Allison de Groot & Nic Gareiss with Winslow Solomon

Other

201 Bridge Street,Richmond VT 05477

25 March, 2022

Description

Allison de Groot (banjo) & Nic Gareiss (dance) with Winslow Solomon (banjo) Co-presentation of Young Tradition Vermont and Garrett School of Irish Dance All who attend should arrive vaccinated, boosted and masked. Be prepared to share vaccination documentation. 'Acclaimed dancer, ethnochoreologist, and queer theorist Nic Gareiss and old-time banjoist Allison de Groot combine timeless tunes and melodies with the surprisingly lyrical, musical, and jaw-droppingly deft steps of Irish, bluegrass, old-time, and otherwise vernacular rhythmic dance.' – Justin Hiltner, The Bluegrass Situation Allison de Groot combines love for old-time music, technical skill and a creative approach to the banjo forming her own sound – unique and full of personality. Her collaborations with musicians such as Tatiana Hargreaves, Bruce Molsky and Nic Gareiss provide spaces to explore the role of clawhammer banjo. Allison has toured all over the world, performing at events such as Newport Folk Festival, Celtic Connections, Rockygrass, Hardly Strictly, Winnipeg Folk Festival, and Tønder Festival. Shaped by the music scene in her hometown of Winnipeg, Canada, Allison also holds a Bachelor of Music in Performance from Berklee College of Music in Boston where she attended on the Slaight Family Scholarship, and has been awarded the Joseph S. Stauffer Prize from the Canada Council for the Arts and the Eisenson Family Prize for Excellence in American Roots Music. Her album with Tatiana Hargreaves won 'Best Bluegrass Album' from the Independent Music Awards and was nominated for ‘Liner Notes of the Year’ at the International Bluegrass Music Association awards. www.allisondegroot.com Named one of Dance Magazine’s '25 to Watch,' Nic Gareiss (he/they) has been hailed by the New York Times for his 'dexterous melding of Irish and Appalachian dance' and called 'the most inventive and expressive step dancer on the scene' by the Boston Herald. He reimagines movement as a musical practice, recasting dance as a medium that appeals to both eyes and ears. Gareiss engages many percussive dance traditions, weaving together a dance technique facilitating his love of improvisation; clog, flatfoot, and step dance footwork vocabulary; and musical collaboration. In 2020 Nic received the Michigan Heritage Award, the state’s highest distinction bestowed on traditional artists. He has performed in sixteen countries at venues including London’s Barbican Centre, the Irish National Concert Hall, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, and the Kennedy Center. www.nicgareiss.com Winslow Solomon is a young banjo/fiddle player who lives in Richmond, attends the Vermont Common School, has rehearsed, recorded and performed with the Young Tradition Vermont's Youth Commission and Touring Group, and studies with Pete Sutherland and others. For more information contact www.youngtraditionvermont.org or [email protected].

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