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Good Folk Fest 2023

Haw River Ballroom 1711 Saxapahaw-Bethlehem Church Rd, Saxapahaw, NC, United States

Good Folk Fest is an evening of art, culture, and music curated by Good Folk Podcast. Featuring the sounds of North Carolina artists including Dissimilar South, Tre. Charles, Nia J., The Violet Exploit, and 723, plus a special showcase from 1,2,3 Puppetry and art from Papr.text. Join us at the Haw River Ballroom on July... Read More →

$25

Waxahatchee

Haw River Ballroom 1711 Saxapahaw-Bethlehem Church Rd, Saxapahaw, NC, United States

On September 7, Katie Crutchfield’s ever-shifting musical project Waxahatchee returns with the Great Thunder EP. Featuring a collection of songs written with now-dormant experimental recording group Great Thunder while Crutchfield was also writing the Waxahatchee albums Cerulean Salt and Ivy Tripp, the original recordings have mostly faded into obscurity. Unearthing and reimagining them with producer Brad Cook at Justin Vernon’s April Base studio in Wisconsin was a cathartic experience, she says. On the heels of last year’s critically acclaimed Out in the Storm, Crutchfield found herself looking to take a sharp turn away from the more rock-oriented influences of her recent records towards her more folk and country roots. “I would say that it is a complete 180 from the last record: super stripped-down, quiet, and with me performing solo, it’s a throwback to how I started,” writes Crutchfield. “Overall, the EP is a warm, kind of vibey recording.” Some of the songs on Great Thunder, like “Chapel of Pines” and “Singer’s No Star,” stayed the same and will be recognizable to those intensely familiar with Crutchfield’s catalog to date, while closer “Takes So Much” was built back up on piano from the bones of the original version, surprising even the songwriter: “Until then, I didn’t realize how beautiful this song was.” As Crutchfield entered April Base to record, she became ill but opted to forge on, beautifully stretching her voice to its emotional limits. Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

$18

John Moreland

Haw River Ballroom 1711 Saxapahaw-Bethlehem Church Rd, Saxapahaw, NC, United States

This is a seated show. Over the last half a dozen years or so, John Moreland’s honesty has stunned us–and stung. As he put hurts we didn’t even realize we had or shared into his songs, we sang along. And we felt better. But there has always been far more to Moreland than sad songs.... Read More →

$15

Tennis

Haw River Ballroom 1711 Saxapahaw-Bethlehem Church Rd, Saxapahaw, NC, United States

Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube | Spotify | SoundCloud

Snail Mail

Haw River Ballroom 1711 Saxapahaw-Bethlehem Church Rd, Saxapahaw, NC, United States

Lindsey Jordan is on the brink of something huge, and she’s only just graduated high school. Her voice rises and falls with electricity throughout Lush, her debut album as Snail Mail, spinning with bold excitement and new beginnings at every turn. “Is there any better feeling than coming clean?” sings the eighteen-year-old guitarist and songwriter halfway through the sprawling anthem that is “Pristine,” the album’s first single. You can’t help but agree with her. It’s a hook that immediately sticks in your head-and a question she seems to be grappling with throughout the record’s 10-songs of crystalline guitar pop. Throughout Lush, Jordan’s clear and powerful voice, acute sense of pacing, and razor-sharp writing cut through the chaos and messiness of growing up: the passing trends, the awkward house parties, the sick-to-your-stomach crushes and the heart wrenching breakups. Jordan’s most masterful skill is in crafting tension, working with muted melodrama that builds and never quite breaks, stretching out over moody rockers and soft-burning hooks, making for visceral slow-releases that stick under the skin. Lush feels at times like an emotional rollercoaster, only fitting for Jordan’s explosive, dynamic personality. Growing up in Baltimore suburb Ellicot City, Jordan began her classical guitar training at age five, and a decade later wrote her first audacious songs as Snail Mail. Around that time, Jordan started frequenting local shows in Baltimore, where she formed close friendships within the local scene, the impetus for her to form a band. By the time she was sixteen, she had already released her debut EP, Habit, on local punk label Sister Polygon Records. In the time that’s elapsed since Habit, Jordan has graduated high school, toured the country, opened for the likes of Girlpool and Waxahatchee as well as selling out her own headline shows, and participated in a round-table discussion for the New York Times about women in punk-giving her time to reflect and refine her songwriting process by using tempered pacings and alternate tunings to create a jawdropping debut both thoughtful and cathartic. Recorded with producer Jake Aron and engineer Johnny Schenke, with contributions from touring bandmates drummer Ray Brown and bassist Alex Bass as well, Lush sounds cinematic, yet still perfectly homemade. The songs on Lush often come close to the five-minute mark, making them long enough to get lost in. The album’s more gauzy and meditative songs play out like ideal end-of-the-night soundtracks, the kind that might score a 3am conversation or a long drive home, from the finger-picking of “Speaking Terms” to the subtle, sweeping harmonies and French horn on “Deep Sea.” It only makes sense that Jordan wrote these songs late at night during a time when she was obsessively reading Eileen Myles and listening to a lot of slowcore and folk songwriters. “Heat Wave” is one of the album’s most devastating moments, a song that wallows in a crumbling mid-summer relationship. “I broke it off, called out of my shift, and just cried in my bathtub and wrote this song,” Jordan recalls. “I was just so desperate to just get the way I was feeling out onto paper so that I could just have it and be done with it. It was almost kind of painful. It was like puking onto paper, and crying, ‘This girl hurt my feelings!’ Towards the end of writing the record, I became better at dealing with my emotions.” Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Bandcamp

$20

Waxahatchee

Haw River Ballroom 1711 Saxapahaw-Bethlehem Church Rd, Saxapahaw, NC, United States

On September 7, Katie Crutchfield’s ever-shifting musical project Waxahatchee returns with the Great Thunder EP. Featuring a collection of songs written with now-dormant experimental recording group Great Thunder while Crutchfield was also writing the Waxahatchee albums Cerulean Salt and Ivy Tripp, the original recordings have mostly faded into obscurity. Unearthing and reimagining them with producer... Read More →

$18

Sharon Van Etten

Haw River Ballroom 1711 Saxapahaw-Bethlehem Church Rd, Saxapahaw, NC, United States

A message from Sharon Van Etten: Dear family, friends, and fans – As you may have guessed by now, in light of COVID-19, my band and I will be postponing our April tour dates. Everyone’s safety and well-being is always our #1 concern, especially during this sensitive time. I’m so grateful for your support, strength and patience. You keep me going. We will announce the rescheduled dates when it’s appropriate, as we are all learning more every day, so hold on to your tickets as those tickets will be honored for the rescheduled dates. We look forward to seeing you. Be well. XO, Sharon Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Spotify | Apple Music

$28

John Moreland

Haw River Ballroom 1711 Saxapahaw-Bethlehem Church Rd, Saxapahaw, NC, United States

This is a seated show. Over the last half a dozen years or so, John Moreland’s honesty has stunned us–and stung. As he put hurts we didn’t even realize we had or shared into his songs, we sang along. And we felt better. But there has always been far more to Moreland than sad songs. Today, his earthbound poetry remains potent, but in addition to his world-weary candor, Moreland’s music smolders with gentle wisdom, flashes of wit and joy, and compassion. And once again, as we listen, we feel better. “I can’t dress myself up and be some folk singer character that I’m not really,” Moreland says. “I figured, I can’t dress up these songs and try to sell them that way. All I can do is be me.” Out February 2020, his latest album LP5 proves John Moreland has gotten really good at being John Moreland–thank God. A masterful display of songwriting by one of today’s best young practitioners of the art form, LP5 is Moreland’s finest record to date. The album’s experimentations with instrumentation and sounds capture an artist whose confidence has grown, all without abandoning the hardy roots rock bed and the lyrics-first approach Moreland’s work demands. “I feel like just this year, in the past few months, I’ve reached a point where I feel like I know what I’m doing here now,” he says. “And I feel comfortable with it.” There was a time when Moreland thought LP5 may not happen. Wary of expectations and his cemented status as a writer’s writer and critical darling, the Tulsa, Oklahoma-based Moreland found writing difficult at best–and completely undesirable at worst. “I’m hesitant to talk about it because I know people don’t want to hear some dude complaining that his dream of being a successful musician came true, but there are things about it that you don’t expect that can mess you up,” Moreland says. “One of the results of that was I really didn’t want to write songs for a couple of years.” He pauses and sighs. “One of the ways I got back into liking music again was to let go of the idea that every time I’d go mess around with an instrument, I’d have to be writing a really good song. I just gave myself the freedom to go into my little music room every day and mess around with different instruments and different sounds. It doesn’t have to be anything. It doesn’t have to result in anything.” Moreland points to that liberating rediscovery as a major influence on the sonic choices that shape LP5. There is no grand or alarming stylistic departure here–just different textures and background layers that add muscly new dimensions to Moreland’s heretofore instrumentally sparse recordings. The record also marks Moreland’s first time working with a producer. He chose Matt Pence. “I wouldn’t say that he pushed me into trying anything that I didn’t already want to do, but I think I came in with a lot of ideas that I found interesting but didn’t know how to execute. Matt was great at expanding on those things,” Moreland says. For Moreland, falling back in love with music also coincided with an even more personal change. “This past year, I’ve been getting into mindfulness and being kinder to myself,” he says. “I was really on that wave when I started writing these songs. I guess it shows.” Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter

$15

Todd Snider

Haw River Ballroom 1711 Saxapahaw-Bethlehem Church Rd, Saxapahaw, NC, United States

This is a seated show. One morning near the end of August, Todd Snider was relaxing with a visitor on the back porch of his house just outside Nashville, drinking coffee and shooting the breeze while his dog, Cowboy Jim, took a nap nearby. After awhile, Snider said to his guest, “I’ve got an album’s worth of songs, and I think the songs are telling me to make a folk record.” This was a surprising bit of news considering he had spent the last six years making rock albums of one kind or another. But Snider was feeling as if he had “maybe drifted too far from the shore.” He was feeling the pull to start over, to go back to what he was doing when he first began, to return to his roots as a folksinger. If Snider needed any further evidence that was the direction he should pursue, he got it a half hour later. Back inside his home office, he checked his email and had one from his manager informing him he had just received an offer to play the 2019 Newport Folk Festival, an event he had never done. Snider mentioned he had been listening to Woody Guthrie’s Library of Congress Recordings, then crossed the room to the turntable and put the needle down on side one of the record. “Woody Guthrie sometimes gets me reset on why you do a song, instead of how,” Snider explains of the man who has long been a touchstone for him. “When I was young, there was something about him that made me want to do it. So once or twice a year, I’ll go back to him, I’ll go back to the source.” Guthrie famously had the words “This machine kills fascists” printed on his guitar, and on several of the songs on Snider’s new album, Cash Cabin Sessions, Vol. 3, he squarely aims his guitar at the creeping fascism he sees in America. He had been wanting to make a political record since 2016, and although only half the songs lean in that direction, there is one constant throughout the album: a man, his guitar, and the truth. Snider has long been recognized as one of his generation’s most gifted and engaging songwriters, so it’s no surprise he has returned with a brilliant set of songs — and make no mistake, Cash Cabin Sessions, Vol. 3 contains some of his best work as a writer. But what really jumps out on the album is Snider’s growth as a musician and vocalist. He plays all the instruments on the record, and his guitar work and harmonica playing are nothing short of exceptional; not only full of feeling, but highly skilled. In regards to his guitar playing on the record, Snider says he wanted to take everything he’s learned over the past 30 years and play the way he used to play really well. As far as his vocals on the album are concerned, Snider is singing with more confidence than ever, a confidence born in part from his time with Hard Working Americans doing nothing but sing. His stirring vocal performances range from slurring blues mumble to Dylanesque talking blues to gravely, honest ache. Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Spotify | Soundcloud | YouTube

Where The Moon Hides Tour 2020 – GARZA featuring Rob Garza of Thievery Corporation

Haw River Ballroom 1711 Saxapahaw-Bethlehem Church Rd, Saxapahaw, NC, United States

GARZA is a collaborative musical experience conjured up by Rob Garza, one-half of the pioneering electronic outfit, Thievery Corporation. His new project is a deep reimagining of a process that features a collective of artists, musicians, producers, visual artists and videographers. With multidimensional music and a convergence of genres; it blends, merges and melds together into one singular experience. GARZA explores a different musical palette of colors and textures than Rob Garza’s previous work…at times blurring the lines between ‘pop’ familiarity and electronic esoterica. After twenty years of Thievery Corporation, GARZA is redrawing his musical boundaries and stretching into areas with a newfound freedom that feels deep and open all at once, yet is undeniable in its accessibility. GARZA’s debut EP releases Fall 2019 with five exciting new tracks. Featuring vocalists: Seann Bowe, Emeline and Shenova…and the ethereal and evocative artwork of Indig0 with each single. The EP releases on Rob Garza’s own Magnetic Moon label. In 2020, GARZA will hit the road with a live band of instrumentalists and vocalists, playing in venues and festivals worldwide. “I’m really excited to be taking this new project on the road to debut the music of GARZA,” said Rob Garza. “We’ll be featuring the vocals of some amazing singers and a new musical ensemble too. With Thievery Corporation not touring in 2020, I’m wholly inspired to perform these new songs with a mix of electronic and live instrumentation, blurring the boundaries of more modern, different genres. And expect to hear a few Thievery standards as well.” Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram