New Jersey Stage logo
New Jersey Stage Menu



 

New Jersey Folk Festival Bridges Tradition and Innovation

By Ilene Dube, JerseyArts.com

originally published: 04/20/2023


As we stroll through our neighborhoods at dinner time and the aromas of garlic, cumin, fenugreek, chilies, cabbages and tomatoes waft through the air, we are reminded that one in five people in the state is from somewhere else. Each community that settles in New Jersey brings with it a wealth of folkways. The New Jersey Folk Festival has been celebrating this for nearly half a century.

The free, outdoor, nonprofit event, sponsored by the American studies department at Rutgers University, will take place on Rutgers’ Cook/Douglass campus Saturday, April 29. There are two 20x40’ audience tents for shade or rain, but festivalgoers are welcome to bring lawn chairs. There is a shuttle bus for those arriving by train or parking elsewhere.

The main stage will include folk musicians Medukha, Jackson Pines, Sean Tobin, Laki Bali and Yeimy Gamez Castillo.

The heritage area, in partnership with The Arts Institute of Middlesex County, includes a Foodways tent featuring the cuisines of Peru, Afghanistan, Mexico and others. Local chefs will share recipes and food traditions and free ingredient kits will be distributed to families through the REPLENISH food pantry network.




Advertise with NJ Stage for $50-$100 per month, click here for info



There will be food vendors to sate appetites for the above-named cuisines, and a Craft Path with a juried selection of craft vendors.

Established in 1975, the festival is the oldest continuously run folk festival in the state. Managed by a team of Rutgers undergrads, the festival attracts more than 15,000 people and is one of the City of New Brunswick's largest regularly scheduled events. The mission is to preserve and protect the music, culture, and arts of the diverse ethnic and cultural communities within the state.

“The festival has been a launching pad for hundreds of students who gained valuable career experience and confidence that has served them well over the years,” founder and folklorist Angus Kress Gillespie wrote in an essay that can be read in full on the festival’s Wikipedia page.

The 2023 festival theme is “New Directions in Folk,” which highlights musicians who are bringing tradition and social justice into conversation with the present, the future and the avant-garde. “New Directions in Folk is an evolving program of performances and workshops that has grown out of our longstanding presentation of singer-songwriters at the festival,” says festival director Maria Kennedy. “We want to highlight the connections musicians are making between tradition and innovation in the crossover from heritage to popular music, and also shine a light on the long tradition of social justice in folk music.”

Jackson Pines is a band of friends from the Pine Barrens. Combining minimalistic acoustic arrangements and taking cues from the ethos of folk, blues, and indie rock, Jackson Pines tells stories of hard times, overflowing love, disappointment and hope.

Born and raised on the New Jersey shore, Sean Tobin was influenced by folk-singing troubadours and high-energy rockers.

Yeimy Gamez Castillo (b. Laz Paz, Honduras 1997) is a multidisciplinary storyteller raised and based in the unceded lands of the Lenni-Lenape: current day Newark. A community organizer, songwriter, poet and music producer, her sonic and literary praxis are inspired by her queer and city-bound immigrant upbringing.

Laki Bali (shown above) delivers an esoteric blend of exotically ancient yet modern music. Says the band’s promotional materials: “A swirling romp of sound that is equal parts foot stomping and face puckering. Come with no expectations other than to have some wild fun and dance in ways you never have before.”

Medukha is one of two bands serving as artist-in-residence at this year’s festival. “I happened to know the artists of medukha because several of them are part of the Ukrainian Village Voices group, who performed at the festival last year,” says Kennedy. “UVV performs very traditional folk music from Ukraine, and when I found out that some members were performing similar repertoire but in a more avant-garde style, I thought it would be interesting to explore that in a workshop.” (The self-described Slavic psych rock band was to have given a workshop “Reimagining Roots” in arranging folk music that, due to the Rutgers strike, has been postponed until fall.)

Steeping age-old village melodies in contemporary psych-rock soundscapes, Medukha (shown above) sprouted in 2020 from a live-streamed performance for Razom for Ukraine, according to the band’s press materials. Razom, which means “together” in Ukrainian, is a nonprofit based in New York City whose network of volunteers work around the world to “unlock the potential of Ukraine.”

