12 APRIL 2010
Rose Budding
In early April, KatRose Serendipity invited me to keep chronicle of her venue, KatRose’s Secret Garden of Live Music. My name is Fox Ravenheart, and she honored me.
In these articles, I will record for your enjoyment the people of the Kat Rose’s Secret Garden of Live Music--their music and lives. I will not always be able to write as much as I’d like to—so many talented performers—but anon I will eventually cover you.
In this article, I will be talking about Caoltie Skytower, whom is just one of the myriad performers of both talent and soul performing at Kat Rose’s Secret Garden of Live Music, the nascent venue opened by the artist, KatRose Serendipity. Katrose is an old friend to the music community here in SL, one of the many talented performers we are privileged to celebrate.
KatRose creates like a natural force, in her music and her mission. In quick time, she founded a setting to manifest her quest:
“My goal is to move people with my venue to support each other, to action, to learn more, to continue their own education. To be a community. To have a fellowship. To of share what we have. Let’s support each other. Let’s teach them. Like the old native American tribes.”
Music is a sacred art to KatRose. Patrons visiting the garden can expect live performances, without tracks or previous recorded songs. This infuses the venue with vivacious energy—a vitality also sown into the setting.
Employing her symbol, the rose, KatRose has painted a setting for her venue germane to the beauty and quality of the musicians she summons to her twin stages. When I first teleported to the venue, a Shinto gateway greeted me. One passes through this portal to enter the secret garden, stepping into a twin spirit world. Any burden of stress mollifies from the salubrious splashing from the fountain—the mother water that satiates the thirst of the verdant garden. In the grasses, cicadas join choir with sparrow song. One can nearly feel the frisson of a cool spring breeze on your face and the tickle of spray from the fountains. KatRose built her wooden stage—a circle as the living world—on the shore. Waves crash the beach boulders at the backs of performers on stage.
A trio of roses—tall and divine in visage—grows over the stage, a symbol of the passion of the woman who sculpted this Arcadian plane. This place like Kat’s music is her truth. As she said:
“The symbol of the roses and thorns—If you can handle the thorns. Many facets. Many layers. If you can’t handle the thorns, you’re not going to get to the roses.”
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Caotlie, pronounced quillcha in Irish and keelcha in welsh as he tells us during his performance, has been performing in SL since December 2009. His name is Irish for forest. Caoltie performed at the Kat Rose Secret Garden on April 8th to an enthusiastic crowd. Caotlie, plucking on his guitar, describes his style traditional folk/rocksy with some classical. Caoltie’s blood is steeped in music: his mother of Northern Belfast sang, tickled the ivories of a piano, and his father, a hillbilly of Missouri sings country music. They met while his father was stationed overseas during World War II. This blend of musical traditions creates a smooth, somber melody in Caoltie’s playing, a style many have called unique—that he switches from strumming to finger style quickly.
Caoltie began playing at age fifteen, joining his family’s tradition. He learned the guitar and picked up the bagpipes—what he calls, a workout. He’s been playing at various venues in real life—cafes, pubs, renaissance faires—for the last thirty-five years. While attending a pagan wedding with friends he learned about the musical life of Second Life in a conversation with friends. He joined Second Life the following with no idea how to apply his talent in the online milieu. For a year no one was interested in having him perform, and finally a friend brought him to The Wild Rose for a concert. “I started to sing for friends on voice.” Finally luck brought him his future manager, Laz Dressler, who taught him the ways of live performing on SL. The Wild Rose was his first gig, soon followed by performances at Guthrie’s, The Drunken Drow, and his online career launched.
On Thursday night, Caoltie’s mood mellowed, performing for us a line up of old Celtic numbers, many dear to his heart: ‘I Live Not Where I Love’ and ‘Black Is The Color’. These songs evoke somber emotion for him and memories of a lost lover who broke his heart. This sentiment reflects in music, and soon we were all remembering our own lost loves. Deftly he plucked his guitar, ringing with a harp quality, the clarion tones bringing the audience to chills—the sound of silvery icicles tapping like bell clappers in a wind. He continued his set with some English folk songs, then finishing the night on high note, playing The Moody Blues.
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NANCE Brody returns to the KatRose Garden on Thursday night, April 15th. NANCE is the owner of NANCE Brody’s Live Music venue and has been singing and plucking her mean twelve-string in Second Life for over three years. She performs original songs in the flavor of folksy rockin’ blues, her favorite being Sweet Evelyn—described by NANCE as her “most fun song”. The song is about a couple NANCE saw while she camped sometime ago on a northern lake in Canada: Vic was Evelyn’s husband—a character who loved to trade things—and the myriad junk of his trades cluttered his trailer site. The song tells the tale of his junk trading ways, the moral being that he traded everything but his wife.
Please come out on Thursday to enjoy NANCE Brody at Kat Rose’s Secret Garden of Live Music.
Fox - what a fantastic review!!! The Garden has got to be my favorite place to catch LIVE music in SL- KatRose Serendipity pours her heart into and it shows. So glad I found it.
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