Past Bluegrass Related Events

/Spire Center for Performing Arts
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Loudon Wainwright III

Spire Center for Performing Arts 25 1/2 Court St, Plymouth, MA

Loudon’s long and illustrious career is highlighted by more than two dozen album releases, Movie and TV credits, and his autobiography, Liner Notes (2017 Penguin/Random House). In 2010 Grammy for Best Traditional Folk Album for High Wide & Handsome: The Charlie Poole Project. His 2012 recording, Older Than My Old Man Now, was named one of NPR’s Top 10 Albums of the Year. September 2018, Loudon releases his 27th career album to-date, Years In The Making, a retrospective double CD with more than 45 tracks – live performances, demos, outtakes, unreleased songs spanning 50 years.

$35

Aztec Two-Step 2.0 featuring Rex Fowler, Dodie Pettit & Friends

Spire Center for Performing Arts 25 1/2 Court St, Plymouth, MA

Following partner Neal Shulman's retirement, Rex carries the Aztec Two-Step legacy forward with his new ensemble. Their fresh multi-instrumental arrangements bring back the sound of the duo's original ATS studio albums. What people are saying: "I went to the show this past Saturday night. Wasn't sure what to expect. How do you replace Neal's guitar work? What a pleasant surprise!! Rex was Rex and the band was awesome! Don't miss the opportunity to see them!" “The energy and music were off the charts!” "Dodie is a Guitar Wizard!"

$30

Recurring

Open Mic Challenge

Spire Center for Performing Arts 25 1/2 Court St, Plymouth, MA

Challenge Nights: Sign-ups start at 6:30 PM in Spire Lounge - Limited to the first 20 people. Thu Jan 9, 2020 Thu Jan 23, 2020 Thu Feb 6, 2020 Thu Feb 13, 2020 3 Winners we be selected at each challenge round for the finals (both winners and anyone who was not picked can come back to any of the following challenges and perform but finalists can only picked once). Finals: Hosted by Boston Catalano & Mike Visconti Will take place on the Spire's stage Fri Feb 21, 2020 | 8:00PM The winner of the Finals will get to open up for a national act on the Spire's stage, $250 prize and 2 free hours out of every 10 hour recording block through Soaring Sound Studios. All contestants will be responsible for setting-up in bringing their own instruments. DI's, amp, and piano will be set-up and available for use along with mics.

Front Country

Spire Center for Performing Arts 25 1/2 Court St, Plymouth, MA

An acoustic band born in the land of tech innovation, Front Country was never going to be accepted as an authentic American roots band out of the gate. Cutting their teeth in progressive bluegrass jams in San Francisco's Mission District and rehearsing in the East Bay, they learned to play roots music their own way, with the tools they had on hand. One day in late February, the five members of Front Country were warming up for their record release show at the renowned bluegrass club the Station Inn, in their new home base of Nashville, Tenn. They'd never played most of these songs live before.It wasn't a given that these musicians would wind up in anything remotely resembling a bluegrass band. Singer Melody Walker got into world music and belted out roots-rock. Bassist Jeremy Darrow studied jazz. Leif Karlstrom trained as a classical violinist, and still prefers that title to "fiddle player." Mandolinist Adam Roszkiewicz studied classical guitar at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. The actual guitarist in the band, Jacob Groopman, did his share of exploring after college, too. "I was in an Afrobeat group for about five years, touring around in this 10-piece kind of hippie Afrobeat band," Groopman says. In the bluegrass world, musicians tend to define themselves by their relationships to tradition — specifically, the tradition of high-and-lonesome singing and a hard-driving sound. There are regional variations from Virginia to Colorado. The West Coast has its own freewheeling tradition, and that's where Front Country started out: at a monthly jam in San Francisco. Then its members heard about a band contest at a bluegrass festival. "And we ended up winning that band competition," Walker says. "The very next day, … Read More »

$25.00

Mile Twelve

Spire Center for Performing Arts 25 1/2 Court St, Plymouth, MA

Although their sound is rooted in traditional bluegrass, Mile Twelve surveys a broader landscape on their newest album, City on a Hill. All five band members bring their own influences and observations into the music, resulting in a project that feels contemporary, thoughtfully crafted, and relevant. “Original bluegrass music, written and played by young people, is very much alive,” says band member Evan Murphy. “I hope people take away that songwriting and arranging really matter. It’s about the material and playing it in a way that feels honest. This album isn’t political in the sense that we’re beating people over the head with anything, we just tried to tell stories that feel authentic.”The album title alludes to the idealized imagery of a shining city on a hill – a historical phrase that has often been applied to Boston, where the band got its start. Murphy adds, “We realized that many of the characters in these songs were in crisis, had been failed in some way, or were failing themselves. It’s an unintentional theme but it came out in the songwriting.” The Mile Twelve lineup offers five of the most promising young musicians in bluegrass: David Benedict (mandolin), Catherine “BB” Bowness (banjo), Bronwyn Keith-Hynes (fiddle), Evan Murphy (guitar, lead vocals), and Nate Sabat (bass, lead vocals). All are credited as songwriters because everyone in the band helped shape the material throughout the writing and arranging process. Murphy and Sabat initiated most of the lyrical ideas for City on a Hill while Benedict wrote the instrumental track, “Rialto.” “We all inspire each other and recognize that everyone has different strengths,” Murphy says. “What makes this band so collaborative is that everyone in the band can do something at … Read More »

