musicreporterblog

Musings on folk, Americana, country, bluegrass and newgrass


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NCMA outdoor concert featuring Watchhouse moves indoors to Martin Marietta Center in downtown Raleigh on Thursday, Aug. 8

Due to weather risks caused by Hurricane Debby, the planned outdoor concert featuring Watchhouse (formerly Mandolin Orange) at the North Carolina Museum of Art at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 8, has been moved to the Martin Marietta Center for the Performing Arts, an indoor venue located in downtown Raleigh. The show, which is presented by First Citizens Bank, is also sponsored by Cat’s Cradle in Carrboro.

Starting over a decade ago playing coffee shops and local restaurants around North Carolina, Watchhouse, led by Andrew Marlin and Emily Frantz, is a bona fide folk music sensation and one of 21st-century indie music’s biggest grassroots success stories. They sell out iconic venues (Red Rocks, Ryman Auditorium) and attract hundreds of millions of streams while producing exploratory music that “redefines roots music for a younger generation,” according to The Washington Post.

TICKETS
Please bring your original ticket (digital or printed). Log into your online account to access tickets and print or add them to your mobile wallet. Questions? Please contact help@ncartmusum.org.

SEATING
Former premium reserved, reserved, and general admission seating will be designated in Raleigh Memorial Auditorium and available on a first come, first serve basis. Ticket holders will be directed by ushers to the appropriate sections upon entry.

TRAFFIC AND PARKING
Martin Marietta Center for the Performing Arts is located just 12–14 minutes from the North Carolina Museum of Art. Directions and parking information can be found here.

ACCESSIBILITY
Visitors with wheelchair-accessible tickets will be given accessible seating at Martin Marietta Center for the Performing Arts. For questions related to accessibility, please visit the Raleigh Memorial Auditorium’s Accessibility webpage or email pacfrontofhouse@raleighnc.gov.


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NCMA, Cat’s Cradle present Steep Canyon Rangers with Amythyst Kiah on Aug. 18

If you follow this blog, you know I have been a big fan of the Steep Canyon Rangers, affectionately known as just “Steep,” for a long, long time so I am excited to announce they are returning to the North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh on Friday, Aug. 18, for a show with the incomparable Amythyst Kiah, whom I have also had the pleasure of hearing perform on numerous occasions. You don’t want to miss this show, trust me! For tickets, which are $30 for nonmembers, and more information, visit https://ncartmuseum.org/events.

From the Museum’s website:

The Steep Canyon Rangers are made up of Graham Sharp on banjo and vocals, Mike Guggino on mandolin/mandola and vocals, Nicky Sanders on fiddle and vocals, Mike Ashworth on drums and vocals, Barrett Smith on bass, guitar, and vocals and Aaron Burdett on guitar and vocals.

The band has been on a journey that is uniquely their own. They started in college at UNC–Chapel Hill, then dove headfirst into bluegrass in its most traditional form. Over the years they rose to the top of the bluegrass genre, headlining top festivals such as Merlefest and Grey Fox Bluegrass.

The Rangers were then discovered by Steve Martin, famous actor and banjo player, who took the band on a decade-long tour. He introduced them to hundreds of thousands of new fans and gave them prime time TV exposure. This helped SCR become the most recognizable modern name in bluegrass music.

The band has continued to tour extensively on their own and has expanded into country, jam, and Americana. The Rangers are big players in the bluegrass/country and Americana scene today. They are often compared to predecessors The Band, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, and the modern Zac Brown Band.

Amythyst Kiah’s Rounder Records debut, Wary + Strange, marks the glorious combination of two vastly different worlds: the iconoclastic alt-rock that first sparked her musical passion and the roots/old-time music scene where she’s found breakout success in recent years, including recognition from Rolling Stone as “one of Americana’s great up-and-coming secrets.” With an unforgettable voice that’s both unfettered and exquisitely controlled, the Tennessee-bred singer/songwriter who identifies as an LGBT woman expands on the uncompromising artistry she most recently revealed as part of Our Native Daughters—an all-women-of-color supergroup. Their Kiah-penned standout “Black Myself” earned a Grammy Award nomination for Best American Roots Song and won Song of the Year at the 2019 Folk Alliance International Awards. In her graceful interlacing of political commentary and personal revelation, Kiah infuses “Black Myself” with a potent vulnerability that builds and deepens all throughout Wary + Strange. The transcendent quality of her newly elevated sound is an extraordinary vessel for Kiah’s songwriting: a raw yet nuanced examination of grief, alienation, and the hard-won triumph of total self-acceptance.


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Brittany Howard of Alabama Shakes to kick off NCMA 2020 Concert Series

From the good folks at the North Carolina Museum of Art (NCMA) :

RALEIGH — Summer concerts and movies have been a North Carolina Museum of Art (NCMA) tradition for two decades, and we’re excited to launch another season of great music and entertainment. Our venue—the Joseph M. Bryan, Jr., Theater in the Museum Park—is situated in the heart of the Museum campus amid gardens, meadows, woodlands, and sculpture.

Presented with Cat’s Cradle, Brittany Howard of Alabama Shakes will perform at 8 p.m. on Sunday, April 26. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. Nü Mangos will open the show. Continue reading


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NCMA hosts first solo exhibition of Scott Avett’s visual art

From the good folks over at the North Carolina Museum of Art (NCMA):

Raleigh, N.C. — This fall, the North Carolina Museum of Art (NCMA) hosts the first solo museum exhibition of the visual art of Scott Avett, founding member of the Grammy-nominated Avett Brothers band. Open October 12,2019,through February 2, 2020, Scott Avett: I N V I S I B L E will include large-scale portraits, prints, and paintings. Until now Avett’s work with The Avett Brothers has taken center stage. The NCMA exhibition shines a lighton his art making, thereby demonstrating the richness and diversity of his practice.“I’m not anything first—not painter, musician, writer, printmaker, performer—before I am an artist,” said Avett, who holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from East Carolina University and lives in Concord, N.C. Continue reading


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North Carolina Museum of Art kicks off 2018 Summer Concert season with First Aid Kit, Shovels and Rope, Mandolin Orange in June

The North Carolina Museum of Art kicks off its 2018 Summer Concert Series with First Aid Kit and Jade Bird on Friday, June 8, which is already sold out as are tickets for Mandolin Orange’s June 23 show.

“Summer concerts and movies have been an NCMA tradition for two decades, and we’re excited to launch another season of great music and entertainment,” the website states. “Our venue — the Joseph M. Bryan, Jr., Theater in the Museum Park — is situated in the heart of the Museum campus amid gardens, meadows, woodlands, and sculpture.”

However, tickets are available for Shovels and Rope and Son Volt on at 8 p.m. on Saturday, June 16.

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