Robert Thatcher, from Signal Mountain, Tennessee, and Tom Brown, from Dalton, Georgia, accompanied by Bob’s wife,
played their song “Roll On, Echo River”
and won
Best Folk / Americana / Bluegrass Song
in the Suwannee Riverkeeper Songwriting Contest 2024.
Hahira, Georgia, September 9, 2024— the First Prize winner in the Suwannee Riverkeeper Songwriting Contest is from Lake City, Florida, with Best from Inside the Suwannee River Basin from Adel, Georgia, and Best from Outside the Suwannee River Basin from Palatka, Florida.
Everyone listened to the two main speakers, the talks about WWALS,
and the headliner at the
WWALS River Revue.
More about all that later.
Then the three judges listened to the
five finalists
of the Seventh Annual Suwannee Riverkeeper Songwriting Contest,
and picked these winners.
The Winners, Suwannee Riverkeeper Songwriting Contest, WWALS River Revue 2024-09-07
Center top: Rachel Grubb of Lake City, Florida, won
Best Americana Indie-Folk Song for “Cruising Down the Suwannee”
and First Prize, with $300.
Top left:
Sweet William Ennis from Palatka, Florida, won Best Blues Song for “Catfish Stew (Suwannee River Blues),” and Best Song from Outside the Suwannee River Basin, with $50.
Top right:
David Rodock from Adel, Georgia, won
Best Pop Country Folk Song for “Moonlight Echoes,” and Best Song from Inside the Suwannee River Basin, with $50.
Bottom left:
Robert Thatcher from Signal Mountain, Tennessee and Tom Brown from Dalton, Georgia, won
Best Folk / Americana / Bluegrass Song for “Roll On, Echo River.”
Bottom right:
Bill Berry from Valdosta, Georgia, won
Best Americana Song for “The River.”
Hahira, GA, August 21, 2024 —
The five finalists will play at the Finals of the Suwannee
Riverkeeper Songwriting Contest, at the WWALS River Revue, Saturday,
September 7, 2024, at the Turner Center for the Arts, in Valdosta,
Georgia. The audience and the three judges will watch and listen.
The judges will award prizes, and the winner will sing again.
This is all after dinner and after Dr. Jason Evans of Stetson
University in Florida talks about his long detective work to
determine water lettuce is indeed native, and Heather Brasell of the
Gaskins Forest Education Center in Georgia talks about the effects
of forest management on water. There will also be a silent auction
in this fundraiser to benefit WWALS Watershed Coalition, Inc.
One entry, a duo, is from Tennessee and Georgia: Robert Thatcher of
Signal Mountain, TN, and Tom Brown of Dalton, GA.
Two are from Georgia: David Rodock of Adel, and Bill Berry of
Valdosta.
Two are from Florida: Sweet William Ennis of Palatka, and Rachel
Grubb of Lake City.
Hahira, GA, September 25, 2023 —
Hahira, Georgia, September 25, 2023 — Ten musicians wrote
songs and seven sang them, about the delights of the waters of the
Suwannee River Basin and the need to preserve them against numerous
threats. Jane Fallon came all the way from Dunedin, Florida, to the
Turner Arts Center in Valdosta, Georgia, to sing a story about
legendary Sun Daughters reflecting on a proposed mine near the
Okefenokee Swamp, the headwaters of the Suwannee River. The three
judges marked her high on storytelling and presenting the value of
the waters, on originality of lyrics and music, and on performance,
with extra credit for naming waterways. She took home First Prize in
the Sixth Annual Suwannee Riverkeeper Songwriting Contest.
Suwannee Riverkeeper with the Winners: Cindy Bear and Franc Robert, Best Folk; Jane Fallon, First Prize; Bacon James, Best from Outside; Kyle Bird Chamberlain and David Rodock, tie for Best from Inside; Chamberlain, Best Blues; Rodock, Best AmeriKinda; Kevin Stephenson, Best Country; and Robert Thatcher (not pictured). Photo: Chuck Roberts
Jane Fallon said, “Thank you for the honor in recognizing my
song ‘Chant For The Okefenokee’ in your contest. It is always
a special feeling to sing a song for an audience that truly
understands its meaning. Thank you also for the work you do in
trying to preserve the waterways. It is so important.”