Downtown Salisbury
Description
The official page of Downtown Salisbury Downtown Salisbury is a MAIN STREET MARYLAND community that is committed to the revitalizing and creating a great place to shop, dine, live, work and play within our own community.
"An alive, interesting Downtown
that is bustling with activity and
that contains a nice balance of
retail, residential, culture, and office.
The Heart of our City
that reflects our values as being
progressive,
anchored in tradition and history
and diverse
A family-oriented place where
people care about each other.
A regional attraction that brings together
people of all ages and races on a daily basis --
and where all of these diverse people are comfortable.
A quirky, different, and unpredictable place
--that's a little funky --
where you can have a unique
and totally enjoyable experience"
Tell your friends
RECENT FACEBOOK POSTS
facebook.comRt 13 Caribbean Flava will soon be open 7 days a week! Check them out at the intersection of Main Street and Rt 13!
January Salisbury Bike partY: Hipsters and Lumberjacks! returns to Downtown DT Salisbury next Friday at 6:30 PM!
2018 started out pretty cold, but we've got Downtown Salisbury hoodies in and ready for you to purchase at the Downtown Visitor Center (110 N Division Street). Stop in and grab yours today! $30 and we’re open 8:30 – 4:30 M-F. Stay warm out there!
Happy New Years and may 2018 bring you happiness in every way possible! Thank you to all those that joined us for the @sbyaedistrict ball drop!
Please keep our friends at Main Roots Coffee in your thoughts and prayers as they suffered a flood from a busted pipe in their shop. ❤️
You can now get updates on the National Folk Festival in Salisbury, MD at @NFFMaryland on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and Snapchat!
You can now get updates on the National Folk Festival in Salisbury, MD at @NFFMaryland on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and Snapchat!
Onward to the New Year, but first, the Downtown Salisbury Weekend Ahead
Onwards To The New Year Ahead! But, first, the Downtown Weekend Ahead FRIDAY - Roadie Joe's Bar and Grill will have Dust and Bones playing and Brew River Restaurant and Bar has Butler & Jameson playing -Pick up your last minute New Year's Eve fashions at Downtown Bridal and Dryden Dress Company SATURDAY - "RING" in the New Year by shopping at Kuhn's Jewelers - Biscuit Bar Saturday's at The Acorn Market SUNDAY - NEW YEAR'S EVE - New Year's Eve Ball Drop - Downtown Salisbury - come ring in the New Year with us in Downtown Salisbury! - New Year's Eve 2018 at La Quinta Inn & Suites! - New Years Eve Brunch or New Years Eve Dinner at Market Street Inn Restaurant & Pub http://downtownsby.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/122917-to-123117-1.pdf
New Years Eve Ball Drop 2018 Downtown Salisbury - come ring in the New Year!
MEDIA RELEASE DATE: December 21, 2017 CONTACT: Caroline O’Hare, National Folk Festival Local Manager / cohare@salisbury.md National Folk Festival Accepting Performer Applications for 2018 Festival in Salisbury, MD Salisbury, MD – The National Folk Festival, coming to Salisbury, Maryland in 2018, is accepting performer applications for the 2018 festival to be held on September 7-9. Applications may be submitted through the website Sonicbids, an “online matchmaker” which connects musicians with performance opportunities, or by mail sent to the National Folk Festival office located in Downtown Salisbury. The deadline to apply is April 30, 2018. Typically, the festival receives submissions from about 2,000 artists each year, although only 25-30 can be selected. Over the course of the National’s three-year residency in Salisbury, it will present a dazzling diversity of performers and traditions. Quality and authenticity are the primary selection criteria for artists. The National Folk Festival’s approach to programming focuses on presenting “traditional” arts – deeply held cultural expressions that are passed on through time in families and communities and in tribal, ethnic, religious, regional, and occupational groups. It presents artists who are firmly rooted in the cultural community from which their music, dance, or other art form derives, rather than “interpreters” of tradition—no matter how accomplished. The Festival strives to be inclusive in terms of race, ethnicity, and region. All applicants are held to the same standards. The selection of festival participants is guided by the definition of folk and traditional arts established by the National Endowment for the Arts: Definition of “folk and traditional arts”: The folk and traditional arts are rooted in and reflective of the cultural life of a community. Community members may share a common ethnic heritage, cultural mores, language, religion, occupation, or geographic region. These vital and constantly reinvigorated artistic traditions are shaped by values and standards of excellence that are passed from generation to generation, most often within family and community, through demonstration, conversation, and practice. Genres of artistic activity include, but are not limited to, music, dance, crafts, and oral expression. Source: National Endowment for the Arts What exactly is folk? From a musical perspective, the Festival will include everything from blues, rockabilly, gospel, klezmer, jazz, bluegrass, breakdance, cowboy, polka, tamburitza, old-time, and mariachi to western swing, honky-tonk, beat box, rhythm and blues, and zydeco, as well as traditional music and dance from Cajun, Native American, Celtic, Middle Eastern, Caribbean, Asian, Appalachian, Latin American, African and Pacific Islander cultures. Over three days, audiences will have the chance to see hundreds of artists representing cultural traditions from across the state, nation and the world. Those interested in performing at the National Folk Festival have two ways to submit their materials for consideration. All artists must follow these guidelines. When submitting materials, artists must include the following: • audio and/or video samples/links • biographical information, and • press materials. Note that these materials will NOT be returned. The PREFERRED METHOD for applying to perform at the National Folk Festival is electronically through https://www.sonicbids.com/find-gigs/play-national-folk-festival-2018-sept/ The ALTERNATE METHOD is to mail a hard copy of artist materials to: NFF Programming Committee ℅ Salisbury Arts & Entertainment District 110 North Division Street Salisbury, MD 21801 All materials received will be logged in, and will receive a preliminary review to assess quality, authenticity and appropriateness. Qualified submissions will be brought before the programming advisory group for further consideration. Artists will NOT be contacted unless the festival is interested in pursuing festival performance possibilities. The high standards of excellence to which the National Folk Festival adheres makes the selection of performing artists a highly competitive process. It is the policy of the National Folk Festival to present an entirely new festival each year, with no repetition of artists. For more information on the National Folk Festival, visit: www.nationalfolkfestivalmd.com # # # About the National Folk Festival Since it was first presented in St. Louis in 1934, the National Folk Festival, the NCTA’s flagship event, has celebrated the roots, richness and variety of American culture. Championed in its early years by Eleanor Roosevelt, it was the first event of national stature to present the arts of many nations, races, and languages on equal footing. It was also the first to present to the public musical forms such as the blues, Cajun music, a polka band, Tex-Mex conjunto, Peking Opera, and many others. Today, the National is an exuberant traveling festival, produced by the NCTA in partnership with communities around the country that embraces the diverse cultural expressions that define us as a people in the 21st century. About the National Council for the Traditional Arts (NCTA) A leading non-profit in the field, the National Council for the Traditional Arts (NCTA), is dedicated to the presentation and documentation of folk and traditional arts in the U.S. Stressing excellence and authenticity, the NCTA presents the nation’s finest traditional artists in major festivals, tours, concerts, workshops, demonstrations, exhibitions, media productions, school programs, cross-cultural exchanges and other activities. It works in partnership with American communities to establish new, sustainable traditional arts events that deliver lasting social, cultural and economic benefits. Over7,000 hours of the NCTA’s archival audio recordings dating from the 1930s are permanently housed at the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress. The NCTA champions the interests of folk and traditional artists and organizations in the arena of public policy. http://www.ncta-usa.org About the City of Salisbury, Maryland Founded in 1732, Salisbury is the county seat of Wicomico County, a place where John Smith touched land in 1608 during his exploration of the Chesapeake Bay. Situated on Maryland's historic Eastern Shore at the crossroads of the Delmarva Peninsula, Salisbury is now one of the region's largest cities, and serves as the capital of the Eastern Shore, a rural area defined by its agricultural and maritime traditions, landscapes and industries. The Chesapeake Bay is central to this distinctive identity. Though a relatively small city, Salisbury is the geographic and economic hub of one of the nation's fastest-growing Metropolitan Statistical Areas. Led by a dynamic mayor, the City of Salisbury is working to build its reputation as an arts and culture destination, and is aligning its downtown development and revitalization efforts with the arts. Salisbury believes hosting the National Folk Festival is the perfect catalyst to further a cultural renaissance and urban renewal. http://www.salisbury.md