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Fort Worth African American Roots Music Festival returns for 5th year

Yasmin Williams, who was recently featured on NPR's "Tiny Desk" music series, is among the performers at this year's Fort Worth African American Roots Music Festival. The event will be March 15 at Southside Preservation Hall in Fort Worth.
Yasmin Williams, who was recently featured on NPR's "Tiny Desk" music series, is among the performers at this year's Fort Worth African American Roots Music Festival. The event will be March 15 at Southside Preservation Hall in Fort Worth.

Country, roots and folk music in North Texas does not begin and end with a guy holding a guitar covering radio hits in a Stockyards bar, or George Strait鈥檚 shows at Dickies Arena 鈥 and Beyonc茅 is far from the first Black artist to work in the genre, even if she just became the first Black artist to win .

Those are the kinds of misconceptions the fifth annual Fort Worth African American Roots Music Festival is designed to debunk, as both the only roots festival in Texas that spotlights Black American musicians and one of the few such festivals in the nation.

鈥淲e are pushing to make sure that when Fort Worth is represented, the wide expanse of what鈥檚 available 鈥 the city鈥檚 diversity 鈥 is represented,鈥 says Brandi Waller-Pace, the festival鈥檚 founder.

Waller-Pace, an artist herself, taught music to Fort Worth ISD elementary school students for a decade and helped shape the district鈥檚 music curriculum. The former teacher and mostly jazz- and neo-soul-versed musician, though, realized they had more to learn after they picked up the banjo 鈥 an instrument with roots in Africa, despite its strong association with rural America.

鈥淚t was such a deep historical connection,鈥 Waller-Pace says. 鈥淚 very quickly found community with other Black folks who were unearthing this history and spreading the word.鈥

That community led to Waller-Pace founding the festival, along with her nonprofit group . Though it was hit with adversity almost instantly when the COVID-19 pandemic stifled plans for the first edition in 2020, the festival quickly became national in scope.

This year, artists include Dom Flemons, Kyshona Armstrong and Yasmin Williams (whom you may have just seen on NPR鈥檚 Tiny Desk series). Flemons, Waller-Pace says, will be bringing Fort Worth-specific music and stories to his performance, based on his expertise in the history of Black cowboys.

Waller-Pace says that if you go to the festival, you should bring your dancing shoes for the first-ever festival square dance. And bring your guitar, banjo or fiddle: 鈥淭here鈥檚 always room to sit around and jam,鈥 she says.

Details

March 15 from noon to 10 p.m. at Southside Preservation Hall, 1519 Lipscomb St., Fort Worth. General admission is $50, $35 for educators and school staff, $30 for students, and $20 for children ages 3-17. Free for younger kids. .

Arts Access is an arts journalism collaboration powered by The Dallas Morning News and 四虎影院.

This community-funded journalism initiative is funded by the Better Together Fund, Carol & Don Glendenning, City of Dallas OAC, The University of Texas at Dallas, Communities Foundation of Texas, The Dallas Foundation, Eugene McDermott Foundation, James & Gayle Halperin Foundation, Jennifer & Peter Altabef and The Meadows Foundation. The News and 四虎影院 retain full editorial control of Arts Access鈥 journalism.

Natalie Weiner is a Dallas-based writer whose work has appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, Billboard and Rolling Stone.