Tag Archives: Apalachicola Doin’ Time

Apalachicola Documentary

Official website of the Murrow Award-Winning Documentary, “Apalachicola Doin’ Time” and various updates

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Rally for Apalachicola Bay in August before a Senate field hearing on the health of the bay. (photo by Donna Green-Townsend)

Tuesday, January 9, 2018 UPDATE: The U.S. Supreme Court began hearing arguments on Monday in the 30-year-old water dispute involving Florida, Georgia and Alabama known as the Tri-State Water War. Molly Samuel from public radio station WABE in Atlanta attended the oral arguments.  Click to hear her report.

June 1, 2017 UPDATE:  Florida asks U.S. Supreme Court to Save Apalachicola River, Oyster Industry:

TALLAHASSEE — Florida is telling the U.S. Supreme Court that it represents the state’s last legal remedy for saving the Apalachicola River and the oysters and people who depend on it.  Gov. Rick Scott in 2013 sued Georgia in the Supreme Court, seeking to cap Georgia’s water use upstream on the Chattahoochee and Flint rivers. But a court official recommended in February that the case be dismissed because Florida had not included the Army Corps of Engineers, which operates federal reservoirs on the Chattahoochee River. In a brief filed Wednesday, Florida argues that the court had never found that a state was harmed by upstream water use but then determined it was powerless to do anything about it. If the court dismisses the case, Georgia would be free to continue or increase its water use, Florida said. ….Click here for the full story.

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October 2013 UPDATE:   Florida Governor Rick Scott and Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi have moved forward with their plans to file a lawsuit in the U.S. Supreme Court over the decades old Tri-State Water War.  The lawsuit is primarily aimed at Georgia over that state’s withdrawals of water from the Chattahoochee-Apalachicola-Flint River system—a river system Alabama, Florida and Georgia all share.  At the heart of the ongoing debate is the health of Apalachicola Bay and Florida’s seafood industry.

Apalachicola Doin' Time

Click here to view highlights of the Senate field hearing held in Apalachicola on the issue in August of 2013. To learn more about how the Apalachicola community is affected by the “water war” listen and view segments below:

2000 Edward R. Murrow Award Winning Documentary

Pic I took at Apalachicola off Paddlewheel used for CD cover later
Fishing boats along the Apalachicola River bayfront (photo by Donna Green-Townsend)
Donna voicing the "Apalachicola Doin' Time" documentary at WUFT with co-hosts Daniel Beasley and Josh Azriel in 1999
Donna voicing the “Apalachicola Doin’ Time” documentary at WUFT with co-hosts Daniel Beasley and Josh Azriel in 1999
Now available: The full written transcript of the documentary with photos.
Introduction- to Re-Release of the Documentary Part One- The Issues
Part Two- Florida’s Oyster CapitolPart Three- Apalachicola’s Waterfront
Part Four- Water Quality and the Tri-State Water WarPart Five- Apalachicola’s History
Part Six- Tourism on the RisePart Seven- Water Quantity and the Tri-State Water War
Part Eight- Close and CreditsPart Nine- Epilogue

The Producers of Apalachicola Doin’ Time- (from left to right) Daniel Beasley, Joshua Azriel, Donna Green-Townsend and Bill Beckett)

Musicians Featured In Apalachicola Doin’ Time (featuring a sample of their music)

Dale Willfest 2001
Dale Crider

Dale Crider – Apalachicola Doin’ Time

"Changes In The Wind" Jeanie Fitchen
Jeanie Fitchen

Jeanie Fitchen – Changes In The Wind

"The River" Steve Gillette
Steve Gillette

Steve Gillette – The River

"Music Drifts" and "Margaret" Mike Jurgensen
Mike Jurgenson

Mike Jurgensen – Music Drifts

and Margaret

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Harvey Reid

Harvey Reid – Circles

ken skeens
Ken Skeens

Ken Skeens – Old Florida River

 
"Wisdom of the River" Mark Smith
Mark Smith

Mark Smith – Wisdom of the River

Various locations around Apalachicola, Florida and some of the people interviewed for the documentary.

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Musical Murrow Celebration

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Just prior to the RTDNA Murrow Award ceremony in Minneapolis, MN, singer songwriter Mark Smith had a celebration at his home which included several of the songwriters who had music utilized in the documentary. In this video Dale Crider sings the song that inspired the documentary.

