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Musings on folk, Americana, country, bluegrass and newgrass


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John McEuen & The Circle Band to perform at Blue Note Grill in Durham on Jan. 12

DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA — You may recognize singer-songwriter John McEuen as a founding member of the legendary country/bluegrass act The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, which recently performed in Durham at the Carolina Theater.

Now McEuen, who left Nitty Gritty in 2017, is planning to perform at the Blue Note Grill on Thursday, Jan. 12,  with the help of Les Thompson (another founding member of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band), John Cable (former NGDB member), and Matt Cartsonis. The quartet plans to perform songs from “Will The Circle Be Unbroken,” the landmark platinum-selling album originally released by The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band 50 years ago, along with contemporary originals penned by McEuen and other storied offerings from the bluegrass/country songbook.  The show will also feature archival photos and video from McEuen’s time in the NGDB, according to his publicist Matt Kelly.

McEuen has personally logged 9,500 plus concert appearances and traveled 3 million plus miles on the road both during his time as a member of NGDB and now as a solo performer.  McEuen is in his 15th year of hosting his Acoustic Traveler show on Sirius/XM and is prominently featured in the Ken Burns documentary “Country Music,” which has aired on PBS.  He also recently released a coffee table book showcasing 150 rare and unseen photos from the “Will The Circle Be Unbroken,” writing and recording sessions to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the release. “Will the Circle Be Unbroken- The Making of a Landmark Album,” which has been featured in Bluegrass TodayWestword, and Aspen Daily News, among others.

IF YOU GO

Who: John McEuen & The Circle Band

What:                Concert Performance

Where:              The Blue Note Grill- 709 Washington St, Durham, NC 27701

When:               Thursday, Jan. 12

Time:                 7:30 p.m.

Tickets:             $35

Age Limit:       All Ages

Website:           www.johnmceuen.com

EPK:                 http://www.michaeljmedia.com/pressjmceuen.html

Tickets:             https://www.etix.com/ticket/p/5937253/john-mceuen-the-circle-band-durham-the-blue-note-grill


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Lineup announced for Mountain Music Festival 2023 on June 1-3 in New River Gorge, WV

Checkout our initial lineup for Mountain Music Festival 2023 on June 1-3 in New River Gorge, West Virginia, at mountainmusicfest featuring @stringdusters@risingappalachia@sierradawnhull@vincehermanband@caitlinkriskoandthebroadcast@thebringdowns and @chadnickellandtheloosechange.

Three-Day General Admission tickets are still $40 OFF with promo code BLINDFAITH23 thru the end of December. That’s ONLY $129 for 3 DAYS of camping and music at @aceadventureresort. Stay tuned for more lineup announcements.


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Joe Newberry and April Verch to bring holiday cheer to Cary Theater on Dec. 14

CARY, NORTH CAROLINA — Growing up, musicians Joe Newberry and April Verch absorbed traditions of home and hearth in his Missouri Ozarks and her Ottawa Valley of Canada.





The holidays have always been a special time of year for both, with the lure of family and friends, festive decorations, gifts under the tree, and always…. music,” a press release states.

So now, each year the duo sets out in a modern day sleigh (with four-wheel drive) to perform their eagerly anticipated holiday tour. Original songs join timeless hymns. Stories warm the heart and give a twinkle to the eye. Lively fiddle and banjo numbers combine with traditional dance steps to illustrate happy times when people made their own fun at the holidays, and all year long. Make your holiday concert list, and check it twice… Newberry and Verch are coming to Cary at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 14.

Newberry grew up in a family full of singers and dancers. He took up the guitar and banjo as a teenager and learned fiddle tunes from great Missouri fiddlers. Verch grew up listening to her Dad’s country band play for dances in the Ottawa Valley. She started step dancing at age three and fiddling at age six. Both Newberry & Verch became masters of their traditions and tour the world with their respective bands and projects. Yet they never forget the roots of their music, that connection to the people in the audience, on the dance floor, to the community sparked by a good song.

