country music, however, is Ray Benson, the nine-time Grammy-winning leader of the country western swing band Asleep at the Wheel.

At 6-foot-7, Ray Benson has been described as a "Jewish giant" and "the biggest Jew in country."

He literally and figuratively towers over the stage in a Stetson and fancy tooled boots, with a grizzled beard and long, thinning hair pulled back in a pony tail.

"I saw miles and miles of Texas, all the stars up in the sky," he sings in his deep, mellow baritone. "I saw miles and miles of Texas, gonna live here 'til I die."

Now 57, Benson was born in Philadelphia but has lived in Austin for 35 years. He talks with a twang, plays golf with Willie Nelson, has recorded more than 30 albums and was named Texas Musician of the Year in 2004.

By his own estimate, he is the only Jewish singing star in the country western scene.

"Kinky's not a country western singer -- he's Kinky!" Benson laughed during a conversation with JTA this summer at the annual Country Rendez-vous festival in south-central France, where Asleep at the Wheel wound up a five-nation European tour.

READ FULL ARTICLE

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Craponne -- Country Rendezvous pictures

I meant to write up something on the Country Rendez-vous in Craponne last weekend, but got in each night far too late, and then left town to travel a little, ended up this past weekend in La Roche sur Foron, France, near Geneva, for the first couple of days of the European Bluegrass festival....

So here, at least, are some pictures from Craponne -- various performers, site, atmosphere, crowd, junk for sale....The festival forms a Wild Western Space par excellence...the area is fenced, and you step through into another world...

Friday, August 1, 2008

More Rebel Flags

I have added a number of pictures from the Country Rendez-vous in Craponne to the photo gallery of Rebel Flags in Europe that I have posted on my web site.

Someone at Craponne told me that he thought there were more Rebel Flags on show now than in the past; he estimated that it was almost 50-50 with American Flags. It didn't seem that much to me... but they certainly are very visible. This year there was a stand selling all sorts of Confederate stuff, including T-shirts of Robert E. Lee and other Confederate heroes, all clearly imported from the US.

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Country Rendez-vous Festival, Craponne, France

I'm at the annual Country Rendez-vous country music festival in Craponne, France this weekend. Got here Thursday, driving up from Italy, arriving just in time to attend the opening reception at a government building in Le Puy, the nearest big town to Craponne. Le Puy is a spectacular medieval (and older) town, a historical place of pilgrimage and mysticism, built in an area of extinct volcanoes. An ancient cathedral tops a steel hill at the center of town, with a spectacular church on another nearly vertical neck of rock, and a huge statue of the Madonna and Child on another.

I was at the festival for the first time last year, and ended up writing a piece on it -- and country music in France in General -- in the International Herald Tribune.

I'm staying with the artists in Le Puy -- a tad inconvenient, as it is a 45-minute drive to the festival venue in Craponne, which means if you go out there, you can't just run back.

The headline act of the first night of the festival (last night) was Austin-based Asleep at the Wheel, the legendary western sweing band led by Ray Benson, who (like me) hails from suburban Philadelphia and whom I've know since we were teenagers.

I chose to go up to the festival on the bus with the band, so I missed the first couple of acts, but I did see the extraordinary progressive bluegrass/roots band Cadillac Sky, which I loved.

They played just ahead of ASTW - who went on well after midnight, playing a mix of their old hits (Take Me Back to Tulsa, Miles and Miles of Texas, etc) songs from their musical play about Bob Wills, A Ride with Bob, and other pieces - Ray did a terrific version of Townes Van Zandt's classic Pancho and Lefty. (I think my favorite song I've heard Ray perform is another Van Zandt song, If I Needed You.)



The crowd was not as huge as it could have been, as it had rained heavily during the evening. But the band got at least part of them up and rocking.

I got to bed at 4 a.m....