Doc Watson
Merlefest was founded in 1988 as a small memorial for the Eddy Merle Watson, tragically killed in a tractor accident in 1985. The first festival was presented on the campus of Wilkes Community College in Wilkesboro, NC on a trailer bed with hay bales scattered around and many of Merle and his father Doc Watson's friends participating in a benefit to raise funds for a memorial garden in his name. There aren't many hay bales on the College campus any longer as Merlefest has grown into the largest festival held in the east and one of the most important acoustic Americana festivals in the nation. Each year, between seventy-five and eighty thousand people attend this event over a four day period during the last weekend in April. This year's dates are April 28 - May 1. Fans attending the festival are confronted with an often bewildering schedule presenting nearly 100 different bands on thirteen sound stages spread around the College campus. This post is presented as a guide to help people negotiate the ins and outs of attending Merlefest getting the most enjoyment from it as possible.
Audience Behind Reserve Seat Area
Watson Stage
Planning: It's never too early to start planning your visit to Merlefest. Fortunately, the folks who run the festival give you lots of help on the Merlefest web site. If you download and print the material now, you can study the schedule in order to decide who you want to see as well as where and when you want to see them. Many performers at Merlefest, even major ones, play multiple shows at different stages. Only the major headliners who close Watson Stage in evenings and some other special events are limited to one performance. If you want to see Robert Plant and the Dream Band, Randy Travis, or Lyle Lovett, you'll have to do it at the Watson Stage. Otherwise, you may have several choices, making it easier for you to schedule. There are two essential tools you need to download and print in order to get it all: The Schedules and The Map. There's also a broad scale Festival Grid showing you day by day every performance taking place. Combining these tools with the Lineup grid will give you a good idea of who's appearing where. This nifty new tool has a small clock icon attached to the name of each performer. Click on the clock, and you'll see all the venues and times for each specific performer. This little tool can help you avoid conflicts for performers who are must see people for you. Check it out! For instance, you can see The Infamous Stringdusters at the Midnight Jam in Walker Center on Saturday night (extra ticket) or on the Watson Stage early Sunday afternoon. The Peter Rowan Bluegrass Band has shows on the Watson Stage on Friday afternoon and the Traditional Stage on Saturday. (If you want to get up close and personal, the Traditional Stage will be more satisfactory for you.) Furthermore, bands with a web presence have live links on this page, enabling you to check them out, hear their music, and make more informed decisions. Use the links provided in the lineup section and YouTube to check out bands you don't know, but would like to know more about before you commit an hour or more to seeing them.
Audience for The Avett Brothers
Sunday Afternoon
It's quite a distance from the Creekside Stage, located behind the main Watson Stage to Walker Center at the top of the campus and nearby Hillside. In recent years, as we've become less mobile, we spend less time at Hillside, but still manage to get up to Walker Center for a couple of shows, because it's such a good concert venue with fine bands playing there. And it's air-conditioned. There are also indoor, air-conditioned auditoriums at Mayes Pit and The Lounge. For those wishing to avoid the hike up to the Walker Center, go to Lowes Hall, one of the large buildings surrounding the Plaza. Inside, take the elevator to the top floor. From there, you can walk up a gentle ramp to Walker Center. This is also a good way to get up to the top of the Hillside Stage area. You can then walk down to find a seat and continue walking down through the Plaza to return to the lower areas of the campus. Careful study of the Map will make this route more clear. However, unless you pick one or two venues and stay at them throughout the day, at Merlefest you're going to walk.
The Watson Stage
The Stages: Merlefest has thirteen different sound stages, dominated by the main stage - Watson. Placed against a hill with stately trees rising above it, beautifully lit by spotlights, the Watson Stage seats about 6,000 people in reserved seats with a vast field behind the reserved seat area that can accomodate perhaps twenty thousand in all. The reserved seat area of Watson is available to all until 5:00 P.M. After that, only those with reserved seat wrist bands are admitted. At times during the day, the Watson Stage seats appear as a huge empty gulf, but in the evening they are often filled for top acts. A huge JumboTron makes it easy to view performances, even from a distance, and the sound is superb at any distance. Those with strong bladders can often manage to come in just before five and then move from place to place as the seats' owners appear. As at any festival, you may occupy open seats until their rightful ticket holders arrive. Some of the bands appearing on the Watson Stage this year: Emmit-Nershi Band, The Doobie Brothers, Tony Rice Unit, Tribute to John Hartford, Michael Cleveland & Flamekeeper, Sam Bush, Lyle Lovett, The Infamous Stringdusters, Tim O'Brien, and Robert Plant & the Band of Joy.
