Robert Andresen (1937-1995) was a leading force in documenting, performing, and promoting
old-time music in the Upper Midwest. The Minnesota native was an avid collector of
traditional recordings, a composer of traditional-sounding songs, a recorder of old-time
musicians, a writer of many articles about traditional music, and a teacher of traditional
music. In the 1980s, he hosted Northland Hoedown, a radio show aired over KUMD-FM, Duluth,
Minnesota. He was instrumental in many musical releases featuring some of the leading
players in the Upper Midwest, including Norwegian fiddler Leonard Finseth, Finnish fiddler
Sulo Hackman and the Plehal Brothers, radio stars of the live music era. Andresen was born
in Minneapolis and raised on a farm in Outing, Minnesota. After high school, he studied
graphic design and worked for more than twenty years at Harcourt Brace Jovanovich graphic
company. He was a skilled guitar player who drew upon his love of bluegrass and Scandinavian
music to become an innovator, adapting Scandinavian accordion and fiddle tunes for the
guitar. Throughout the 1970s and into the 1980s, Andresen played in an old-time band called
the Wildwoods, comprised of his first wife Joanne, and her relatives Dale and Dorie. He also
sat in with several famed old-time musicians from throughout the Upper Midwest. With his
second wife, Gale Perry Andresen, he helped found the Lake Superior Old-time Fiddle Contest.
He died of cancer on March 10, 1995.