Holding a portrait given to him by Donna Green-Townsend and George Floyd painted by Mary Ann DiNella
Crider holding a portrait given to him by Donna Green-Townsend and George Floyd painted by Mary Ann DiNella

For more than three decades Dale Crider worked as a wildlife biologist for the Florida Game and Freshwater Fish Commission.  During that time he also followed his other passion, songwriting.  Crider wrote many songs about environmental conditions in Florida.  “Apalachicola Doin’ Time” was one such song.  It was by chance nearly 30 years after Crider penned the song that Apalachicola resident, George Floyd, happened upon one of Crider’s music tapes and heard his song.  On that day the concept for the need to tell the story of the Tri-State Water War was born.  Crider is considered to be Florida’s Environmental Troubadour.  He has inspired musicians across Florida to write songs about the environment.

Listen to an hour-long special on Across the Prairie on WUFT regarding the Re-release and update of the Apalachicola Doin’ Time Documentary Dale and documentary co-producer Donna Green-Townsend were special guests on the longtime Sunday afternoon program on WUFT, Across the Prairie with host Cathy DeWitt.  Click on the audio button below.

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Cover of Apalachicola Doin’ Time CD

Copies of the two-CD set of “Apalachicola Doin’ Time,” including the music companion CD, are available through the non-profit Will McLean Foundation. Will McLean is considered the “Father of Florida Folk.”  He’s the first folk artist inducted into the Florida Artists Hall of Fame.  It was his mission to save Florida through music.

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In 2001 several of the musicians whose songs were used in the documentary were featured at not only the Will McLean Festival (March, 2001) but also the state’s official festival, The Florida Folk Festival (May, 2001). Click on the audio button below to hear the live presentation at the Will McLean Festival.  The late Jan Glidewell, longtime columnist with the Tampa Bay Times, introduced Donna Green-Townsend who hosted the special musical event.

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The late Homer Marks from Apalachicola

One of the key characters of the documentary, Homer Marks, lived to be 102.  (Homer died in 2005).  Click here to go to a special page dedicated to Homer Marks.

Dale Crider, Josh Azriel, Donna Green-Townsend and George Floyd and friend
Dale Crider, Josh Azriel, Donna Green-Townsend and George Floyd and friend

Funding for the “Apalachicola Doin’ Time” documentary was provided by a grant from George Floyd in memory of Jim Floyd and George Kirvin, two of the earliest heralds of the rivers and bays and their value as an undisturbed natural resource.

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Apalachicola Documentary Awards

1st Place National RTDNA Edward R. Murrow Award, Best Documentary

1st Place Southeast Regional RTDNA Edward R. Murrow Award, Best Documentary

1st Place Florida Associated Press Broadcasters, Public Affairs category

Silver Reel from the National Federation of Community Broadcasters, documentary category

Finalist, Atlanta Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, Green Eye Shade awards (Southeast 11 state Region)

Finalist, Society of Professional Journalists Sunshine State Awards, Public Affairs category

1st Place, BEA Student Interactive Multimedia competition in the Online category

Silver Addy in the Collateral Material – CD Category for the Apalachicola Doin’ Time CD cover, insert and tray card.

Some of the stations that have carried Apalachicola Doin’ Time:

KBAQ Mesa, Arizona
KBOO Portland, Oregon
KERA Dallas, Texas
KJZZ Phoenix, Arizona
Utah Public Radio/KUSU FM Logan, Utah
WABE Atlanta, Georgia
WETS Johnson City, Tennessee
WFSU Tallahassee, Florida
WFSW Panama City, Florida
WJUF-FM Inverness, Florida
WKGC Panama City, Florida
WQCS  Asheville, North Carolina
WSLU Canton, New York
WUFT-FM Gainesville, Florida
California Public Radio
Georgia Public Radio

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Documentary Summary by- Co-Producer, Donna Green-Townsend Two hundred yards below the Appalachian Trail in Georgia, the waters of the Chattahoochee River begin a 500 mile journey south.  The river flows each day through Atlanta, past Western Georgia cities like Columbus and along the state boundary between Georgia and Alabama — past more than a dozen dams and locks on the way to the Gulf of Mexico.  At the Florida-Georgia border the Chattahoochee meets up with Georgia’s Flint River and  takes on a new name –The Apalachicola. Sixteen billion gallons of water flow down the Apalachicola into the Bay every day making it Florida’s largest waterway and it’s at the heart of a tri-state water war.