Medukha began life as a duo, with Asia Mieleszko (pronounced “ah-shah mye-lesh-ko”) on lead vocals, synth, drymba (jaw harp), and melodica; and Max Temnogorod on guitar and vocals. Subsequently, they added James Kogan, bass, and Blake Suben, drums.

Also a mezzosoprano and conductor, Mieleszko “moonlights as a dilettante harpist, retired pianist rediscovering impressionism, and diner coffee devotee,” according to her bio. “Her musical endeavors oscillate between preserving the (very) old and pioneering the daringly new.” She also helms the AEON ensemble, which has performed at Carnegie Hall, Symphony Space, the DiMenna Center and Princeton University, as well as “your local dive bar.” The multihyphenate writes for Strong Towns, designs websites, teaches, photographs festivals and “can be found wherever Wi-Fi is reliable, typically along Amtrak's Northeast Corridor.”

 

 

The foursome has strong ties to Ukraine. Mieleszko is Polish, but has been engaging with Ukrainian folk culture for years in her role as musical director of Ukrainian Village Voices, the New York City-based performance group whose mission is to study, preserve, and perform the polyphonic traditions of Ukraine's villages. Temnogorod was born in Ukraine and came to the U.S. at age 3. Kogan and Suben have Ukrainian and Soviet roots as well, and all have performed, at one point, with Ukrainian Village Voices.

Mieleszko and Temnogorod are based in Philadelphia, and the other half of the band is in Brooklyn, where most of the members grew up (Mieleszko hails from Far Rockaway, Queens).

“Growing up in non-English speaking households in immigrant enclaves of New York City, we’d inevitably reflect on our diasporic, or more accurately, ‘third culture’ identities,” writes Mieleszko in an email. “As a ‘third culture kid’ in the U.S., you're neither fully American nor fully the nationality of your parents: you're this third thing that doesn't totally have a home. The term resonates with us because it highlights the fractures of identity in a way that ‘diaspora’ doesn't. It’s all the more apt when considering the waves of post-Soviet immigration in the 1990s: the distinct culture in which our parents grew up belonged to a place that, by the time they were leaving, no longer existed. In some ways, our parents are strangers to their native lands too.”

Chef Michelle Washington Wilson prepares a dish while being live streamed by interns (Photo courtesy of the Arts Institute of Middlesex County)

Shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine in winter 2022, medukha held a workshop that highlighted songs from the regions of Ukraine most affected by bombardment and military aggression. Titled “Solidarity Through Song,” funds were raised for both Razom for Ukraine and the International Rescue Committee. The workshop was open to all. From the event’s announcement: “Ukrainian folk music is, at its core, a music of the people, for the people. It is made in community, without pretense but not without passion and discipline. As Ukraine suffers immeasurable losses, we want to lift up the songs of Ukraine’s vibrant villages whose musical legacy and culture at large is threatened by the horror of war.”

This year’s festival can also be viewed through livestream.

 

 


EVENT PREVIEWS

(MORRISTOWN, NJ) -- On Thursday, June 11, 2026, the Telegraph Quartet will return to perform for the Morris Museum's seventh annual Back Deck season. This outdoor concert series began during the pandemic, and The New York Times describes it as "Live Music Splendor in a Parking Lot." Showtime is 7:30pm.
Carteret PAC presents Jo Dee Messina

Carteret PAC presents Jo Dee Messina

(CARTERET, NJ) -- Chart-topping country music icon Jo Dee Messina will perform at The URSB Carteret Performing Arts and Events Center on Friday, June 12, 2026. Messina is known for her powerful vocals and extensive catalog including nine number-one hits, 16 Top 40 songs, and awards and nominations from the ACM, CMA, AMA, Billboard, and the Grammys. Showtime is 8:000pm.
SOPAC to Celebrate 20th Anniversary with Gala 20: Featuring Max Weinberg

SOPAC to Celebrate 20th Anniversary with Gala 20: Featuring Max Weinberg's Jukebox

(SOUTH ORANGE, NJ) -- The South Orange Performing Arts Center (SOPAC) will celebrate its 20th Anniversary on Friday, June 12, 2026 with Gala 20: Featuring Max Weinberg's Jukebox — a venue-wide celebration from 5:00pm–11:00pm.
Trenton City Museum presents Art & Song: A Musical Gallery on June 12th

