Located at: 18388 Coastal Hwy, Lewes, DE 19958
🎟 For fans of singer-songwriter, folk 🎵
Get ready for a spooktacular show like never before that will feature The Rough & Tumble performing spooky songs they wrote as part of an album about various monsters and creatures of lore, all created to make children obey and behave.
A few years ago, we began hearing from people about the stories they were told as children, stories to keep them in line, scary tales to teach them to conform to the culture of their families. Most were harmless, but others were downright scarring. We resonated with this concept even though both our sets of parents weren’t big on ghosts, unless you count the holy ghost (which we do) who was referred to as the holy spirit to avoid confusion with other spectral beings. Still, we could see the way they employed stories and cautionary tales to keep us in line. It seemed natural. Maybe that’s part of how children learn boundaries and safe behavior. Maybe that’s what it’s like growing up in a religious household in the 80’s. Maybe it’s the way an event changes itself into a story the minute it passes into memory. In one memory, three brothers tossed a rope over a limb to create a swing and were told to take it down before they hung themselves. In another memory, they were told that a young boy hung himself in that same tree and that’s where the rope came from. Our stories may hang more closely on our own beliefs about another’s motivation than we like to think.
Over time, these stories got relegated to family get-togethers, holding your breath when you go through a tunnel, confessions when you’re three drinks in with complete strangers and a fear of spiders. Harmless, quirky insights into how you were raised. Add some oxygen and a spark, though, and these beliefs became a fire, a fence, a funeral you won’t cry at.
The plot of every monster story hangs on whether you believe there is a monster.
Sunday, February 9, 2025
Linwood Taylor Band with Sol Roots
International Blues and Blues/Rock artist. Played with artist as diverse as Blues Brothers, Joe Louis Walker and HR of Bad Brains.