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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111008T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111008T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20110929T054215Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230212T050709Z
UID:1540-1318100400-1318107600@gbae.org
SUMMARY:CeCe Gable
DESCRIPTION:Timeless Songs of the Great American Songbook\n7:00 PM Saturday\, October 8\, 2011\nCeCe Gable\, the Chanteuse of the Sierra\, makes her triumphant return to Winnemucca’s famed Martin Hotel on October 8\, 2011 at 7:00 p.m. Last year’s performance was “over the top” with great jazz stylings by Ms. Gable and her band. \nThis is a show you won’t want to miss with world-class jazz musicians: \nKeyboardist/Accordionist\, Corky Bennett\nBassist\, Bill McCubbin;\nTenor Saxophonist\, Rocky Tatarelli\nDrummer\, Chuck Hughes. \nThis is sure to be an exciting evening of music for everyone who loves the timeless songs of the Great American Songbook\, the Beatles\, straight ahead jazz and some obscure cabaret tunes. \n“Gable is a Reno and Northern Nevada treasure. A fine musician\, a charming host for an evening of song from the Great American Songbook\, this chic lady brings glamor to her work and a no-frills approach to lyrics and musical line that gives each song it’s very own moment supreme.” – Jack Neal \n“CeCe is a storyteller. Her earlier studies in dance have clearly found their way into her approach to the song and jazz music\, for she\, like the dancer\, attempts to get inside the sound in order to discover what the sound has to say…” – L. Martina Young \nCeCe draws the listener into her captivating world of song with an incredible depth of emotion. She swings with rhythmic passion and also has the ability to caress a ballad with effortless interpretation. Influenced by many of the women and men of jazz\, she offers her own voice on jazz standards and the American Songbook. She shines on any stage whether she is accompanied by a solo pianist\, a trio or an entire orchestra… you’ll find you cannot get enough of this jazz experience. \nWell known to audiences up and down the Pacific Coast and throughout the western states\, CeCe Gable is rapidly becoming one of the premiere jazz singers in the region. \nA native of Barberton\, Ohio\, and a graduate of Kent State University\, CeCe lived in Winnemucca for a few years while she was working as an artist in residence in Winnemucca schools. While she was in Winnemucca she primarily taught dance and creative movement to budding young artist’s. CeCe now makes her home in the Reno/Tahoe area as a performing and recording artist. \nA consummate jazz cabaret performer\, she has sung in jazz clubs throughout the United States and Europe including New Orleans\, Las Vegas\, Palm Springs\, Fiji\, Munich\, Athens and at New York City’s Iridium with Les Paul. \nShe has presented the works of George Gershwin\, Thelonious Monk\, Stephen Sondheim and Kurt Weill to rave reviews in a variety of venues. According to Metroland (Albany\, NY)\, CeCe Gable is a performer who exudes warmth\, sophistication\, a generous stage presence and rare versatility. A unique\, compelling performer with a style and sound all her own\, CeCe has been compared to the song stylists of the ’50?s with a contemporary twist. \nAdmired as a “quiet surprise” by audiences nationwide\, CeCe has become known for delivering an honest performance and has prompted more than one audience member to say “When you sing I see the music flow through you and I believe you.” \nRichard Feldman\, stage director and arts critic for The Record (Troy\, NY) asserts that “CeCe Gable is one of those rare performers whose mellow vocals\, stylistic sophistication\, diversity of material and intimate delivery combine perfectly to convince us that she’s singing to each of us…personally.” \nTICKETS ARE ON SALE NOW\nTickets are available for $15.00 at the Martin Hotel\, Nature’s Corner\, and Global Coffee. You can also buy them on-line at http://themartinhotel.com
URL:https://gbae.org/event/cece-gable/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/ccg.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111020T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111020T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20111011T165344Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T054107Z
UID:1569-1319137200-1319144400@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Joyce Andersen
DESCRIPTION:7:00 PM\nThursday\, October 20\, 2011\nQueen of the Solo Nouveau Old-Time\nElectro-Acoustic Shamanic Violin Troubadours\n \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \nAfter nearly 20 years as a fiddle sideman and a singer-songwriter\, playing in bluegrass\, country\, rock\, celtic\, jazz and folk ensembles\, Joyce Andersen has gone into the woodshed for 2 years to create a new body of music and a new musical standard of what an unaccompanied fiddle troubadour can do. Her 5th solo CD\, titled Swerve\, features her new sound in 8 extended improvisational songs that embrace a dizzying range of musical styles\, from jazz standards to fiddle tunes\, gospel\, ballads and blistering rock & roll. \nOver her career Andersen has developed an uncanny ability to play violin and sing at the same time\, often with the instrument and vocal in counter-rhythms\, as well as complex harmony and diverging lines. Add to this an array of hi-tech gear that would make a rock star drool\, and Andersen now commands a staggering wall of sound that emanates from her violin\, viola\, Norwegian Hardinger fiddle\, and foot percussion. Without using any computerized or pre-recorded sounds\, she literally dances with all four limbs as she weaves intricate rhythms\, melodies\, and harmonies into extraordinarliy musical sonic collages. Her new sound is built from a large palette of strummed\, plucked and bowed sounds\, combining and juxtaposing beautiful acoustic violin tones with swirling electro-acoustic explorations and crunching rock distortion. \nSwerve marks the emergence of a unique\, urgent and powerful new sound for the solo violin player\, that is at once diverse\, complex\, and distinctively her own. It showcases her impressive musical skills and vocals as well as her composing\, arranging and brilliant improvising. With her powerful voice and stage presence at the center\, she runs seamlessly through traditional bluegrass songs\, anthemic power ballads\, Billie Holiday torch songs\, and house-rocking reworkings of classics from the likes of Marvin Gaye\, Big Mama Thornton\, Steppenwolf\, Steve Winwood and even Jimi Hendrix. \nJoyce Conjures Up Jimi Hendrix\n \n“I’ve always envied guitarists their ability to play gigs alone\, and especially I have always been in awe of the expressive power of the electric guitar\,” says Andersen. ” I’m excited to have found a way to make a complete solo troubadour sound with just my violin that feels right to me musically\, and since violinists really haven’t gone down that road the guitarists have\, I am finding my own sounds.” Guitarists have always been able to play solo\, and it’s taken over two years of effort for Andersen to develop the new tools and techniques she needs to fulfill her musical vision of expanding the violin’s capabilities. Following in the footsteps of electric guitar pioneers like Hendrix\, Les Paul and Michael Hedges\, Andersen is sculpting a new set of sounds to add to the sonic landscape of an instrument that was considered to have been perfected 400 years ago. She says: “A vital part of my sound is that in no way am I abandoning the acoustic tone of the violin & viola in favor of an electronic replacement. Electric violinists have plugged in for decades\, but they seem to have sacrificed the acoustic tone they started with. I am trying to use both sets of sounds in my music.” \nIndeed\, for over half a century guitarists and listeners have accepted the electronically generated sounds of echo\, phasing\, tremolo\, delays\, distortion\, and even wah-wah as an extension of the sound of the guitar\, and there is no reason why the violin cannot go down a similar artistic path\, and be seen as expansion rather than compromise or degradation. A number of violin players are already experimenting with electro-acoustic sounds\, but Joyce Andersen is taking this idea to a whole new musical level and opening a new set of doors for modern-day violin troubadours\, while still remaining true to her deep roots in traditional fiddling and musical Americana. \nHer music has brought her from the coffeehouses and taverns of her native New England\, national & international touring with folk virtuoso (and husband) Harvey Reid\, the stage of Carnegie Hall\, the Conan O’Brien show and country music in Japan. \nHer recorded work has won her critical acclaim and radio play in the folk world. \nSing Out! magazine says her CDs “…places her right up there with any of the songwriters out there performing their songs today.” \nThe Boston Globe says “That neo-traditional current is starting to be felt among the ranks of New England songwriters…among the hottest…New Hampshire fiddler-singer Joyce Andersen.” \nAnd Minnesota Public Radio says “Youth and strength flow through her voice. She’s got power and conviction. . . She’s writing new songs and retelling old stories\, and there’s” still something mysterious in her music that sounds like comes from an ancient and pure source.”
URL:https://gbae.org/event/joyce-andersen/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/joyce_andersen_400px.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111104T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111104T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20111022T193729Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T053912Z
UID:1607-1320433200-1320440400@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Chuck Pyle
DESCRIPTION:The Zen Cowboy\nA virtuoso guitarist with a Will Rogers-like wit\n7:00 PM Friday\, November 4\, 2011\n \nChuck Pyle has won high praise from both fans and peers alike throughout an inspired performance career of over 40 years. When reviewers first gave him the “Zen Cowboy” moniker\, he decided to\, as he says\, “Always ride the horse in the direction it’s going\,” and took the nickname to heart\, shaving his head and blending his upbeat perspective with old-fashioned horse sense. He mixes infectiously hummable melodies with straight-from-the-saddle poetry\, quoting bumper stickers\, proverbs\, world leaders and old cowboys. \nAn accomplished songwriter\, Chuck’s songs have been recorded by John Denver\, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and Suzy Bogguss. Country fans know him best for writing\, “Cadillac Cowboy”\, recorded by the late Chris LeDoux\, and “Jaded Lover”\, recorded by Jerry Jeff Walker. \nWhile fans love his recordings\, they adore Chuck’s live performance. The first time he made an audience laugh\, he was “hooked”. A nimble guitarist\, critics say his sense of rhythm is more like a fine classical\, or jazz\, soloist\, his songwriting musically sophisticated yet full of uncluttered space. The Chuck Pyle Finger-Style approach to guitar has distinguished him as a true original\, earning him invitations to teach at such prestigious events as The Puget Sound Guitar Workshop and The Swannanoa Gathering. His music has made him a favorite of Bill & Melinda Gates who have had him play at their home in Seattle. Since writing the theme-song for a PBS series called Spirit of Colorado\, he’s attained local fame\, and even sings for the opening session of the Colorado State Legislature. \nChuck Pyle came from Iowa in 1965 when\, “Boulder was mostly gravel streets”\, and resides on the front range of Colorado. He does 100 dates a year all across the country\, playing festivals and theaters\, coffeehouses and house concerts. \n \nHis 11th CD\, THE SPACES IN BETWEEN is twelve all-new songs\, each with finger-style guitar out front of a crackerjack rhythm section. The embellishments are elegant\, with everything from fiddle to uilleann pipes\, grand piano to ukulele; each song’s a hummable melody guaranteed to make you tap your inner feet. In the middle of the night\, Chuck began writing down the words to the CD’s opening song\, called Dream Song\, and the more awake he became\, the better it sounded. Picking Out My Outfit is about Man’s need to look casual\, Copper John is about the favorite nymph of fly-fisherman and Wide Open is about Wyoming’s bigness. The rest of the songs are classic Chuck Pyle truth-telling; one man’s outlook seen from a life-in-motion as he continues to gather traction and gravity.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/chuck-pyle/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/ChuckPile_smbw.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111201T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111201T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20111126T190442Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T053755Z
UID:1639-1322766000-1322773200@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Brenn Hill
