The Cabin Hunter's Mandolin CD features :
Charlie Hunt on mandolin, octave mandolin, autoharp, tenor guitar and percussion; Nancy Bayer on piano and accordion; Sandra Chaffin and Susie Hallinan on fiddles; Will Putman on guitar; Robin Dale Ford on electric bass; Trudy Heffernan on acoustic bass; Pat Fitzgerald on percussion; Bill Connor on flute and saxophone; and Brendan Cox on mandolin.
Influences
Hibbard Perry, Peter Ostroushko, John Reischman, David Surrette, Paul Kotapish, TJ Johnson
Sounds Like
Contradance, Celtic Bellydance, New Acoustic, Folk
About Charlie Hunt Mandolin Player, Fairbanks, Alaska
Charlie Hunt is a mandolin player living in Fairbanks, the Northern most city in Alaska. His new CD, The Cabin Hunter’s Mandolin, is Charlie’s first CD. It is an eclectic blend of instrumental tunes selected and played by Charlie with help from some of Fairbanks Alaska’s finest acoustic musicians. The CD is a reflection of Charlie’s wide ranging interest in varied music genres: folk, rock, new acoustic and his experience playing contra dance music.
Originally hailing from Rhode Island, Charlie has been living and playing music in Fairbanks for 26 years. While living in Rhode Island, he took classical mandolin lessons from the renowned fretted instrument teacher Hibbard Perry. Mr. Perry had recently founded the Providence Mandolin orchestra and asked Charlie to join playing second mandolin. Charlie’s interest in musical arrangement and harmony stemmed from playing in the second mandolin section of the orchestra. Charlie later worked in Germany and played in The Jolly Beggarmen with Irish and Scottish musicians. This band morphed into Puzzle which included a German folk couple. The German couple sometimes sang in Platt Deutsch, or Low German spoken in the lowlands of Northern Europe. In 1982, Charlie transferred to a position in Fairbanks, Alaska. He arrived in Fairbanks with little more than the clothes on his back, a civil service job and his mandolin. He was immediately absorbed into a thriving folk music community. He became a member of the Cabin Hunters, a loose association of musicians interested in Celtic Music. The band was named after an Irish tune, and because the members of the band were desperate to find a place to live in the post pipeline era in Fairbanks. In 1983, Charlie found his cabin which he still lives in to this day. The rest of the members followed their dreams outside of Alaska.
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