Trenton City Museum presents Art & Song: A Musical Gallery on June 12th

(TRENTON, NJ) -- Trenton City Museum presents the concert Art & Song: A Musical Gallery on Friday, June 12, 2026 at 6:30pm. Versatile vocalists Tom Chiola and Pam Jorgensen, accompanied by the George Sinkler Trio, will delight audience members with selections from Broadway, Blues, Jazz, and more. Transformed into a stylish jazz café, the museum will also provide delicious food and beverages amid the art of the just-opened Ellarslie Open 43 exhibition. Doors will open at 6:00pm.
French Montana to Headline Grand Opening of Dream Live Performing Arts Center

French Montana to Headline Grand Opening of Dream Live Performing Arts Center

(EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ) -- American Dream will celebrate the region's opening World Cup match between Brazil and Morocco with the debut of its newest venue, the Dream Live Performing Arts Center, with a postgame concert by French Montana on June 13, 2026 at 9:00pm.
Sergio Mendes

Sergio Mendes' Wife, Gracinha Leporace, Brings His 'Best Band Ever' to New Jersey

Sixty years ago, Herb Alpert Presents Sergio Mendes & Brasil '66 (A&M Records) emerged as both a masterful artistic statement and a major commercial breakthrough album. The record helped introduce the sophisticated rhythms and cool elegance of Brazilian bossa nova and samba to a truly global audience, blending Brazilian musical traditions with American pop, jazz, and contemporary studio production and repertoire.
Marc Ribler & Friends to perform Paul McCartney birthday tribute "When I

Marc Ribler & Friends to perform Paul McCartney birthday tribute "When I'm 84" at Axelrod PAC

(DEAL, NJ) -- As a tribute to Sir Paul McCartney's upcoming 84th birthday in June, Jersey Shore musician Marc Ribler has put together an all-star lineup to perform "When I'm 84" at the Axelrod Performing Arts Center on Saturday, June 13 and Sunday, June 14, 2026.

Levoy Theatre presents Paul Thorn on June 18th

(MILLVILLE, NJ) -- The Levoy Theatre presents Paul Thorn on Thursday, June 18, 2026 at 7:30pm. When it comes to songwriting, less is more, and simplicity is strength. Just ask Paul Thorn, who’s spent three decades turning soulful grooves and small syllables into songs that pack a big wallop.

Erin Harpe & Countryman Jim Bring Award-Nominated Country Blues to Lizzie Rose Music Room on June 18th

(TUCKERTON, NJ) -- Award-nominated country blues duo Erin Harpe & Countryman Jim will bring their captivating blend of traditional country blues, folk, and Americana to the Lizzie Rose Music Room on Thursday, June 18, 2026 at 7:30pm.
The Black Crowes and Whiskey Myers to Perform at Prudential Center

The Black Crowes and Whiskey Myers to Perform at Prudential Center

(NEWARK, NJ) -- Genre-defying rock legends The Black Crowes bring their massive co-headlining Southern Hospitality Tour with modern rock's boundary-pushing powerhouse Whiskey Myers to Prudential Center in Newark on Saturday, June 20, 2026 at 8:00pm.

 

MORE EVENTS

Click on the listing to bring up its webpage


Hamilton de Holanda Trio

Tuesday, June 09, 2026 @ 7:30pm
McCarter Theatre Center (Berlind Theatre)
Princeton, NJ


Sam Morrow Band

Tuesday, June 09, 2026 @ 7:30pm
Lizzie Rose Music Room
Tuckerton, NJ


The Brandee Younger Trio

Wednesday, June 10, 2026 @ 7:30pm
McCarter Theatre Center (Berlind Theatre)
Princeton, NJ


Susan Werner

Thursday, June 11, 2026 @ 7:30pm
Lizzie Rose Music Room
Tuckerton, NJ


The Sergio Mendes Band

Thursday, June 11, 2026 @ 7:30pm
Mayo Performing Arts Center (MPAC)
Morristown, NJ



 

Advertise with NJ Stage for $50-$100 per month, click here for info