DESCRIPTION:Cowboy Singer/Songwriter\n7:00 PM Thursday\, December 01\, 2011\nSinger/Songwriter Brenn Hill doesn’t just sing about the American West\, he reveals its heart to anyone who will take the time to listen. His most recent release “Equine” (2010)\, clearly defines what might be his most profound work to date\, as well as a mirror of his growth as an artist over the last ten years. Its broad theme of horses\, the cowboy’s working partner\, is but a pathway into and through his own personal journey. No longer just the observer or narrator of our Western story\, but its strongest interpreter\, life’s trials and tribulations are also his raw material. Faith\, trust and love are his guide. \nPurchase Tickets Online\n“Overall\, I want a listener to know that my music isn’t about me\,” explains Hill. “It’s how I make my living and not a vehicle for stardom. My goal is to present a valid story about people\, places\, and events that are song-worthy. If I can challenge someone’s perspective\, or offer a new one on a classic theme or issue\, I’ve achieved my goal. I feel a deep sense of purpose with my music and am honored to have the opportunity that I have. \nI deeply appreciate my listeners. The greatest compliments I receive come directly from those that listen to my music. When a song touches them so profoundly that they tell me\, “that song changed my life\,” or\, “that song got me through a hard time\,” or\, “that song’s about me\,” then I know I got it right. No amount of money or recognition could mean more than that.” \nBorn into a 6th generation of a family anchored to the West and raised in Utah\, Brenn and his music revisit the many stories that come from the land with a fresh\, contemporary and personal twist. Home for the Hill’s is Hooper\, a rural community in Northern Utah where Brenn resides with his wife\, three children and a cavvy of horses. “Time in the saddle is my payoff for the hard miles on the road\, the gut-full of showbiz\, and the time away from loved ones\,” says Brenn. “Horses bring me purpose in life. They provide a foundation and theme for my music and are an endless fountain of inspiration. In a way\, horses write a lot of my songs\, especially since they are an integral part of my connection to the land. They reveal my character. They’re constant teachers with endless patience and capacity\, and likewise\, provide an endless bank of inspiration that I can draw from.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/brenn-hill-2/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/brennhill.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120107T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120107T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20111210T084107Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T053633Z
UID:1666-1325962800-1325970000@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Langroise Trio
DESCRIPTION:Chamber Music\n7:00 PM\, Saturday\, January 07\, 2012\nTickets Are On Sale Now\n  \n \nWe’re lining up another great music series for 2012 and we are privileged to start our new year hosting the Langroise Trio as they celebrate their 20th year of performances. \nIn what has become a community favorite\, the concert with Geoffrey Trabichoff\, David Johnson\, and Sam Smith provides an evening of exquisite chamber music in the fashion it was meant to be heard\, with a small engaged audience sitting close up\, and listening intently. The performance at the Martin has become a favorite of the Langroise Trio’s as well with Geoffrey saying “We love playing in your intimate venue\, where the excellent acoustic is exceeded only by the warmth of the audience.” \nPurchase your tickets on-line from the Martin Hotel\nEstablished in 1991 the Langroise Trio are Artists-in-residence at The College of Idaho\, where they form the string faculty. They have performed on chamber music series in Alabama\, Florida\, Idaho\, Oregon and Washington\, their fourth c.d. is in the planning stage\, and the Trio was one of the first groups to give an “internet archived” concert on the Millennium Stage of the Kennedy Center. \nWith its personnel among some of the foremost musicians in the country\, the Langroise Trio offers an eclectic repertoire. Contemporary works by Idaho composers Jim Cockey and David Alan Earnest have been written especially for them and they stylishly play music from the Romantic\, Classical\, Baroque and Renaissance eras as well. \nGeoffrey Trabichoff is Concertmaster of the Boise Philharmonic. He is the former concertmaster of the BBC Scottish Symphony and former leader of the Paragon Ensemble of Scotland. Geoffrey has broadcast numerous concertos for the BBC. He has been guest concertmaster of the Royal Philharmonic and the London Symphony as well as the Northern Sinfonia\, BBC Welsh and BBC Philharmonic Orchestras. He also served as concertmaster of the Mannheim Chamber and Hanover State Orchestras in Germany. \nDavid Johnson has been principal violist of the Iceland Symphony and the Ft. Wayne Philharmonic\, and a member of the Freimann Quartet. David was assistant principal violist for the Grant Park Symphony in Chicago and holds a Master of Music degree from Indiana University. He has been a featured soloist on numerous occasions and a featured artist on Iceland National Radio Broadcasts. \nSamuel Smith has been principal cellist of the Ft. Wayne Philharmonic where he was a frequent soloist and a member of the Freimann Quartet. Samuel was also a cellist for the Grant Park Symphony of Chicago. He has served as assistant principal cellist of the Florida Symphony\, and has been on the adjunct faculty at Anderson College and the summer faculty at Ball State University.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/langroise-trio-2/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/WMCA-LT-11-04-08.1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120131T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120131T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120119T075834Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T053449Z
UID:1694-1328036400-1328043600@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Ramblin' Jack Elliott
DESCRIPTION:It ain’t where you’re from that counts\, it is where you’re going.\nRamblin’ Jack Elliott is going to make another visit to the Martin Hotel in Winnemucca.   We’re thrilled to have one of the most mythical characters in American music visit our cozy little venue for the third time. \nJack Elliott set off sparks in London when he traveled there in 1955.   The young musicians in England were just starting to investigate American blues and traditional country music.   Into their midst fell an guitar playing cowboy.   Jack showed up in this world of proper gentlemen in his boots\, his jeans\, and wearing his Stetson.   He could play flawlessly in the styles they had only heard but never seen.   Jack’s time in England and Europe helped prime the British Invasion that shows up on our shores 10 years later… \nMusic at the Martin\nwith\nRamblin’ Jack Elliott\n7:00 PM\nTuesday\, January 31\, 2012\nOne of the last true links to the great folk traditions of this country\, with over 40 albums under his belt\, Ramblin’ Jack Elliott is considered one of the country’s legendary foundations of folk music. \n Purchase your tickets on-line from the Martin Hotel \nLong before every kid in America wanted to play guitar — before Elvis\, Dylan\, the Beatles or Led Zeppelin — Ramblin’ Jack had picked it up and was passing it along. From Johnny Cash to Tom Waits\, Beck to Bonnie Raitt\, Ry Cooder to Bruce Springsteen\, the Grateful Dead to The Rolling Stones\, they all pay homage to Ramblin’ Jack Elliott. \nIn the tradition of roving troubadours Jack has carried the seeds and pollens of story and song for decades from one place to another\, from one generation to the next. They are timeless songs that outlast whatever current musical fashion strikes today’s fancy. \n“His tone of voice is sharp\, focused and piercing.  All that and he plays the guitar effortlessly in a fluid flat-picking perfected style.  He was a brilliant entertainer…. Most folk musicians waited for you to come to them.  Jack went out and grabbed you….. Jack was King of the Folksingers.” – Bob Dylan\, Chronicles: Volume One \nThere are no degrees of separation between Jack and the real thing. He is the guy who ran away from his Brooklyn home at fourteen to join the rodeo and learned his guitar from a cowboy. In 1950\, he met Woody Guthrie\, moved in with the Guthrie family and traveled with Woody to California and Florida\, from the redwood forests to the Gulf Stream waters. Jack became so enthralled with the life and composer of This Land Is Your Land\, The Dust Bowl Ballads\, and a wealth of children’s songs that he completely absorbed the inflections and mannerisms\, leading Guthrie to remark\, “Jack sounds more like me than I do.” \nIn 1954\, along with folksinging pals Frank Robinson and Guy Carawan\, Jack journeyed south through Appalachia\, Nashville and to New Orleans to hear authentic American country music. He later made this the basis for his talking song\, 912 Greens. \nIn 1955 Jack married and traveled to Europe\, bringing his genuine American folk\, cowboy and blues repertoire and his guitar virtuosity\, inspiring a new generation of budding British rockers\, from Mick Jagger to Eric Clapton. \nWhen he returned to America in 1961\, he met another young folksinger\, Bob Dylan at Woody Guthrie’s bedside\, and mentored Bob. Jack has continued as an inspiration for every roots-inspired performer since. \nAlong the way he learned the blues first-hand from Leadbelly\, Mississippi John Hurt\, the Reverend Gary Davis\, Big Bill Broonzy\, Brownie Mcghee and Sonny Terry\, Jesse Fuller and Champion Jack Dupree. \nHe has recorded forty albums; wrote one of the first trucking songs\, Cup of Coffee\, recorded by Johnny Cash; championed the works of new singer-songwriters\, from Bob Dylan and Kris Kristofferson to Tim Hardin; became a founding member of Bob Dylan’s Rolling Thunder Revue; and continued the life of the traveling troubadour influencing Jerry Jeff Walker\, Guy Clark\, Tom Russell The Grateful Dead and countless others. \nIn 1995\, Ramblin’ Jack received his first of five Grammy nominations and the Grammy Award for Best Traditional Folk Album\, for South Coast (Red House Records). Jack was again recognized with a Grammy Award for best Traditional Blues Album in 2009\, for A Stranger Here (Anti-Epitaph Records). \nIn 1998\, President Bill Clinton awarded Jack the National Medal of the Arts\, proclaiming\, “In giving new life to our most valuable musical traditions\, Ramblin’ Jack has himself become an American treasure.” \nIn 2000\, Jack’s daughter\, filmmaker\, Aiyana Elliott produced and directed The Ballad of Ramblin’ Jack\, her take on Jack’s life and their fragile relationship\, winning a Special Jury Prize from the Sundance Film Festival. \nRamblin’ Jack Elliott\nThrough it all—though agents\, managers\, wives and recording companies have tried—Jack resisted being molded into a commercial commodity. He played his shows without a written set list or including any songs that did not ring with his gut feeling of what mattered to him. \nRamblin’ Jack’s life of travels\, performances and recordings is a testament to the America of lore\, a giant land of struggle\, hard luck and sometimes even of good fortune. Ramblin’ Jack takes us to places that spur us on to the romance and passion of life in the tunes and voices of real people. \nAt eighty\, Ramblin’ Jack is still on the road\, still seeking those people\, places\, songs and stories that are hand-crafted\, wreaking of wood and canvas\, cowhide and forged metal. You’ll find him in the sleek lines of a long haul semi-truck\, in the rigging of an old sailing ship\, in the smell of a fine leather saddle. \nBETTER YET\, FIND HIM AT THE MARTIN HOTEL IN WINNEMUCCA ON JANUARY 31.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/ramblin_jack_elliott/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/RJE3.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120131T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120131T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120925T033148Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230215T024737Z
UID:2047-1328036400-1328043600@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Colin Ross
DESCRIPTION:7:00 PM\, Saturday\, September 29\, 2012\nThe $10.00 tickets are on sale now at the Martin Hotel\, Nature’s Corner\, and Global Coffee. You can also buy them online at themartinhotel.com. \n \nColin Ross is a singer\, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist with deep American roots. His shows feature a tremendous variety of original music combined with a hip blend of vintage styles. He mixes virtuosic free-style piano technique with rollicking blues and boogie\, liquid 12-string guitar\, greasy delta slide\, and wry lyrics to make his own brand of Americana. \nHe is a jammer folks. No two performances are ever going to be the same. He gets into his zone\, and just lets it fly. \nColin was born in Little Rock Arkansas and grew up on the banks of the Mississippi in the little town of Elsah in southern Illinois. He started playing piano at the age of 5 and began collecting recordings\, instruments\, music and art books. His interest in Americana began with a fascination with Woody Guthrie\, and developed with immersion in bluegrass folk and roots music. His influences are as varied as Bach and the Grateful Dead. \nSeptember 29th Colin returns to the historic Martin Hotel for an exciting\, intimate “unplugged” show.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/colin-ross/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/ColinRossInstument560.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120225T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120225T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120218T081002Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T053201Z
