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The Annual Summer Solstice Folk Music,
Dance and Storytelling Festival

2003 Festival logoSince 1980 the California Traditional Music Society has hosted an annual folk music festival celebrating music, dance and storytelling scheduled on or near the Summer Solstice. Each year we try to make the coming Summer Solstice Folk Music, Dance and Storytelling Festival better than the last. Click here for the schedule of this year's festival. We plan to make it a great one!

The CTMS Solstice Festival is unlike most other folk music gatherings. In addition to concerts, jam sessions, and story swaps, the CTMS Festival is a "teaching festival". Musicians, dancers, singers and storytellers from all over the world come to share their knowledge and experience with you. You will find classes on everything from playing fiddle to vocal warm-ups to contra-dancing and more!

People dancingThe CTMS Solstice Festival was first held in 1980 in Greystone Park at the Greystone Mansion in Beverly Hills. This Tudor-style mansion was built by famed oil-tycoon Edward Doheny in 1928 as a gift to his son and has over 46,000 square feet of living space. The Greystone Mansion provided a wonderful location for the festival for five years.

From 1986 to 1990 the CTMS Solstice Festival was held at the campus of California State University, Northridge (CSUN). Then it moved to the campus of Soka University of America in 1991, where it is held today.

2003 Festival logoThe annual Summer Solstice Festival is the largest teaching-oriented gathering of its kind in the nation. Held in June, it attracts over 5,000 individuals, families, and friends for a weekend of "hands on" workshops where skills, repertoire and technique are taught. In addition there are jam sessions, master classes, performances and over 300 scheduled events.

The audience comes from all over Los Angeles County, the state of California, the United States and Canada. The Festival employs 100 Folk Music artists and has over 350 local volunteers during the weekend. It takes 18 months to plan and execute each Festival, with over 10,000 hours of volunteer labor. It is a massive undertaking, a logistic operation with incredible artistic achievement, known for excellence throughout the world.

Many of the volunteers have been with CTMS for over 20 years, and now their families are included in the volunteer roster. This premier family Folk Music event includes 25 mini-festivals going on concurrently. For those who wish to simply sit and listen, the Festival is filled with three exciting performance stages.

Elaine with kidsBecause of the abysmal cutbacks in public education, the Festival is the only opportunity most children have of learning about the Folk Music and songs of America or any other cultures. There is no other vehicle for hands-on exposure to multicultural Folk Music and dance available in the region. In 1992, CTMS inaugurated a special children's area that offered youngsters the chance to explore such things as introductory guitar, folk singing and dancing, storytelling and workshops on making instruments from recycled materials. CTMS obtains numerous loaner instruments so that children can touch and try unfamiliar instruments and learn about Folk Music by actually playing.

Playing at the FestivalThese newer programs augment the Festival's family-friendly atmosphere, where children are invited to participate in all events (Please Note: Children under 12 are admitted to the Festival for free and all of the Festival facilities are handicapped accessible). Workshops are designed for family involvement so that children, teenagers, and parents can participate together. This is rare in modern America, where families are normally divided in their artistic preferences and what they like to do in their leisure time.

The Festival reaches hundreds of thousands through extensive media support. For several years, KCSN broadcast the Festival live for two full days. KPFK, KNJO, and KCRW schedule feature stories, interviews with many of the featured concert artists, and live broadcasts of performances. CBS, NBC, and ABC have provided television coverage. In addition, many radio stations throughout the state broadcast portions of the Festival concerts and interviews.