It was over three decades ago,
deep in the woods of Waretown, NJ, that the Pinelands Cultural Society
(PCS) found its roots. Every Saturday night, in Joe and George Albert's
small, secluded deer cabin in the Waretown pinelands, a handful of musicians
would gather to pick and sing until the wee hours of Sunday morning.
New songs
and old songs and many of their own creations would ring out to a few
friends who would venture down the long sandy lane through the pines.
Their cabin was known as the "Home Place" by the few lucky people who
went there.
In the summer, the cabin windows were opened and wild deer wandered around the yard. In the winter, you would find a roaring fire in the old cast iron cookstove and plenty of hot coffee and homemade cake. The cabin was lighted by several gas lamps, and water was provided by an old hand pump in the kitchen. There was no electricity.
The "Home Place"
soon became widely known by word-of-mouth. Newspaper and television reporters
were soon covering the Saturday night events. Hundreds of people
were finding their way to the cabin to listen to the music of the pine
barrens. The list of musicians was also growing, and it was not
unusual to find musicians entertaining outside while waiting their chance
to get in.
Fiddle
player George Albert died and Joe Albert, still living in the cabin, was
finding it hard to handle the growing crowds with the accompanying problems.
And so it was... the music stopped at the "Home Place". The visitors
missed it. Joe missed it, but no one missed it more than the musicians.
After a lapse of six months or so, a few pickin' pineys decided
to do something about it.
They rented
a big bare room at the Waretown Auction. They gathered up some of
the "Home Place" musicians, charged a small fee to the public, and Saturday
night's "Sounds of the Jersey Pines" once again belonged to the
folks of Waretown and the surrounding areas.
The Pinelands
Cultural Society (PCS), formed around the original few from the "Home
Place", was the outcome of this venture. Today there are hundreds
of musicians who have been a part of the "Sounds of the Jersey Pines".
The Society's goals include preservation and stimulation of interest
in our pinelands musical heritage. To meet this goal, the PCS planned
to build a new music hall.
The Hall
would be a place for aspiring musicians, young and old, to learn and perform.
It would be a place where music can be given back to the people.
The building would be called Albert Music Hall, after the
two Albert brothers who opened their hearts and home to a handful of musicians
so many years ago.
The "Sounds
of The Jersey Pines" has rung out every Saturday night since November
1974. Our first temporary home was at the Waretown Auction. Although
the building was destroyed by a disastrous fire in July 1992, Saturday
night performances continued uninterrupted in the parking lot in front
of the ruins.
By late
summer, PCS was able to temporarily present Albert Hall shows in the Frederic
A. Priff Elementary School in Waretown, NJ.
On May
18,1996 ground was broken for the Pinelands Cultural Society's new Albert
Music Hall building at 131 Wells Mills Road, Waretown, NJ. The 6000
square foot building was dedicated and officially opened on January 5,
1997. Over 1,100 persons attended to hear a special "Ceremonial
Set" followed by 44 bands playing two song sets. Joe and George Albert's
dream had come true !
Drawing courtesy of Roy Everett
A 45-space
parking lot and 4-bay garage/storage facility behind the Hall was completed
and the adjacent Pickin' Shed expanded to 600 sq. ft. in October 2004.
Welcome now
to the new air-conditioned Albert Music Hall. Come join the fun of the
traditional musical gatherings of the NJ Pinelands. Bring the whole family
for an evening of live country, bluegrass, and pinelands music each Saturday
night at 7:30 PM. Doors open at 6:30 PM.
Are you are
a musician? Bring your instrument and swap your songs with others. There
is plenty of pickin' room on the Albert Music Hall porch, in the Pickin'
Shed, and around the grounds. The special melodies and lyrics of old time
songs and more recent hits can always be heard.
Acoustic
instruments such as fiddles, guitars, banjos, mandolins, dobros, upright
basses, dulcimers, spoons, and wash tub bass, played by musicians from
the tri-state area, convey the history and special magic of the music.
Performing groups change every 30 minutes. Come by and help us to continue
and preserve this unique and beautiful tradition.