UID:1753-1330196400-1330203600@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Men of Worth
DESCRIPTION:7:00 PM Saturday\, February 25\, 2012\nFROM SCOTLAND’S OUTER ISLANDS AND IRELAND’S WEST\, SOME OF AMERICA’S MOST AUTHENTIC MUSICAL HERITAGE IS COMING TO WINNEMUCCA. \n \nThe folk duo\, Men of Worth\, who position themselves firmly at the extreme\, traditional end of the Celtic music spectrum\, will perform at the Martin Hotel on Saturday\, February 25. \nMen of Worth’s tunes and songs are so authentic\, so closely connected to their heritage\, that Scotsman Donnie Macdonald sings some in his native Gaelic; while Irishman James Keigher includes time-polished pieces saved from the oral traditions of his native County Mayo. \n Purchase your tickets on-line from the Martin Hotel \n“Our music has its history in the crofting life of my Hebridean homeland and James’ western Ireland. It was a part of the fabric of everyday life and it came to America with the immigrants a century ago”\, explained Macdonald. “Now\, we’re playing it again\, to audiences for whom it could only be a generational memory”.\n“For us\, the irony is we were brought up in Scotland and Ireland\, and as boys we listened most eagerly to the music of America\, and not especially to the music of own areas. On our radios\, we heard Hank Williams Sr. and Jim Reeves. We wanted to see the Arkansas River\, not Loch Lomond\, and Reeves’ hometown of Carthage\, in east Texas\, had more romance for me than did the Isle of Lewis”. “Joni Mitchell\, Neil Young and Crosby\, Stills and Nash influenced me greatly”\, admitted Keigher\, who as a teen was already performing his own songs in the Irish pubs where he learned his wit and humor. “But now I have returned to my own musical bloodlines\, too.” \nThe pair could not escape the emotion and tradition of their homeland song heritage. “We could not grow away from those sounds”\, said Macdonald\, “so we have preserved them as accurately and authentically as we can\, in our performances”. “We entertain people with the real music of our regions; we have an ancient yet fresh musical story to tell”. \nSometimes that music comes from prosaic sources – Keigher wrote one song after overhearing two old ladies gossiping about him in a village market – and sometimes from traditional music passed down the generations. Several of Macdonald’s songs come from his mother’s own poetry and from Hebridean crofters’ airs. \nThe musicians\, who met in California in 1988\, each play a handful of instruments\, among them mandolin\, guitar\, concertina and bodhran\, a handheld drum. They are both married to Americans and live on the west coast. Keigher lives in Ashland\, Oregon and Macdonald lives near Sacramento\, California. \nThey have played concerts across the US\, from Alaska to Texas. They also take guided tours to their own musical roots: leading folk fans to the western isles of Scotland and to Ireland’s heartland to hear the real music of the isles in its own home. \nIf you can’t make that journey\, you can hear the music when these talented troubadours bring it to you\, February 25.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/men-of-worth/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/Men-of-Worth560.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120317T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120317T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120314T000547Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T040544Z
UID:1776-1332010800-1332018000@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Nell Robinson and Jim Nunally
DESCRIPTION:Voice and guitar blend harkens back to old-time county roots.\n  \nMusic at the Martin\n7:00 PM – March 17\nNell Robinson has a brand-new harmony-driven duo with award winning guitarist Jim Nunally\, reminiscent of classic duets like Geroge Jones and Tammy Wynette as well as singing siblings like the Louvin and Stanley Brothers.  Think Del McCoury meets Iris Dement. \nAlongside her own original material\, Nell Robinson and Jim Nunally cover music ranging from Bill Monroe to Nine Inch Nails. \n Purchase your tickets on-line from the Martin Hotel \nNell Robinson hadn’t sung in public since elementary school until the itch struck in 2007.  She has traveled a long way since then\, and from her family’s small roots in “loser” Alabama\, where several generations of Robinsons lived. Nell’s sweet childhood memories embrace visiting the local store that sold bottled cokes and boiled peanuts\, pickling blueberries and shelling peas with her grandmothers\, Nell Robinson and Thelma Bates.  Raised by a career Air Force father\, she and her family moved every few years\, and the Alabama farmhouse and local roads were one of very few places where she was recognized and where almost every house along the road had “kinfolk” in it. \nNell’s debut CD\, “Nell Robinson in Loango”\, made national bluegrass and Americana charts throughout the country and she was quickly snapped up by Garrison Keillor’s “A Prairie Home Companion and the Strawberry Music Festival. \nJim Nunally is a world-class guitarist\, vocalist and songwriter\, and has toured extensively with the David Grisman Bluegrass Experience and with John Rieschman and the Blue Jays.  He is the recipient of two Grammy Award certificates and two IBMA awards.  He is also a two time Western Open Masterpicking Champion and Guitar Champion.  His most recent CD\, “Gloria’s Waltz”\, showcases his distinctive pickin’ and singing.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/robinson_nunally/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/NellRobinsonJimNunally.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120330T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120330T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120321T055710Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T040407Z
UID:1793-1333134000-1333141200@gbae.org
SUMMARY:James King
DESCRIPTION:Purchase your tickets Now! On-line from the Martin Hotel\nThe James King Bluegrass Band\n7:00 PM Friday\, March 30\, 2012\n \nFrom the moment you first hear his voice\, you know you are hearing bluegrass the way it was meant to be sung. James King sings bluegrass as only a handful of others before him – Carter Stanley\, Red Allen\, Del McCoury – ever have. Bluegrass Unlimited has called him “the most impressive lead vocalist to emerge in traditional bluegrass this decade”. \nLine up:\nJames King – Guitar\, Vocals\nDonald Dowdy – Mandolin\, Tenor Vocals\nClay Lillard – Banjo\, Vocals\nEddie Biggerstaff – Upright Bass\, Vocals \nThe James King Band has been entertaining now for over 14 years and has been taking people by storm with their style of traditional bluegrass music. Whether it be a James King Signature ballad or a good ole foot stomper\, James and the band really know how to make a crowd respond to their style and show. They get the crowd into their music and show in every form. The James King Band is based around the soulful sounds of James King’s lead vocals. \nAlthough James King was largely unknown until his smash 1993 Rounder debut\, “These Old Pictures”\, King has been around the music all of his entire life. He was born near the very heart of Bluegrass Country in the town of Martinsville\, VA. After a stint in the Marines\, King began to pursue his musical career in earnest in 1979. In the mid-1980s\, King recorded two albums along with Ralph Stanley and his band for Webco Records\, “Stanley Brothers Classics” and “Reunion”\, which were followed by his debut with his own band\, 1988’s James King Sings “Cold\, Cold World.” But it wasn’t until he decided to work on a project with Johnson Mountain Boys’ Vocalist Dudley Connell that he found his true voice\, on what Bluegrass Unlimited dubbed “the breakthrough album of the year.” King’s startling power and emotional purity in his voice led to great reviews\, live performances from coast to coast\, and a 1995 IBMA nomination for emerging Artist of the Year. James won the honor of being the 1997 IBMA Emerging Artist of the Year and the 1998 SPBGMA Traditional Male Vocalist of the Year. \nDonald Dowdy was born April\, 1987\, and is the son of Victor Dowdy of the Bluegrass Brothers. He started playing mandolin at the age of 7. In addition to the James King Band\, Donald has worked for such bands as Southern Comfort\, The Locust Mtn. Boys\, and the Bluegrass Brothers. When not traveling with the James King Band\, Donald enjoys hunting\, fishing\, and spending time with his seven month old son\, Breyden James Dowdy. Donald wishes to thank his family and friends for their support\, and the ‘Master of All’\, our Lord Jesus Christ for his talent. \nClay Lillard\, of Cascade\, Virginia\, started playing banjo at the age of 12. He won first place banjo at Wayside Park Fiddlers Convention in 2006\, at the age of 15. He has several influences on banjo\, including his father Steve Lillard\, who passed away nine years ago June. Clay spends most of his off- time picking and learning ‘new’ sounds of the traditional banjo. \nPlaying bass for the James King Band is Eddie Biggerstaff. Eddie is from Cleveland County N.C. and now living in Waco N.C. Eddie grew up singing in church with his father and grandfather in a quartet and knew early on he had a gift of singing. He went on to becoming involved in many regional bands such as Brushy Creek and Carolina Crossfire. Eddie has spent the last seven years with the band Blueridge\, touring the U.S. and Canada. Eddie has been up for Bass playing of the year twice by SPBGMA in Nashville T.N.\, and in 2006\, the recording Getting Ready was nominated by the IBMA for Gospel recording of the year. Eddie’s resume also includes Rambler’s Choice\, Larry Rice\, and working with the great mandolin player Herschel Sizemore. He was asked to play bass at the Roanoke Bluegrass Weekend concert\, which features most of the elite in bluegrass music today. Eddie is a seasoned professional who adds energy and a distinctive edge to the band. \nJames King may be the greatest “mountain soul” singer of his generation\, bringing a deep understanding of the hardcore bluegrass tradition to his hard-driving blend of bluegrass and honky-tonk country music. “Thirty Years of Farming”\, his latest release on Rounder\, is a fresh collection of overlooked treasures and classics-to-be\, each infused with the raw emotion that has come to be his trademark. Here is one of the most exciting sounds in bluegrass today.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/james-king/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/jamesking02-426x135.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120414T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120414T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120405T060002Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T040159Z
UID:1834-1334430000-1334437200@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Caleb Klauder Country Band
DESCRIPTION:Early Honky-Tonk Country Music\n7:00 PM\, Saturday\, April 14\, 2012\nPurchase your tickets Now! On-line from The Martin Hotel\n \nCaleb Klauder’s warm sound\, authentic and familiar\, feels all at once contemporary and vintage\, as though it’s coming from the porch next-door. Raised between Orcas Island\, Washington and Little Cumberland\, Georgia\, Klauder took his first steps in Knoxville. If his music could invent a genre\, it would be New-school Americana\, infusing old standards with Northwestern attitude and spinning out modern classics made elegant with Southern charm. Klauder writes his rough-hewn lyrics among the chickens scratching in his garden in Portland\, Oregon\, where he works as a musician and carpenter and is raising his 13-year-old son\, Elijah. \nWinner of the Portland Music Awards Outstanding Achievement in Country Music in 2008\, Caleb Klauder has been on tour for the last fifteen years performing with Calobo\, Pig Iron\, The Caleb Klauder Band\, The Foghorn Stringband\, and with Dirk Powell. He’s opened for acts such as JJ Cale\, Iris Dement\, David Bromberg\, and the Del McCoury Band and has shared the stage with Tim O’Brien\, Kevin Burke\, The Wilders\, Uncle Earl\, and Justin Townes Earle. Klauder regularly collaborates with Dirk Powell\, Riley Baugus\, Betse Ellis\, Reyna Gellert\, and Justin Townes Earle. \nKlauder has toured extensively with both the Foghorn Stringband and the Caleb Klauder Country Band throughout the US\, the UK\, Ireland\, Denmark\, Sweden\, Finland and Malaysia playing a variety of stages including the Tonder Music Festival\, the Newport Folk Festival\, the Rainforest World Music Festival\, the Chicago Folk and Roots Festival\, Pick-a-thon Roots Music Festival\, The Seattle Folk Life Festival\, The Bristol Rhythm and Roots Festival\, Bumbershoot and the ROMP Festival.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/caleb-klauder-country-band/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/CKCB_Photo_Color_560.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120427T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120427T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120421T051626Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T035933Z
UID:1850-1335553200-1335560400@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Mike Beck
