Every year Homegrown selects a local luminary to curate an album of their favorite local music. Each album is available on our Bandcamp site and they are all pay-what-you-can. Check it out HERE to learn more.
https://duluthhomegrown.bandcamp.com/
Category: 2019
2019 Homegrown registration is now open!
Registration for the 2019 Duluth Homegrown Music Festival is now open. Please complete the registration form HERE.
Welcome Sean Zarn as Homegrown’s Assistant Director!
Please join me in welcoming Sean Zarn as Homegrown’s latest Assistant Director! Sean has been with the festival in multiple roles over the years and has an abundance of knowledge from his tenure. I look forward to our partnership!
-Melissa La Tour, Executive Director
This is Sean’s Homegrown story….
My parents were my biggest musical influences for my first several years until I was able to start discovering new music on my own. Jerry Lee Lewis and The Beatles were the primary inspiration for me to get into learning to play instruments and writing songs. I started on piano and eventually tried a handful of other instruments.
Many friends and other high school students my age were picking up instruments which had a snowball effect and the Iron Range became a thriving music scene for teenagers with a couple dozen bands and shows in all-ages venues a couple times every week. This lasted about four years until I was a senior in high school and it showed me everything that’s great about a local, DIY music community.
Eventually settling in Duluth for college, I met Steve Libby working at Pizza Hut; he adopted me into his circle of friends and jamming buddies. We’ve been playing together now for almost 10 years. When I moved to Duluth, I also immediately found The Alrights and became enamored. This was a phenomenal band that seemed to perfectly match my impression of the character of Duluth and it was a sign that there was an active local music scene here in Duluth.
About a year and a half into living in Duluth, Steve gave me a Homegrown Field Guide going into the 2010 Homegrown weekend. I was a little furious that nobody told me about this during my first year. I tried to make it to see a band my girlfriend (now wife) was interested in and had our very first experience with a changed schedule or a misprint. Oddly, I can’t recall the other bands we specifically saw that year, but it was very few and we really didn’t understand the scope of the festival – we’d only learned of the event at the beginning of the weekend and we were busy college students.
The following year, we got a field guide earlier and arranged for some nights of music mixed in with our school schedules. This is when I really got a taste of what Homegrown is, and I was pretty excited to not be in school the following year. In 2012, I dove in for a full week and marveled at the existence of such an event. How could I have gone my whole life without knowing about this? The music, the community, and the accessibility were overwhelming and inspiring. I was impressed at how many artists were part of the local music community.
In 2013, I went to the Winter Fiasco, where I found out there were volunteer opportunities, which I was eager to do. I wanted to do my part to help with this wonderful event, and I was introduced to Melissa LaTour, the volunteer coordinator. That year, I plunged further into the Homegrown experience – following strangers from venue to venue, staying up 4 hours later than planned, and cursing my day-job schedule. I’d found my favorite week of the year.
Each year, I wanted to spend more time volunteering; it was another aspect of the festival that I really enjoyed. After a few years of extensive volunteering, Melissa suggested I consider applying for an open position on the steering committee. In 2016, I was accepted to join the committee, starting the 2017 festival year. I’m so proud to be helping year-round with this event, and I love all my new friends and new experiences that come with it. I’m incredibly honored to be moving into the Assistant Director role; just like every volunteer, committee, and board role, it’s bigger than me and demands my respect. I will serve the mission of Homegrown and not use the role for self-serving purposes.
Homegrown is Looking for Steering Committee Members
The Homegrown Music Festival is looking for fresh steering committee members to join our team. If you are interested in joining us in preparations on next year’s festival, please fill out the application below.