For these veteran performers who come from distinct traditions and parts of the world, their collaboration is fueled by their kindred passion for bringing people together to celebrate traditional music. Blues and ballads stem into Canadian regional styles and originals. Their voices blend in harmony, their tasteful instrumentals prove that these masters have nothing left to prove, and then their feet kick up the dust in perfect rhythm…and together, they make you remember why this music existed in the first place.

For tickets, which range from $16 to $20, contact the Cary Theater general box office at 919-462-2055 or visit this link.


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Early bird launch day for RedWing X set for Dec. 6

Tickets and camping sales are a whirlwind on Early Bird launch day set for Dec. 6 beginning at 10 a.m. for the 10th annual Red Wing Roots Music Festival.

Here are a few reminders before it all begins: We have only 1,000 Early Bird tickets and a limited number of Premium RV Campsites available. (Only one Premium campsite per order.) These two hot items move fast! As soon as the Early Bird tickets run out, Tier 2 tickets will automatically open. If you haven’t already, be sure to check out all of the great camping options before tomorrow. We can’t wait to see you in June!
Each year the festival runs with the help of a fantastic group of volunteers! We would love to have you join us this summer. Learn more about volunteer opportunities for the 10th annual Red Wing Roots Music Festival. Volunteer applications open tomorrow! 

Visit https://www.redwingroots.com/ to buy tickets or sign up to volunteer.


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MerleFest adds Little Feat, Tanya Tucker, Marcus King and Miko Marks to already star-studded lineup for April 27-30

WILKESBORO, NORTH CAROLINA — MerleFest, presented by Window World, has just added another huge list of performers to its star-studded 2023 lineup, which includes headliners The Avett Brothers and Maren Morris.

Set for April 27-30, 2023, on the campus of Wilkes Community College, MerleFest attendees will have the chance to see boogie-rock masters Little Feat, next-generation guitar slinger Marcus King, living country music legend Tanya TuckerMiko Marks’ blend of country, blues, southern rock and gospel and many more take to the festival’s multiple weekend stages.

In addition, the following bands and artists have ALSO been added to the MerleFest 2023 lineup: AJ Lee & Blue Summit, Alison Brown, Andy Cohen, Anna Lynch, Bee Taylor, Brothers Comatose, Chris Jones & The Night Drivers, Cole Chaney, Compton & Newberry, Dom Flemons, I Draw Slow, Lightnin’ Wells, The Local Honeys, Nigel Wearne, Stillhouse Junkies, Taylor Rae, Terry Baucom’s Dukes of Drive, Todd Albright, Tommy Prine, Yasmin Williams and The Youngers.

These newly-added artists will join MerleFest’s previously announced lineup: The Avett Brothers, Maren Morris, Black Opry Revue, Sam Bush, Jerry Douglas, Peter Rowan, Andy May, Banknotes, Carol Rifkin, Charles Welch, Donna the Buffalo, Jack Lawrence, Jeff Little Trio, Jim Lauderdale, Joe Smothers, Kruger Brothers, Laura Boosinger, The Local Boys, Mark Bumgarner, Mitch Greenhill & Mitch’s Kitchen, Pete & Joan Wernick, Presley Barker, Roy Book Binder, Scythian, T. Michael Coleman, The InterACTive Theater of Jef, The Waybacks, Tony Williamson and Wayne Henderson.

2023 marks MerleFest’s 35th festival and will honor Doc Watson’s 100th birthday year. To celebrate the historic milestone event, organizers intend to feature MerleFest’s unique history and present unique collaborations to honor the festival’s founding folk icon. From the flatbed trailer stage at the 1988 Eddy Merle Watson Memorial Festival to today, and looking into the future, MerleFest will continue to draw fans from all over the world to the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains each spring to make music, moments and memories together.

Want to be a vendor or volunteer? Sign up at MerleFest.org, which is where you can also buy tickets. Just a friendly reminder: The last day ticket orders will be mailed before the holiday break will be Dec. 20. Shipping tickets will resume on Jan. 3, 2023. 


