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2001 Emmy® Award Recipient
National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences
Northwest Regional Chapter
Host / Narrator of Pike Place Market - Soul of a City
The winds of change have blown a strong voice to the
American folk scene…a Pacific Nor‘wester in the form
of singer songwriter Jim Hinde, bringing his powerful
repertoire of Hinde-Sight . . . songs and stories of
pride, passion, and lessons learned on roads less
traveled . . . and though he may employ humor and wit to
veil it, the “scars of wisdom” authenticate his
words.
Jim’s road map reads like a lifetime wade in the
primordial pool of which contemporary folk songs are
born . . . Midwestern small town upbringing, sixties
coffeehouses, Vietnam, freight trains, hopes dashed and
realized, loves lost and gained, family, blue collar,
white collar, no collar, search, struggle, survival, and
accomplishment.
His professional resume is quite respectable. Jim has
been a staple at Seattle’s Pike Place Market since
1989, where he narrated, wrote, and received a Northwest
Regional Emmy Award for the PBS documentary Pike Place
Market—Soul of a City, toured nationally, performed on
the ABC Evening News, WNBC New York, appeared in several
episodes of Northern Exposure; and has video,
soundtrack, discography, and major folk festival stage
credits too numerous to list. With pride and humility he
adds, "my greatest accomplishments are husband,
father, and social activist."
"This is the real thing."
(Jim Page, Victory Review)
"Jim Hinde is a songwriter for
the 21st century, ready to help us all pay attention to
the subtle, changing weirdness of modern life. I’m a
fan; you will be, too." (Richard Dorsett, Victory
Review)
"Jim’s a big man, with a big
beard and a big voice . . . of an ilk I don’t hear
enough of anymore. Even when it’s light and fun, Hinde’s
is music of conscience." (Thomas Shapley, Seattle
Post-Intelligencer)
"Known as a man who speaks his
mind, Hinde possesses a sharp, opinionated wit and the
guts to vocalize it. With songs of train journeys,
truths learned and a country called America, Hinde
expresses always an underlying optimism even when
protesting the status quo . . . delivered in a voice
that’s somehow inherently gentle . . . a good dad’s
voice." (Joanne DePue, Pike Place Market News)
Preferring to play guitar and sing songs to tooting
his own horn, Hinde simply characterizes his work as
"real folk for real folk . . . not too bitter, not
too sweet." When not performing solo, Jim has been
honored to assume the stage with the likes of American
folksinger songwriter Jim Page, world harmonica champion
Jim McLaughlin, legendary Scottish fiddler the late
Johnny Cunningham, and stellar musicians from coast to
coast including Scott Law, Orville Johnson, Fly Amero,
and Dave Brown. In 2003, Jim shared a Salt Lake City,
Utah event with none other than Glen Campbell.
In a 1974 Newsweek article, Hinde was quoted as
saying, "I’m just going to keep going until I
find out where I want to be." That quest has
privileged him to the corners and the crossroads of this
country . . . to the very heartbeat of the American
spirit . . . where Jim takes the pulse and returns it
through story and song . . . and humbly he adds,
"that’s a pretty cool place to be."
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