Dirk Powell is a musician whose emotional understanding of American tradition
enables him to cross significant cultural and artistic boundaries. He has
expanded on musical roots extending back more than nine generations in the
Southern Appalachian Mountains to create a career encompassing live
performance, recording, producing, and composing/arranging for film. His
ability to unite traditional and historical forms with modern artistic
sensibilities has led to work with many of today's greatest directors,
including Anthony Minghella, Ang Lee, Victor Nuñez, Spike Lee, Steve James,
and Edward Burns.
While considered one of the world's leading experts on traditional
Appalachian fiddle and banjo styles, Dirk has a foundation in the classical
realm, having begun piano study at age 8 before switching to Baroque
harpsichord at 10. In his early teens, Dirk formed a musical bond with his
grandfather, James Clarence Hay of Ashland, Kentucky, and discovered a
personal resonance with the music of his mountain heritage. By combining
early formal training with this deep feeling for rural styles, Dirk has
arrived at a position unique in the modern musical landscape. He is in high
demand for his soulful film scores, well-grounded yet adventurous CD
production, consultation as an authority within several distinct traditions,
and expertise on a wide variety of instruments.
Most recently, Dirk has been working with Anthony Minghella and T Bone
Burnett on the music for the upcoming Miramax film Cold Mountain. His score
for the Steve James documentary Stevie, which won first place at the
Amsterdam Film Festival and is in competition at Sundance, 2003, has received
wide acclaim. Dirk composed music for and performed in Victor Nuñez’s film
Coastlines, which premiered at Sundance, 2002, and was chosen as fiddle and
banjo soloist for Mychael Danna’s score to Ang Lee's Ride With the Devil, for
which he also recorded an end-credit version of What's Simple Is True with
the well-known singer Jewel. The connection established on this film with
top music supervisor/producer Alex Steyermark resulted in Dirk composing and
performing the score for The Unfinished Civil War, an award-winning
documentary produced and directed by Glenn Kirschbaum. Dirk also wrote and
performed the score to the powerful Appalshop film, Stranger With a Camera,
which won a Silver Spire at the San Francisco International Film Festival and
has aired extensively on PBS.
Dirk's banjo playing can be heard in Spike Lee’s Bamboozled and Edward
Burns’ The Brothers McMullen. His fiddling was featured in Riverdance: The
Show, for which he chose and arranged traditional American material. Dirk
has also appeared in the BBC/RTE five part documentary series The Irish Empire as an expert on the music and culture of the Scots-Irish who immigrated to
the Appalachian Mountains in the 1700s. The companion recording to Charles
Frazier's National Book Award-winning novel Cold Mountain on which he
collaborated with Tim O’Brien and John Herrmann received widespread critical
acclaim as it brought the untamed spirit of Appalachian music to a new
audience. Dirk has recently been collaborating on a fusion of Appalachian
music and Hip Hop with Richmond producer/rapper Danja Mowf for the film From
the Holler to the Hood, which looks at tension between guards and inmates in
the new maximum security prisons in Appalachia.
Dirk has also delved deeply into the traditions of Southwest Louisiana, where
he now makes his home with wife Christine Balfa. Their Cajun band Balfa
Toujours, carrying on in the musical footsteps of Dirk's legendary
father-in-law Dewey Balfa, continues to release critically acclaimed CDs and
tour the world. Most recently on the home front, Dirk has begun
collaboration with Creole musician Keith Frank to release a CD specifically
challenging the legacy of racism that continues to haunt Louisiana.
In addition to these musical pursuits, Dirk has actively pursued a
long-standing interest in writing. His work has been accepted for
publication by national literary magazines such as The Oxford American. His
liner notes have received a great deal of attention, most recently earning a
nomination for "Best Liner Notes" from the International Bluegrass Music
Association for the CD Letters From My Father. In a further strengthening of
his relationship with film as an art form, Dirk recently completed his first
screenplay, Lost Branch, which addresses the growing American obsession with
internet genealogy as an attempted replacement for family ties dissolving
under the pressures of modern life.
In short, Dirk Powell has a vibrant creative energy that crosses many
boundaries while remaining grounded in the rural traditions of his heritage.
His formal musical training, deep-running roots, and dedication to
self-expression as a necessary part of life combine to make him one of the
most unique artists in America today.