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Visit ‘The Power of Women in Country Music’ exhibit for free on Saturday, Dec. 3, at the N.C. history museum

RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA — Christmas is coming early to the North Carolina Museum of History, which is celebrating its 120th birthday on Saturday, Dec. 3.

In honor of the occasion, the museum is featuring free admission all day to its current ticketed exhibit “The Power of Women in Country Music.” And from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. there will be live on-site broadcasting from the Triangle’s country music station WQDR, specially themed treats, a special birthday promotion in the Museum Shop, and more, according to the museum’s website.

From international superstars, including Emmylou Harris, Dolly Parton, Rosanne Cash, Shania Twain and Taylor Swift, to contemporary North Carolina artists, such as Rhiannon Giddens, Rissi Palmer and Kasey Tyndall, “The Power of Women in Country Music,” is on loan from the GRAMMY Museum® in Los Angeles. The exhibit highlights the past, present and future of country music’s greatest female trailblazers.

Artifacts include Swift’s white “Mean” dress and banjo as well as a replication of the wooden cabin the pop star performed in front of at the 2021 Grammy awards. Palmer’s microphone she uses on her podcast, “Color Me Country.”

The exhibit opened to rave reviews on Oct. 28 and runs through Feb. 26, 2023. “This empowering exhibition will be amplified with a special concert series, author series, family events and activities, and much more,” the museum website states.

One of the concerts, Southern Songbirds: Alice Gerrard and Friends, is free and set for 3 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 11, at the museum. “Gerrard will join us with special guests for a screening of her biopic, “You Gave Me a Song,” followed by a short performance and Q & A with the artist. Gerrard will be joined by Tatiana Hargreaves and Dashawn Hickman. This event will be emceed by legendary North Carolina native Jim Lauderdale,” the museum stated in an email.

Watch a video about the exhibit here.

Photo of Chatham Rabbits


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The Lincoln Theatre presents ‘An Evening With Chatham Rabbits’ on Dec. 4

RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA — Fans of the North Carolina duo, Chatham Rabbits, have a chance to hear some new music at 7 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 4, at the Lincoln Theatre in downtown Raleigh.

“An Evening with Chatham Rabbits” is part of the group’s album-release tour for “If You See Me Riding By,” their third full-length studio album.

Co-written during the height of the pandemic and honed through the reflection and challenges the crisis demanded, this album is absolutely a piece of pandemic art, according to the RALToday event listing. “If You See Me Riding By” was recorded at both Bedtown Studios (Watchhouse, Libby Rodenbough) and Betty’s (Sylvan Esso, Dead Tongues) with producer Saman Khoujinian.

Tickets start at $19.50 and can be purchased at this link.


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MerleFest shares initial 2023 lineup for 35th festival

Tickets on sale and volunteer opportunities are available

WILKESBORO, N.C. — It’s the most wonderful time of the year … and I’m not talking about the upcoming holidays. Instead, this is the season for finding out who will be performing at next year’s live music festivals and this week’s initial 35th edition of MerleFest‘s lineup announcement for April 27-30, 2023, did not disappoint.

Country music sensation Maren Morris is set to make her MerleFest debut on the campus of Wilkes Community College on Saturday along with the Black Opry Revue who will hit the stage on Friday. And the wildly popular North Carolina natives The Avett Brothers, who first performed at MerleFest in 2004 and are one of the most requested performers in the festival’s history, are set to return on Friday at the festival, which will also honor Doc Watson’s 100th birthday year.

To celebrate the historic milestone event, organizers intend to feature MerleFest’s unique history and present unique collaborations to honor the festival’s founding folk icon.  From the flatbed trailer stage at the 1988 Eddy Merle Watson Memorial Festival to today, and looking into the future, MerleFest, which has served as the unofficial kickoff of the annual outdoor festival season, is an annual homecoming of musicians and music fans. Since its inception, the festival has drawn fans from all over the world to the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains each spring to make music, moments and memories together.

