Fredericksburg Songwriters' Showcase | Bob Gramann |
Bob Gramann
likes songs that say something new or look at something old in a new
way – songs that make the listener focus, reflect, and react. His
songs aim for that spark of insight, that “Aha!” of listener
satisfaction. Current events and human priorities give him ample
material for reflection, humor, and satire. Sing Out Magazine
called him “witty and insightful.” The Washington Post’s Eve
Ziebart saw him as “a where’s-my-Whole-Earth-catalogue sort of New Guy
who’d rather be kayaking than fighting the good lawn fight.”
During the past two decades, Gramann has earned respect as a
songwriter, presenter, and guitar maker in central
Virginia. He was voted Fredericksburg’s Best Acoustic
Act for 1995 in the town newspaper’s poll. Gramann maintains his
notoriety by performing songs with local historic settings and
political barbs in Fredericksburg and throughout the mid-Atlantic
states. He’s played at the Central Ohio Folk Festival as
well as the prestigious Washington Folk Festival in Washington,
DC. Among his honors are a surprise WAMMIE nomination and
play on NPR’s Car Talk. His song “Sara Sing” is included on the
FOCUS compilation Capitol Acoustics III CD. He produces the monthly
acoustic concert series Fredericksburg Songwriters’ Showcase,
begun in 1993 with Peter Mealy.
Gramann makes the instruments he plays, and boasts a list of
celebrity compliments for his steel string and classical guitars.
He sells his handmade guitars through Picker’s Supply in downtown
Fredericksburg, at the House of Musical Traditions in Takoma Park, MD,
at musician’s gatherings, and on his website. He branched out
into banjos when he wrote a song that required banjo accompaniment.
Five CDs of Gramann’s original songs (Mostly True Songs, That Squirrel
Song, See Farther in the Darkness, Granddad Planted Trees, and
...Mostly Live) are available in select record stores and from his
website. The most recent, ...Mostly Live, was recorded at some of
his concerts in 2008 and includes many of the stories and introductions
that accompany his songs.
An avid canoeist and conservationist, Gramann is especially proud that
his musical urgings raise public awareness of river and environmental
issues. Sometimes it is a long process. His song
“Rappahannock Running Free” first called for the removal of an aging
dam in 1993. It voiced the dreams of fishermen and paddlers since
the dam was built. In February, 2004, Gramann had the honor of
singing this song to a crowd of thousands just minutes before two major
explosions breeched the dam’s foundation. “I performed for
the world,” says Gramann of the CNN and network coverage of the
event. The removal of the dam exposed 4 rapids, allowed the
upstream migration of anadromous fish for the first time in 150 years,
and demonstrated the power of folk music when coupled with plastic
explosives.
You can see Bob perform at the Friends of the Rappahannock Concerts in
Fredericksburg, infrequent restaurant gigs, the Fredericksburg
Songwriters' Showcase , and at folk coffee houses in the Washington,
D.C. area.
Bob runs the Fredericksburg Songwriters' Showcase , a monthly concert
series featuring original acoustic music by Fredericksburg area,
regional songwriters and "name acts", both resident and traveling
through. The Showcase provides a forum for this exciting and creative
art form. It offers a varied program on the last Friday of each
month.
Bob appeared in the March 2011 Songwriters' Showcase as well as showcases annually.
Page put together (with info & pics from Bob Gramann ) by Ernest Ackermann.
Send rants/rave to above mentioned Ackermann
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