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New Book Tells the History and Lore of Walnut Valley Festival
Winfield, KS
08/16/2022 10:46 AM

New Book Tells the History and Lore of Walnut Valley Festival

Winfield, KS

Thanks to Seth Bate, fans of the Walnut Valley Festival (WVF) in Winfield, KS, can now discover for themselves much of the untold history and hidden lore of this annual event. Bate, who moved to Winfield for college, attended the festival and has been a devoted fan ever since. Aside from his examination of the festival’s early years and what distinguishes it from other music festivals, Winfield’s Walnut Valley Festival includes reflections from entertainers, staff and crew, as well as campers and fans. Published by the History Press, it also has over 100 images, most drawn from WVF archives, and one appendix providing significant festival milestones and a second providing a listing of all the artists who have played at Winfield over its 50-year history.

Seth Bate: “I moved to Kansas in 1989 to attend Southwestern College in Winfield. I fell in love with a Kansas farm girl, Jenny, and have made Winfield my home. I started working as a WVF emcee and stage manager in the late 1990s, and a few years later Jenny and I took over managing the Wednesday Workshops—hands-on workshops that give participants the opportunity to learn directly from festival artists. In addition to my own love for the festival, I married into a family connection. Jenny’s dad, Joe Muret, was one of the three founding members of the Walnut Valley Festival. Joe ended his association with the festival in the early 1980s, but he and his wife, Christie, are still a great source of stories about the early days.”

Bate enjoyed the festival so much that he picked it as a topic for his master’s thesis, which focused on the challenges faced by the organizers of a ‘raucous’ music festival in in a fairly conservative Kansas town. When WVF Executive Director Bart Redford read the thesis, he promptly dubbed Bate the ‘official Walnut Valley Festival Historian.’

The book includes reflections by festival staff, emcees, performers, campers and fans. The list of contributors, aside from Bate’s substantive portions on the early history and feel of the festival, includes Dan Crary, Beppe Gambetta, John McCutcheon, Leo Eilts, Linda Tilton, Orin Friesen, Sam Ontjes, Wayne Steadham, Janine & Edward Foster, Karen Deal, Russell and Sherry Brace, Tim Sidebottom, Larry Junker, Greg Smyer, Kendra Redford and Bart Redford.

Seth Bate: “When we started talking about turning my thesis into a book, the easy thing would have been to just condense what I had written and add some of the festival’s amazing collection of photos. Bart and his team wisely suggested something more collaborative, reflecting the Winfield spirit. We collected contributions from a wide variety of artists, festival staff, crew members and campers. I think the result benefits from the variety of viewpoints, the different ways that people see the festival, based on their own experiences.”

The book is available for purchase at the Walnut Valley Festival office, 918 Main Street, Winfield, KS, or on the festival website, wvfest.com (under Tix and Merchandise). It will also be available for purchase at the 50th Walnut Valley Festival, September 14-18, at the Mercantile.

Reference
Rex Flottman
620.221.3250
 
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