Creekside Stage
Creekside During Mando Mania
The Americana Stage: Located on a busy corner in front of Johnson Hall in the middle of the campus, The Americana Stage often attracts and captures people on the way past as well as drawing those wishing to see headline artists in a closer setting. Most seating here is on the ground, which is flat, so consider bringing a folding chair. Sun screen is essential. Some of the band appearing at Americana include: Johnson's Crossroads, Rusty Knox, The John Hartford String Band, Sarah Jarosz, Casey Driessen, Town Mountain, Lost Bayou Ramblers, Wailin' Jennies.
The Americana Stage
Audience at Americana
The Hillside Stage
The Hillside Stage during Album Hour
Little Pickers
Little Pickers, hosted by Andy May, is located in the area devoted to children's activities located at the back of the field in front of Watson Stage. The area includes a number of activities designed to appeal to children or give them a chance to perform. Clowns on stilts, inflatable bouncers, and the not to be missed Alberti Flea Circus. The Little Pickers tent is often filled with proud parents, but also represents an opportunity to renew your faith that the future of bluegrass music is in good hands. Merlefest does its best to be family friendly and, for the most part, succeeds. It appears to me that the small Austin Stage where blues and alt.bluegrass have been presented in the past has been moved indoors and will be the stage for the Austin Song Writing Contest as well as the various instrument contests. Since there are thirteen sound stages, I've only presented a sample. Your time spent studying the schedule will be richly rewarded.
Bluegrass at Merlefest: Some people have complained that Merlefest is no longer a "real" bluegrass festival. I seriously doubt that it was ever purely a bluegrass festival, but let's look at the offerings to examine the amount of bluegrass available during Merlefest. First, for people seeking to have plenty of opportunity to jam or to watch others jam, the area hosted by the Wilkes Acoustic Folk Society has three tents and plenty of space (#7 on the Merlefest map) near the Traditional Tent. There's practically non-stop picking here during the festival. In addition, early arrivals to Wilkesboro can find picking there from 6:00 PM until around 9:30 on Monday through Wednesday evenings. It's not unusual to see the Kruger Brothers there, Tut Taylor and his friends, and many other local pickers mixing with pickers from around the country and the rest of the world. By Wednesday evening, early arriving professionals are often seen there.
The Pickin' Place
Eating and Shopping
Recently, as part of its effort to make the campus a greener place and reduce the crowded feeling of Merlefest, the Merlefest staff has spread eating and shopping opportunities into an ever wider range of places. The main food tent contains mostly meals and larger snacks prepared by local service and school organizations, representing the major fund raising effort for these groups. Food offerings range from barbecue (both chicken and pork) to Thai and Italian platters as well as coffee, soft drinks, sandwiches, and such. Prices are reasonable considering the size and quality of the meals. It's best the schedule your eating away from regular meal times and Watson Stage breaks, as the lines become pretty long then.
The Food Tent
Other eating places are distributed around the campus selling coffee, ice-cream, hot dogs, and other snacks as well as a vendor in the children's area selling funnel cakes and other traditional fair food. Many people, especially those semi-camped on blankets behind the reserved seat area in front of the Watson Stage often bring coolers in with them containing cold (non-alcoholic) drinks, sandwiches...a full day's supply of food thus saving a considerable amount of money within the festival grounds. Remember, if you bring a cooler, your entry to Merlefest will be slower as it will be carefully inspected for banned fluids and open containers. You might even expect to have the cap on your water bottle inspected.
