18-Feb-09 3:30 PM CST
iFest Announces Music Line up for 2009 Event
HOUSTON SPOTLIGHTING IRELAND
Ladies, Plena Libre, Marc Broussard, Marcia Ball, Flaco Jimenez,
Rootz Underground, The Wailing Souls, Alpha Yaya Diallo, Little Joe Y La Familia, CJ
Chenier, BeauSoleil, Keith Frank, Mariachi Los Arrieros, Beoga, Kevin Burke, Julie Fowlis,
Step Rideau, Big Sam’s Funky Nation, Soul Rebels, J. Paul Jr., Danny O’Flaherty, Jody Nix,
Joel Guzman, Terri Hendrix, Jones Family Singers, Little Brian Terry, Chic Gamine,
Houston’s Championship Irish Dancers And Much More!
music lineup showcasing a host of top artists from around the globe. The 38th annual Festival returns to downtown Houston April 18-19 and 25-26, 2009, featuring continuous music, dance and cultural
performances on 12 stages.
Players, April 18; soul/gospel queen Mavis Staples, April 19; South African jazz trumpeter Hugh Masekela,
April 25; and Chicano roots-rockers Los Lobos, hosting the festival’s “Celtic/Conjunto” finale, April 26. International acts include Nigeria’s Seun Kuti & Egypt 80, Puerto Rico’s Plena Libre, Jamaica’s Rootz Underground and the Wailing Souls, Guinea’s Alpha YaYa Diallo and Quebec’s Chic Gamine, joined by Louisiana’s homegrown R&B/soul crooner Marc Broussard. Each year, iFest’s World Stage puts the
best of world music next to the finest American roots music to demonstrate how music can
communicate across cultural and linguistic barriers. This year’s lineup is one of our greatest yet.
front of Houston’s City Hall. Headliners include Ireland’s hottest new band, Beoga, from County Down;
Boston’s celebrated Irish-American lasses, Cherish the Ladies; and Scotland’s enchanting Gaelic thrush,
Julie Fowlis. These incredible artists will be joined each night by an all-star team of Houston’s champion
Irish dancers, drawn from the local troupes McTeggart, O’Maoileidigh and Cass. While guests enjoy the fantastic entertainment lineup on Center Stage, unique eats will be close by in the surrounding food court.
grant from the Houston Endowment. The programming on this stage recreates the 2008 Smithsonian
Folklife Festival’s salute to Texas music, with headliners Marcia Ball, April 18; CJ Chenier, April 19; Little
Joe y la Familia, April 25; and Los Tres Reyes de Accordiones with Flaco Jimenez, Joel Guzman and
Jaime deAnda, April 26. The carefully curated lineup represents the state’s unique country, blues, gospel,
Hispanic and Cajun heritage, including El Paso’s fabulous Mariachi Los Arrieros, Big Spring’s legendary Jody Nix and
the Texas Cowboys, Bay City’s spirit-raising Jones Family Singers, Austin singer-songwriter Terri Hendrix, San
Antonio’s conjunto accordion kings Los Texmaniacs and Houston’s own ageless blues guitar hero, Texas Johnny
Brown. The Houston International Festival is proud to bring the Smithsonian’s hugely successful musical tribute in Washington D.C. back to the Lone Star State.
Paul Jr., Lil Brian Terry, Lil Malcolm, Cedric Watson, Feufollet and the Lost Bayou Ramblers. Step out to
New Orleans second-line funk with Big Sam’s Funky Nation, Soul Rebels and the Zulu Connection Mardi
Gras Indians. Groove to the Gulf Coast blues of Sherman Robertson, Mike Zito and Ezra Charles. This
stage is one of the most popular Festival destinations.
sessions hosted by the great fiddler from County Cork, Kevin Burke, along with authentic Irish pub grub
and brew. Joining Kevin and his trio each day will be top regional Irish and Celtic artists such as Danny O’Flaherty, Lonestar Stout, Clandestine and Constant Billy, as well as acoustic Texas artists the Quebe
Sisters Band, Les Amis Creole, Charles Thibodeaux and the Gillette Brothers. Each day, a
programming segment will be dedicated to Texas artists meeting Irish artists to demonstrate the Celtic connection to regional country, Cajun and Creole traditions.
goers to camp out for a few hours, enjoy the shade and a cold beverage while listening to a variety of
music genres. At this year’s Festival, the stage will present a stylistically diverse mix of the top local and
regional bands, including Irish rockers the Blaggards, the Killdares and Needfire; honky-tonker James
Hand; gospel shouters the Original Soul Invaders; polka stompers Mark Halata & Texavia; and Zydeco
party hounds Big Red & the Playmakers and the Zydeco Dots.
telling bards to Irish step-dance lessons, cooking demonstrations and literary readings, these stages
honor the ongoing ancestral connection between Ireland and the Irish in America. Each Festival day will
kick-off with a marching bagpipes band parade from the Gaelic Stage to Center Stage.
diverse mix of Flamenco, Mariachi, Ballet Folklorico, Conjunto, Salsa, and Spanish Celtic music. African drumming, dancing and Caribbean parades will fill Lower Tranquility Park, where the new African-
Caribbean Zone picks up where last year’s festival honoring the theme “Out of Africa” left off.
dance troupes and youth groups showcasing Houston’s abundance of international diversity – from Africa and Asia to Europe and the Americas. Of course, the local Irish dance troupes will be prominently featured
each day with their colorful costumes and golden curls. And offering further evidence of Houston’s
importance as an international center, the Sister Cities Stage features excellent music and dance programming presented by the local Sister Cities Associations.
Sundays, Noon to 9 p.m. The Festival will also host a free lunchtime concert on Friday, April 17 following
the official ribbon-cutting and opening day ceremonies at 11 a.m. on Center Stage.
purchase at H-E-B stores:
- $7.50 St. Patty’s Special Advance Tickets
Available March 1 – 31, online only
- $10.00 Early-Bird Admission
Available April 1 – 13, online and H-E-B Stores
- $15.00 Regular Admission
Available April 14 through end of Festival and at the Gate
- FREE Target Kids Free (kids 12 and under are FREE)
All proceeds benefit the Festival arts and education programs.
Festival’s official website at www.ifest.org.
Rating: 5.00 / 5.00
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1 ratings
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For additional information on this articles article, please contact:
Tracy Golden
(713) 722-9433
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Big up, this is Mikey from IDIGINIS - playing at 4:30pm Sat 4/25 on Sister Cities stage - check out the vibes @ www.myspace.com/idiginis and come out to support - very excited to see Wailing Souls and Rootz Underground especially if you truly love reggae! Blessed love, Jah Rastafari.
O M G! Marc Broussard! YAY!
FINALLY, after all these years, you've got a REAL CAJUN band coming and I hope all you IFest people who book the music are at the Louisiana Stage on April 25th to hear the Lost Bayou Ramblers. Zydeco is good but zydeco is NOT Cajun. Zydeco is South Louisiana Black Creole music. There is a vast difference so come hear for yourselves. (You had Steve Riley and the Mamou Playboys here some years back and about all they played is Rock & Roll, not Cajun as they are noted for. They were a BUST.)
I have heard of this fest...am a stong addict to international/world/festival muszak..especially when its live, as all real muzak is live and kicks..cept for canned music, canned music on my radio..(can you name the group that sang that), if you can, you were not part of the 60/70s in SF..countryjoe.com..he fails to remember the 60's..I expect the ifest to be a blast into the ether..way wildy hubbard..that is not the son of the old woman who lived in the shoe...upstart those redneck sons again.