Peggy Ratusz – Living the life doing what she loves most

Peggy Ratusz – Living the life doing what she loves most

well established presence in the Asheville music scene since 2002, Jazz and Blues Chanteuse Peggy Ratusz performs an infectious, sultry, multi-layered brand of original, traditional and modern Blues, Soul and Jazz. While influences such as Ray Charles, Connie Evingson, Joan Osborne and Bonnie Raitt are evident, it can’t be denied that her unique style and voice are one of a kind. She and her backing bands are particularly impressive during live performances where audiences are warmed by the glow of her shine. Inspired by the rhythm, the melodies and content of the stories she tells, every drop of emotion is authentic and shows all who are present, that she’s a willing servant to the music she writes and covers.

For over forty years, opportunities have come her way that have landed her on television shows, radio, festival line ups, theaters, bars, restaurants, benefits, private events and showcases. She spent seven years based in Tucson, Arizona where she toured the West in a folk rock trio from 1979 to 1985. Audiences began to experience the richness, power and emotion of her voice evoking positive reviews and acclaim. In 1985 she moved to “the live music capital of the world ” a.k.a. Austin, Texas and stepped into the Blues pool fronting a 4-pc Chicago Blues style band called The Bootleggers. She performed at popular clubs in Austin such as The Steam Boat, The Black Cat Lounge, 311 Club, Babe’s and Maggie Mae’s. Throughout the 1990’s she was also a featured entertainer in show bands such as Hot Wax, Apollo Soul and The Copy Cats, covering Motown and Soul music from the 60’s and 70’s and 80’s.

In November of 2002, she moved to Western North Carolina and now makes her home in Fletcher. “Listening is the most important aspect about creating music people need to hear. It enables us to lift each other up as musicians on stage together, which in turn gives us the opportunity to fearlessly stretch ourselves beyond what we thought we were capable of doing.” The talented musicians, who share the stage with her, agree.

The 2000’s have been banner years for this still very young 62 year old singer and musician. An original track from her freshman CD, “Sexual High” was picked by Jomar Records and is featured on the compilation CD, National Women in Blues. Her live version of Memphis Slim’s I’m Lost Without You featuring Duane Simpson on acoustic guitar is on the 12th Volume of WNCW’s Crowd Around the Mic CD. She and her bands have been voted Best in Blues for 10 years, the last 4 in a row (2016-2019) and in 2008, 2010 and 2016, Peggy was a semi-finalist in the most prestigious Blues competition in the world, The International Blues Challenge held for the past 36 years in Memphis, TN.

In early 2010, Peggy officially released her sophomore album, Infused with the Blues which features 23 of Asheville’s best instrumentalists and vocalists. Kellin Watson, Paula Hanke, Ron Clearfield, Mike Barnes, River Guerguerian, Jonathan Scales, Rhoda Weaver, Duane Simpson, Joey Katkowski, Rob Geisler and more. All gifted musicians and singers, she calls friends. In 2011 she opened for the Tedeschi Trucks Band at the Spartanburg Memorial Auditorium. Ratusz has also shared the stage with or opened for The Beach Boys, Taj Mahal, Bernard Allison, Denise LaSalle, Candye Kane, Bob Margolin, Geff Achison, Kellin Watson and Shannon Whitworth.

She’s performed at The Bull Durham Blues Festival, Chattanooga’s Riverbend Festival, Carolina Blues Festival, Women In Blues Festival, End of Summer Blues Festival, The Green Swan Festival, Bele Chere and area venues such as The Orange Peel, Isis Restaurant & Music Hall, The Grey Eagle Music Hall, Ambrose West, Jack of the Wood, 5 Walnut and Tressa’s Downtown Jazz & Blues.

Women Who Made Music History Concerts, LLC is her latest endeavor, co-producing and co-starring with local vocalist, Paula Hanke. Since 2016, the pair has successfully aligned themselves within the Performing Arts circuit, garnered a booking agent out of NYC and are currently touring one of their shows, Love is a Rose, that celebrates super star, Linda Ronstadt. www.loveisaroselive.com

An advocate for area and touring musicians, she’s booked bands and singer-songwriters at area bars and restaurants including Jack of the Wood, The Block off Biltmore and Tressa’s Downtown Jazz & Blues. For two years, she hosted a bi-monthly Female Artist Spotlight Night at Tressa’s Jazz & Blues which were paid showcases for women artists of all genres from novice to professional. For several years, she was a teen band music mentor for several area youth bands and is now a volunteer at Girls Rock Asheville. For the past 15 years, Peggy has been a sought after vocal coach,
and her monthly feature, Women Making Music has graced the pages of  SOFIA.

Playin’ it forward is the philosophy by which she lives. To be lucky enough to make a living doing what she loves the most and does the best is not something this ruby throated Blues Mama, ever takes for granted.

