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Bill Spence has been a musician for over 45 years, playing banjo, guitar, Autoharp and the instrument he is best known for today, the hammered dulcimer. In his high school days he formed a Skiffle band in the style of Englands Lonnie Donegan, playing for community organizations and school events. He took up his interest in hammered dulcimer in 1969 when he first met Howie Mitchell at the Fox Hollow Festival in Petersburg, NY. | ||
| In 1970 he formed a string band named Fennigs All-Star String Band with musicians living in the Albany, New York area brought together by a folk music organization known as The Pickn and Singn Gathern. For over ten years Bill conducted the monthly sings which were an integral part of each Gathern meeting. During the next few years at the Fox Hollow Festival in Petersburgh, New York he met and exchanged playing techniques with Howie Mitchell, Malcolm Dalglish, Walt Michael, Jay Round and John McCutcheon, among others. | |
In
1973 The Hammered Dulcimer with Bill
and Fennig's All-Star String Band was recorded in the Spence family's living
room
on a 2-track machine. Home-recorded, with liner notes written by Bill, this first
recording has sold over 60,000 copies. Until that time, there were virtually
no
recordings of hammered dulcimer music available. This lively "feel good" recording
captured the fancy of a new generation of musicians, and became the source of
inspiration for hundreds of new-found hammered dulcimer enthusiasts. The original
Fennigs All-Stars featured Bill on hammered dulcimer, Tom McCreesh on fiddle,
John Pedersen on banjo, and Joan Pelton on piano. |
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The Hammered Dulcimer marked the beginning of Front Hall Records, which during its 20-plus year existence recorded many popular folk artists, including Michael Cooney, Alistair Anderson, Louis Killen, John McCutcheon, John Roberts and Tony Barrand, Rick Lee, Lorraine Lee Hammond, and Walt Michael and Company. | ||
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From 1973 through 1978 Bill Spence and Fennigs All-Star String Band toured the East coast, playing concerts and contra dances. Bills wife, Andy, booked the band far and wide and called the dances. The group played at all the major folk festivals of the time including Fox Hollow, Mariposa, the Philadelphia Folk Festival, and many colleges and community events.
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In 1977 Bill and Andy were founding members of a not-for-profit corporation whose mission is to present folk and traditional music and dance to the general public through concerts and group instruction. Today Old Songs, Inc. has enjoyed a 25-year history of bringing acoustic music to the Capital District of New York State. | ||
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The February - April 2001 issue of the Dulcimer Players News featured an article on Bill's history and playing style. Click the photo and you'll be whisked to the DPN web site. | ||
| Biographical
Information: Born: August 1940, Iowa City, Iowa. Graduated with a BA in Communications 1962 University of Iowa. Army Security Agency, US Army 1962 - 1965. State University of New York at Albany, Television, Audio and Graphic Design until his retirement in 1998. Bill comes by his interest in Celtic music honestly, having Scottish, Irish and Scandinavian parents and grandparents. He lives in Voorheesville, NY with his wife "Andy" and has one daughter, Hannah, a graduate of Oberlin Conservatory of Music, Oberlin, OH. Thirty-seven years later the band still plays for contra dances and occasional weddings, festivals, concerts, and community events. |
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