$10 advance / $12 at the door

8pm showtime

Fellow Pynins:

Fellow Pynins is an award winning contemporary folk duo with a keen and bucolic sense of vocal harmony and song craft. The live performance is a whimsically emotional escapade through the chasms of our, yes, feelings.. Dashed with spontaneous and clever banter, mirth and woe, you will probably cry and quite possibly laugh, a lot. Wielding claw-hammer banjo, Irish bouzouki, mandolin, and acoustic guitar the duo sings predominantly original music as well as reworked traditional ballads gathered from their travels.

"Folk Music with a hefty touch of whimsy" - Bob Boilen (NPR) 

"Fellow Pynins will transport you into their haunting and beguiling world of love tales and spine-tingling harmonies... They'll have you traveling far and wide to hear them again." - Lisa Dunn (BBC)



Barbaro:

Barbaro’s music is at once lively and intimate, perfect for twirling around the dance floor or cooking with someone you love. The Minneapolis-Winona based rising stars have created their eclectic sound through original songwriting craft, with inspiration derived from bluegrass, jazz and chamber music. Barbaro’s musical vision explores their collective life experiences through intricate instrumentation, creatively bending the traditional music into a style and sound that is all their own.  Their debut album, Dressed in Roses, droppede January 2020, “spotlights the band’s affinity to blur the lines between genres.” 

“When I listen to Barbaro I find myself leaning in to the sound… trying to figure out where this unique blend came from, and where it’s going next!” -Mike Pengra, Radio Heartland
“Barbaro budge beyond the bounds of bluegrass.” -The Current

Norah Rendell + the Lost Forty:

“Best Irish Vocalist of 2011, 2012 and 2016”, Norah Rendell heads up a powerful song-based trio with multi-instrumentalists Brian Miller and Randy Gosa. Inspired by Celtic traditions from Newfoundland to Minnesota, Norah Rendell and the Lost Forty unearth heirloom songs with Irish-American and Canadian roots and perform them with passion and nuance."

“…clear, expressive singing, which is among the best on today’s Celtic folk scene”. – Stephen Winick, Huffington Post

“Her singing left me goose-pimpled all over – a sure sign of a gutsy, emotional delivery laced with meaning and pathos” ~ Fred Silver, The Stornoway Gazette