Also joining the lineup, will be award-winning MerleFest veterans Sam Bush, Jerry DouglasPeter Rowan, Jim Lauderdale and Scythian, in addition to many, many more including:

Andy May

Banknotes

Carol Rifkin

Charles Welch

Donna the Buffalo

Jack Lawrence

Jeff Little Trio

Joe Smothers

Kruger Brothers

Laura Boosinger

The Local Boys

Mark Bumgarner

Mitch Greenhill & Mitch’s Kitchen

Pete & Joan Wernick

Presley Barker

Roy Book Binder

T. Michael Coleman

The InterACTive Theater of Jef

The Waybacks

Tony Williamson

Wayne Henderson

To learn more, purchase tickets or to volunteer visit https://merlefest.org/.


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Nitty Gritty Dirt Band returns to Carolina Theatre on Nov. 6

If you missed them at MerleFest earlier this year, fans of “Mr. Bojangles” and “Fishin’ In the Dark” can catch Americana’s original band — the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band — in Durham at the Carolina Theatre on Sunday, Nov. 6.

From the band’s bio: Many veteran bands trade on nostalgia, on replication of past glories, and on recycled emotions from younger, more carefree days.

The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band trades on a mix of reimagined classics and compelling newer works. The group formed in 1966 as a Long Beach, California jug band, scored its first charting single in 1967, and embarked on a self-propelled ride through folk, country, rock ‘n’ roll, pop, bluegrass, and the amalgam now known as “Americana.” The first major hit came in 1971 with the epic “Mr. Bojangles,” which, along with insistent support from banjo master Earl Scruggs, opened doors in Nashville. Behind those doors were Earl Scruggs, Roy Acuff, Doc Watson, Mother Maybelle Carter, Jimmy Martin, and others who would collaborate on a multi-artist, multi-generational, three-disc 1972 masterpiece: “Will the Circle Be Unbroken” went triple Platinum, spawned two later volumes and wound up in the Grammy Hall of Fame.

Was this a cutting-edge combo or a group of revivalists? Was the goal rebellion or musical piety? Yes, to all these things. In the 1980s, the Dirt Band reeled off 15 straight Top 10 country hits, including chart-toppers “Long Hard Road (The Sharecropper’s Dream),” “Modern Day Romance,” and “Fishin’ in the Dark (co-written by Jim Photoglo, who would join the band in the second decade of the new century). 1989 brought a second “Circle” album, this one featuring singer-songwriter talents including John Prine, Rosanne Cash and John Hiatt and garnering two Grammy awards for the band (it later won another, for a collaboration with Earl Scruggs and other fine folks). Circle II also won the Country Music Association’s Album of the Year prize. “Circle III” was released in 2003, featuring collaborations with Johnny Cash, Dwight Yoakam, Emmylou Harris, Taj Mahal and more.

In May, the band released “Dirt Does Dylan,” just a few years after the Dirt Band’s Jeff Hanna paid $4 to see Bob Dylan play at his high school auditorium in Long Beach, California. The fire lit inside of Hanna that night still burns as strong as ever. Hanna and his Dirt Band bandmates have had quite a career of their own since then, introducing folk, bluegrass,and country music—what would later be termed “Americana”—to a whole new generation of fans.

Their latest effort, however, is a full-circle return with “Dirt Does Dylan,” a 10-track album highlighting some of the gems from Dylan’s vast catalog with the help of three new band members: fiddle specialist Ross Holmes; singer-songwriter and bass player Photoglo; and Dirt Band founder Jeff Hanna’s son, the absurdly talented singer and guitarist Jaime Hanna.

Produced and recorded by Ray Kennedy at Room & Board Studio in Nashville, Tennessee, “Dirt Does Dylan” finds a generation-spanning Dirt Band paying an appropriately great tribute to arguably the greatest songwriter of the 20th century with the help of friends like Jason Isbell, The War & Treaty, Steve Earle and Rosanne Cash, to name a few. 

For more information on Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and “Dirt Does Dylan,” visit nittygritty.com.