- Categories
-
Tags
60's British 80's Acoustic Amy Speace Antje archie fisher Barry Goudreau Beatles Bill Staines Bluegrass blues Bob Dylan Carolyn Waters Catie Curtis Chad and Jeremy Classic Rock Club 47 coffeehouse country Country Music Dan Fogelberg Dance Danielle Dar Williams Denny Laine festival fiddle Fishing Folk folk alliance folk new england Folk Rock garden Gary Backstrom gloucester guthrie Hayley Reardon hayley Reardon concert dedham healing jez lowe Karla Bonoff keelaghan Kerri Powers Brendan Hogan last waltz Les Sampou les sampou rock folk Live Music lorraine hammond Lowell maine Marina Evans music in common Neil Young new bedford New england folk music archives Passim Patty Larkin Paul Simon Peter and Gordon Peter Yarrow Peter. Paul and Mary Piano Puff Regent Theatre rev tor Richmond rock Rock Music singer Singer Songwriter songwriter Steely Dan the band The Last Waltz Live The Sea The Sea Todd Rundgren Tom Rush waltham waterfront Wings Winter
Hayley Reardon: A Solo Performance
Coming off two sold out performances at the legendary Club Passim this is a show not to be missed.
A portion of the proceeds from this concert will benefit the New England Folk Music Archives. Produced by Last Dance Productions.
Only 40 seats will be sold for this very intimate concert!
Since her showcase at the International Folk Alliance in February 2010, Hayley Reardon has exploded onto the stage of folk music. In addition to being featured in the recently released “For the Love of the Music” Club 47 documentary and producing her first full length LP, she has developed an in-school performance program, “Find Your Voice,” to encourage peer empowerment through self-expression. Hayley’s new release, “Where the Artists Go,” is, in her own words, the product of the “focus on what I wanted to say with my arts sense of freedom that folk empowers me to say it the way I want to.”
“Reardon is taking the folk scene by storm.” WBUR
“She is certainly a bright star on the horizon, a glorious addition to the future of acoustic music.” Performer Mag
“Reardon definitely has an old soul, and her dedication to her art shows in Where the Artists Go, an impressive debut.” Candor News
“Where the Artists Go can be cast as coming of age thoughts riding on a sea of song. There is a unique world view and an everyman way of describing the scene that makes these songs sing.” The Alternate Root
Only 40 tickets will be sold for this special event to benefit The New England Folk Music Archives.
Produced by Last Dance Productions
The New England Folk Music Archives is pleased to welcome Brendan Hogan and Kerri Powers to one of the great listening rooms in town, Kerri and Brendan will perform solo sets and if we’re lucky play a few tunes together.
Tickets and more info here
Les Sampou performs Saturday. Reserve your campsite now for the 27th Annual Spring Gulch Folk Festival. A weekend-long event of excellent music, sing-a-long campfires, workshops, dancing, and crafts. The 2013 Folk Festival will run for four days, Thursday through Sunday
More information here.
Recently naming her a 2012 “Bostonian Of The Year”, The Boston Globe characterized her as…”a confident, radiant teenage singer/songwriter who is helping to pen the next chapter of the Boston folk scene…while Reardon is rapidly making a name for herself under the stage lights, it could be said that she’s having a bigger impact on her peers across the country as a leading spokesperson for bullying prevention. By pairing her music with a message of collective responsibility, she has become an effective teen-to-teen ambassador, sought after by schools nationwide.”
“When you listen to 17-year-old folk singer Hayley Reardon, it’s hard to identify what’s more impressive: the fact that she’s already considered a seasoned folk artist or that she’s a national spokesperson for PACER’s National Bullying Prevention Center. In any event, both are laudable facts that dovetail nicely on her debut album Where The Artists Go.
“Powerfully expressive, Les Sampou has been tested in the trenches of life and survived brilliantly. Her new album, “Lonesomeville,” is a personal Top Ten favorite of the year. She invests many songs with the emotional honesty of Lucinda Williams, probing love in all of its complexity while belting the heck out of the music. She has a passionate, rockabilly-blues edge that lifts your spirits high, followed by ballads that dig into your soul like few artists can.”
STEVE MORSE Boston Globe Correspondent & Contributor to Billboard and Rolling Stone