|
Denver Folk & Roots Music Festival announces official artist lineup |
|
|
|
PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
Tuesday, January 8, 2008
Contact: Rodolfo Betancourt
rudy@swallowhillmusic.org
Laura McGaughey
laura@swallowhillmusic.org
303.765.2488 |
|
|
|
Previous |
Newsroom | Next |
Denver — Swallow Hill Music Association is pleased to announce its official artist lineup
for its Second Annual Denver Folk & Roots Music Festival (Friday, March 28,
2008). This evening of
diverse music is presented in the unique setting of one of the
finest acoustic concert halls in America, the Ellie Caulkins Opera House at the
Denver Center for the Performing Arts.
The evening will begin at 6 p.m.
with a series of five showcases. Southern Journey featuring Emily Morgan
Bates and Marta Burton, a tribute to Alan Lomax and those dedicated to
recording the folk music of the American South, will be the first showcase,
followed by Fifth World, a Native peoples trio comprised of Dine flute
player Andrew Begay, Saamoke percussionist Will Clipman, and Laarakia didgeridoo
player Ash Dargan. Next we'll make a run to the southern border with Tuscon,
Ariz.-based Santa Cruz River Band, who will entertain the crowd with an
array of Mexican folk songs and southwest spice. Steppin' In It with Rachael
Davis will then deliver some rocking newgrass peppered with jazz and folk
influences. Our final showcase will be Colorado favorites Dakota Blonde,
an acoustic trio whose combination of folk, bluegrass, and country with a little
Celtic tinge keep audiences coming back for more.
Following the showcases there will
be a brief intermission as the stage changes are made for our headliners for
this special event,
Nanci Griffith and Bruce Cockburn.
Bruce
Cockburn's esteemed career
includes 29 albums, numerous international awards (including an
induction to the Canadian Music Hall of Fame in 2001) and countless concert
performances. His highly personal finger picking guitar style merges Mississippi
John Hurt blues with modal jazz harmony as well as melodic lyricism and cycling
rhythms that suggest an ear for Indian, Asian, and African music. His
songwriting has also reflected the turmoil of our times, with anti-globalism
manifestos, a reflective coda on his experiences with the poor and downtrodden
in Nicaragua, and environmentalist anthems. His latest album, Life Short Call
Now, is the 29th album in a career that's midway through its fourth
decade, and is wide-ranging, playful, and adventurous, eager to take chances and
happy to push limits.
Nanci
Griffith's admirers are legion (Bob Dylan specifically requested that she sing
"Boots of Spanish Leather" at his historic Madison Square Garden anniversary
concert), and she has penned some of country music's most enduring compositions,
including Emmylou Harris' and Willie Nelson's "Gulf Coast Highway," Kathy
Mattea's "Love at the Five and Dime" and "Listen to the Radio," and Suzy Bogguss'
"Outbound Plane." She was the first to record Julie Gold's Grammy-winning
classic, "From a Distance," which found wider commercial success with Bette
Middler. Whether performing her own poetically evocative material or the
compositions of her influences, friends, and peers, Griffith possesses a powerful
gift for inhabiting the songs she sings. Her career spans nearly three decades
with numerous accolades, including numerous Grammy nominations as well as a win
in 1994 for her album, Other Voices, Other Rooms.
The emcee for the evening will be
Denver's Godfather of Folk, Harry Tuft. Tuft is responsible for sowing the seeds
of Swallow Hill through his establishment of the Denver Folklore Center, an staple of not only Denver's folk
and music community, but of the entire Western region of the United States.
For
tickets visit
www.swallowhillmusic.org
or call (303) 777-1003. Discounts are available for Swallow Hill members.
This press release is available as a RSS Feed at
http://www.swallowhillmusic.org/xml/newsroom/rss/SwallowHillNews.xml.
About Swallow Hill Music
Association
Helping people make music since 1979 years, Swallow Hill Music
Association is one of the largest institutions of its kind in the United
States as a source for folk, roots and acoustic music. With more than
2,100 members—some of whom are also volunteers—Swallow Hill provides a
place to celebrate music that is rarely heard elsewhere in the Rocky
Mountain Region. Three concert venues house more than 150 performances a
year, featuring some of the world's great artists as well as up-and-coming
new talent. The Julie Davis Music School at Swallow Hill provides a
valuable and affordable extra-curricular educational resource to the
community with more than 50 music instructors involved in more than 240
adult classes and 70 children's classes annually.
A Tier II member of the Scientific and
Cultural Facilities District (SCFD), Swallow Hill has won both the Mayor's
and Governor's Awards for Excellence in the Arts, countless "Best of
Denver" awards, has been recognized by the the North American Folk
Alliance, and is one of the most sought-after venues by folk and roots
performers in the country.
# # #
|