This documentary is an audio journey to the community at the end of the drainpipe so to speak — Apalachicola: a Florida seafood community that worries about being at the mercy of its northern water using neighbors. We journey to the city’s famous waterfront, hear about the history of this unique river town and find out how the community’s affected by the rapid development of ecotourism and growth.  We also talk with the key negotiators involved in the current water war involving Alabama, Florida and Georgia as the clock ticks down on a deadline to resolve differences over shared river resources.

There’s a lot at stake for all three southern states: rapid growth in Atlanta creates a strong need to secure drinking water for the future. Farmers want to maintain the ability to irrigate their crops, Alabama residents want to maintain peak hydro power and navigational use, and in Florida, at the end of the Apalachicola River, the seafood industry worries about the future of its oysters, scallops, crabs and shrimp.

To read the full written script with photos click here.

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 Update: U.S. Senators Nelson and Rubio Hold Senate Field Hearing in Apalachicola while Governor Rick Scott says Florida will file a lawsuit seeking to limit the amount of Apalachicola headwaters Georgia can use. (aired August 13, 2013)

Apalachicola’s oyster industry see historic collapse in 2012 from drought and salinity  (originally aired April 26, 2013)

The severe drought in 2012 caused an historic collapse of Florida’s oyster industry.  During the past year a variety of state agencies have been working for the Florida Sea Grant Program to try and understand all the causes for the fishery disaster.  The cooperative effort is working toward designing a plan to help restore and manage the industry in the future.  WUFT’s Donna Green-Townsend talked with the Director of the Florida Sea Grant College Program, Karl Havens, who is heading up the University of Florida’s Oyster Recovery Team, about the findings outlined in the group’s special report this week.

Links to Environmental Data

United States Geological Service — Water Resources of Georgia: The overall website for the USGS water resources program in Georgia. Links to a variety of pollution data, answers to common questions and USGS publications.

Upper Chattahoochee River Keeper: The website of the non-profit organization that keeps tabs on everything that deals with the Chattahoochee, including a section on tri-state water issues. Background information on the river, legal issues, and information about joining the group.

Georgia Department of Natural Resources: An extensive section on Georgia’s plan to deal with water issues among the three states

Alabama Department of Economic and Community Affairs: The specific details of Alabama’s water plans for the ACF river basin and the Alabama-Coosa-Tallapoosa River basin.

Apalachicola Chamber of Commerce: The online home to the Apalachicola area. Find out about the historic nature of “Florida’s Forgotten Coast.”

Tupelo Honey: The largest and densest stands of Tupelo trees grow in the swamps of the lower Apalachicola and Chipola Rivers. Nowhere are Tupelos so dense that honey can be made from and certified pure Tupelo.

Florida Department of Environmental Protection: The site provides the latest information on proposed environmental legislation, appointments, and programs.

Apalachicola National Estuarine Research Reserve: The Apalachicola Reserve includes two barrier islands and a portion of a third. The Reserve also includes the lower 52 miles of the Apalachicola River and its associated floodplain, small portions of adjoining uplands, and the Apalachicola Bay system. The overall high water quality of the Apalachicola estuary, with the combined effects of other factors, provide the ideal living conditions for estuarine biota and have resulted in the creation of a highly productive estuarine system. The myriad of habitats found within the Reserve support a wide range of plant and animal species, many of which are threatened or endangered.

Apalachicola River and Bay Ecosystem Plan: A 183-page plan to balance human needs with wildlife needs. Developed by Florida State University for the Florida Department of Environmental Protection and the Army Corp of Engineers.

Corps of Engineers: The various recreation sites on the Chattahoochee, Flint and Apalachicola river system, including various lakes, locks, dams, and campgrounds.

Read the original 1999 interviews with key players in the tri-state water war:

Sally Bethea — Executive Director of Upper Chattahoochee River Keeper

Matt Kales — Program Director at Upper Chattahoochee River Keeper

Robert Kerr — Director, Pollution Prevention Assistance Division, Georgia Department of Natural Resources

Steve Leitman — Environmental Scientist, NW FL Water Management District

Woody Miley — Director, Apalachicola National Marine Estuary

Lindsey Thomas — Federal Commissioner of the ACT – ACF River Basin Commission

Now available: The full written transcript of the documentary with photos.

Re-Release of the Apalachicola Doin’ Time Documentary on Across the Prairie

On the WUFT program, “Across the Prairie,” on January 21, 2007 host Cathy DeWitt interviewed Donna Green-Townsend and Dale Crider on the re-release of the 2000 Edward R. Murrow Award-winning documentary, Apalachicola Doin’ Time.

