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Mac Benford has
been a leading figure in the preservation and performance of
traditional Appalachian stringband music for more than thirty
years. He began playing clawhammer banjo in 1960, while a student
at Williams College. His interest in the authentic mountain
styles of playing the 5-string led him to the greatest living
masters of the time - players like Wade Ward, Kyle Creed, Tom
Ashley, and Roscoe Holcomb who would provide life-long inspiration
and models in the formation of his own style.
Moving to California’s
Bay Area in 1967, Mac began his professional performing career
with the much-beloved Dr. Humbead’s New Tranquility Stringband
and Medicine Show.This group specialized in the re-creation
of the old-time music captured on 78 rpm records from the 1920s,
most especially that of Charlie Poole and the North Carolina
Ramblers. The band played festvals (rock and folk), clubs,
coffeehouses up and down the West Coast, before it disbanded
in 1970.
In that year, Mac
began playing with Walt Koken and Bob Potts as the Fat City
Stringband. Honing their skills on the street corners of San
Francisco and old-time fiddler’s conventions in Virginia
and North Carolina, the three finally settled in New York State’s
Finger Lakes area, and there became the nucleus of the now-legendary
Highwoods Stringband. Their innovative sound, combining authentic
renditions of the tunes and songs from bygone days with the
driving power of the competition-oriented string music of the
'70s, knocked the old-time world on its ear and provided a
brand new model for the stringband revival.It was written that “more
than any other band of their time, they were responsible for
drawing a legion of new,young fans into old-time music by the
force of their musicianship and the fact that they were having
such a good time at it.”
Between 1972 and
1979, the Highwoods played most of the major American traditional
music festivals - the Smithsonian, the National, Kent State,
Philadelphia, Fox Hollow, Walnut Valley, Down Home, New Orleans
Jazz Fest, San Diego, Bluegrass Festival of the U.S., Brandywine,
etc. In 1974, they were part of a six-week State Department
tour through Latin America and in 1976, they toured Western
Europe. They joined the New Lost City Ramblers for a performance
at Carnegie Hall in 1978. A recording of this concert was later
nominated for a Grammy.
Following the Highwoods’ demise,
Mac formed the Backwoods Band and continued performing on the
same circuit with continuing success. This band featured virtuoso
singing and playing and added elements of blues, bluegrass,
Cajun, and western swing to their old-time sound. The mid-'80s
saw Mac reduce his extensive touring to devote more time to
his new family and their Mecklenburg, NY, farmstead. His occasional
appearances were with local groups or with a band called the
Uncles, which he founded with Rick Good to perform the wonderful
music of Uncle Dave Macon and to accompany Sharon Leahy’s
dance group, The Footnotes.
In 1990, Mac returned
to recording and the festival circuit with the highly acclaimed
Woodshed Allstars, which the NY Post called “the finest
stringband in America”. This talent loaded ensemble performed
their tightly crafted arrangements of old-time country music
and Marie Burns’ originals at concerts and festivals
across North America for seven years before they disbanded.
The band recorded a cassette on Marimac and a CD for Rounder.
Selections from these recordings have been featured on several
major compilations.
Currently, Mac
performs primarily with UpSouth, a rocking dance band, which
features older Southern fiddle tunes with piano back-up. The
band has developed an enthusiastic following on the Northeast
dance-circuit, and with the development of a solid vocal repertoire,
they are now beginning to appear at concerts and festivals.
Mac has long been known
for his solid mastery of a variety of traditional banjo styles.
His highly evolved clawhammer style, showcased on his recent releases,
Kentucky Favorites and Half Past Four, have recently made him a
much sought-after instructor at banjo camps across the country.
He has been a staff member at Ashoken, Augusta Heritage, Fiddle
Tunes, Banjo Camp North, Suwannee Banjo Camp, American Banjo Camp,
and Midwest Banjo Camp, to name a few.
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