The Merlefest Mall
Located right on your pathway to the Watson Stage, the Merlefest Mall is the central sales area for all CD's being sold by bands as well as t-shirts and other band memorabilia. Staffed by the Wilkes County Chamber of Commerce, a $3.00 premium is added to each item. The good news is that there are recordings for sale here that are not always easy to find, old Doc Watson recordings, for instance. At the other side of the stage is the Exposition Tent where instrument vendors, gear purveyors, and others show off their wares. Often you can find endorsers at their instrument company's booth. The instruments are there for you to play, and there's often some pretty good pickin' going on in there, as well as some excellent buys. As the weekend progresses, prices often begin to come down and exceptional bargains can sometimes be found since vendors would rather not carry their instruments home with them.
The Exposition Tent
The Shops at Merlefest, three longish rows of vendor tents you must pass through on your way into and out of the festival, offer varied and interesting items to purchase. Some instrument vendors who would rather pay less than the fee for the Expo tent are set up here, as well as clothing (non-official but often necessary), art, toys, and much more. Cook's Sporting Goods from N. Wilkesboro has a large booth offering the things you forgot to bring - broad brimmed hats, good walking shoes, and other outdoor gear. Be sure to stroll through this area several times during the weekend. The Heritage Crafts tent displays higher end regional crafts, often with the craftsperson working on making brooms, instruments, or jewelry. There's some really nice gift stuff here.
The Shops at Merlefest
A note on toilet facilities is worthwhile here. You can't attend a festival that has better or more carefully tended toilet facilities than Merlefest. Ranging from ordinary every-day portable toilets to air-conditioned full service facilites scattered around the grounds, the portables and the indoor toilets in the buildings are frequently cleaned and provided in sufficient quantity. A look at the lines would suggest that about twice as many flush toilet portables should be provided for women than for me. Lines are short, the facilites are clean. What more could you ask? Facilities are conveniently located near all venues and scattered about the campus.
Merlefest can become the highlight of you annual festival trips, or it can be pretty much a disaster for you. The difference lies in your ability to plan your activities and pace yourself, realizing that you can't possibly see and do everything in one four day weekend. The festival is about much more than the music. Enjoy the various elements available to you, and have a wonderful time.
Clothing: Each day we come down to the Wilkes Community College campus from our trailer with two backpacks containing enough clothing to provide for any changes in weather the foot hills of the Smokies provide in spring. The Watson Stage is backed by a low hill over which chill, damp air flows down into bottomland on clear cool evenings. People come equipped with parkas and sleeping bags to stay warm on such evenings. At other times, when it's a little overcast after a warm day, you can stay 'til closing in a t-shirt. Remember, staying warm requires keeping your extremities warm and dry. Nothing beats a spare pair of dry, warm socks, gloves, and a knit cap. Beyond that, zip-off pants that allow you to cover your legs, a moderately heavy fleece, and a rain parka or coat usually suffice. We carry folding umbrellas with us, also. We've rarely had four consecutive days without rain in the years we've attended Merlefest. But it's also important to carry sun block and a wide brimmed hat.
There are lots of ways to make Merlefest more expensive. You can buy reserved seats, eat all your meals from the vendors, buy lots of CD's and t-shirts, enter all the instrument raffles, and even become a festival sponsor. All these help provide needed support to the college and the organizations who rely on Merlefest as their most important fund raiser. But where else can you hear ninety-seven (that's 97) different bands, groups, or individual performers for a basic four day entry price of $140 until March 13, and $155 thereafter. There are a number of ticket alternatives. Merlefest is located on the Wilkes Community College campus. The map below shows you how to get there. There's lots of free parking across the street from the college along route 268, and free shuttles are provided by the Boy Scouts. Please contribute liberally to the tip jar on these.
Merlefest can become the highlight of you annual festival trips, or it can be pretty much a disaster for you. The difference lies in your ability to plan your activities and pace yourself, realizing that you can't possibly see and do everything in one four day weekend. The festival is about much more than the music. Enjoy the various elements available to you, and have a wonderful time.
Ted...an amazingly informative look at MF as always...but what about my Cabin Stage? It's pretty cool too.
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Thanks for this fantastic preview, Ted. It's made me even more excited about MerleFest!!
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