Peggy Ratusz is a vocal coach,
song interpreter, and songwriter.

For vocal coaching email her at

[email protected]

How to Beat the Blues During the Long, Cold, Dreary Winter Months

How to Beat the Blues During the Long, Cold, Dreary Winter Months

Sometimes people begin to feel a little down after the holidays and before the warm spring and summer months. There are, however, things everyone can do to stay positive, focused, and happy during this time of year.

Take a vitamin D supplement. Vitamin D is the natural mood elevator that is one of the secret reasons we humans crave warm weather and sunshiny days. Your body naturally produces it when exposed to the sun, but it may be lacking during the cold days of winter. Supplements can be bought over-the-counter, but ask your prescribing doctor if it will interact negatively with any current prescriptions you have. Vitamin D usually has no drug interactions and no side effects, so most doctors will give you the green light.

Stay connected with loved ones. This includes family and friends. Most of us reconnect with those we love during the holidays, and this can create a natural feeling of well-being and good cheer. This then fades and leaves us feeling depressed, lonely, and isolated unless we continue to maintain these connections throughout the rest of the year. Take this chance to reconnect again now that the holiday rush is over. Go to lunch with a friend or take an exercise class together. Call or email or even visit your relatives. A few hours spent with a chosen companion or two can do wonders for your mental health.

Write a list of gratitude. This is a simple and profound tool for mood elevation. Simply list out things, people, or events you are grateful for, then place the list where you will see it regularly. Change the list every few days so you realize just how much you have to be thankful for.

Pick up an old hobby or learn a new one. Humans crave meaningful and pleasurable activities. It can be very satisfying to learn how to paint with watercolors, crochet an afghan, or to build a birdhouse. Find a craft that interests you, take a class, or go online to improve your skill.

With these tips you can have a happy, fulfilled New Year!

Courtney Maybin, Owner of Beauty Bin, Asheville’s New One-Stop Beauty Shop

Courtney Maybin, Owner of Beauty Bin, Asheville’s New One-Stop Beauty Shop

Native to WNC, Courtney Maybin has lived here all her life, except during a few years when she moved around the country with her husband, Cameron Maybin who is a professional baseball player. In 2015, they returned to Asheville and bought a home. It was then that Courtney found the opportunity to consider what she wanted to do for her own career.

“I always loved the beauty industry, so I chose to take the esthetics course at Blue Ridge Community College. I became a licensed esthetician in 2018. From there, I decided to start a studio out of my home to continue to practice and to begin to gain clientele, but I always knew I wanted to open a store front,” she says. “I began the planning for Beauty Bin in early 2019 and worked throughout the year to prepare for an end-of-year opening.”

Courtney’s vision for a salon and spa includes her mission to give affordable services to everyone regardless of race, gender, or age. “It’s important to me that no matter who walks through the door, they (my staff) know how to work on any kind of hair or any kind of skin type.” Insisting on this diverse skill set means that her employees require more training, but Courtney believes it is worth the effort. “Self-care is important and something all people should invest in.”

Tammy Barnwell, Courtney’s mother, has been instrumental in her new business venture. “She’s my lifesaver,” Courtney says. “As far as business things, whether it’s scheduling or bookkeeping, she can do it all. I know the field of esthetics, which she doesn’t know at all, and she knows all these things about internal business. We’re learning a lot from each other. Beauty Bin couldn’t run without her!”

With Tammy by her side, these two ladies also look for ways to give back to the community. Beauty Bin was a drop-off location for MANNA Food Bank’s annual holiday food drive; and they are planning to continue to work with the food bank throughout the year to help those in need. Courtney is also continuing to work on a charity she started with her husband, Maybin Mission, with a spa-inspired twist. The original program allowed the community to nominate families to receive holiday gifts: a Christmas dinner party, and a visit with Santa. One lucky winner was gifted with a 60-minute massage, custom facial, brow wax, and skin-care set.  “Looking forward, I want to find more ways to give back to the community as much as possible.”

At Beauty Bin, you’ll find everything you are looking for in a spa or salon. This “one-stop” shop offers facials, massages, lash extensions, color, cut, and more. You can get it all under one roof at the Beauty Bin.

Visit the Beauty Bin at 117 Sweeten Creek Road in Asheville and you’ll leave feeling beautiful!

Eco-Friendly Holiday Gift Ideas

Eco-Friendly Holiday Gift Ideas

For holiday shoppers who like to plan a bit ahead of time and give a gift that could make the difference in someone’s life, here are ten holiday gift ideas that help others and the environment.

Give the Gift of Your Time

One of the nicest things a loved one can give is the gift of their time, whether that means as a babysitter, errand runner, shuttle driver or something else equally helpful. This is an especially wonderful gift for someone who is ill or older. Give the gift of time by reading to them or making a meal.

