Lucky Clark On Music: Carol Noonan
Singer-songwriter talks about COVID-19, how its affected her Stone Mountain Arts Center, her life.
Share
I have known Carol Noonan for decades now. It began with her first band, Knots and Crosses, and continued throughout her highly successful solo career culminating with the creation of the Stone Mountain Arts Center where she and her husband, Jeff Flagg, present some of music’s biggest stars who flock to the tiny town of Brownfield to perform in a centuries-old barn for folks from all around New England. As I alluded to earlier, she’s an old friend and with the COVID-19 pandemic ravaging the concert scene currently, I called her at home to find out how the couple is faring nowadays with gatherings more than 50 people being curtailed. We chatted Jan. 8.
introduce such an amendment three years ago. senator orrin hatch from my home state of utah and congressman jeff flagg from arizona. all extremely supportive for what our family is doing. in fact, will even be partnering with us to use our family as an example with a lot of their constituents to really show what some people are doing about this issue and why it needs to be addressed because this is the future of our children and our grandchildren that we re talking about and that s why when these girls said they were concerned about the debt, our family decided to do something and this is what we re doing and we really feel like we are making a difference. congress is listening and we re very, very encouraged by that. and as you said, as you point out, when you told your daughters or figured out that each one of them would owe $41,000 at this point of the national debt, you decided to do something about it. but you sound as though you re encouraged and as though your message is getti
i haven t seen one of these for a while. thank you so much. except at the smithsonian. oh, my goodness. e-mail us right now, it was so hot at your house. what happened yesterday or what could happen today? keep it clean. all right. it s going to be a very festive show for you this morning. we have your headlines. the heat is on in the northeast as steve just said. today, temperatures are predicted to hover around the triple digits from virginia to new england. these record-breaking temperatures are expected to last until saturday. heat warnings and advisories have been issued throughout most of the region. in new york city, 500 public cooling centers are being opened today to help people escape the heat. i ve had enough. got to cover up as much as we can. just got back from iraq. this is like nothing. it could not have come on a worst day. 600 amtrak passengers struck on a disabled train from boston to new york city without any air conditioning. it took two ho