|
<<Back to main
Notes page
Simon St. Pierre
by Joe Wilson
FRC206
Simon St. Pierre is a fascinating and elusive figure in Maine fiddling,
more heard about than actually heard, a north woods lumberjack skilled
in an array of music learned in logging bunkhouses. He came to the French
festival in the company of Fred Pike, a stunning guitarist from Maine,
and a force of nature almost as elusive as his fiddling partner. They
made a huge impression, especially upon Dewey Balfa, who found the musical
lumberjack to be " a brother I met today."
Reared in a logging community in Quebec, Simon told of long winters
in the logging bunkhouses of the northern region of the province. Fiddlers
from many parts of Canada were employed there, and Simon's eclectic repertoire
began there, but his style is grounded in Quebec. Yes, he'd heard all
the radio fiddlers, as well as many of the recorded ones, but his favorites
were men he had met and learned from, sitting in a circle. A favorite
was Claire Lake, a neighbor in the Smyrna Mills area of Maine.
Simon had been in the USA for about twenty years at the time of the
festival, and his son Danny was also a fine guitarist. He still earned
his living as a lumberjack, operating a one-man sawmill, sawing white
swamp cedar into logs to create insect-proof log cabins. He subsequently
toured Louisiana and the Mississippi Valley with a music and dance showcase
featuring Cajun, zydeco, Missouri French, French New England and Mitchif
Indian artists put together for the National Council for the Traditional
Arts by musicologist and ethnographer Kathy James. In 1982 he was awarded
a National Heritage Fellowship by the Folk Arts Program of the National
Endowment for the Arts. He is living in retirement in Maine.
<<Back to main Notes page
|
|