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, April 27\, 2012\n7:00 PM at the Martin Hotel\nPurchase your $10 tickets Now! On-line from The Martin Hotel\n\nMike Beck is well-known for his memorable ballads that capture old California\, and the cowboy way of life. He has performed in numerous foreign countries\, and throughout the United States. Mike recently returned from doing some shows in Norway and Sweden. \nTwo of Mike Beck’s songs were listed in the “13 Best Cowboy Songs of All Time” in the April 2009 issue of Western Horseman Magazine (“In Old California” – a song about Jo Mora – and “Don’t Tell Me.”) His song\, “Patrick” was listed as one of “The Top 15 Roadworthy Cowboy Songs” in the July 2008 issue of Cowboys & Indians Magazine. His song\, “Amanda Come Home” was featured on NPR’s Weekend Edition\, and is dedicated to all of the women who served in Iraq. In the Spring 2010 edition of The Cowboy Way\, Bill Reynolds writes\, “His love of the ways of the vaquero and the Pacific Slope region of the West comes through his songs in superb guitar work.” \nBorn and raised in Monterey County\, California\, at age 13\, Mike Beck went to the Monterey Pop Festival and liked what he heard. He picked up a guitar and never looked back. Since that time\, he has been composing and performing a wide array of folk\, rock and Americana music. Mike’s songs reflect his life as a professional musician and a working cowboy in Montana and Carmel Valley near Big Sur. \nAccording to Ramblin’ Jack Elliot\, “Mike Beck plays the guitar like a Byrd. His strings do things that mine could never do. They obey the slightest finger-touch commands like a fine reining horse.” \nBeck is riding high after being recognized by Western Horseman magazine in a recent article naming “The 13 Best Cowboy Songs of All Times” along with songs written by luminaries such as Ramblin’ Jack Elliott\, Allison Moorer\, Lucinda Williams and Ian Tyson. \n“I had two songs on that list\, which was kind of cool\,” said Beck. “to be alongside some of the other people on that list\, like Tom Russell\, Ian Tyson. I thought\, that’s nice company. That was nice of them to say that.” \nVisit Mike Beck online http://www.mikebeck.com \n(I found this rather amazing video on YouTube\, posted by pagenmaestro; with the notes here below the video. – bill) \n \nI met Mike Beck right after this performance in Austin\, Texas\, in June of 2004\, when he delivered among other originals a gripping solo performance of “Old Man\,” a song about one of the resin jaws he met while cowboying in Montana. We stood outside in the humid night heat and\, along with horseman Magne Hellesjo of Norway\, talked music and horses\, and shared some cold beers. A year or so later the three of us convened again at Magne’s farm in Norway where\, between horse clinics\, Mike joined me and other members of Poisoned Red Berries in the recording of my first produced studio album. Mike’s been working with his band\, The Bohemian Saints\, for a few years now\, playing mainly in California with occasional tours. Mike Beck has also just released a beautiful solo album of songs\, called “Free”. If you like the sound of “Old Man\,” check out the new solo album. Mike’s songs offer a unique perspective on life\, opening on a wisdom earned genuinely through a life of horse whispering\, work with Ian Tyson and Ramblin’ Jack Elliott\, and Beck’s own take on the old ways of the cowboy life in America. Learn more about Mike and his music at http://www.mikebeck.com \n  \nNote: If anyone objects to this video presentation due to copyright infringement\, please make contact and it will be promptly removed. DL
URL:https://gbae.org/event/mike_beck/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/Mike_Beck_solo.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120518T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120518T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120515T191400Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T035544Z
UID:1862-1337367600-1337374800@gbae.org
SUMMARY:David Jacobs-Strain
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, May 18\, 2012\n7:00 PM at the Martin Hotel\nPurchase your $10 tickets Now! On-line from The Martin Hotel\nDavid Jacobs-Strain\, a consummate finger-style and slide guitarist\, plays in the blues tradition but isn’t from it. You’ll hear echoes of Skip James\, Charlie Patton\, Tommy Johnson\, and a song or two by Fred McDowell or Robert Johnson in his solo performances. But as a modern roots singer-songwriter\, “I come from the language of the country blues\, but it’s important not to silence other influences\,” he says. \nHis obsession with sound serves a deeper purpose than a mere desire to display technical wizardry. “For me\, there’s something about rural blues that has a transcendent quality\, a wide open sound. Think of the rhythm of a train. There’s a cross between spiritual and secular music in Fred McDowell. Compared to commercial electric blues\, the Delta blues are more interesting modally and have a spiritual depth to them. You can also hear anger\, humor\, and empathy. I’m going after the texture\, the tone and feel of that.” \n“I’ve always been drawn to the trance-oriented\, heavier\, Delta blues—to the driving\, passionate\, raw\, distraught sound of somebody like Son House\,” he says. “When you’re in the flow of the music\, there’s an ecstasy to it. Of course\, when I was 12\, I thought I knew what Robert Johnson’s ‘Come on into My Kitchen’ was all about.” The 24-year-old Jacobs-Strain has refined his youthful expression of raw energy\, passion\, and technique into powerful\, nuanced performances. \nHe grew up in Eugene\, Oregon\, in a community that was centered on cultural change and environmentalism. He sees a distinct connection between the principles embodied in his upbringing and the democracy of the blues. “I’m really into hand-made culture—and real people making real music. The voice. One guitar. Even at their simplest\, the blues have always been a vehicle for expressing your own situation\, whether as an individual or a community. There’s such power in that.” \nJacobs-Strain is a veteran of the national club and festival circuit. He’s been billed with T-Bone Burnett and Bob Weir\, and has opened for acts such as Los Lobos\, Lucinda Williams\, Taj Mahal\, Etta James\, Boz Scaggs\, and the Blind Boys of Alabama. By the time he was 19\, he had played at the Philadelphia Folk Festival and MerleFest. His other festival credits include the Strawberry Music Festival\, the Newport Folk Festival\, the Telluride Blues Fest\, the Vancouver Folk Festival\, the Montreal Jazz Festival\, and the Lugano Blues to Bop Festival in Switzerland. He’s also served as faculty at guitar workshops\, most notably at Jorma Kaukonen’s Fur Peace Ranch. In 2008\, he was chosen by Boz Scaggs to open his summer tour. \n“How do you continue to find inspiration in sound? Why does a certain musical phrase grab you by the hair and heart and brain? How do you continue to make it new? How do you honor the people who poured themselves into the music in the first place?” Jacobs-Strain asks. Whenever he strives to answer these questions\, you’ll want to be there to listen.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/david_jacobs-strain/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/DJS.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120623T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120623T213000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120608T153234Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T035310Z
UID:1868-1340479800-1340487000@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Jackstraw
DESCRIPTION:High Energy Bluesgrass\n7:30 PM\, Saturday\, June 23\, 2012\nPurchase your tickets Now! On-line from The Martin Hotel\n \nAfter ten years on the road and five albums\, Jackstraw is a Northwest institution. This coal-fired Portland quartet plays the kind of music as deep and old as the silt washing out of a defunct Appalachian strip mine. Most of the time it’s bluegrass\, but not always. As often as the boys rip through a Stanley Brothers chestnut\, they tap into their own deep collection of originals\, swerve into honky-tonk or barn-burn a rock ‘n roll classic. Throughout the band’s history\, critics have been quick to praise their energy and speed\, often drawing comparisons to punk music. It’s true\, Jackstraw does play fast. But the band never replaces musical depth and feeling with showmanship. \nJackstraw is not afraid to explore new territory\, but they won’t turn on their musical forbears and the hallmarks of bluegrass –great songs\, great picking\, and great singing. It is this steadfast adherence to their principles that has kept Jackstraw fans coming back for a decade and consistently wins the band new hearts. A Jackstraw show is truly an inclusive\, multi-generational experience. \nThe band’s devoted following includes bluegrass purists\, alt-country fans\, kids who want to dance\, and people who know a good tune when they hear one. Jackstraw was born when rhythm guitarist Darrin Craig and lead player Jon Neufeld met mandolin picker David Pugh and bassist Jesse Withers in 1997 at Artichoke Music\, a Portland guitar store and acoustic music institution. \nNot long after their formation\, Jackstraw recorded their first album and hit the road. Six records later\, the band has toured throughout the United States\, playing roadhouses\, listening rooms and clubs as well as festival stages. Along the way\, they have shared bills with many bluegrass greats such as Del McCoury and Tim O’Brien and included legends like Danny Barnes (Bill Frissell\, Robert Earl Keen\, Bad Livers) and Tony Furtado (Earl Scruggs\, Alison Krauss) as temporary band mates.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/jackstraw/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Jackstraw-2012-560px.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120714T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120714T213000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120702T155853Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T035114Z
UID:1888-1342294200-1342301400@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Houston Jones
DESCRIPTION:High Octane Americana\n7:30 PM\, Saturday\, July 14\, 2012\nPurchase your tickets Now! On-line from The Martin Hotel\n\nHouston Jones is a California based high octane Americana quintet. Formed in 2001\, the band performs a strong original repertoire that ranges from bluegrass and folk to blues and gospel. Houston Jones features\,from left to right in the photo\, Glenn Houston (lead guitar)\, Peter Tucker (drums and percussion)\, Travis Jones (lead vocals and acoustic guitar)\, Chris Kee (standup bass\, cello and guitar)\, and Henry Salvia (keyboards and accordion). \n“As good as any singing and picking I’ve heard in my thirty years in the music business. Do your friends a big favor\, and turn them on to this band!” – Bob Brown\, Owner\, Rancho Nicasio\, and manager\, Huey Lewis and the News \nA big hit at every festival they’ve played\, including Telluride\, Sisters\, American River\, Mill Pond\, Strawberry (where they were voted “best new discovery” and “best vocalist”). \n \nGlenn Houston has received the “Best Guitarist” award for 2009 from the Northern California Bluegrass Society. He is an accomplished player with influences ranging from T-Bone Walker\, Albert King\, B.B. King and Michael Bloomfield to Doc Watson\, Albert Lee and James Burton. A co-founder in 1979 of the group Hearts on Fire\, Glenn was nominated for “Best Lead Guitar” by the California Country Music Association (CCMA). While Glenn was with the group\, Hearts on Fire earned a prestigious Bay Area Music Award (Bammie). Over the years\, Glenn has shared billing with Hank Williams\, Jr.\, Merle Haggard\, Waylon Jennings\, Willie Nelson\, Emmylou Harris\, The David Grisman Quintet\, Doc Watson\, Earl Scruggs\, John Hartford\, Ricky Skaggs\, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band\, and The Tubes. In recent years\, he has performed live and in the recording studio with Grammy Award winner Ramblin’ Jack Elliott; he co-founded and played lead guitar for the critically acclaimed acoustic group The Waybacks; he has performed with blues legends Mark Naftalin and Nick Gravenites; and he has earned a second nomination for “Best Lead Guitar” from the CCMA. And yes\, he plays left-handed upside down. \nTravis Jones’ musical background and history reads like a William Faulkner novel. He began singing gospel music at age four with his mother Lottie Mae Adams\, a blues singer who recorded several discs on Paula Records. Travis became known not only for his vocal abilities but also for his telling of old testament bible stories at revivals and tent meetings all across the south. He started his first group at sixteen – a Paul Revere and the Raiders tribute band. Travis served 6 years in the US Army; he was stationed in Europe where he performed with the soul and funk band Smoke\, which eventually became the back up band for the famous R&B group The Manhattans (“Let’s Just Kiss and Say Goodbye”). Upon leaving the armed forces\, Europe\, and Smoke\, Travis made his way to Northern California where he has resided since 1979. \nDuring his time in California\, he has performed with a wide array of artists. He’s shared the stage with Asleep at the Wheel and Waylon Jennings – Night Ranger and the Doobie Brothers – John Hartford and Levon Helm\, just to name a few. He has recorded with various artists\, as well as releasing two self titled albums – “Lost Highway\, The Legendary Music of Hank Williams” and “Dance All Night” – along with five CD releases with Houston Jones. Travis lives in Alameda CA\, on his sailboat\, with Samson the wonderdog. \nRolling Stone Magazine described Peter Tucker as “one of the most