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00000176-4e34-d3bc-a977-4f7c3a150000On Shasta Serenade, host Barry Hazle mixes up an eclectic brew of Americana, blues, rockabilly, folk, bluegrass and timeless standards from his perch in Oak Run. Shasta Serenade airs Saturdays at 12 p.m.

Shasta Serenade: December 5th, 2015

The Black Lillies

This week’s Shasta Serenade features our usual eclectic mix of Americana, which includes new music from a Portland-based duo, Pretty Gritty, Ireland-based I Drive Slow, The Kathy Kallick Band, and my choice of a great stocking stuffer - The Black Lillies’ new album, “Hard To Please.” John Driskell Hopkins (founding member of the Zac Brown Band) has a new Christmas album out – you have to listen to his version of “You’re a Mean One Mr. Grinch!”

You’ll find our playlists and show archives at mynspr.org. Next week is the 100th birthday of Frank Sinatra. I’ll feature ‘Ol Blue Eyes and touch on his enormous influence on popular music and his very open, and I think heroic, stand on civil rights.  

12.05.2015_shasta_serenade_hour_2.mp3
Listen to Shasta Serenade (Part 2)

Barry was a foundling in an old adobe in Southern California, adopted by nomadic Polish Gypsies, and lived with them until the age of 50. He has had no formal schooling, but learned to play the fiddle by the age of five. Throughout his early years, one could find him fiddling away in the foothills of Northern California tending his Lithuanian goats, making cheese and goat meat Kielbasa. He was renowned for his sheepherder’s bread making. He accidentally baked a rock into a particularly delicious loaf of bread, on which the chief of the gypsy clan broke a bicuspid. The clan seized his shepherd's cane and the Chief broke it in half tossing the parts to the ground. Barry was thus humiliated, and banished for life from the only family he had ever known. (Later, Barry sold the recipe for the Kielbasa to the NHL for a small fortune – they use it in the manufacturing of hockey pucks).