Give the Gift of Service

One of the easiest gifts to give is personal hand-crafted gift cards redeemable for things like a manicure or pedicure, back or foot massage, home-cooked meal, house cleaning or some other service a friend or loved one might appreciate.

Give an Activity Gift Certificate

While the standard gift cards generally come from local department or grocery stores, this is the year to consider giving something a little different. A gift certificate to a special class at a local school, the movies or theater, or a sporting event is a nice change of pace.

Give Gifts from Recycled Materials

One of the best ways to promote sustainability is by making or buying gifts made from recycled materials. Consider giving and using handmade paper products like stationery or holiday cards. Check out your neighborhood or the internet for stores that sell goods made from recycled materials.

Give Gifts that are Recycled

Not necessarily a gift made from recycled materials and definitely not Aunt Ellie’s fruit cake that just arrived by express mail yesterday, but something that was purchased at a flea market, yard sale, estate sale or second-hand store. Lots of people have collections to add to, so a special token found in some dusty corner of an antique store might be just the ticket.

Give Homemade/Handmade Gifts

Nothing says lovin’ like something from the oven! Homemade gifts for the holidays are the best. Bake, sew, paint, craft or whatever. Make up a batch of cookies and fudge or create a photo album, scrapbook, family DVD or memory box. Better yet, how about creating something from baker’s clay?

Give a Gift that is Living

While it is not outlandish to give someone who is very close to a pet – rescue the little feller from the local pound — a nice flower or potted plant might be a better choice. You might want to consider giving a selection of flower or vegetable seeds, bulbs to plant in the spring or a hummingbird feeder – just add sugar water.

Give a Donation in Someone’s Name

If friends and family are particularly devoted to a certain charity, making a donation in their name might be the right idea. Otherwise there are a lot of worthy organizations to choose from  environmental or otherwise. 

Be Sure to Shop Locally

There are so many local merchants that offer services that friends and family can utilize that it may be difficult to settle on just one. Shop locally and eliminate the middleman, reduce transportation costs and help the local economy, all of which helps shoppers and the environment. Plus local businesses typically return an average of 80 percent of each dollar spent back to the community.

Use and Give Eco-Bags or Shopping

Want to give the gift that keeps on giving? Give canvas shopping bags available in small sizes at many grocery stores and help friends and family eliminate the use of plastic shopping bags. Or choose larger bags from the local craft store that can be used for lots of different occasions.

The whole idea is to find new and different ways to make the holiday season people- and earth-friendly.

Get in the Christmas Mood

Not in the mood for Christmas? No jingle in your bells? No jolly in your holly? No. . . . okay, okay . . . you get my (snow)drift. What you need is a Christmas mood enhancer. If it seems that you always get in the mood on the 24th of December, and then feel like you’ve missed out on the whole Christmas Spirit, start early this year. Here are a few tips to get into the spirit of the season.

Play Christmas songs at home. You can pick up a Christmas CD at a department store,  or visit your local library to find classical or modern Christmas music. Dancing to Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree, or swooning to Elvis’ Blue Christmas will surely lift your spirits.

Bake cookies. You can’t beat the smell of homemade cookies baking in the oven. Use those cookie cutters you have stuck in the back of the cupboard to make stars, trees, and gingerbread boys and girls. Use different colors of icing to decorate them, then sprinkle with edible glitter.

Make apple cider. Get some plain apple juice and pour it into a big pot. Add cinnamon sticks and cloves. Peel and slice an orange or two and float the slices in the top of the juice. Cook on low until heated thoroughly. Strain the cloves before serving. 

Buy tangerines. Purchase the very small, easy-to-peel kind. There is something about that juicy little citrus fruit that just makes you think “Christmas.” They’re also yummy and good for you. They look really nice in a bowl as a centerpiece, too.

Put up lights. It’s okay if you don’t have your tree yet. Wrap the little white twinkle lights around a baker’s rack or book stand. One of my favorite places for lights is the little space between the top of the kitchen cabinets and the ceiling.  It makes your kitchen look so cozy at night.

Watch Christmas movies. There are so many to choose from: Miracle on 34th Street, A Christmas Story, Winter Wonderland, It’s A Wonderful Life, Elf. Anything that makes you feel all warm and fuzzy will work. Just put on a pair of comfy, flannel pajamas, pop some popcorn, and settle in.

Buy a holiday decorative item. Just some little something to cozy up a corner.

Read Little Women. You can’t read about Jo cutting her hair and still feel Christmas-neutral.

Buy a gift for someone you love, or make a donation to your favorite charity in the name of someone you love.

If all this fails . . . get into your car and drive around. Other people have had their lights up since Halloween. Don’t forget to take your Christmas music with you.

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