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10th Annual MusicFest 'n Sugar Grove 2007

Grammy Award winner Doc Watson at the Music Fest in Sugar Grove North Carolina 2007

All photos and illustrations by Pat Johns ©2008
All Rights Reserved
See links to article references at the end of the article.

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July, 2007

The music began at 2 p.m. on Friday, July 13 and continued into late night Saturday the 14th. Crowd favorites The Kruger Brothers and Amantha Mill were joined this year by the Steep Canyon Rangers and Jim Lauderdale and for the first time in a few years, Doc Watson.

Admission to the Music Fest also included access to the Doc and Merle Watson Folk Art Museum inside the Old Cove Creek School with its collection of Doc and Merle Watson memorabilia. All of the proceeds from the MusicFest benefit the museum.

The Steep Canyon Rangers at the Music Fest in Sugar Grove North Carolina 2007

Crowd-pleasing newcomers to this years' event were the Steep Canyon Rangers, a group which formed at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The group received numerous standing ovations from the audience. Their fine talent, fresh sound and great showmanship made them a standout.

Grammy Award winner Doc Watson at the Music Fest in Sugar Grove North Carolina 2007

"Over the last 50 years the guitar has had a very powerful influence on American music. Predominantly a rhythm instrument at the turn of the century, the guitar began to step out of the rhythm section in the 1930s and 40s and has maintained a dominant presence in every form of music from rock, to folk, to country, bluegrass, blues and old-time. While Elvis, the Beatles, Bob Dylan and other pop icons of the 50s and 60s certainly played a large role in bolstering the guitar's popularity, the man who has had the deepest, most enduring and most profound influence on the way the acoustic flat top guitar is played as a lead instrument in folk, old-time and bluegrass music today is Arthel "Doc" Watson."

~ "A Biography of Doc Watson" by Dan Miller, edited by Steve Carr (see link below)

"Most guitarists don't have to rummage through their memories for long to recall the first time and place they heard Doc Watson. For young flatpicking phenom Bryan Sutton, it was the Stomping Ground in Maggie Valley, North Carolina, when he was about ten years old. "He was the first guitar player I ever saw live who was doing what I was trying to do," Sutton recalls. "I'd never heard anybody flatpick like that."
~ Acoustic Guitar Magazine June 2003

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11-year old fiddler Maura Shawn Scanlin at the Music Fest in Sugar Grove North Carolina 2007 with Doc Watson Steep Canyon Rangers and Kruger Brothers

Early on Saturday morning the gathering crowd was treated to a performance by 11-year old "violinist/fiddler" Maura Shawn Scanlin who lives just down the road in the Cove Creek Community. Maura Shawn performed Celtic music on the main stage and then lead the audience (see photo at right) to the new Southern Exposure's Solar Stage where she performed again !

Maura Shawn performs with 2 other young violinists/fiddlers in the group they call The Forget~Me~Knots. According to her biography on their website (see link below) she began playing the violin in 1999 and currently studies at the Appalachian State University Community Music School. According to the site, " She enjoys playing soccer, swimming, horseback riding, gardening, reading, drawing, and painting in addition to her musical interests."

Local vendor Bald Guy Brew at the Music Fest in Sugar Grove North Carolina 2007 with Doc Watson Steep Canyon Rangers and Kruger Brothers

Bald Guy Brew roasted coffee beans and provided hot coffee to the crowd on both unusually cool evenings.

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Links to references in this article and to sites related to the MusicFest in Sugar Grove: