One brooding afternoon I walked along Dunn’s Marsh in Fitchburg WI when a chilling cry pierced the rustling breeze. It sounded like a call of the wild through time, echoing the ancient history of life cycles. I looked up and […]
Kevernacular (Kevin Lynch) is a veteran, award-winning arts journalist, educator and visual artist. He won The Milwaukee Press Club's 2013 gold award for "Best Critical Review of the Arts" for my Culture Currents blog "Edward Curtis Preserved America's Vanishing Race for Posterity." The Aug. 22 posting reviewed a photo exhibit at The Museum of Wisconsin Art by Curtis, who documented the passing of America's original Native American culture and society in the early 20th century.
He was a long-time staff arts writer for The Capital Times in Madison and The Milwaukee Journal, where he was lead writer of a Pulitzer-nominated Newspapers in Education project called "That's Jazz."
KL at the Blue Plum Music and Arts Festival, Johnson City, Tennessee, June 2012. photo by Sheila Lynch
Among other publications, he's written for Down Beat, The Village Voice, The Chicago Tribune, New Art Examiner, Rain Taxi, American Record Guide, CODA (The Canadian jazz magazine), Wisconsin Natural Resources Magazine, Scene PBS TV magazine (Minneapolis), Graven Images: A Journal of Culture, Law and the Sacred; The Shepherd Express, OnMilwaukee.com and he has been a featured blogger on roots music for NoDepression.com. He's taught cultural journalism, English rhetoric and composition (while earning half of the credits for a PhD. in American Literature), and film studies. He served as a music program host for WLUM-FM and WMSE-FM in Milwaukee. He's also working on a novel, Melville's Trace or, The Jackal. Kevin is a also a visual artist and studied jazz piano and theory at the Wisconsin Conservatory of Music. A recent hand disability keeps him from piano playing these days. He lives in Milwaukee.
STATEMENT: In blog writing and reporting, I strive to maintain and espouse the same journalistic standards of professionalism cultivated in over 30 years as a working arts journalist. Given the freedom of the blogosphere, misinformation compounds and spreads at an alarming rate. So, maintaining such standards is more important than ever, even as I welcome the new freedom and vibrancy.
My blogger's moniker suggests a particular hybrid quality as a cultural observer. My sense is that meaningful distinctions between fine and vernacular art blur in the cultural currents -- aside from functional genre names. I've covered and researched both realms plenty and categories help identify and clarify -- fine vs. folk vs. pop art - but there's no hierarchy of quality among genres or traditions, in my mind. As Duke Ellington said, "There's two kinds of music, good music and bad music."
"Vernaculars speak" implicitly nags the old culture-class question of, say, who's better: Bob Dylan or Dylan Thomas? Pop culture poet/songwriter Bob Dylan is taken seriously today by intelligencia, of course -- almost to death. But I think that beyond Bob, and because of him, the craft and art of songwriting has spread and grown almost exponentially in many vernacular idioms, often in new hybrids. And that phenomenon is important and noteworthy.
One brooding afternoon I walked along Dunn’s Marsh in Fitchburg WI when a chilling cry pierced the rustling breeze. It sounded like a call of the wild through time, echoing the ancient history of life cycles. I looked up and […]
Notice mountaineer Bills Briggs’ ski tracks zig-zagging down from the summit of The Grand Teton, an unprecedented feat he accomplished on June 15, 1971, a few years before I climbed with him. Photo by Virginia Huidekoper. Do I start by […]
The Flatlanders with Jimmie Vaughn and the Tilt-a-Whirl Band in concert, Northern Lights Theater. The Flatlanders seem to embody the restless and intricate cultural development called roots music. When they performed last night at Potowatomie Casino in Milwaukee, you could […]
A bit like the Wizard of Oz, avuncular Paul Geremia toils in relative obscurity, as if behind a curtain while mustering his musical wonders. This remains true despite some critics asserting that he’s as good as anyone playing country blues. […]
Dicks Pick’s Volumes One and Two —The Grateful Dead, released in vinyl limited editions of 2000 in late November 2012. Many Deadheads will nod knowingly at my comments, but I’ve never been a true head, who ritualistically followed the Grateful […]
“Cast a cold eye On life, on death. Horseman, pass by!” W. B Yeats’ chilling epitaph for his own grave has always haunted me, since I first read it. I suspect it might also haunt singer-songwriter Jeffrey Foucault. Because it […]
This is a mystery story of sorts, with a twist or two, yet the mystery’s not impossible to solve. The question: Why Rodney Crowell is still emerging from the shadows, even though he ranks among the most esteemed singer-songwriters in Americana music […]
Various Artists – This One’s For Him: A Tribute to Guy Clark * (2 CD set) When writers as esteemed as John Prine, Steve Earle, Rodney Crowell, Emmylou Harris, Robert Earl Keen, Jerry Jeff Walker, Kris Kristofferson, Darrell Scott and […]
I’m rootin’ around again today but hey, it’s spring right? Actually Mr. Bill and Ms. Kitty, proprietors of Café Carpe in Fort Atkinson, gone done it again. They have a knack for digging up genuine borderline geniuses for their small […]
Just a brief note about what appears to be a new moniker for me, Kevernacular. It’s actually the byline for my blog Culture Currents (Vernaculars Speak) at www.kevernacular.com , where most of my NoDep blogs originate. You’ll find roundaboutly postings on virtually […]