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Telluride Blues & Brews Festival One of the most scenic music festivals in the country, the Telluride Blues & Brews Festival takes place every September in Telluride, Colorado, a world-famous resort town in the heart of the Rocky Mountains. The festival is a three day celebration of music and microbrews, held in Telluride Town Park , an outdoor music venue with breathtaking mountain peaks for a backdrop. By day, experience live blues, rock, funk, gospel, and soul, the best microbrews from over 50 microbreweries during Saturday's Grand Tasting, a wide variety of food and craft vendors, children's activities, and more - all on the festival grounds. By night, follow the festival as it flows into the town of Telluride and Mountain Village, with late night juke joints and after-hours jams.
Telluride Society for Jazz Since 1977, Telluride’s majestic perch - high in the spectacular San Juan Mountains in Southwestern Colorado has been the site of a musical odyssey combining the finest of nature and art. Each year the Telluride Society for Jazz produces one of the most memorable festivals in the world. Its intimate format and many opportunities for enjoying spectacular mountain activities complement the superb music. One can enjoy hiking, mountain jeep tours, visits to mining ghost towns, biking and more, all of which seduce an audience of up to 3,000 per day to this historic, one-of-a-kind Victorian town seen by most Americans only in TV commercials. Combining outdoor stages during the day with theater and club shows running at night, this festival has the best of both worlds.
Telluride Cajun Festival The festival capital of Colorado will host the 3rd Annual Telluride Cajun Festival, Saturday, July 14, 2007 at the Base of Chair 4 in the Mountain Village on the Lower Misty Maiden Trail. The Telluride Cajun Festival is a one day festival bringing N'awlins to Telluride with Funk bands and N'awlins cuisine. The 2007 Headliner will be the Dirty Dozen Brass Band. Also on the bill is Leo Nocentelli with Little Hercules. Keeping the groove going between acts will be DJ Smothered in Cheddar. Tasty New Orleans cuisine by Fat Alley BBQ including Po' Boys, Jambalaya, Crawfish Boil, Meat Pies, Amstel Light and Tasty drinks by Bacardi and Cazadores.
Telluride Chamber Music Festival The Telluride Chamber Music Festival has been bringing music to Telluride since 1973. This year we continue to bring you chamber music as it was originally intended, up close and personal!. Our festival creates a spontaneous connection between audience and musicians which lifts the human spirit. You are invited to take a break from your busy life and enjoy one of life's gentler pleasures by hearing chamber music at its best. Our Artist Director, Roy Malan, is planning another great festival for our enjoyment. Roy is the concertmaster with the San Francisco Ballet.
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Telluride News and Telluride Articles
News from www.telluridenews.com
The latest news from the www.telluridenews.com website!
  • Town Council gives green light to Phish show
    In the middle of the summer of 1988, a young band from Vermont drove a beat-up truck across the country to Telluride to play a string of shows here.
  • Parties hold quieter caucuses this year
    Last year, when Coloradans got a say in whether the Democrats would nominate their first black candidate or their first woman candidate for president, the caucuses were a very big deal.
  • Gov?t supports uranium accountability bill
    As President Obama calls for more nuclear power, Colorado contemplates putting two uranium mills into operation.
  • For town, a refresher on [being] history
    Everyone knows Telluride doesn?t look like Vail or even its haughty cousin Aspen, with a downtown studded with concrete buildings.
  • Dolores: the worst jobless rate in the state
    He traveled from his home in Dolores County for work. He drilled holes and lit dynamite and hauled rocks up from underground ? rocks that not only powered a nation but paid his family?s bills. But when uranium mines near the Utah border closed this fall, Larry Kibel lost his job along with scores of other workers, and he found himself part of a very unfortunate statistic.
  • Sweet science
    Telluride High School students Devin McCarthy (L) and Chancee Forestier (R) from Jeremy Voytko?s chemistry class instruct Telluride first graders, from left, Raven Snaedr, Margaret Byrom, Kyra Levan and Owen Distefeno in the science of making ice cream on Friday afternoon. Voytko?s students are studying chemical reactions and conducted experiments with the first graders. [Photo by Merrick Chase]
  • AIRPORTWith $17 million from feds, airport inches toward completion
    The Telluride Regional Airport will complete the crusade against its once-bowed runway, thanks to $17 million from the federal government.
  • Celebrating phenomenal women
    In some countries, International Women?s Day on March 8 is a National Holiday where people honor all the women in their lives. In the United States, it?s a so-so affair that mostly passes unnoticed.
  • LOCAL NEWSLocal Theresa Powell found dead at Orvis
    Former co-workers said that Theresa J. Powell was a nice person and good to work with. They said she was full of energy and always bouncing around. Freddy Enriquez, her co-worker at La Cocina de Luz, where she worked last year, called her ?Jiminy,? after Jiminy Cricket.?
  • Cop Shop
    Reilly Capps Telluride Marshal?s Department Feb. 23 CONFUSION: Oh, how she got quite a shock When she saw in her parking lot Her red car was gone But then she checked around And found it was in a new spot. Feb. 27 ELK EUTHANIZED: An elk apparently fell off the hillside onto the bike path and broke its snout, and it looked like the animal wasn?t going to be able to feed itself. Scared, the elk charged a couple deputies who came to check on it, and they had to scramble over a rail for protection. It seemed like the animal?s snout wasn?t going to heal right and it looked like it would starve, so a deputy used his Springfield XD service pistol and shot it, twice, in the head. Public works took care of the carcass.
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