Apalachicola Doin’ Time Musicians and Songwriters

To learn more about the artists and their music for the Apalachicola Doin’ Time documentary click on the links below:

 

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Dale Crider Bio for Apalachicola Doin’ Time documentary

Jeanie Fitchen Bio for Apalachicola Doin’ Time documentary

Steve Gillette Bio for Apalachicola Doin’ Time documentary

Mike Jurgensen Bio for Apalachicola Doin’ Time documentary

Harvey Reid Bio for Apalachicola Doin’ Time documentary

Ken Skeens Bio for Apalachicola Doin’ Time documentary

Mark Smith Bio for Apalachicola Doin’ Time documentary

Steve Gillette Bio for Apalachicola Doin’ Time documentary

The River

By Steve Gillette

Lyrics:
I’ve seen the paddlewheelers rolling south on a summer’s day
I’ve seen lovers at the guard rails with stars in their lemonade
And I’ve heard the hobos gather, heard the banjos grace the glade
Heard them sing about the river, called it the lazy man’s parade
Sing me that song about the river, green, going away
I always did feel like a drifter about this time of day
Last night I stood by the highway, pretended I was on my way
You know a hundred thousand headlights couldn’t match the milky way
And when the moonlight touches the water surely something touches me
And I go reaching for the river like it’s reaching for the sea.
chorus
Some things go on forever, the truth don’t ever change
The wind may brush the water, but the river holds her sway.
chorus
Compass Rose Music, Used with permission
More information about Steve’s music is available at his website

Musician Steve Gillette

Biography:
In a musical age created by the singer-songwriter, Steve Gillette has long been considered to be one of the finest. His music has inspired glowing reviews from the critics and the deep loyalty of his fans. Since Ian and Sylvia first recorded Darcy Farrow in 1966, Steve’s songs have been sung by dozens of major artists including Garth Brooks, John Denver, Nanci Griffith, Waylon Jennings, Gordon Lightfoot, Anne Murray, Tony Rice, Kenny Rogers, Linda Ronstadt, Spanky and Our Gang, Jerry Jeff Walker, Jennifer Warnes, Don Williams, and Tammy Wynette.

Steve’s first album, STEVE GILLETTE, originally released in the Spring of 1968, has recently been reissued by Vanguard on compact disc. The album includes guest performances by Buffy Saint Marie, Bruce Langhorne and Dick Rosmini. His second album, BACK ON THE STREET AGAIN, was produced by John Ware for Outpost Records, with help from Spanky McFarland and Emmy Lou Harris’ Hot Band. Steve’s third album ALONE…DIRECT (solo voice and guitar) was recorded by the direct-to-disc process and produced by John DelGatto on Sierra Records.

Graham Nash produced Steve’s fourth album, A LITTLE WARMTH, which was released on Flying Fish Records in 1979. Appearing on this album were Johnny Barbatta and Pete Sears from The Jefferson Starship, Graham Nash, David Lindley, and Jennifer Warnes.

Since their marriage in April of 1989, Steve Gillette and Cindy Mangsen have been traveling, performing and recording together. Their album LIVE IN CONCERT, recorded at the Ark in Ann Arbor, is available from their own company, Compass Rose Music, and was on many “10 Best” lists when it was released in 1991. A second duet album called THE LIGHT OF THE DAY was named Top Folk Album of 1996 by Rich Warren (WFMT, Chicago) and Matt Watroba (WDET, Detroit).

A collection of twelve of Steve’s original songs was produced in Nashville by Jim Rooney in 1992. The album, called THE WAYS OF THE WORLD (Compass Rose), features studio performances by Stuart Duncan, Mark Howard, Roy Huskey Jr., Kenny Malone, and Mark Schatz. Steve’s latest solo recording is entitled TEXAS AND TENNESSEE (Redwing Music, 1998), with back-up from Charles Cochran, Mark Graham, Mark Schatz, Pete Sutherland, Pete Wasner, Mike Williams and others.

Ken Skeens Bio for Apalachicola Doin’ Time documentary

Old Florida River

By Ken Skeens

 

Musician Ken Skeens

Biography:
Ken composes music in the tradition of Will McLean, about the preservation and protection of Florida. He’s produced two original CDs, An Empty Chair and Florida Spirit. He was the first winner of the Best Florida Song Contest at the Will McLean Festival in 1992, and served for many years as the director of the contest and a member of the Will McLean Executive Committee. Ken and his songwriting partner Leigh Goldsmith are regular performers in the Orlando area and at festivals throughout the state. They perform songs in harmony in an effort “to keep the spirit of Florida alive”

To learn more about Ken Skeens click here.

Dale Crider Bio for Apalachicola Doin’ Time documentary

Apalachicola Doin’ Time

By Dale Crider

Lyrics:
When she leaves the dam at Chattahoochee 
Winding in a southern flow 
Easy on her way — another night and day 
She’ll finally reach the Gulf of Mexico
Apalachicola River Water 
In veins of our land 
Alligators in her swampy borders 
Are a part of nature’s plan 
Give the word to protect her 
Call the technical sector 
Soften up the cry to drain the swampland dry 
Apalachicola let her wind 
Apalachicola strong in mind 
Apalachicola flowin’ fine–Lord 
Apalachicola doin’ time
So as we turn the page of natural history 
She’s windin’ in a southern flow 
Nursin’ in her waves 
The oysters in the bays 
This is just a part of nature’s role 
(Chorus)
© Dale Crider, Used with permission

Singer Songwriter Dale Crider

Biography:

Dale Crider, a retired wildlife biologist, has been an education specialist for the Florida Game and Water Fish Commission for more than three decades. As both singer and biologist, Dale has spent his life convincing people that Florida wildlife habitats, and the plants and animals dependent on them, should be diligently preserved. Learn more about Dale by clicking here.

Harvey Reid Bio for Apalachicola Doin’ Time documentary

Circles

By Harvey Reid

Lyrics:
I throw a stone into the water and I watch the circles as they grow
While holidays and birthdays leave footprints like soldiers in the snow
The flowers and the icicles are spokes in a wheel that has no end
And the passing of the seasons makes me think about circles again

The sun and the moon, circles tracing circles in the sky
While old people and children look at each other in the mirror in the eye
Like the turning of a waterwheel like the voice of a long lost friend
When I think about my old friends I think about circles again

Round and round and round in circles we spin
Over and over we end up right where we begin
Those things that never change, those things that are never the same
Though it looks like a straight road I’m traveling in circles again

These round coins in my hand there’s so much I do that they ask me
What goes around will come around; there are wheels turning night & day right past me
I had a dream long ago I was hiding but a clock always found me
And now everywhere I look I see circles all around me

1991 by Harvey Reid (Quahog Music BMI) Used with permission.

Singer Songwriter and Musician Harvey Reid

Biography:
Songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Harvey Reid has honed his craft since the 1970s in countless clubs, festivals, streetcorners, cafes, schools and concert halls across the nation. He has been called a “giant of the steel strings” and “one of the true treasures of American acoustic music,: and is considered to be one of the modern masters and innovators of the acoustic guitar, autoharp and 6-string banjo. He has absorbed a vast repertoire of American contemporary and roots music and woven it into his own colorful, personal and distinctive style. His 32 recordings on Woodpeckers Records showcase his mastery of many instruments and styles of acoustic music, from hip folk to slashing slide guitar blues to bluegrass, old-time, Celtic, ragtime, and even classical.

Reid is also the author of dozens of music education books as well as an important visionary and pioneer in modern troubadour education. He is the creator of the Liberty Guitar Method, a ground-breaking advance in beginning guitar.
Reid’s skills and versatility on the guitar alone mark him as an important new voice and one of the deepest artists in acoustic music.

He won the 1981 National Fingerpicking Guitar Competition and the 1982 International Autoharp competition. Yet he’s also a veteran musician with a long list of studio and band credits, a strong flatpicker who has won Bill Monroe’s Beanblossom bluegrass guitar contest, a versatile and engaging singer, a powerful lyricist, prolific composer, arranger and songwriter, a solid mandolin, mandocello and bouzouki player, and a seasoned performer and captivating entertainer.

Harvey Reid maintains an extensive website that has the lyrics, liner notes, guitar tunings and more for all of his songs.

Mike Jurgensen Bio for Apalachicola Doin’ Time documentary

Music Drifts Along this River

By Mike Jurgensen

Margaret

Singer Songwriter Mike Jurgensen

Biography:
Michael Jurgensen has lived in the Tampa Bay area since 1968, when he moved from his native Chapel Hill, NC. Mike began playing the guitar when he was seven years old, but it was not until 1992 that he began performing in public seriously. It was then that he discovered the Iron Horse coffee house in Tarpon Springs, where he began playing open mics. Over the next two years he branched out to do open mics and feature sets at other Tampa Bay area coffee houses and restaurants, as well as regularly emceeing the Iron Horse open mics.

