Monday, July 21, 2008

Current Project

Aurora Lights will be releasing their newest project, a music CD centered on the culture and environmental issues in southern West Virginia, in June of 2009.  Check out our myspace page.  This music CD is the second music compilation Aurora Lights has produced, the first being “Moving Mountains: Voices of Appalachia Rise Up Against Mountaintop Removal.”

This new CD being compiled by Jen Osha and Sam McCreery and will have an online map component of participatory maps of the Coal River Valley. The participatory maps will consist of 3-5 layers focused on Coal River Valley as well as more detailed maps for areas of special concern. The maps serve as the central feature on the website through which additional multimedia, including web links, video, pictures, additional interviews and songs, can be geographically linked.

Aurora Lights was founded by Jen Osha in 1999 and has a mission to “strengthen connections within and between human communities and their natural environment.” In West Virginia, Aurora Lights supports hands-on environmental educational programs for college students, reforestation programs through their native trees nursery, and overseas opportunities for local students to travel to the Ecuadorian Amazon to experience First People’s connections to the land. They specifically organize, lead and fund weekend trips to the coalfields as well as summer internships.

The new compilation CD will have quite a line-up of musicians. A song from the up and coming band, Rising Appalachia (RISE), will also be featured on the CD. They have been compared Ani Difranco, The Be Good Tanyas and Bjork. Playing a fiddle, banjo, kalimba, and boudrhan, (with guests on the bass, trumpet, djembe, and more) the group Rising Appalachia offers a fresh, raw approach to traditional music. Keith and Joan Pitzer and Andrew McKnight have also submitted songs for consideration for the CD. They were featured on the Moving Mountains CD.

As with the Moving Mountains CD, the profits from this compilation will be donated back into the community in the form of direct grants. The proceeds from the Moving Mountains CD gave about $7,000 to coal field community members and non-profit organizations working to stop mountaintop removal coal mining.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

A Record Setting Year for the Mountain Keeper's Music Festival

The Mountain Keepers Music Festival saw record setting crowds as
more than three hundred made a long journey up to Kayford Mountain to celebrate Appalachian life while also supporting a truly beneficial clean energy economy. This was the second annual Mountain Keepers Music Festival. Held on Saturday, July
5th and Sunday, July 6th, speakers and organizations at the festival highlighted the absolute need to bring good paying green jobs to West Virginia while also defending our mountains from the ravages of Mountaintop Removal. This free concert is the premier music festival that celebrates environmental justice in southern West Virginia. The two day event featured local and regional musicians who played a variety of bluegrass, gospel, country and old time music, as well as children's games, a pot-luck meal and silent auction.

The purpose of the concert, according to local citizen activist Larry Gibson, is to show support for "human rights, health and water rights, and basically everything that we have." Larry Gibson, whose family has lived on the same land for over 230 years, has been working to protect his health, his heritage, and his community from the ravages of
Mountain Top Removal. This festival brought together Larry Gibson's family with people who actively work to end Mountaintop Removal and also with people who made their first visit to the mountain for an all around fun and warm weekend.

The festival featured many emerging artists who celebrate their homes and heritage. Elizabeth LaPrelle sang with her mother, Sandy LaPrelle who also played fiddle. Jim Savarino, who has played at festivals from Iowa to Texas, performed Appalachain roots
contemporary folk songs. Keith, Joan and Jake Pitzer brought together traditional and contemporary styles with down to earth lyrics. The Lone Tones, a popular Knoxville, Tennessee band, have garnered regional and national attention for their unique style, literate songwriting, and inspiring live shows also played.

For more information about the concert: www.myspace.com/mtkeepersfest

This event was sponsored by the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, Student Environmental Action Coalition and Coal River Mountain Watch.

For more information on the effects of mountaintop removal, please
visit www.crmw.net, www.ohvec.org, or www.seac.org.