"riding the rails" press release
Here's the press release I'm sending around in advance of the next leg of the tour.
Riding the rails to share songs from Kansas to Kentucky
Spending weeks at a time traveling by train isn't everyone's idea of a good time. But it's all “part of the job” for Bryan Moyer Suderman, who has logged over 10,000 miles by rail in the past year, carrying his guitar, a backpack full of CDs, and a soul full of music across North America, including stops in the next few weeks in Newton Kansas, southeastern Iowa, Lexington Kentucky, and Lancaster County Pennsylvania.
Moyer Suderman has become known for his unique gift of crafting songs and performances that draw from the deep wells of biblical vision and wisdom while being accessible and fun for young and old alike. Audiences respond to the warmth of his voice, the contagious nature of his songs, and his signature interactive style of singing and song leading. Since the release of his first CD “God's Love is for Everybody”
in 2002, Bryan's “songs of faith for small and tall” have become favorites with families and churches across North America and beyond, and have been published in various hymnal, songbook, curriculum and other resources. “A New Heart” is his 4th CD released on the SmallTall Music label (www.smalltallmusic.com).
But why travel by train?
While travel and performing is an important part of Moyer Suderman's work (he recently returned from Paraguay, where he was part of the song leading team at the recent Mennonite World Conference Assembly), he also struggles with how to carry out this vocation in a way that is sustainable economically and ecologically as well as sustainable in terms of healthy relationships with his family and local community
(he attends Community Mennonite Church of Stouffville Ontario).
As a result, Moyer Suderman works to keep his long-distance travel schedule confined to a limited number of weeks per year, and then to “make hay while the sun shines” and perform as much as possible while he is on the road. CanRail and Amtrak rail passes offer a way to do that at a low cost and in a way that reduces the carbon emissions that would result from more “one-off” flights to long-distance engagements. Moyer
Suderman completed a coast-to-coast USA railroad tour last spring and took the train from Toronto to Vancouver and back last fall before his current tour in the American Midwest.
Another component of Moyer Suderman's long-term strategy is what he calls his “Community Supported Music” system. This is an innovative online delivery system for music that is patterned after the “Community Supported Agriculture” (CSA) approach, making regular “deliveries” of new songs that are “fresh, home- grown, and always in season.” Since pioneering this alternative business model for the arts, now in its
fourth year, Moyer Suderman has made quarterly “deliveries” of new songs - complete with music notation, chords, thoughts and reflections, and activity ideas and tips for using the songs in home, school, and congregational settings. Various other artists have picked up on the idea as well, have been applying this model to their own work.
Bryan lives near Toronto, Ontario with his wife Julie and son Matthew. For more about Bryan Moyer Suderman recordings, downloads, and tour schedule, visit www.smalltallmusic.com, and discover more about his “Community Supported Music” system at www.bryanmoyersuderman.com
2 Comments:
I'm curious to know how many books you read per year, on average, considering all the sitting travel... I am just finishing The Omnivore's dilemma (in the next 10 minutes) after starting it last May, post graduation. Just curious. All the best of luck to you, Bryan.
How many per year...? Wow... ummm... well... I usually have a few on the go at the same time (different categories), so in terms of finishing books it's easier for me to break it down... probably 2 or 3 per week... sometimes more, sometimes a bit less... My pace of finishing books is actually less on the train, as I tend to bring something really substantial that will take me a while (not enough space to bring a lot of faster books)... I'm on a bit of a biography kick right now... bios of Paul McCartney, Mel Brooks, and Beethoven in the last couple of weeks, now starting on Pilgram Marpeck... I might save that one for the train in a couple of weeks...
I think the Omnivore's Dilemma is a great choice! How did you like it? Any changed habits as a result?
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