He has also played at several local fairs and festivals, and he has been the featured artist a number of times on various live radio shows on WMNF in Tampa. Although Mike had written several songs prior to 1992, he has only been writing seriously since 1992. Mike was a finalist in the 1994 and 1996 South Florida Folk Festival song-writing competitions, and he won the Best New Florida Song award at the 1998 Will McLean Festival.

In April of 1994 Mike joined the well-known Florida acoustic group, Myriad, which had been together for about 4 years at the time. Together with Myriad, he played concerts at coffee houses, radio shows, benefit concerts, and festivals around the state. The group also has several recordings including two CDs, “Song Circle” and “New Strings.” Mike also has a solo recording project.

In recent years he has performed as part of the trio known as 2PM featuring Mike, Pete Price and Pete Hennings. The trio has performed at a wide variety of Florida festivals and music venues and has three CDs: “Keepin’ Time,” “Let’s Just Play One More,” and their newest project, “Writing on the Wall.”

More information on Mike’s group “2PM” is available at their website. To hear more of Mike’s music click here. Mike can also be reached by mail: 6985 Coronet Dr. / New Port Richey, Fl 34655

Mark Smith Bio for Apalachicola Doin’ Time documentary

Wisdom of the River by Mark Smith

 

Singer Songwriter Mark Smith

Lyrics:
I have seen a river, and a river has seen me
I have felt its current flowin’ to the sea
In its deep reflection are scenes from yesterday
The wisdom of the river is showin’ us the way
The landscape is the canvas…the water is the brush
Painting out a poem in the stillness and the hush
Then a whisper from a whirlpool takes a shadow for a ride
And the wisdom of the river has found its way inside
When the river talks I…wanna listen, wanna pay attention now, don’t be slow.
When the river talks I…wanna listen, cuz it might say something I wanna know
With skin of fluid motion, that paddle can caress,
It holds me like a lover unafraid to be undressed
With secrets barely hinted, not quite an open book
The wisdom of the river invites a closer look.
(repeat first verse)
Mark Smith, Used with permission

Biography:
Raised on the St. Johns River and in the salt marshes of coastal Northeast Florida, Mark developed a passion for his native Florida at an early age. Always one to find a song in seemingly obscure moments or places, Mark brings the subtleties of Florida’s landscapes and history to life in his original music.
With three albums to his credit, Mark has toured Florida since 1992 performing at numerous established folk venues. He has appeared numerous times at the prestigious Florida Folk Festival in White Springs. He lives in Gainesville.
Mark Smith is accessible via email or regular mail at 2027 NW 56th Terrace / Gainesville, FL 32605.

Jeanie Fitchen Bio for Apalachicola Doin’ Time documentary

Changes in the Wind

By Jeanie Fitchen

Musician Jeanie Fitchen

Biography:
From the age of thirteen, Jeanie Fitchen has enchanted concert and festival audiences from the Alaskan Arctic to the Carribbean Tropics, bringing to them her singular musical art intertwining original stories and stellar vocals in a rich musical synthesis.

Born and raised in Orlando, Florida, Jeanie grew up with the music of great masters such as Verdi, Puccini and Mozart. Her mother had hoped that she might train for the opera but Jeanie found her musical niche in the simple beauty and artistic style of folk music, viewing it as a vehicle for personal and social expression.

At age 15, Jeanie made her festival debut with appearances at the Florida Folk Festival in White Springs and the Fox Hollow Folk Festival in Petersburg, New York. She continues to be a major performer and MC at numerous festivals and acoustic venues around the country.

She is the recipient of the 2016 Florida Folk Festival Legends and Legacy Award.

In 2010 she was awarded the Fellow Man and Mother Earth Award from the Stetson Kennedy Foundation in recognition of her outstanding song contributions to Florida. The songs she has written and sung praise the defense of Florida’s natural and cultural heritage and have done much to enrich the lives of the living and insure that these treasures will be passed on for generations to come.

In 2001 she she received the Florida Folk Heritage award for outstanding folk artists and culture advocates who have made long-standing contributions to the folk cultural resources of the state. Established in 1985, the program parallels the National Heritage Fellowships.

Jeanie’s concert performances take the listener through the entire gamut of emotions as she spins yarns and tugs at the heartstrings, incorporating traditional as well as contemporary topical elements in her programs. She is a highly-acclaimed songwriter with the ability to evoke through melancholy and euphoria the wondrous resilience and vitality of life.

More information about Jeanie’s music is available at her website