* The Early Music Dinner where I performed some of Uccellini's forest Symphonies with the Baroque Ensemble for all of the important people at the University
* Going to an Australian tune session at Harry Gardner's home
* The end of the semester Baroque Ensemble Performance at the Early Music Studio where I performed Uccellini again and also a work by Zelenka for bass voice, two violins, viola, two oboes and organ. There was also lots of wine and snacks and silly adventures afterwords. I even saw a fruit bat flying in the rain!
* Attending several Irish / other sessions around town
* I am finishing up my research project for Ethnography of Music on Australian Bush Dance Music so there is lots of reading and writing and listening going on right now.
* I have my Conducting practical exam on Thursday where I will rehearse an ensemble playingThat Smile which is a fun little piece that Clayton Moser wrote.
* I also have my Historical Performance Practice exam on Thursday where I will play a Canzoni by Frescobaldi, some dance movements from Marais Sontata Maresienne, the first Adagio movement from Corelli's Violin Sonata No. 5, and an excerpt from Corelli's La Folia.
I went to Maldon Folk Festival this weekend and had a wonderful time! We were there Friday through Monday and it was basically music non-stop the whole time. I think I was expecting it to be a lot more like Lake Eden Arts Festival than it was. The festival is spread out all over town. Actually, it is more like two festivals. One at the camping ground outside of town and one in the town at various schools, churches, and pubs. There are lots of impromptu sessions on the street in front of the shops and restaurants ranging from Australian tunes to Irish, Scottish, and American. There was one hall that had displays by different local instrument makers including harp, guitar, banjo, accordion, whistle, and flute. The population seemed to me to be a lot older than at LEAF. While LEAF has a large concentration of the 20-30 crowd and a relatively even distribution of other ages, this festival seemed to have a higher concentration of the 60-80 crowd and a lot more musicians than at LEAF.
As per usual this year in Victoria, it rained and thus camping in the rain occurred but luckily my tent stayed mostly dry. Friday night we went to the Bush Dance that was led by the Emu Creek Bush Band. The floor was quite slippery so dancing in normal shoes was much more effective than sliding halfway around the room in dance shoes. Pretty much anyone who wanted to could join in at the back of the band and since the floor was so slick I spent about half of the time playing with the band. I put up a brief video clip of it on Facebook so if you want you can check that out. There were a lot of accordions and concertinas, a few whistles and flutes, a resonator guitar played as a lap steel guitar, a piano with the front cover removed, a bass, mandolin, and a few fiddles. At one point a bunch of costumed and slightly tipsy ladies walked in so the next few dances were quite entertaining. We even played the cancan to keep them entertained!
Over the course of the weekend I attended several workshops including lap steel guitar, blues mandolin, spoons, and dance music workshops. I think the spoons workshop was my favorite and I am definitely going to go in search of a good pair at Goodwill when I get back to Charleston. The jam sessions on the street were so much fun. On Sunday, the Gay Charmers (a dance band that has been around 50 years) had a concert where they basically asked anyone in the room who had an instrument with them to play something and anyone who knew it would just join in which was a ton of fun.
Meals were mostly in the restaurants and cafes in town but there were also some food tents near the camp ground and the performance tents there. Later in the evening there were some raucous acts at the Guinness tent and lots of jumping around sort of dancing. I had so much fun standing right at the front taking it all in. Over the weekend I also attended a Beatles sing-a-long and we had some great late night jam sessions.
I was mostly too busy having fun to take pictures but here are a few decent ones that I got:


The next weekend I went to the Grampians with the Mountaineering club for a two day bushwalk on the Major Mitchell plateau. The hike was a lot of fun! We rolled in Friday night at 11:30 and went straight to bed. It rained a lot that night but we stayed perfectly dry in my tent. When I woke up there were like 20 eastern grey kangaroos wandering around munching on grass and maybe 30 sulfer-crested cockatoos making a huge racket. 