creative percussionists to emerge in rock music.” Originally from Massachusetts\, Peter’s eclectic pro career began in the early 60’s working with the Boston-based band The Monks featuring Brad Delp (who later became lead singer for the rock group Boston.) Peter also recorded in New York with Tim Hardin and worked with Richie Havens\, Austin Delone\, Grungy O’Muck and others. Peter has also worked with the ground-breaking rock band Guns and Butter\, recording two albums on Atlantic Records. Later\, on the West Coast\, Peter played with the R&B band Pacific Gas and Electric and with Declan Mulligan and The Beau Brummels with whom he put out the Vince Welnick-produced single\, “Back To Life.” Peter has continued to play folk\, jazz\, country\, blues and rock with many Bay Area Bands such as Large and in the Way\, The Ray Price Club\, Celtic Scandal\, The Ron Price Band\, The Lost River Band\, The Gary Gates Band\, Dallas Wayne\, and most recently\, The Waybacks\, The Cowlicks\, and of course\, Houston Jones. Peter is a session drummer too\, in many Bay Area recording studios\, and especially for local music entrepreneur Kathi Goldmark where he has recorded with Warren Zevon\, Skunk Baxter and authors Amy Tan\, Steven King\, and Norman Mailer. \nA classically trained cellist with a degree in ethnomusicology\, Chris Kee has performed and recorded with a bewildering array of artists\, including Peter Rowan and Norah Jones. He is a long time collaborator with Telecaster wizard Jim Campilongo\, playing with Jim in the legendary Ten Gallon Cats and various post-Cats ensembles. With drummer Peter Tucker\, he was in the original rhythm section of those practitioners of acoustic mayhem\, The Waybacks. In various musical incarnations\, he has opened for Jerry Garcia\, Lyle Lovett\, Los Lobos\, Bela Fleck and J.J. Cale\, to name but a few. \nHenry Salvia was born a dim-witted but honest child in the Cagolugo section of Detroit. As a child\, he threatened his parents with becoming a drummer until he discovered that the piano was larger and heavier\, so naturally he began to play it. After a long and undistinguished career performing in luxurious hotels and corner dives throughout the Metropolitan area\, he decided to move to Los Angeles to expand his opportunities\, and wound up in San Francisco. Several years of playing rock and Top 40 in Detroit was ideal training for his role in the Billy Band \, who played both kinds of music (country and western). After being replaced by a pedal steel guitar (though no one in the Billy Band played it\, it looked better on stage than Henry)\, he moved to a roots rock band called the Hurricanes \, where he was surprised to discover his wife singing for the band. So\, he married her. It seemed the honorable thing to do. \nAll of this experience playing rock and country made him the logical selection as the piano player for the Johnny Nocturne band\, who specialize in R&B\, soul\, and jazz. Henry’s frenetic yet lyrical style (describe by bandleader John Firmin as “a cross between Carmen Cavallero and Cecil Taylor”) is featured on several of their albums. Henry has had the honor of working with artists such as Bo Diddley\, Rickie Lee Jones\, Johnny Colla (of Huey Lewis and the News)\, Big Jay McNeeley\, Jessica Mitford\, Tommy Ridgely\, Al Kooper\, Peter Coyote\, Big Lou the Accordion Princess\, Jan Fanucci\, and (his favorite) Johnny Adams.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/houston_jones/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/HoustonJones.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120810T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120810T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120727T190229Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T034236Z
UID:1911-1344625200-1344632400@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Gillette Brothers
DESCRIPTION:Cowboys\, Minstrels\, Medicine Shows\n7:00 PM\, Friday\, August 10\, 2012 at The Martin Hotel\nThe $10.00 tickets are on sale now at the Martin Hotel\, Nature’s Corner\, and Global Coffee. You can also buy them online at themartinhotel.com.\nStep back into the 1880’s and listen to the music that cowboys were really playing and singing and you may be surprised to hear a diverse and multicultural mix of blues\, Irish fiddle melodies\, African beats\, gospel\, old-timey\, minstrel\, and popular uptown parlor music. This is exactly the experience that an evening with the Gillette Brothers provides. Guy and Pipp Gillette are working to both entertain and educate their audiences about real life and the real people that populated old West. When the music is combined with some yodeling\, bones playing\, story telling\, and medicine show barking\, you will be both amazed and amused. \n \nGuy plays the fiddle\, banjo\, guitar and the bones. Pipp plays the guitar\, banjo\, harmonica\, tambourine and an Irish drum call the bodhron. On top of that\, they both have beautiful\, strong\, and compelling singing voices.\n \nThey have played at major events and venues around the country including: The 2008 Smithsonian Folklife Festival in Washington DC\, The National Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko\, NV\, The Monterey Cowboy Poetry & Music Festival in Monterey\, CA\, The Santa Clarita Cowboy Poetry & Music Festival in Santa Clarita\, CA\, The Willow Tree Festival in Gordon\, NE\, The Arizona Cowboy Poets Gathering in Prescott\, AZ; The Cherry Blossom Festival in Macon\, GA; The National Arboretum in Washington\, DC\, The Buffalo Bill Historical Center in Cody\, WY\, and The National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City\, OK\, The Museum of South Texas in Edinburgh Texas. \nIn August 2005\, the Gillette Brothers traveled to Japan representing the State of Texas at the World Expo – Aichi/Nagoya\, performing their music at the US Pavilion. In October 2008\, the Gillette Brothers toured Somerset\, England for two weeks\, performing in village halls and the Bridgewater Arts Center. \nThey have demonstrated chuckwagon cooking at the Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City; the Ranching Heritage Museum in Lubbock\, Texas; The Museum of South Texas in Edinburgh Texas; Dalton Days in Longview\, Texas; and the Cherry Blossom Festival in Macon\, Georgia. \nTheir cooking has been spotlighted in Persimmon Hill\, the magazine of the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum; The National Cowboy Hall of Fame Cookbook by B. Byron Price; A Taste of Texas Ranching by Tom Bryant and Joel Bernstein; and the Spirit of the West: Cooking for Ranch House & Range by Beverly Cox and Martin Jacobs. \nThe Gillette Brothers were recipients of the 2009 AMERICAN COWBOY CULTURE AWARD for western music from the NATIONAL COWBOY SYMPOSIUM & CELEBRATION. They were awarded the 2003 and the 1998 Will Rogers Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Advancement of Contemporary Cowboy Music Best Duo/Group by The Academy of Western Artists. They have also received the National Cowboy Symposium’s American Cowboy Culture Chuck Wagon Award. \nThe Gillette Brothers run The Camp St. Cafe & Store in Crockett\, Texas a live music venue\, much like the Martin Hotel\, that has featured some of the top performers in the country. They live on the ranch that their grandfather established in 1912 in Lovelady Texas\, a ranch that has a collection of buildings that have often been compared to the National Ranching Hertage Center in Lubbock Texas. \nThey were also instrumental in getting a life-sized statue of Blues Legend Lightnin’ Hopkins erected in Crockett.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/gillette-brothers-2/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/Gillette-Brother-Flyer-250px.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120810T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120810T233000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120727T190329Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T034924Z
UID:1957-1344625200-1344641400@gbae.org
SUMMARY:One Night – Two Shows
DESCRIPTION:As a result of serendipity the Gillette Brothers and the Hi*Beams will cross paths in Winnemucca on the same night\, and so we’re doing the right thing\, the only thing\, and that’s hosting two shows on the same night! You can start slow and stable at the Martin\, and end up Rocking and Rolling at Winner’s.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/one-night-two-shows/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/Gillette-Brother-Flyer-250px.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120810T213000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120810T233000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120727T190135Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T034718Z
UID:1924-1344634200-1344641400@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Halden Wofford & The Hi*Beams
DESCRIPTION:Rollicking Honky Tonk! Rocked Up Texas Swing!\nHippies and the Deadheads Rejoice!\n9:30 PM Friday\, August 10\, 2012\nWINNER’S CASINO HOTEL LOUNGE! \nThey’re Back! This time in a new spot\, with ROOM TO MOVE and a place to get up and DANCE! \nLast summer when we hosted Halden Wofford and the Hi*Beams they just about rocked the Martin down. This year\, through a generous partnership with WINNER’S HOTEL and CASINO\, we’re gonna present a late night show that could be the high light of the year\, but we’re gonna need you there to make it happen! And\, just like the shows we present at the Martin\, all the money from your tickets will go to the band! So\, when you step up and buy a ticket\, or pay the cover at the door\, remember you are helping to support a bunch of crazy wandering musicians that have traveled thousands of miles just to show you a good time! \nThe $10.00 tickets are on sale now at the WINNER’S GIFT SHOP\, the Martin Hotel\, Nature’s Corner\, and Global Coffee. You can also buy them online at themartinhotel.com.\n \n\nHalden Wofford & the Hi*Beams ride out from the cutting edge cowtown of Denver\, Colorado. Rootsy and real\, neither revivalist nor retro\, the Hi-Beams brand of country music is as boundless and electrifying as America itself.  \nEqual parts Hank Williams and Johnny Depp\, front man Halden Wofford pours forth a potent mix of rocked-up honky tonk\, western swing\, Dylanesque originals and spaghetti western epics. There is no creative limit to the songwriter\, illustrator\, author\, storyteller and singer. But Halden has met his match in the Hi*Beams. Each outrageous tale he spins is met by the whine and wail of the steel guitar\, the furious double-neck electric guitar and mandolin\, and the relentless thump of the upright bass and drums. \nFrom Red Rocks to rodeos\, the Fillmore Auditorium to the back of a flatbed truck\, Prairie Home Companion to performing arts centers\, Halden Wofford & the Hi*Beams deliver an unforgettable and original night of American music. \nHalden Wofford and the Hi-Beams’ throwback and stylish take on the honky tonk genre is a breath of fresh air amidst other wannabe retro acts. With some of the choicest players on the Front Range and a professionalism that is bar-none\, the Hi-Beams landed themselves on the famed NPR show “A Prairie Home Companion” in recent years and Wofford’s distinct vocals continue to garner the band well-earned attention. – Marquee Magazine\, Boulder\, CO
URL:https://gbae.org/event/halden-wofford-hi-beams/
LOCATION:Winner’s Hotel and Casino\, 185 W Winnemucca Blvd\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Hi-Beams.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120823T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230131T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120816T190232Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T033840Z
UID:1986-1345748400-1675198800@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Don Edwards