$20.00

inSPIRE Concert Lounge Series – Mark Mandeville & Raianne Richards

Spire Center for Performing Arts 25 1/2 Court St, Plymouth, MA

The Spire Center for Performing Arts is excited to present the all-new inSPIRE Concert Series in the Spire Center Performance Lobby. Mark Mandeville & Raianne Richards blend distinctively rich harmonies with a wide range of accompaniment (guitar, mandolin, banjo, harmonica, ukulele, clarinet, penny whistle, electric bass), featuring original songwriting, witty humor and meaningful audience engagement.

$10

inSPIRE Concert Lounge Series – Mark Mandeville & Raianne Richards

Spire Center for Performing Arts 25 1/2 Court St, Plymouth, MA

The Spire Center for Performing Arts is excited to present the all-new inSPIRE Concert Series in the Spire Center Performance Lobby. Mark Mandeville & Raianne Richards blend distinctively rich harmonies with a wide range of accompaniment (guitar, mandolin, banjo, harmonica, ukulele, clarinet, penny whistle, electric bass), featuring original songwriting, witty humor and meaningful audience engagement.

$10

Kathy Mattea – “The Acoustic Living Room” w/ Bill Cooley

Spire Center for Performing Arts 25 1/2 Court St, Plymouth, MA

Hailed by The Washington Post as ‘one of Nashville’s finest song interpreters,’ Kathy Mattea has enjoyed the kind of success many artists only dream of: two GRAMMY wins, four CMA Awards, four #1 country singles, and five gold albums (plus a platinum collection of her greatest hits). Grammy Award winning singer Kathy Mattea and her longtime collaborator, guitarist Bill Cooley, have shared one of Nashville’s most musically rich partnerships for over two decades. The duo meets as old friends, welcoming you into The Acoustic Living Room to share songs and stories near and dear to their hearts — including Kathy’s beloved classics such as “18 Wheels and a Dozen Roses,” “Where’ve You Been?,” and many other hits, plus a handful of more eclectic and often requested tunes from her extensive catalogue, and a sprinkling of brand new material, all reinterpreted for the duo format. Her 18 albums are woven through with bluegrass, gospel, and Celtic influences, and have garnered multiple CMA, ACM, and Grammy Awards. A genuine storyteller, Kathy draws inspiration from her Appalachian roots and is a torchbearer for often overlooked musical legacies like those of Hazel Dickens and Jean Ritchie. Her most recent album, Calling Me Home, is a collection of songs that celebrates the Appalachian culture of her native West Virginia and expands the vocabulary of acoustic roots music that has always served as her artistic center.  web: www.mattea.com

$46

Darrell Scott

Spire Center for Performing Arts 25 1/2 Court St, Plymouth, MA

Multi-Instrumentalist and Singer-Songwriter Darrell Scott mines and cultivates the everyday moments, taking the rote, menial, mundane, and allowing it to be surreal, ever poignant, and candidly honest, lilting, blooming, and resonating. The words he fosters allow us to make sense of the world, what is at stake here, and our place in it. And ultimately, Darrell knows the sole truth of life is that love is all that matters, that we don’t always get it right, but that’s the instinctive and requisite circuitous allure of things, why we forever chase it, and why it is held sacred. There is an absence of light, before the light.  A simple bare stage in the waning gloaming, and I can see Darrell make his way to a lone microphone.  He is here to shine that light on matters of the heart─the grit, grease, gristle, and most importantly, the marrow beneath the breastbone.And what is the path that shapes us as we go along, those true defining moments without which we would be hollow versions of our current selves?  For Darrell, it was coming from a musical family with a father who had him smitten with guitars by the age of 4, alongside a brother who played Jerry Reed style as well.  From there, things only ramped up with literature and poetry endeavors while a student at Tufts University, along with playing his way through life.  This would never change. When those hands of his make their way across the strings and fretboard, there is palpable loss of air in the theater, as the listeners, our feet and bodies firmly on the ground, watch his sonic wings take him upwards in flight, and realize we are as along for … Read More »

$27

inSPIRE Concert Lounge Series – Cold Chocolate

Spire Center for Performing Arts 25 1/2 Court St, Plymouth, MA

The Spire Center for Performing Arts is excited to present the all-new inSPIRE Concert Series in the Spire Center Performance Lobby. Cold Chocolate is a genre-bending Americana band that fuses folk, funk, and bluegrass to create a unique sound all their own. Featuring Ethan Robbins on guitar, Ariel Bernstein on percussion, and backed by some of the root's music scene's finest players, this group from Boston is impressing audiences throughout New England and beyond. Punctuated by tight harmonies and skillful musicianship, and...

$10