"By
featuring diverse music and interviews, etown creates a constantly
exapnding community on the air"
Thursday / November 20, 2008
Near the west end of Canyon Boulevard in Boulder, Colorado,
under the rock cliffs called the flatirons, sits the Town
Hall of a community of thousands called etown.
etown is a nationally syndicated radio show
heard every week on more than 200 stations across the United
States. Every etown show is taped in front of a live audience
and features performances from many top musical artists, thought-provoking
interviews, and the presentation of the e-chievement award
recognizing everyday people who have made a difference in
their community. Most of the tapings take place at the historic
Boulder Theater, but the show is on the road several times
each year.
The
show has featured live performances by artists such as Ani
DiFranco, Bela Fleck, Crosby & Nash, Julian Lennon, Natalie
Merchant, Los Lobos, Nancy Griffith, James Taylor and Willie
Nelson. Each week the hosts interview an author, scientist,
poet, or citizen about some aspect of the world and community.
Interviews have included Jane Goodall, Archbishop Desmond
Tutu, President Jimmy Carter, Dave Barry, and Daryl Hannah.
The mission of etown is “to produce high quality programs
of diverse music and conversation in order to entertain, educate
and engage a wide audience in appreciating and protecting
our cultural and natural resources.” By featuring diverse
music and interviews, etown creates a constantly expanding
"community on the air." The high point of every
broadcast is the presentation of the "e-chievement award",
reminding listeners that individual efforts really do make
a difference and that respect for each other and our natural
environment go hand in hand. Award winners are nominated by
listeners and include people like Chad Pregracke, age 25 of
Illinois, who personally cleaned up 1,500 miles of shoreline
of the Mississippi River; Mack Stewart, a retired newspaper
publisher who founded a non-profit organization that has provided
warm clothing to more than 85,000 children across the United
States; and Sean Downs, a successful businessman and amateur
surfer who started the Sumba Foundation which provides clean
water, supplies and schools benefiting more than 18,000 people
living on the Indonesian island of Sumba.
The
co-founders of etown are Nick and Helen Forster, who started
the radio show in 1991. "Etown is not really about the
music," said Nick, "The music is what makes it work,
but we don't do this just so we can have a music show on the
radio. We don't do this so we can hang around with artists.
It's not about the entertainment industry. It's not about
commerce or being the most popular radio show in the world.
It's not about celebrity. In fact, it's about the anti-celebrity.
It's about anonymous heroes around the country. The show is
a vehicle for stories of hometown heroes who do such great
work."
Prior to launching etown, Nick Forster was a founding member
of the popular bluegrass band Hot Rize, as well as a sideman
with artists such as David Wilcox and Michelle Shocked. Hot
Rize released ten albums and appeared on Austin City Limits,
The Grand Old Opry, and Garrison Keillor's A Prairie Home
Companion. While on a State Department tour in Eastern Europe,
Nick conceived the idea of the weekly radio show. NPR originally
turned Nick down for funding and broadcast support, but after
the Forsters funded the program on a shoestring themselves,
NPR changed their mind. Now, etown is broadcast on more than
200 stations coast-to-coast.
Co-host
and co-founder Helen Forster has a background in theater and
improvisational comedy, and is producer of the massive Telluride
Bluegrass Festival as well as various other on air programs.
As etown's co-host, Helen lends her golden-toned voice to
both the spoken work and the musical portions of the show.
She has provided harmony vocals for guest artists Bruce Cockburn,
Beth Orton, Keb'Mo', Patty Larkin, James Taylor, David Crosby,
John Gorka and more. Outside of etown, she has performed as
a vocalist on Prairie Home Companion and in concert across
the country. She is also an established commercial voice-over
talent. Both Nick and Helen perform in the etown band, the
e-tones.
Says performing artist Shawn Colvin, who has played with
the e-tones and appeared several times on the show, "I
like where etown is coming from. I really appreciate the ecological
overview, and the e-tones are one of the best bands I've ever
played with." Roseanne Cash calls etown, "a superb
refuge in the vast wasteland of radio." Michelle Shocked
said it all, "You know what they say about etown... location,
location, location!"
What's next for etown? "My hope is that we'll create
a virtual community. We really do think about etown as a place.
Etown is the hometown for these kinds of great music and core
values that we have been presenting for so many years. We
want to create a literal community of people who are etown
participants. As a non-profit organization, we're about something
that is not particularly market-driven. The great label support
and the great station support is really how we've been able
to stay around and grow," says Nick Forster.
To hear etown on the air: check out the etown website (www.etown.org)
for stations, times and days of airing; OR go to http://www.etown.org/listen.live.shtml.
Membership in etown is free, and gives you access to years
of archived shows. You will also find a list of various stations
that stream the show, so you can listen to the show as it
is broadcast.
Upcoming Live Tapings
(all live shows at the Boulder Theater, Boulder Colorado):
June 12th: Richie Havens
and Aqualung
June 21st: Leo Kottke,
Mike Gordon and Mary Gauthier
June 26th: Judy Collins and John Cohen
July 10th: Ray LaMontagne, Sara Lee Guthrie
and Johnny Irion