DESCRIPTION:The best purveyor of cowboy music in America today.\n7:30 PM\, Thursday\, August 23\, 2012\nThe $15.00 tickets are on sale now at the Martin Hotel\, Nature’s Corner\, and Global Coffee. You can also buy them online at themartinhotel.com. \nDon Edwards\nDon represents the best of what Great Basin Arts and Entertainment is all about. He is a truly great singer\, guitar player\, folklorist\, storyteller\, engaging entertainer\, and one of the finest gentlemen we have ever met. \nThis Grammy nominated singer-guitarist continues to build a legacy that enriches our vision of the American West. In tales of the day-to-day lives and emotions of those who have lived it\, his ballads paint a sweeping landscape of both mind and heart\, keeping alive the sights\, sounds and feelings of this most American contribution to culture and art. The quality of this cowboy balladeer’s music stems from the fact that he is so much more than a singer. Bobby Weaver of the National Cowboy Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City\, summed up Edwards’ importance as “… the best purveyor of cowboy music in America today.” \nAn historian\, author\, and musicologist\, unusually well – versed in cowboy lore and musical traditions\, Don brings a rare complement of knowing and loving his craft. Mostly though\, there is the soul of a poet; a man who has never succumbed to the temptations of presenting a glamorized or romanticized version of the West. Edwards deals with bad weather\, petty motivations\, sadness\, nostalgia and longing\, as parts of the landscape like any other. \n \nThe son of a vaudeville magician\, Don was aware as a child of a vast cross-section of music from classical to jazz\, and blues to western-swing. Many of those influences enter his own music as they did the music of the West. Edwards was drawn to the cowboy life by the books of Will James and was presented the Will James Society’s “Big Enough Award” which is presented annually to someone who personifies the Western and Cowboy way of life and their achievements. He also loved the ‘B’ Westerns of the silver screen\, particularly those featuring “sure-‘nuff cowboys” like Tom Mix and Ken Maynard. He taught himself guitar at age ten\, and in 1961\, he got his first professional job as an actor/singer/stuntman at Six Flags Over Texas. In 1964\, Don released his first recording on REN Records of Dallas. \nDon became part owner of The White Elephant Saloon in the Fort Worth Stockyards where ballad hunter and historian\, John Lomax collected cowboy songs. Subsequently\, Esquire magazine named The White Elephant one of America’s 100 best bars. Edwards also began playing throughout Oklahoma and Texas\, and with the birth of the Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko\, Nevada\, he achieved widespread recognition. He has now entertained throughout the United States\, Canada\, Great Britain\, Ireland\, New Zealand\, Europe and the Far East. \nDon Edwards has two recorded anthologies of cowboy songs\, Guitars & Saddle Songs and Songs of the Cowboy\, included in the Folklore Archives of the Library of Congress. These anthologies have been re-recorded and expanded for Western Jubilee Recording Company as the 32-song double CD/cassette\, Saddle Songs. This project was awarded first place as the Best Folk/Traditional Album at the annual 1998 INDIE Awards Ceremony. National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City has awarded Edwards five prestigious Wrangler Awards for Outstanding Traditional Western Music. He has received multiple awards from the Western Music Association for Male Vocalist and Performer of the Year. Edwards\, along with co-presenter\, Waddie Mitchell\, was seen on the network-televised Academy of Country Music Awards and was the featured performer for the Los Angeles’ Golden Boot Awards. In April 2000\, Edwards was immortalized onto the Walk of Western Stars by the City of Santa Clarita\, CA. \nDon has presented seminars at Yale\, Rice\, Texas Christian and other universities. His recordings under the Warner Western label\, Goin’ Back to Texas\, Songs of the Trail \, The Bard & The Balladeer and West of Yesterday spawned a new audience for his craft. The summer of 1997 found Don Edwards in Livingston\, Montana portraying the role of Smokey in Robert Redford’s film The Horse Whisperer. In addition to his acting/singing role\, Don is featured on the MCA soundtrack. In May of 1998\, to coincide with The Horse Whisperer theater release\, Warner’s compiled and released The Best of Don Edwards while Western Jubilee offered Don’s My Hero Gene Autry recorded live at Mr. Autry’s 90th Birthday. His next two recordings for Western Jubilee resulted in two more visits to Oklahoma City\, both receiving the Outstanding Traditional Western Music Recording of the Year – A Prairie Portrait (April 2001) with Waddie Mitchell and the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra and Kin To The Wind\, Memories of Marty Robbins (April 2002). In the Fall of 2002\, Western Jubilee released an important special project: Don Edwards and Bluegrass icon\, Peter Rowan teamed up on High Lonesome Cowboy. This recording traces the roots of Western music from Appalachia to Abilene and includes legendary musicians\, Norman Blake and Tony Rice. High Lonesome Cowboy resulted in a Grammy nomination for 2002 – the first time Cowboy music has ever been nominated for this prestigious award. In 2003\, Western Jubilee offers Saddle Songs II – Last of the Troubadours\, 32 more Classic Cowboy Songs\, which was followed by Don’s newest book\, Saddle Songs – A Cowboy Songbag. 2005 found Don Edwards’ solo concert and personal appearance schedule the busiest to date. The Warner Herzog film production\, Grizzly Man was released featuring Don’s recording of Coyotes at the conclusion of the movie. In April 2007\, Don Edwards newest Western Jubilee recording Moonlight And Skies received the Wrangler Award (his sixth) for Outstanding Traditional Western Album of the Year from the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum. The album contains Coyotes along with 12 other little gems Don found along the trail. \nThe richness of Don’s voice coupled with an unforgettable stage presentation makes Don Edwards America’s number one Western singer and concert attraction. The accolades have been simply added bonuses for Edwards\, who sings what he does out of love and respect for the genre. Don’s career continues to blossom\, and luckily for all who care about it\, he has because of his sincere approach\, added much to the literature and music of the West\, passing on to the rest of us a rich legacy.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/don-edwards/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/porch-don.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120831T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120831T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120825T035719Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T033716Z
UID:2010-1346439600-1346446800@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Victoria Matlock
DESCRIPTION:Broadway Returns to Winnemucca\n7:30 PM\, Friday\, August 31\, 2012\nVictoria made it to town\, and she’s staying with her dad\, but she has come down with laryngitis\, so the show tonight is CANCELLED. \nVictoria deeply regrets that this has occurred\, and offers her profound apology.  \nIf you purchased a ticket to the show\, just come down to the Martin between 6:00 PM and 7:30 PM tonight\, and you will be provided with a full refund.  \n \nOn August 31st Broadway musical theater actress Victoria Matlock returns to the Martin Hotel with another show\, once again sponsored by jointly by Great Basin Arts and Entertainment and White Sage Theatre. \nAlmost exactly three years ago Miss Matlock presented an evening of Broadway songs to a sold out audience at the Martin Hotel.  Since that performance there have been numerous comments made about her performance\, most of which can be summarized as\, “When is she coming back.” \nDuring the past three years Miss Matlock has been performing in the Broadway show “Million Dollar Quartet.”  She was in this new musical for 901 performances: 523 on Broadway and the remainder when the show moved off-Broadway.  She played the part of Dyanne\, Elvis Presley’s girlfriend and the only female in the show.  The show’s heavy production schedule of eight shows a week has prevented her from returning to Winnemucca. \nIn the performance at the Martin Hotel she will be performing the songs she sang in the show as well as a medley of other songs.  In addition she will open the floor for questions\, especially for questions from young people who may be thinking of an acting career. \nMiss Matlock graduated from the University of Northern Colorado in 1999 with a degree in musical theater and a minor in computer science.  The computer science education was to enable her to have an alternate career if the theater didn’t work out.  Since graduating she has been almost continuously working in the theater and has only used her computer background to prepare web sites for herself and a few friends.  Her web site is located at www.victoriamatlock.com.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/victoria-matlock/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/Victoria-Matlock.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120907T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120907T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120904T181338Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T033040Z
UID:2022-1347044400-1347051600@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Roy Book Binder
DESCRIPTION:Blues Guitar Legend Returns to the Martin\n7:00 PM\, Friday\, September 7\, 2012\nThe $10.00 tickets are on sale now at the Martin Hotel\, Nature’s Corner\, and Global Coffee. You can also buy them online at themartinhotel.com. \nRoy Book Binder at the Martin 2008\nThe great Roy Book Binder is set to play a concert at the Martin Hotel on Friday\, September 7th. Something of a national treasure\, Book Binder plays blues in the Piedmont style\, a very old East Coast tradition based on ragtime and multi-part gospel guitar techniques. \nBesides being a musical giant with unexceeded technique\, Book Binder is known as a crowd-pleasing entertainer with deft comic timing\, an encyclopedic knowledge of American roots music history\, and an inexhaustible supply of tales collected over a lifetime of traveling and performing with greats like Brownie McGhee\, Sonny Terry\, Rock Bottom\, Fats Kaplin\, Doc Watson\, Bonnie Raitt\, and Ray Charles. \nBook Binder emerged alongside pal Dave van Ronk in the New York City coffeehouse scene of the mid-60s\, the beginning of the so-called “folk revival.” And\, his repertoire includes “Bookaroo” songs\, played in a folk style reminiscent of Rambling Jack Elliot\, and Don Edwards. \nBook Binder’s real bailiwick\, though\, is blues in the East Coast or “Piedmont” style\, named for the plateau that stretches from Richmond\, Virginia to Atlanta\, Georgia. The style evolved in the 20s\, 30s\, and 40s\, when ragtime\, parlor\, and gospel guitar players like Blind Blake\, Blind Boy Fuller\, and Reverend Gary Davis began applying polyphonic finger-picking technique to the blues. Book Binder perfected his Piedmont technique as Davis’s protégé\, working as the blind virtuoso’s driver and side-man during the late 1960s. \nBook Binder has recorded seven albums\, most in a “hillbilly” blues style that includes plenty of colorful banter between the tracks. Often\, the stories and jokes stretch back to Book Binder’s formative years on the road with the Reverend Davis. Though based on old-time techniques\, his songs sound fresh and relevant\, often featuring original lyrics re-spun to reflect contemporary themes. \nBook Binder continues to perform solo shows around the world\, the last time we saw him he was about to leave for the Blues Festival in Hell Norway where he appeared along with Ramblin’ Jack and many other greats. He also teaches at MerleFest and the Fur Peace School\, and keeps an entertaining travel “blog” on his website\, RoyBookBinder.com. \nSo\, if you’re in town over the weekend\, don’t miss the chance to see one of the great bluesmen of all time\, up close and personal\, right here in Winnemucca. The show starts at 7 PM on Friday\, September 7th\, at the Martin Hotel on Railroad Street.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/roy-book-binder/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/Bookbinder-Winnemucca-2008.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120913T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120913T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20120910T162832Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T032850Z
UID:2027-1347562800-1347570000@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Dave Alvin and the Guilty Ones
DESCRIPTION:Alternative Country Rock\n7:00 PM\, Thursday\, September 13\, 2012\nThe $15.00 tickets are on sale now at the Martin Hotel\, Nature’s Corner\, and Global Coffee. You can also buy them online at themartinhotel.com. \n \nThis may turn out to be the happiest incident of serendipity yet this year. Great Basin Arts and Entertainment has managed to snag one of the most compelling performers traveling the roads of America\, to play at show at the Martin on Thursday night. \nDave Alvin\, is a Grammy award winning guitarist\, singer and songwriter\, and a proponent of Americana music. He is a former founding member of The Blasters\, who are often credited with helping launch the American roots rock scene in the early ’80s.  Combining the revved-up energy of punk rock with an enthusiastic embrace of classic American sounds\, the Blasters became a sensation in Los Angeles and won an enthusiastic cult following across the United States and Europe. Dave went on to play guitar in the famed Los Angeles punk band X\, and with members of X formed the alternative county outfit the Knitters.   Alvin and his current road band the Guilty Ones will perform at the Martin at 7:00 PM on Thursday. \nDave Alvin\, who Rolling Stone Magazine calls “an under recognized guitar hero”\, is steeped in Americana – not just the genre but a deep river of American myth that keeps giving him characters to write about. Alvin is an acute observer of the human condition and he fills his songs with small towns\, highways and losers we imagine he’s encountered on countless tours. He sings in a throaty rumble reminiscent of Hoyt Axton and Greg Brown about love and loss and ghosts of things past. \nIn 1989\, Dwight Yoakam scored a hit on the country charts with Alvin’s song “Long White Cadillac\,” In 2000\, Alvin recorded a collection of traditional folk and blues classics\, Public Domain: Songs from the Wild Land\, which earned him a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Album. \nWhen not busy recording his own music\, Alvin has also worked as a producer for several other roots-oriented acts\, including Tom Russell\, the Derailers\, and Big Sandy & His Fly-Rite Boys\, and he has collaborated with rockabilly legend Sonny Burgess. As a sideman\, Alvin has recorded sessions with the likes of Ramblin’ Jack Elliott\, Little Milton\, Katy Moffatt\, and Syd Straw. \nDave Alvin and the Guilty Ones will perform at 7:00 PM on Thursday\, September 13\, 2012 as part of Great Basin Arts and Entertainment’s Music at the Martin series.  $15 tickets are available at Nature’s Corner\, Global Coffee and at the Martin Hotel.  \n 
