Stephen Wade | |
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Born | 1953 (age 63–64) |
Origin | Chicago, Illinois, United States |
Genres | Folk |
Occupation(s) | Musician, writer, researcher |
Stephen Wade (born 1953) is an American folk musician, writer, and researcher.
Growing up in Chicago in the 1950s and ‘60s, Stephen Wade was exposed to a number of vernacular musicians who had moved north to the city from the Mississippi Delta and the Southern Appalachians.
Wade started playing blues guitar at age eleven and eventually switched to the banjo. In 1972, he began studying with Fleming Brown at Chicago’s Old Town School of Folk Music. By the mid-‘70s, Brown passed his classes over to Wade to teach. In 1972, Wade also began an association with Brown’s teacher, old-time, Kentucky-born radio singer Doc Hopkins. Under the tutelage of these two mentors, Wade immersed himself in the banjo, traditional music, and American folklore. Later, he traveled across the United States to research American humor and folk tales and meet with folk musicians in the field.
By the late ‘70s, he had developed a theatrical performance combining storytelling, traditional music, and percussive dance, entitled Banjo Dancing. The show opened in Chicago in May 1979 where it ran for thirteen months, including a Labor Day performance at the White House. In January 1981, Wade brought Banjo Dancing to Washington, D.C.’s Arena Stage. Although he was initially booked for three weeks, his engagement there ran ten years.
In 1986, Wade appeared in the public television documentary The Unquiet Library, a study of the Library of Congress’s music division. This led the following year to his writing and narrating Catching the Music, a celebration of the banjo and its learning.
On the Way Home, Wade’s second critically acclaimed theatre show, opened in 1989 in Washington, D.C. In the early ‘90s, he took both shows on the road. In 1993, Wade received the Joseph Jefferson award for his Chicago run of On the Way Home. A five-time Helen Hayes award nominee, in 2003, Wade received the Helen Hayes/Charles MacArthur award as composer, adaptor, and musical director for the world premiere of Zora Neale Hurston’s Polk County.
His essays, reviews, and articles have appeared in such publications as American Music, ARSC Journal, Encyclopedia of Appalachia, Studies in Popular Culture, Encyclopedia of Chicago, Musical Quarterly, American Archivist, Southern Quarterly, Journal of Country Music, New Letters, Beloit Magazine, Folklife Center News, Chicago Tribune, and the Washington Post’s Book World.