LYNN ? The Squeezebox Stompers will kick the annual Fourth of July celebration off in style with a free concert at Red Rock park on July 3 from 7 p.m. until 9 p.m.Band leader Ralph Tufo, who has been performing for more than 30 years, plays the accordion, piano, Anglo concertina and Cajun accordion. Tufo, who teaches at North Shore Community College, was a founding member of the Boogaloo Swamis, which won four Boston Music Awards.Guitar and bass player Larry Plitt won the 2007 Boston Folk Festival Singer/ Songwriter contest. Pitt, who is a veteran of the San Fransisco folk rock scene of the early 1970’s, said his music is rooted in the Piedmont and Delta blues styles is also peppered with Cajun, Zydeco, Celtic and classical influences.Paul Harty said he “was bitten by the Folk Bug” as a teenager in the 1960’s and never recovered. Harty plays guitar, harmonica, fiddle and mandolin. He is also a singer and songwriter.Mike Migliozzi said his music draws on many disciplines including rock, jazz, funk, punk, reggae and folk. In 1998, Mike left New York to join New England’s Boogaloo Swamis. Since then, he has performed with numerous area musicians including Louisiana legend, Jesse Lége.The newest member of the group is Ron Chane, who described himself as an “unrepentant rock and roller.” Chane played bass with Boston’s Catalinas for 22 years and he has also performed members of the Outlaws, Orleans and Boston. Chane said after he bought an upright bass a few years ago he found himself in demand as an acoustic musician.You can also catch Tufo on Lynn Community Cable, which is regularly airing “Rockin’ Ralph’s Roadhouse.”Tufo, who resides in Winthrop, said the show is “A Musical About Survival New Orleans’ Style After Katrina.” It was performed by the students and faculty of North Shore Community College on April 16.The staged reading was written by Tufo, who also wrote all the songs in the production. He said he was granted granted a sabbatical from North Shore Community College, where he teaches Developmental Communications Skills, to write the play. The production is about several New Orleans characters holding out at a single beacon of hope, a roadhouse left standing – Rockin’ Ralph’s Roadhouse – in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Spirits run high and low as the characters sing about their troubles and their joys: treacherous land developers; lack of government response; love, loss and perseverance.?While in New Orleans working with the North Shore Community College’s rebuilding crew,” he said. “I heard the residents’ stories of survival during Katrina and their struggles to restore their personal lives, community, and culture. I feel these stories need to be told?to remind everyone that the rebuilding of New Orleans needs to remain a priority of our country.”Tufo said the band would have the Cd on sale at the event in Lynn on July 3 and 50 percent of the proceeds from the sales would be donated to NSCC’s Katrina Relief Fund.