URL:https://gbae.org/event/dave-alvin-and-the-guilty-ones/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/ALVIN3_BETHHERZHAFT560.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121026T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121026T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20121007T015003Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T032634Z
UID:2072-1351278000-1351285200@gbae.org
SUMMARY:The Crooked Jades
DESCRIPTION:Familiar Old-Time Embraced by the Strange\n7:00 PM Friday\, October 26\, 2012\nThe $15.00 tickets are on sale now at the Martin Hotel\, Nature’s Corner\, and Global Coffee. You can also buy them online at themartinhotel.com. \n \n“Grounded in tradition\, old-time string band music and mountain blues but with open horizons that take them\, subtly\, to other parts of the planet\, they have a haunting spookiness\, an organic pulse\, and most importantly a clear vision…Instrumentally they’re truly inspiring\, getting original textures out of conventional stringband instruments and mixing them with (in this context) oddities like bass ukulele\, harmonium\, mbira\, cello and Vietnamese jaw harp and bau zither. Vocally\, they have that lonesome white blues sound which has its ancestry in Dock Boggs and the Carters but again they take it somewhere else…a consistently startling and addictive album.”\n– The Crooked Jades “Shining Darkness”  Reviewed by Ian Anderson\nin UK magazine f ROOTS \nPerforming driving dance tunes and haunting ballads with an amazing array of vintage and eclectic instruments\, The Crooked Jades are modern innovators in the old-time Americana world\, creating a cinematic sound based on Americana roots infused with the diverse musical influences of Europe and Africa.On a mission to reinvent old world music\, they bring their soulful performances (brilliantly suprising arrangements of obscure old tunes mixed with beautiful original compositions) to clubs\, concert halls and festivals around the united States and Europe. \nBased in San Francisco\, founded by leader Jeff Kazor and nurtured by the vibrant West coast\, California and Ba Area bluegrass and old-time music scenes\, the Crooked Jades play with a thrilling and hyponotic energy which has inspired director Sean Penn to include a turn from World’s on Fire ih his most recent film Into the Wild\, fans on their feet dancing and critics comparing them to everyone from the New Lost City Ramblers and The Pouges to Nick Cave\, Tom Waits\, and Gillian Welch. \nAppealing as much to the pierced generation as to their great-grandparents\, this is sepia tones\, bent angles\, unexpected accents\, unanticipated sounds.  It’s banjo ukeuleles\, minstrel banjos\, plucked fiddles\, bowed basses\, Hawaiian slide guitars\, harmoniums and Vietnamese jaw harps together in fiery\, artful\, harmony.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/crooked_jades/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/CrookedJadesNYC.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121103T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121103T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20121030T225139Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T032451Z
UID:2081-1351969200-1351976400@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Foghorn Stringband
DESCRIPTION:Ass Kickin’ Redneck Stringband Music\n7:00 PM Saturday\, November 3\, 2012\nThe $15.00 tickets are on sale now at the Martin Hotel\, Nature’s Corner\, and Global Coffee. You can also buy them online at themartinhotel.com. \n \nFoghorn Stringband is the shining gold standard for American stringband music\, with seven albums\, thousands of shows\, over a decade of touring under their belts\, and two entirely new generations of old-time musicians following their lead. Through all this\, they’ve never let the music grow cold; instead they’ve been steadily proving that American roots music is a never-ending well of inspiration. From their origins in Portland\, Oregon’s underground roots music scene\, the core duo of Foghorn Stringband\, Caleb Klauder\, whose wistful\, keening vocals and rapid-fire mandolin picking have always been the heart of the band\, and Stephen ‘Sammy’ Lind\, perhaps the best old-time fiddler of his generation\, have spread the old-time stringband gospel all over the world\, but they’ve also brought in new influences and inspirations from their many travels and fellow bandmates. Vintage country and honky-tonk became a staple of Foghorn Stringband thanks to Klauder’s intense passion for the music\, and frequent visits to Louisiana have inspired the group to bring Cajun songs into the repertoire. \nAs the music has changed\, the band has changed and reformed as well. Canadian singer and bassist Nadine Landry\, from Québec via the Yukon\, joined the band in 2008\, bringing a wealth of experience as an internationally touring bluegrass musician. New member\, singer and guitarist Reeb Willms\, came down from Bellingham with a suitcase of old\, vintage country songs and a powerfully beautiful\, pure voice born in the farmlands of Washington State. It’s a new Foghorn Stringband these days\, but the music is as furiously compelling as ever. For the group that first broke the good news about Southern old-time music to new generations\, a new album and new tour dates are both a return to form and a fresh new start. \nWowing audiences across the country and across the pond playing over 200 days a year\, Foghorn is one of the most sought after acts for festival stages and music camps\, and are band mates for world renowned master old-time musician Dirk Powell and Cajun legends Joel Savoy and Jesse Lége. Recent festivals and venues they’ve played include San Francisco Bluegrass & Old-Time Festival\, Pickathon\, Sioux River Folk Festival\, The Old Town School of Folk Music\, California Bluegrass Association’s Father’s Day Bluegrass Festival\, Freight & Salvage\, Bristol Rhythm & Roots\, Austin Stringband Festival\, and many more\, including extensive tours of the UK and Ireland! They were selected as Official Showcase Artists at the 2011 IBMA Conference. \nFoghorn Stringband play the old way\, the way you’d have heard stringbands play on Southern radio stations back in the 1930s. They don’t fancy up the music to make it more modern\, instead they reach into the heart of the songs\, pulling out the deep emotions that made them so enduring in the first place. Performing live\, these multi- instrumentalists gather around a single microphone in the middle of the stage\, expertly balancing their sound on the fly\, and creating the rarest of music: songs that are at once wildly virtuosic and intimately hand-crafted. Foghorn Stringband play American roots music of the finest order.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/foghorn-stringband-2/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Foghhorn-Stringband-2012.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121107T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121107T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20121105T063749Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T032157Z
UID:2097-1352314800-1352322000@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Chris Proctor
DESCRIPTION:US National Fingerstyle Champion\n7:00 PM Wednesday\, November 7\, 2012 \nThe $10.00 tickets are on sale now at the Martin Hotel\, Nature’s Corner\, and Global Coffee. You can also buy them online at themartinhotel.com. \nCritics call his guitar playing “breathtaking\,” “haunting\,” and “rich.” Guitar magazines describe his compositions as “spectacular\,” “elegant\,” and “exquisite\,” and praise his twelve-string work as “revelatory.” Media reviewers trace the roots of his style to folk\, jazz\, pop\, and classical music\, categorize his playing as “Baroque Folk\,” and “Instrumental Americana\,” and compare him to Leo Kottke and Michael Hedges. \nAnother reviewer ventured this analysis: “What to call his unique melange of styles? There’s an aspect of Americana in the echoes of Appalachian and old-timey styles that are apparent in just about every track\, but there are also elements of jazz\, Celtic folk\, and a dash of blues in here somewhere. What Proctor does is create guitar music that reflects the whole heritage of the instrument and still has his own distinct stamp — a tall order\, but he’s up to the job”\n \nThese luminous and diverse quotes characterize the media’s efforts to describe Chris Proctor’s solo\, 6 and 12-string guitar concerts and recordings. Two additional comments typify the first-time listener’s reaction: “Wow- I didn’t know that acoustic guitars could sound like that\,” and\, ” It seems as if there are three guitarists up there on stage\, not just one.” \nHere’s more of what critics\, listeners\, presenters and concert audiences say about Chris Proctor: \n\nHe is an acclaimed composer of original music and a wonderful arranger for the 6 and 12-string guitars.\nHe is a performer with a gift for communicating the tremendous variety\, vitality\, and accessibility of his music.\nHis amazing variety of guitar sounds and textures\, and the rich tapestry of bass\, melody\, and inner voices\, bring an orchestral quality to his music that surprises and delights audiences who haven’t heard him before.\nHis compositions and arrangements shine with folk\, jazz\, pop\, classical\, and ethnic influences.\nHe is a superlative workshop\, master class and residency/outreach leader\, author of numerous instructional articles in the guitar press\, and producer of two world-class instructional videos for 6 and 12-string players.\n\n \nGecko Drive from Chris Proctor on Vimeo.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/chris-proctor-2/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/lotus_color-200x250.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121229T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121229T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20121209T071929Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T032008Z
UID:2108-1356807600-1356814800@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Waddie Mitchell
DESCRIPTION:Buckaroo Poet\nWinner 2012 Nevada Heritage Award\n7:00 PM\, Saturday\, December 29\, 2012 \nThe $15.00 tickets are on sale now at the Martin Hotel\, Nature’s Corner\, and Global Coffee. You can also buy them online at themartinhotel.com.\n \n“I can’t ever remember ‘finding’ cowboy poetry\,” Waddie Mitchell says of the entertaining and enduring art of storytelling. “It was always there. The cowboys sure never called it poetry. I know I wouldn’t have liked it if they would have. Seems like an oxymoron\, don’t it!?” \nFrom his earliest days on the remote Nevada ranches where his father worked\, Waddie was immersed in the cowboy way of entertaining\, the art of spinnin’ tales in rhyme and meter that came to be called cowboy poetry\, a Western tradition that is as rich as the lifestyle that gave birth to it. Within his stories\, old in a voice that is timeless and familiar\, are the common bonds we all share\, moments both grand and commonplace\, the humorous and the tragic\, the life and death struggles and triumphs that we each recognize. And yet\, Waddie presents his material with personal insights and the lessons learned during his life spent as a buckaroo. \n“All the time I was growing up we had these old cowboys around\,” he says. “When you live in close proximity like that with the same folks month after month\, one of your duties is to entertain each other\, and I suppose that’s where the whole tradition of cowboy poetry started. You find that if you have a rhyme and a meter to start that story\, people will listen to it over and over again\,” Waddie states in his down-to-earth description of its beginnings. \n“When my imagination first got let out of the gate\, it was from an old-time cowboy\, with a story set to rhyme\,” he says in his second recording from Warner Western\, Lone Driftin’ Rider. By the age of 10\, he was reciting poetry himself; at 16\, he quit school to follow his heart and went to making his living as a\ncowboy.\nThere came a time though\, which he relates in his poem Where To Go\, when he had to choose between being a full-time cowboy (he managed a 36\,000 acre ranch in Lee-Jiggs\, Nevada) and the art form that he loved so much. In 1984\, he helped organize the internationally recognized Elko Cowboy Poetry Gathering and gave his first public performance. Although Waddie didn’t think anyone would be interested\, (he thought it would be a pretty good party for the weekend) the first Cowboy Poetry Gathering was set for a cold\, snowy weekend in January. This was one of the only times Waddie and his fellow cowboys were free from ranch duties. More than 2\,000 people showed up\, and Waddie was off and running. \nIn 2012 Waddie Mitchell received the prestigious Nevada Heritage Award from the Nevada Arts Council.  He continues hosting and performing at festivals\, private gatherings\, rodeos\, corporate events\, concert halls and an extraordinarily wide variety of functions. The Reno Gazette-Journal published a list from a panel of writers\, historians and other notables\, who selected the Top 20 Artists\, Authors and Entertainers To Influence Nevada in the 20th Century. Sure enough pards\, there was Waddie!
