Arkansas State Fiddle & Banjo Contests and Concert featuring Bruce Molsky and Tony Trischka, Mountain View

02aug10:30 AM9:00 PMArkansas State Fiddle & Banjo Contests and Concert featuring Bruce Molsky and Tony Trischka, Mountain View

Event Details

Event Details

Mark your calendars for the Old Time Fiddle & Banjo State Championships at the Ozark Folk Center in Mountain View, Arkansas on Saturday, August 2, 2025.

Admission is free for both state championship contests from 10:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. at the park’s 1,000-seat indoor music venue, Ozark Highlands Theater.

In the evening, witness extraordinary musical talent during our annual Fiddle & Banjo Evening Show featuring fiddle & banjo virtuosos Bruce Molsky and Tony Trischka and the Ozark Folk Center Square Dancers.

The usual ticket fees apply to the evening show.

Proudly sponsored by Old Time Ozark Traditions, Inc. A non-profit corporation keeping old time music & dance, craft and culture of the Ozarks alive since 2012.

About the performers…

Bruce Molsky: GRAMMY-nominated, described as “an absolute master” (No Depression), Molsky transports audiences to another time and place, with his authentic and personal interpretations of rarities from the Southern Appalachian songbook and other musical traditions from around the globe. Best known for his work on the fiddle, Bruce’s banjo, guitar and his distinctive, powerful vocals also resonate with listeners. His combination of technical virtuosity and relaxed conversational wit makes a concert hall feel like an intimate front porch gathering.

Bruce’s take on tradition has landed him in collaborations with some of the world’s most highly respected players from roots to rock. He is a special guest on legend rocker Mark Knopfler’s recent CD, “Tracker.” His 1865 Songs of Hope & Home with Anonymous 4, was on Billboard’s top 10 for weeks. Along with Andy Irvine & Donal Lunny, Bruce is a founding member of the supergroup Mozaik, with three recordings. You can see Bruce on the BBC TV “Transatlantic Sessions” with Aly Bain and Jerry Douglas, and on “David Holt’s State of Music” on PBS. He stays active touring and recording with longtime collaborators Darol Anger, Tony Trischka and Mountain Drifters’ Allison de Groot.

Bruce holds the title of “Visiting Scholar in the American Roots Music Program” at Berklee College of Music, where he is the go-to guy for the next generation of roots musicians.

“Performing and teaching traditional music are the biggest things in my world. For me, being a musician isn’t a standalone thing; it informs everything I do in my life. It’s always been about being creative and being a part of something much bigger than myself, a link in the musical chain and part of the community of people who play it and love it.”

Tony Trischka: “Tony Trischka is known as the father of modern bluegrass” – New York Times

He’s raised the banjo’s profile in many ways. Through his theme song for Books on the Air and performances on A Prairie Home Companion, Mountain Stage, From Our Front Porch and other programs, he’s been a frequent presence on NPR. His work with his pal Steve Martin too has helped the banjo gain a wider audience and deeper understanding. Trischka’s GRAMMY-nominated album Double Banjo Bluegrass Spectacular, released in 2007, and Great Big World, from 2014, feature Martin within a mix of veterans and up-and-coming luminaries. He produced Martin’s Grammy-nominated Rounder album from 2011, Rare Bird Alert, which touts performances by the Steep Canyon Rangers, Paul McCartney and the Dixie Chicks. His forthcoming album, Shall We Hope, is a visionary exploration of Civil War history featuring an all-star cast—from Michael Daves and Maura O’Connell to the Femmes, Catherine Russell, Guy Davis, the actor John Lithgow and many others.

In many ways, Trischka’s collaborators join him to pay homage to an architect of progressive bluegrass—an invaluable pioneer who absorbed the slings and arrows of roots traditionalists and proved that acoustic music could accommodate imagination and individualism. (Trischka, in his self-effacing way, insists he was simply falling into a longer-running tradition: “Bill Monroe, when he invented bluegrass, took all these other elements and fused them together,” he explains.)

Time

August 2, 2025 10:30 AM - 9:00 PM(GMT+00:00)

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