Bill Crofut, a high school friend, called me from Cambodia one day in 1960, asking me to join him in giving a series of American folk music concerts in several Asian and African countries. This was for a State Department people-to-people program, and while they sent the New York Philharmonic to Russia, they were satisfied with a banjo player for Laos and Burma. But Crofut claimed that at his first concert in Cambodia, 10,000 people came and 9,990 walked out. Would I join him for a few months touring? After all, we had enjoyed singing together occasionally in high school. My guitar was gathering dust as I tried to make a living as a concert-music composer, so I hesitated. My friends were less ambivalent. “A free trip to Asia? Composing can wait, you’ve got to go, it will only take a few months.” So I did, and being a performer lasted a dozen years.
–Stephen Addiss, age 84