URL:https://gbae.org/event/waddie-mitchell/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/Waddie_Barrel.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130503T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130503T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20130425T192451Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T031805Z
UID:2124-1367607600-1367614800@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Repertory Dance Theatre
DESCRIPTION:Partnership brings Utah Repertory Dance Theatre to Winnemucca\nPerformance Open to the Public\nFriday\, May 3\, 2013\n7:00 PM – Lowry High Auditorium\nDoors open at 6:15\n\nThe Utah Repertory Dance Theatre will visit Winnemucca and Elko April 29 through May 4 as part  of the Sense of Place touring initiative\, coordinated by the Nevada Arts Council\, and supported by Barrick Gold of North America.\nThe local partners\, Great Basin College in Elko\, and Great Basin Arts & Entertainment in Winnemucca\, worked with members of the Salt Lake City dance company to schedule community-specific activities. These include workshops for students and senior citizens\, movement classes\, school lecture-demonstrations\, collaborations with local dancers\, full-length performances and related visual arts exhibits. \n“These initiatives provide access to quality arts experiences for citizens that reside in the state’s rural counties\, and offer students the opportunity to explore the creative process under the guidance of professional artists\,” said Susan Boskoff\, executive director of the Nevada Arts Council.  “It’s all about creating a sense of place in communities across the state to enhance the quality of life for everyone.” The Arts Council will produce video vignettes of residency activities in Winnemucca that will be shared with the public on the agency’s website this summer. \nUtah’s Repertory Dance Theatre was founded in 1966 as a professional modern dance company through a cooperative effort involving the Salt Lake City community\, the University of Utah and a major grant from the Rockefeller Foundation. \n“We are really happy to support RDT’s tour through rural Nevada\,” said Lou Schack\, Barrick’s director of communications. “Along with our focus on access to education\, bringing high-quality arts experiences to the places where our employees live and work is an important part of our overall commitment to Nevada.” \nRDT has toured to more than 300 cities in the United States\, Canada\, and Europe; and has performed for diverse audiences from Utah to Vienna\, Austria\, in schoolrooms and opera houses\, from gymnasiums to the Kennedy Center. RDT’s mission is to broaden the public’s understanding of the art of modern dance through a variety of community-based programs; and it acts as a resource center and laboratory for dancers\, choreographers\, visual artists\, writers and composers. The company offers annual summer workshops and year-round classes to train aspiring professionals and inspire the creative potential in people of all ages. \nAs a result of Barrick’s generous support of this fabulous event\, we are using the opportunity to raise money for a grief support program we are trying to launch in Winnemucca.  The “Hope Tree” project\, once set up\, will provide local grief support groups for children\, teens\, and families.  \n  \nWe’re suggesting a minimum donation of $5 for adults and $15 for a family\, but we hope people will dig deep and be extra generous for this much needed project to support youth in their time of grieving. – Bill Sims\, Chairman\, Great Basin Arts and Entertainment \nTickets for the Winnemucca Performance are available in advance at Nature’s Corner\, Global Coffee\, and The Martin Hotel. If we don’t sell out\, there will be tickets available at the door.\nFor schedule details in Winnemucca\, please contact Bill Sims\, Great Basin Arts & Entertainment at contact@gbae.org. \nFor schedule details in Elko\, please contact Christine Young-Gerber\, Great Basin College at christine.younggerber@gbcnv.edu. \nFor information about RDT\, please visit rdtutah.org\, or contact Rick Nobis\, Booking Coordinator at booking@rdtutah.org. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTHIS PROJECT IS CO-SPONSORED BY THE NEVADA ARTS COUNCIL\, A DIVISION OF THE NEVADA DEPARTMENT OF TOURISM AND CULTURAL AFFAIRS\, AND IS SUPPORTED BY BARRICK GOLD OF NORTH AMERICA.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/rdtutah/
LOCATION:Lowry High\, 5375 Kluncy Canyon Rd\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/RDTUtah560.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130703T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130703T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20130622T182130Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T031334Z
UID:2192-1372878000-1372885200@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Mike Beck
DESCRIPTION:Wednesday\, July 3\, 2013\n7:00 PM at the Martin Hotel\nPurchase your $10 tickets Now! On-line from The Martin Hotel\n\nMike Beck is well-known for his memorable ballads that capture old California\, and the cowboy way of life. He has performed in numerous foreign countries\, and throughout the United States. Mike recently returned from doing some shows in Norway and Sweden. \nTwo of Mike Beck’s songs were listed in the “13 Best Cowboy Songs of All Time” in the April 2009 issue of Western Horseman Magazine (“In Old California” – a song about Jo Mora – and “Don’t Tell Me.”) His song\, “Patrick” was listed as one of “The Top 15 Roadworthy Cowboy Songs” in the July 2008 issue of Cowboys & Indians Magazine. His song\, “Amanda Come Home” was featured on NPR’s Weekend Edition\, and is dedicated to all of the women who served in Iraq. In the Spring 2010 edition of The Cowboy Way\, Bill Reynolds writes\, “His love of the ways of the vaquero and the Pacific Slope region of the West comes through his songs in superb guitar work.” \nBorn and raised in Monterey County\, California\, at age 13\, Mike Beck went to the Monterey Pop Festival and liked what he heard. He picked up a guitar and never looked back. Since that time\, he has been composing and performing a wide array of folk\, rock and Americana music. Mike’s songs reflect his life as a professional musician and a working cowboy in Montana and Carmel Valley near Big Sur. \nAccording to Ramblin’ Jack Elliot\, “Mike Beck plays the guitar like a Byrd. His strings do things that mine could never do. They obey the slightest finger-touch commands like a fine reining horse.” \nBeck is riding high after being recognized by Western Horseman magazine in a recent article naming “The 13 Best Cowboy Songs of All Times” along with songs written by luminaries such as Ramblin’ Jack Elliott\, Allison Moorer\, Lucinda Williams and Ian Tyson. \n“I had two songs on that list\, which was kind of cool\,” said Beck. “to be alongside some of the other people on that list\, like Tom Russell\, Ian Tyson. I thought\, that’s nice company. That was nice of them to say that.” \nVisit Mike online http://www.mikebeck.com
URL:https://gbae.org/event/mike-beck-2013/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/MikeBeck-400px.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130904T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130904T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20130812T170534Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T031221Z
UID:2214-1378321200-1378328400@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Stories and Seeds Trail Tour
DESCRIPTION:A Special Double Bill\nRAMBLIN’ JACK ELLIOTT\nand\nNELL ROBINSON\nWednesday\, September 4\, 2013\n7:00 PM at the Martin Hotel \nLimited Seating – Only 75 Tickets\nPurchase your $25 tickets Now! On-line from The Martin Hotel\nA rare package of American Roots and Folk music will grace the stage for a concert on Wednesday\, September 4th at the Martin Hotel.  The Stories and Seeds Trail Tour features the legendary Ramblin’ Jack Elliott along with singer-songwriter Nell Robinson. \nAn American musical treasure\, Ramblin’ Jack is a five time Grammy nominee and two time Grammy winner. In 1998 Jack was presented with a National Medal of Arts award from the National Endowment for the Arts. This award\, created by Congress on behalf of the American people\, is a lifetime achievement award that recognizes the extraordinary accomplishments of individuals engaged in the creation and production of the arts in the United States. \nHaving a long and prolific career\, Ramblin’ Jack has carried the seeds of story and song for decades\, from one place to another\, from one generation to the next.  Ramblin’ Jack picked up the American troubadour tradition and passed it along\, most famously from Woody Guthrie to Bob Dylan.  A wide spectrum of musical artists have paid homage to Ramblin’ Jack Elliott including Johnny Cash\, Bruce Springsteen\, and Tom Waits. \nJoining the Seeds and Stories collaboration is vital contemporary folk singer-songwriter Nell Robinson. Nell has two solo records and recently released a duet cd with Jim Nunally entitled “House and Garden” featuring rich stories\, lyrics\, and vocal harmonies.  Nell Robinson has performed at many American music venues including A Prairie Home Companion\, The Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington DC\, Strawberry Music Festival\, and the Freight and Salvage Coffeehouse in Berkley.  Her singing has been compared to the iconic voice of Emmylou Harris and songwriting of Patty Griffin.  One critic recently call Nell’s music “a timeless\, sepia-toned world at the intersection of bluegrass\, country\, folk\, and Americana.” Joining Nell onstage will be a very talented young guitar player and singer named Logan Ledger. \nThis unique tour collaboration of the old and the new is planting the new seeds that will carry on the vital cultural tradition of storytelling though roots music. \nThis September 4th show at the Martin Hotel starts at 7pm and has a special limited seating of 75.  Tickets are $25 and are on sale at The Martin Hotel\, Nature’s Corner\, and Global Coffee.  The concert is presented by Great Basin Arts and Entertainment\, a grassroots all volunteer non-profit 501(c)(3) organization.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/stories-and-seeds-trail-tour/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/RJE250.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131003T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131003T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T134621
CREATED:20130925T033840Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T031039Z
UID:2295-1380826800-1380834000@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Foghorn Stringband
DESCRIPTION:Ass Kickin’ Redneck Stringband Music\n7:00 PM Thursday\, October 3\, 2013\nThe $15.00 tickets are on sale now at the Martin Hotel\, Nature’s Corner\, and Global Coffee. You can also buy them online at themartinhotel.com. \nWe’re gonna open this show with Winnemucca’s own L.N.O.Y. (Listless Numbers of Youth). They will play a short set to begin the evening\, and then you’ll get two full sets with Foghorn. \n \nFoghorn Stringband is the shining gold standard for American stringband music\, with seven albums\, thousands of shows\, over a decade of touring under their belts\, and two entirely new generations of old-time musicians following their lead. Through all this\, they’ve never let the music grow cold; instead they’ve been steadily proving that American roots music is a never-ending well of inspiration. From their origins in Portland\, Oregon’s underground roots music scene\, the core duo of Foghorn Stringband\, Caleb Klauder\, whose wistful\, keening vocals and rapid-fire mandolin picking have always been the heart of the band\, and Stephen ‘Sammy’ Lind\, perhaps the best old-time fiddler of his generation\, have spread the old-time stringband gospel all over the world\, but they’ve also brought in new influences and inspirations from their many travels and fellow bandmates. Vintage country and honky-tonk became a staple of Foghorn Stringband thanks to Klauder’s intense passion for the music\, and frequent visits to Louisiana have inspired the group to bring Cajun songs into the repertoire. \nAs the music has changed\, the band has changed and reformed as well. Canadian singer and bassist Nadine Landry\, from Québec via the Yukon\, joined the band in 2008\, bringing a wealth of experience as an internationally touring bluegrass musician. New member\, singer and guitarist Reeb Willms\, came down from Bellingham with a suitcase of old\, vintage country songs and a powerfully beautiful\, pure voice born in the farmlands of Washington State. It’s a new Foghorn Stringband these days\, but the music is as furiously compelling as ever. For the group that first broke the good news about Southern old-time music to new generations\, a new album and new tour dates are both a return to form and a fresh new start. \n \nWowing audiences across the country and across the pond playing over 200 days a year\, Foghorn is one of the most sought after acts for festival stages and music camps\, and are band mates for world renowned master old-time musician Dirk Powell and Cajun legends Joel Savoy and Jesse Lége. Recent festivals and venues they’ve played include San Francisco Bluegrass & Old-Time Festival\, Pickathon\, Sioux River Folk Festival\, The Old Town School of Folk Music\, California Bluegrass Association’s Father’s Day Bluegrass Festival\, Freight & Salvage\, Bristol Rhythm & Roots\, Austin Stringband Festival\, and many more\, including extensive tours of the UK and Ireland! They were selected as Official Showcase Artists at the 2011 IBMA Conference. \nFoghorn Stringband play the old way\, the way you’d have heard stringbands play on Southern radio stations back in the 1930s. They don’t fancy up the music to make it more modern\, instead they reach into the heart of the songs\, pulling out the deep emotions that made them so enduring in the first place. Performing live\, these multi- instrumentalists gather around a single microphone in the middle of the stage\, expertly balancing their sound on the fly\, and creating the rarest of music: songs that are at once wildly virtuosic and intimately hand-crafted. Foghorn Stringband play American roots music of the finest order.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/foghorn-stringband-3/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Foghhorn-Stringband-2012.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR