Enjoy the Ride (feat. Emily Pakes)

Folkstar & Karmic Fury Records are proud to release from the vault “Enjoy the Ride” featuring Emily Pakes. “Enjoy the Ride” was written to remember and honor all those who have been injured or killed while bicycling. Here’s the full story.

Folkstar - Enjoy the RideIn July of 2013 Kim and I were up in Durham hanging out with our friend / amazing musician Emily Pakes when we started talking about possibly writing a song together. She mentioned the recent death of local Durham cyclist Seth Vidal, which I had heard about. I also knew about several other bicyclists killed in Wilmington and other North Carolina towns because my brother is an avid cyclist and wrote of these accounts in his blog (sirbikesalot.com). But Seth’s story is that one that really haunted me. Two days before he died he tweeted: “It isn’t a contest. Just enjoy the ride.” This stuck with me and I couldn’t hide from it until I put it on paper and worked it out in the studio with Kim. Then Emily came down and delivered an impressive rap for the second verse.

This song is dedicated to Seth Vidal (killed in a hit and run on Hillandale Road in Durham), Paul Tyler (killed in a hit and run on Wrightsville Ave), the Doolittles (father and son killed while riding in the River Road bike lane), Phil Tidmarsh (killed on River Road by a young addict), Harley Becraft (run over twice before anyone stopped to help), Alan Simons (shot in the head by a firefighter in Asheville), Gary Frank Sargent (killed on Eastwood Road), and everyone else killed or injured on our roads. These are preventable tragedies, if only we’d take driving seriously and be good people to each other.

~ Sue Cag of Folkstar

Direct song link: https://folkstar.bandcamp.com/track/enjoy-the-ride-feat-emily-pakes

The RecoveryRockFest Folkstar Band

Folkstar Band
Folkstar fully banded (l-r): Nick Simon, Sue Cag, Kim Dicso, Crystal Fussell, Graham Wilson

The Folkstar full-band show at RECOVERY ROCK FEST last night! Awesome show, awesome people, awesome venue! Kick-ass music from Melissa Ferrick, Mike Blair and the Stonewalls, Stray Local, and Tom McDonald! Huge amount of gratitude to Nyla Cione, Arlene Cummings, Cynthia Cooke, Karen Kane, Heather Rogers, Alicia Whitley, and the fabulous sound crew, especially the guy who went and found Sue after she left her camera behind. Thank you to everyone who came to enjoy the music and the camaraderie. This was a freakin’ amazing event!! Our band ROCKS with (l-r) Nick Simon, Sue Cag, Kim Dicso, Crystal Fussell, and Graham Wilson. — at UNCW Kenan Auditorium.

Recovery RockFest Press Galore!!

RecoveryRockFest has been all over the news lately, in so many places it’s impossible to keep up! This is due to the amazing outreach work of founder Nyla Cione. She’s been on radio stations, news stations, and all our online and paper press publications. We are honored to be included in such a great cause!!

Here we are on Time Warner news! Keep your eye out for all the Folkstar sightings!


Star News – Thursday, August 27th, 2015:
Article Online:
http://www.starnewsonline.com/article/20150825/ENT/150829953/1026/ent04?Title=Indie-singer-Melissa-Ferrick-headlines-Recovery-Rockfest

RRF Folkstar Star News
Recovery RockFest and Folkstar covered in this Thursday’s edition of Star News

Encore Magazine – August 26th, 2015:
Article Online: http://www.encorepub.com/rock-out-to-recovery-new-festival-focuses-on-overcoming-addictions-at-uncws-kenan-auditorium/

RRF Folkstar in Encore
Recovery RockFest and Folkstar in Encore Magazine

Treelines and Skylines – The Painting!

This is Sue’s new painting created as the cover art for the new Folkstar album Treelines and Skylines. We are incredibly happy with how it turned out and super excited to see it on the cover of our new album – to be released next month!!

Treelines and Skylines Painting by Sue Cag
Folkstar album Treelines and Skylines painting by Sue Cag

Treelines and Skylines (acrylic painting and album cover art)
by Sue Cag of Folkstar

Treelines and Skylines represents the dichotomy of “nature” vs human fabrication. On the left side of the canvas stands an enormous vibrant ancient tree with lush forest behind it. This venerable tree represents original forests and authentic life. It was inspired by considerable time spent in the small pockets of true forest that remain out west: the sequoias, redwoods, douglas firs, spruce, and cedars. There is movement, light, and texture in the complex bark and trunk, including the fire scar.

On the right side stand dull skyscrapers, asphalt, and a coal plant, all rising from a dead ancient stump. Symbolic of our most populous city, the Empire State Building represents the ultimate skyline, the human “empire.” The Transamerica Pyramid represents the west where logging continues and where the coast redwoods were cleared in order to build San Francisco. A road leads into the walled, dreary city where a smokestack pollutes the air and represents what’s necessary to run such a place.

The center of the painting shows man’s wanton destruction in the form of a vast clear-cut. Walking into it is like walking into an area that has been bombed; it radiates the stillness and loss of a cemetery with the stumps left behind like tombstones. In the distance there is a thin treeline of what’s left – a treeline left open to wind and storm, the little bit that could possibly be saved.

Snow-capped mountains stand above the scene, the highest points, next to a mountain top that’s been “removed” for mining. This painting illustrates how humans have destroyed and continue to destroy our world. It’s obvious after discovering just how much ancient forest has been lost forever, but it’s also evident in everything we do right now, every choice we make, and all the things we prefer to value. We’re living under the illusion of power and we fill our lives with misinformation, distraction, and clutter that just leaves us empty. We’ve created a separation between us and “nature” where no such disconnect actually exists.