[Cover design by Heather Loyd/Peninsula Daily News]

[Cover design by Heather Loyd/Peninsula Daily News]

WEEKEND: Centrum Festival of American Fiddle Tunes features performances through today (Saturday)

PORT TOWNSEND — Christine Balfa was quaking in her boots, just a little.

Never mind that she’s been coming to Centrum’s Festival of American Fiddle Tunes since she was a grade-schooler.

Never mind that she is nationally known as a teacher of Cajun music and culture at festivals such as this.

The daughter of the late Cajun master Dewey Balfa, she is a singer and multi-instrumentalist with nine albums to her credit.

But earlier this week, amidst the workshops at Fort Worden State Park, Fiddle Tunes artistic director Suzy Thompson asked her to do something she’s not all that comfortable with: teach a fiddle class.

“I’ve had a love-hate relationship with the fiddle all my life,” Balfa said.

She’s in her element while singing.

But the fiddle would frustrate because what she had in her head wasn’t coming out on those strings.

Balfa could not, however, tell Thompson no. She’s known the Fiddle Tunes director since Balfa was a girl of 5.

So you know what? “I’m just going to go for it,” and tell the class she’s learning right along with them.

Sure, you’re vulnerable. But “if you’re staying in your safe zone, you’re not really living,” said Balfa.

Along with more than 30 faculty members and 300 students, she’s living it up at Fiddle Tunes.

After a week of classes, jams, band labs and dances, the festival culminates in three public performances at McCurdy Pavilion, the big hall at Fort Worden State Park.

Today’s 1:30 p.m. “Fiddles on Fire” concert brings together 12 artists from two continents: Kentucky’s Bruce Greene and John Haywood; Denmark’s Kristian Bugge, Morten Alfred Hoirup and Sonnich Lydom; Lisa Ornstein, Andre Marchand and Normand Miron of Quebec, Canada; Shaye Cohn and John James of New Orleans and New England’s Sandy Bradley and Rodney Miller.

Miller, a National Endowment for the Arts-designated Master Fiddler and New Hampshire’s state artist laureate, calls Fiddle Tunes plain amazing, an experience where he feels “surrounded, welcomed and encouraged.”

He urges the uninitiated to come to the concerts, which will travel around the globe as well as back and forth in time. The tunes, Miller said, range from originals, straight from his own head and heart, to traditionals more than a century old.

In this place, “the music is very powerful,” he said.

“It’s just a rich heritage the world has.”

Public performance No. 2, titled “North and South,” comes to McCurdy Pavilion at 7:30 tonight. It promises more roaming: to Ireland with fiddler Brian Conway, his sister Rose Conway Flanagan and Mark Simos; down to Georgia with Frank Maloy and Mick Kinney; to the West Coast with Ruthie Dornfeld, Jody Stecher and Kate Brislin; to Scotland with Calum MacKinnon and Lisa Scott and to Louisiana with Cajun artists Anya Burgess, Kristi Guillory, Christine Balfa and friends.

“Such a variety of fiddle music, I have never come across in my life,” said Flanagan, who grew up in the Bronx, N.Y., and now lives in the fiercely Irish-American community of Pearl River, N.Y.

“Everyone is so good. It’s really intimidating,” added the fiddler, who is humble despite her biography.

She teaches at the Pearl River School of Irish Music and at fiddle camps from Alaska to Baltimore to Sligo, Ireland. As a performer, she plays in ensembles including the Green Gates Ceili Band and on “Forget Me Not,” her debut album with flutist Laura Byrne.

Oh, and she was inducted two years ago into the international Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eireann (“Gathering of Irish Musicians”) hall of fame.

At Fiddle Tunes, Flanagan relishes the fact that musicians from varying genres take her classes; there were nearly 60 in one session.

They come to learn triplets and stutters and “ways to make their Irish fiddle tunes sound more Irish,” she said.

“I show them different techniques, like holding on to a note before going on to the next . . . or sliding down out of the note. That gives it a little more mournful sound.”

Such nuance is key, obviously, but mournful will not be the feeling Saturday at Fiddle Tunes’ Independence Day finale. The 1:30 p.m. Fiddles on the Fourth concert, again at McCurdy Pavilion, will be a party with music from across North America:

Kinnon and Betty Lou Beaton from Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Vesta Johnson and Steve Hall from Missouri, Suzy Thompson and friends from California; bluegrass artists Billy Baker with Jack Hinshelwood and friends and Don Pedro, Miguel and Hermenegildo Dimas from Michoacan, Mexico.

Thompson, artistic director of Fiddle Tunes for 15 years now, bowed to her fellow musicians.

“The joy and generosity with which our faculty shares their music with us and with each other,” she said, “continues to amaze me.”

More in News

Joe McDonald, from Fort Worth, Texas, purchases a bag of Brussels sprouts from Red Dog Farm on Saturday, the last day of the Port Townsend Farmers Market in Uptown Port Townsend. The market will resume operations on the first Saturday in April 2026. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
End of season

Joe McDonald of Fort Worth, Texas, purchases a bag of Brussels sprouts… Continue reading

Clallam requests new court contracts

Sequim, PA to explore six-month agreements

Joshua and Cindy Sylvester’s brood includes five biological sons, two of whom are grown, a teen girl who needed a home, a 9-year-old whom they adopted through the Indian Child Welfare Act, and two younger children who came to them through kinship foster care. The couple asked that the teen girl and three younger children not be fully named. Shown from left to right are Azuriah Sylvester, Zishe Sylvester, Taylor S., “H” Sylvester, Joshua Sylvester (holding family dog Queso), “R,” Cindy Sylvester, Phin Sylvester, and “O.” (Cindy Sylvester)
Olympic Angels staff, volunteers provide help for foster families

Organization supports community through Love Box, Dare to Dream programs

Sequim City Council member Vicki Lowe participates in her last meeting on Dec. 8 after choosing not to run for a second term. (Barbara Hanna/City of Sequim)
Lowe honored for Sequim City Council service

Elected officials recall her inspiration, confidence

No flight operations scheduled this week

There will be no field carrier landing practice operations for… Continue reading

Art Director Aviela Maynard quality checks a mushroom glow puzzle. (Beckett Pintair)
Port Townsend puzzle-maker produces wide range

Christmas, art-history and niche puzzles all made from wood

Food programs updating services

Report: Peninsula sees need more than those statewide

U.S. Rep. Emily Randall, D-Port Orchard.
Randall bill to support military families passes both chambers

ANCHOR legislation would require 45-day relocation notification

x
Home Fund supports rent, utility assistance

St. Vincent de Paul helps more than 1,220 Sequim families

EYE ON THE PENINSULA: Peninsula boards set to meet on Monday

Meetings across the North Olympic Peninsula

Hill Street in Port Angeles is closed due to a landslide. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Hill Street closed due to landslide

Hill Street is closed due to an active landslide.… Continue reading

Tippy Munger, an employee at Olympic Stationers on East Front Street in Port Angeles, puts out a welcoming display for holiday shoppers just outside the business’ door every day. She said several men have sat there waiting while their wives shop inside. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Holiday hijinks

Tippy Munger, an employee at Olympic Stationers on East Front Street in… Continue reading