An Imaginary Christmas in Idaho
An Imaginary Christmas in Idaho is an audio CD featuring 19 songs and stories by Award-winning folksinger Rosalie Sorrels and some of her long-time Idaho friends. An Imaginary Christmas in Idaho offers a celebratory mix of Native American poems, hilarious stories, an Italian Christmas carol, traditional sing-along favorites, and a few fun surprises. Musician friends include Idaho’s legendary John Thomsen and the More’s Creek String Band, notorious poet Gino Sky, Sandpoint, Idaho’s Wild Roses (Beth Pederson and Cinde Borup, and Boise’s Basque Choir, Biotzetik. The collection is not a rehash of holiday standards by any means. It has a unique Idaho flair.
"Idaho’s gotten a lot of bad press lately," Sorrels writes in the liner notes. "It used to be when I said I was from Idaho, people would say: ‘Oh, yeah . . . potatoes . . . Frank Church, Ernest Hemingway, Vardis Fisher.’ Now they say, ‘Do you live anywhere near Ruby Ridge’. . . or ‘Aren’t you afraid of all the Neo-Nazis?’" This album is intended to demonstrate that we are just a regular bunch of ordinary people with extraordinary lives: respectable, hardworking, just like everybody, everywhere. . ." Winner of the 1999 National Storytelling Association’s Circle of Excellence Award, Sorrels conceived the project after years of offering popular holiday concerts with novelist/poet friend Gino Sky. Having become something of a holiday tradition, their sold-out concerts are memorable evenings of warm and greatly entertaining stories and folk favorites Sorrels has gathered from her 40-year career as folk music’s "Traveling Lady." After a 1996 Christmas concert, Sorrels decided she wanted to capture some of that holiday magic on CD. Much of An Imaginary Christmas in Idaho was recorded live in Boise’s Basque Museum and Cultural Center, with the audience often taking part in the singing.
Gino Sky, author of the Rocky Mountain cult classic Appaloosa Rising (Doubleday, 1980), and a slew of other books of poetry and stories, reads a couple of stories and poems based on his wildly eccentric family. Among the stories he reads is "The Fruitcake," an autobiographical story about a beat generation-era poet’s homecoming to secure his Mormon mother ‘s "secret" fruitcake recipe. The story appeared in Country Living to rave reviews several years ago and was later reprinted in the Chicken Soup for the Soul Cookbook.
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