
It takes some serious nurturing skills to raise a PineCone from a Tomader seed.
The Oldtime Music And Dance Enthusiasts of Raleigh (TOMADER) first got together in 1983 to establish a place for old time musicians to play in the Raleigh area. The focus has always been on traditional music, but in the beginning, the fledgling organization offered a rather limited menu of only bluegrass, gospel and blues in addition to the oldtime sounds.
In 1984, the name was changed to PineCone, and the focus of the music gradually broadened to include doo-wop, swing and world music. โOur mission statement is to preserve, promote and present the traditional folk arts,โ says Executive Director Susan Newberry. โIt now has expanded to include the folk music of a lot of different folks from a whole lot of different countries. PineCone really is presenting the folk music base of world music.โ
The organization has a three-pronged approach to presenting entertainment. The venue for their larger acts is Raleighโs 800-seat Stewart Theater on the NCSU campus. Regional acts are mostly displayed in the 350-seat Daniels Auditorium in the North Carolina Museum of History on free Sunday afternoon concerts. Local acts show up at Garnerโs Lake Benson Park in the summer where seating on the grassy lakeshore is unlimited. In the winter months, the show moves inside to the 500-seat Garner Historic Auditorium located in the 1921-era Garner School building on Garner Road. Both venues are free.
โWeโve had just about anybody whoโs anybody in the bluegrass world,โ says Newberry. Bill Monroe, Ralph Stanley, Doc Watson, Del McCoury, Ricky Scaggs, Peter Rowan, Tony Rice, Norman Blake, JD Crowe, Doyle Lawson, and Lynn Morris are past PineCone performers. Not all on the list have made it into the building however. โAlison Kraussโthe first time we presented her she couldnโt even drive a car, and it was in a field,โ Newberry says.
The director is proud of the fact that PineCone is one of the few places offering the opportunity for the real community artist to perform in public. The organization has presented nearly every N.C. Heritage award winner, including Etta Baker, Joe Thomson, Benton Flippen, and Ralph Blizzard. โAnd then we got into world music, and then we presented cowboy music and flat-pick guitar music, and weโre doing a good bit of Mexican programming,โ says Newberry. PineCone is considered the largest and most active organization presenting folk music in the state.
Past president Ben Runkel, who now sits on the board of directors, says that Newberry has been instrumental in bringing different local and regional performers to Garner and also to the Museum of History series. โWe talked about it a lot and decided as a board to start bring in more international kinds of artists there, especially if they relate to a population here in this area like Hispanic, Vietnamese, Indianโall kinds of things,โ Runkel said. โWe try to work some of that in into all of the series that we do and it has been pretty successful.โ
Februaryโs schedule features an international cast. The Gypsy and Klezmer influenced music of Les Yeux Noirs (The Black Eyes, named for a Django Reinhardt tune) featuring music from Romania, Hungary, Russia and Armenia is at Stewart Theater Thursday, Feb. 12 at 8 p.m. Ballet Regional Mexicano will perform two different sets of traditional dances from the Mexican states of Jalisco and Nuevo Leon at the Garner Auditorium Feb 22. The family dance troupe Los Viejitos (โThe Little Old Menโ) will perform a traditional dance from the state of Michoacan.
One act that Runkel was instrumental in getting and is proudest of was legendary Bob Wills fiddler Johnny Gimble appearing with a band of Nashville studio musicians, the Time Jumpers at the Stewart Theater. He is also proud to have been able to present in the Garner Theater local gospel artists The Capitol City Five. โThe whole mission, more or less, is to take these really talented but not necessarily well known performers and bring them out in to the public so people can see them. Thatโs the overarching thing that really turned me on about it,โ Runkel says.
In any given year, the organization puts 100-150 events and broadcasts fifty weekly radio shows. The PineCone Bluegrass Show, hosted by Tim Woodall and Larry Nixon on WQDR, 94.7FM on Sunday night from 6-9 p.m., is celebrating its 15th year on the air. Itโs been number one in its time slot since the day it went on the air. In addition to the shows it does at the three venues already mentioned, the organization has a program they call PineCone Sessions.
โWe offer the opportunity for folks in the community to get together and make music together,โ Newberry says of the monthly session. โThereโs a shape note group that we sponsor, there is a hammer dulcimer session, and we also sponsor an Irish music session that is really a beginnerโs session.โ
This year marks PineConeโs 20th anniversary season. โWeโre really excited about that, and hoping to put together a season that has some real what we hope will be once in a lifetime opportunities,โ Newberry says.
And the selection process for those opportunities is of course very serious and scientific, right? โAbout the criteria for selecting an artist, the biggest one is when everybody goes โwowโ when the name is mentioned,โ Newberry laughs.
โWe go, โYeah, thatโs who we ought to have.โ โ 
Upcoming PineCone events


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