Folk singer songwriter Dvorak to headline in Putnam County April 13
HENNEPIN IL - The Putnam County Historical Society welcomes Midwest troubadour Mark Dvorak to the Old Meeting House, 403 Old Highway 26 for a spring concert event.
“I try to mix it up,” said Dvorak who accompanies himself on guitar, 5-string banjo, 12-string guitar and other instruments. “The subject of ’The American Folk Song’ has always been fascinating to me. It all started by listening to Bob Dylan while in high school. I read the 1972 biography by Anthony Scaduto which led me to Pete Seeger. Seeger’s recordings and books opened the door to the music of Woody Guthrie, Lead Belly and a whole bunch of others. The songs represent a kind of an ongoing patchwork quilt of struggle, celebration, loss and triumph. And at the very core of these song - is storytelling."
Dvorak just released his 21st CD release Live & Alone, recorded in an empty concert hall during the height of the pandemic lock down. He is also has published his fourth book of essays, 31 Winters, which reflects on his long journey through music and teaching.
The Chicago Tribune has called Dvorak “masterful,” and the Fox Valley Folk Festival describes him as “a living archive of song and style.” Dvorak has won awards for journalism and children’s music, and was honored in 2013 with the FARM Lantern Bearer Award from Folk Alliance International. In 2008 he received the Woodstock Folk Festival Lifetime Achievement Award and in 2012 Rich Warren, long time host of The Midnight Special radio program named Dvorak “Chicago’s official troubadour.”
For information phone 815.303.7114 or log onto www.pchistorical.com. Learn more about Mark Dvorak at www.markdvorak.com.