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Headlining this year's lineup are festival co-founders the Crooked Jades along with local favorites Peter Rowan and David Grisman. The legendary Freighthoppers return after a five-year absence, while Spring Creek Bluegrass Band, which recently won the Telluride Bluegrass Festival band competition, makes its festival debut. But the most talked-about act on the bill may be the Carolina Chocolate Drops, a trio of African-American twentysomethings on banjos, fiddles, and jugs who are reviving traditional 1920s black string-band music. The group met at the Black Banjo Gathering at Appalachian State University in April 2005 and released its fantastic debut, Dona Got a Ramblin' Mind, a year later. Recently featured in the Golden Globe–nominated Denzel Washington film The Great Debaters, the Drops bring their brand of back-porch-picking, foot-stomping good times to Berkeley's Freight and Salvage on Thursday, Feb. 7, and prove once again that the grass is blue beyond the usual geographical suspects.