Vinterton in Sundsvall

For the last long-weekend of my Xmas break, I took the train up to Sundsvall to join in a short 3-day music camp for “youth” (and whoever-all else wants to come). Thanks to Amy Parker for the idea, and for introducing me to a veritable flock of friendly folk musician friends. It was quite entertaining to discover what felt like an entire town where everyone knows Amy; she has spent considerable time there ever since meeting up with Gun-Britt during their year in the fiddle course at the Malung folk school in the ’90s.

Gun-Britt is the able organizer of Vinterton — and evidently of much of the rest of the folk scene in Sundsvall — and her prompt reply to my initial inquiry had said, yes, you should come! but BTW the camp doesn’t include housing or anything so you should come stay with me! By the time I got there, she’d also said yes to several rounds of visiting family, and things were getting a little complicated over there. She kept me for the first night anyway so that we would still get to hang out together, and I met the set of family that was already there. Then the next morning when we drove into town — the day’s programming sensibly starts at noon — we shifted me over to stay right in town with Lasse and Eva. So I was adopted by two households in only 4 days, and felt very well taken care of indeed.

I’d missed the first day of an only three-day camp, but things went fine all the same. My schedule for each afternoon included a singing session with everyone, a fiddle group class with Emma Ahlberg, a fika break, an ensemble class (mine had fiddles, guitars, drums, recorder, oboes, bassoon, a bass) with Magnus Andersson and Emma, a dinner break, another fiddle group class (only my first day, with Camilla Andersson), and a playing session with everyone. The first evening there was a dance, and the second evening there was a final concert. I missed a large percentage of the dance because that turned out to be my only chance to get to play some tunes with Agneta (despite the fact that she lives in Sundsvall and we’d both been in Göteborg for Jul), and I didn’t want to miss that.

The final concert was quite a production, with the entire camp crammed onto the stage for much of the time, but things came together remarkably well for such a brief preparation time. It was an energetic program and the audience clearly enjoyed it. I was quite impressed with each of the course leaders — they have a lot of great musicians and teachers up in that part of the world!

Plus, I found Sundsvall quite charming. And I loved being able to make new connections and talk with all my new friends entirely in Swedish. So I will certainly be heading back that-a-way again.

I’m afraid I don’t have any photos from my group classes, because I already felt like enough of an imposition showing up late and not knowing people (a lot of the kids have been going to camp together for years) and whatnot, so I didn’t want to be even weirder by waving a camera around.

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Gott nyt år!

We were honored to be included in the New Year’s Eve gathering that Urban and Hannah traditionally attend with some friends — there were 9 of us altogether, I believe. It was the first time either Mills or I had started a new year abroad, and it certainly got our year off to a good start. Lots of good food, some tutorials in artistic napkin-folding, some singing and a very brief small-space schottis, some fiddle tunes from a variety of Swedish traditions, some board games (Sequence worked well as a 9-player game) and non-board games, fireworks and champagne at midnight, pleasant conversation and super-friendly people,…

Then on New Year’s day we had another chance to play tunes with Urban and David, since there hadn’t been nearly enough tunes yet. In the evening Mills and I migrated to a hotel right near the train station so he’d have an easy early-morning commute to the airport, to offset his adventurous three-flight itinerary.

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Göteborg city museums

Udo joined us for a day, and picked two really fun ways to show us the city. First he took us to the Älvrummet, where there is a humongous table with a scale model of (a large swath of) the city — it’s used for city planning purposes, and shows some proposed new developments so that everyone can see what is actually being proposed. An excellent choice of a way to see the city on a day when it is pouring cold rain! Then we spent a fun afternoon at the Stadsmuseum (city museum).

Price of all this museum-going? Your 40 SEK ($6) ticket to any of five main museums is actually an annual admission card for all five (not the Älvrummet, that’s free), and they were giving out the 2013 card in late 2012!

Another day Mills and I walked over to see the big church, Masthuggskyrkan, at full size. I’ll tack a couple of pics from that day here too.

(Trying out another photo viewer. Different drawbacks. Better?)

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Röhsskamuseet

Since we’d had such a good time at the design museum in Copenhagen in 2007, we thought it would be interesting to check out the museum of design and applied arts in Göteborg as well. Urban joined us for the day — it was great to have his company, and his insight as tour guide for our walk into and around town. We all had a nice Indian dinner together after the museum booted us out.

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Konstmuseum

We liked the art museum so much, we went there twice! Well, OK, also the first day they closed earlier than the web site promised — but we did enjoy the collection.

Did anyone else know that having one’s nose to the grindstone was ever literal?!?

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Outings to Borås & Fräntorp

We took the bus out to Borås for a day to visit with Ingrid and Thomas, and this time also with David, whose birthday we got to help celebrate. Thomas’s mother joined as us well for the scrumptious midday dinner and cake, and some of the visiting afterward. Ingrid and Thomas have each collected and/or made so many beautiful things that I am afraid my enjoyment of them makes me seem rather like a tourist, but both are imperturbably gracious hosts. Plus now I have pics of all kinds of great things I could try to make — straw figures, embroidery, candles,…

After dinner we spent some time watching concert videos. Ingrid had complete footage of David’s Nordic Dance show at Linköping, which Mills hadn’t seen and I was happy to see again, and then we watched their show from a previous year. Then we watched the ESI Julkonsert — I had initially thought we’d maybe just see the one number that David and I performed together, but then we ended up watching the whole concert, which was something of a marathon for the parents who’d already seen it in person. No Youtube of the entire show, but I’ll let you know when the video of our halling is up.

On our way back to the station, we took a little sidetrip to see the downtown exhibit of United Buddy Bears, each painted to represent one of the 108 countries represented by the UN, and the (remains of the) holiday ice sculptures. It’s funny how downtown Borås seems so familiar and homey when we only first set foot there a few months ago.

The evening after our trip to Borås, we went to a dance with Urban at the Fräntorps Folkets Hus, and met up with Thomas and Ingrid there as well. Urban actually hadn’t been to a dance in quite a while, so it was nice to feel like we were being a good influence.

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