The Wild Coyotes
String Band Music Old and New
Band Bio
Southeast Idaho is sparse, high desert country west
of the rocky mountains of the great divide where coyotes roam. It is a place where musicians of any
particular idiom are few and far between.
Traditional bluegrass, old-time, cowboy, and western swing music can be
found, but there is no dominant indigenous musical tradition. The environment fosters an open, diverse
community of musicians playing traditional music. Music parties here often include all of these
styles mixed and mingled. The Wild Coyotes
bring all of this variety together to make The Coyote sound – stringband music
old and new.
The Wild
Coyotes are four good friends living in southeast Idaho that come together to play music, melding
their diverse musical backgrounds and interests. The Coyotes create tight harmonies and
driving instrumentals as they play old-time fiddle and banjo tunes and songs
from old and new sources. The Coyotes
will bring you a program spanning a wide variety of traditional American-roots
styles. Old time, bluegrass, classic and
contemporary folk, and cowboy genres are set to classic old-time string band
instrumentation with exciting vocal harmonies.
In addition
to concerts and entertainment for festivals, banquets, weddings, or other
special functions, the Wild Coyotes join with top regional dance caller Dave
Cottle of Salt Lake City
to provide exciting contra, square, and circle dances. Dave has a magical way of encouraging even
the most reluctant so that even groups with no prior dance experience can have
a memorable evening. Dancing to the
music of the Wild Coyotes with Dave calling is fun, good exercise, and a great
time!
The Wild
Coyotes have recorded three CDs: Across the Great Divide, Tunehead’s Fancy,
and thier latest Coyote Tracks.
Joe Dobbs, host of the West Virginia Public Radio Show “Music from the
Mountains,” has featured Across the Great Divide on his program. Joe says, “I really like this CD. We’ve got a lot of response for it. People told me they think it’s the best
old-time CD they’ve heard.”
The Wild
Coyotes began in 2002, when fiddler/mandolinist/singer Vince
Crofts decided it was time to start playing with nearby
friends singer/guitarist Sallie
Sublette and banjoist Rick McCracken. The
Wild Coyotes are Vince Crofts
(fiddle, mandolin, and vocals), Rick McCracken (fretless and fretted banjo,
vocals), Sallie Sublette (guitar,
vocals) and Carrie Bean (bass, vocals).
Sallie Sublette (guitar, vocals) grew up in West Virginia where every vacation was a long and winding
trip back to the North Carolina
farm, the family homestead since before the civil war. Her grandmother Sallie
got her music degree in 1910, and Sallie
felt like the “illegitimate” folkie in this family of southern Bapist church
musicians. Her mother said, “Please
don’t take your little sister to those places you sing,” meaning coffeehouses
or the big concerts by her rock and roll revival group, “The Blue Moons.” Sallie’s
lyrical vocal leads and solid harmony singing has spanned a wide range of genre;
from Carter Family autoharp in old-time bands, to concert choirs, country rock
bar bands, and now, most happily, the Wild Coyotes. When she’s not doing counseling in her
private practice she loves to cross-country ski and hike the sage and cedar
hills around her home with her big yellow dog Maggie.
Carrie Bean (bass, vocals) is a talented singer,
songwriter, and bass player. Oldest of
eight in Rexburg, Idaho, she helped her family clean up after
the Teton Flood devastated their home.
She has played guitar and electric bass in several groups doing original
music. She played acoustic bass with the
New South Fork bluegrass band. Several of her original songs are featured on
the Coyote’s latest CD. For her day job
Carrie keeps her patients teeth squeaky clean in an office where the dentist
takes the whole group to Mexico
every year. In her spare time she snowboards
the back country in winter, runs marathons, climbs the Tetons in summer, and
she writes more songs. Like her voice,
Carrie is lively and sweet and a delightful anchor for The Coyotes.
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Vince Crofts
(fiddle, mandolin, vocals) is a native of Idaho whose family business really was
potatoes. Vince
is a reformed bluegrasser who now takes five fiddles in different
old-time tunings to every performance, including the fiddle his grandfather
played. He is a popular “utility”
musician who also plays mandolin and guitar and he taught Carrie to play the
upright bass. Father of five musical
children, the Coyotes particularly enjoy it when he demonstrates harmony lines using
the falsetto voice he used to teach parts to his daughters in the family
band. Vince has
a long history of performing with great regional bands. He has played in Europe
with his Jackson Wyoming based western swing Shelly and Kelly Band, and dude
ranches and trail rides with his western duo partner Mindi. In his spare time you will find Vince playing ice hockey or avidly kayaking; he has
run the Grand Canyon several times. Vince teaches
music in his home. He is one of the best
“horse traders” around and has helped many people find an instrument they love
to play.
Rick McCracken (old-time banjo, vocals) with his
fluid clawhammer style is one of the outstanding old-time players in the intermountain
west. He immerses himself in archival
recordings researching tune sources and bringing them to new life in the
old-time stringbands he has played with through the years, and his first CD, Yellow
Cat, was recorded with the Montana based Schnell Brothers. He has taught banjo at the Festival of
American Fiddle Tunes in Port Townsend Washington
and the Bluff Country Gathering in Lanesboro Minnesota.
Rick and Sallie were featured
at the Bluegrass and Traditional Music Festival in Harrietville, Australia.
Rick, a staunch tunehead, has blossomed
into a great old-tme singer with The Coyotes.
Rick is the techno-coyote and recorded all of the Coyotes CDs, as well
as projects for other acoustic groups.
He has a long history of climbing and ski touring, and he and Sallie love to camp and hike with their dog Maggie.