The nugget. (Sisters, Or.) 1994-current, December 04, 2019, Page 26, Image 26

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    26 
Wednesday, December 4, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
FOLK FESTIVAL:
Concerts feature
award-winning music
Continued from page 3
their transcendent live shows,
while mining new energetic
material from the place where
folk music, funk and soul
meet.
The band9s newest album, 
<Is It You, Is It Me= 4 com-
ing January 31 via their own 
Medium  Expectations  label 
and Nashville9s Thirty Tigers 
4 is something different
entirely and represents the lat-
est stage in a band that never
stops evolving and refuses
to stand still. The result is a
sonic revelation and a reck-
oning. After celebrating more
than a decade of sonic adven-
turing, playing thousands of
shows  together  in  10  coun-
tries and counting, and col-
lecting a devoted and growing
fan base coast to coast, the
six core members 4 founder
Z. Lupetin, Liz Beebe, Josh
Heffernan, Matt Rubin, Ulf
Bjorlin and Connor Vance
4 knew they had to create
something bigger.
With  a  big  brass-and-
strings band building the sets
around them, Is It You, Is It 
Me isn9t afraid to explore the 
personal and political tension
that the group may have shied
away from facing before. The
group9s signature intertwined 
vocal leads star on the open-
ing track, <Dreaming,= which
tackles the deep vulnerability
of revealing your secrets and
your soul every night in front
of an audience. But where
the band really sets on a new
course is on lushly cinematic,
orchestrated set pieces like
<Mirror,= <Runaway= and,
most notably, the current
fan  favorite  and  live  show-
stopper <Sonic Boom,= about
the struggle to reveal who
you really are in the hidden,
rose-colored world of social 
media.
On Thursday, April 9, stel-
lar mandolin player Sierra
Hull will perform with a
full band, demonstrating her
wide-ranging  and  excep-
tional musical talent as a
writer, singer and performer.
Hull9s  stellar  career  started 
early. She had her Grand Ole 
Opry  debut  at  age  10  and 
was called back to the famed
stage a year later to perform
with her hero and mentor,
Alison Krauss. Sierra played 
Carnegie  Hall  at  12;  at  13 
she signed with Rounder
Records and issued her debut,
<Secrets,= garnering the first
of many nominations for the
IBMA9s  Mandolin  Player  of 
the Year designation.
She  played  the  Kennedy 
Center  at  16  and  the  next 
year became the first blue-
grass musician to receive
a Presidential Scholarship
to the Berklee College of
Music. As a 20-year-old, Hull 
played the White House and
in  2010,  captured  her  first 
IBMA  award  for  Recorded 
Event  of  the  Year.  All  the 
while, she was shedding the
prodigy tag, turning virtuoso,
and recording her second
album, <Daybreak,= with
seven of her own original
compositions.
By 2016, Hull had reached 
a more mature place in her
life and in her art. She tapped
legendary bluegrass musi-
cian Béla Fleck to produce
her third album, <Weighted
Mind.= A departure from her
opening pair of records that
blended progressive elements
with traditional structure, Hull
let go of whatever preconcep-
tions existed 4 both hers and
those of her audience 4 and
birthed a Grammy-nominated 
masterpiece. Enlisting bassist 
Ethan Jodziewicz (and Fleck 
on two cuts), and harness-
ing vocal contributions from
Krauss,  Abigail  Washburn, 
and Rhiannon Giddens, Hull 
trusted her foundation of
influences to support this
artistic leap. Months later she
was  taking  home  the  IBMA 
Mandolin Player of the Year
award.
After  a  near-decade  of 
consecutive nominations,
Hull broke that last glass
ceiling, becoming the first
woman to win the prestigious
title, then she took home a
pair to join it, winning again
in 2017 and 2018. 
Sierra Hull has maintained
a rigorous touring schedule.
Even when off the road, she 
is frequently guesting with
friends and legends, joining
such icons as the Indigo Girls, 
Garth  Brooks,  and  Gillian 
Welch, and performing at the
Country Music Awards with
Ricky Skaggs, Brad Paisley,
and Marty Stuart.
She says she9s ready now 
for something new.
Currently in the midst of
work  for  the  follow-up  to 
<Weighted Mind,= her next
album will consist of all
original songs. Beyond that,
there are compelling ideas
she  won9t  divulge  for  col-
laborations and, perhaps, an
all-instrumental record. 
<I  love  playing  music. 
It9s  all  I  ever  wanted  to  do. 
I don9t see it, necessarily, as 
a bad thing that I9m slow on 
making  albums.  I  want  my 
albums to be something I can 
be proud of,= said Hull.
For more information on
the 2020 Sisters Folk Festival 
Winter Concert Series visit
www.sistersfolkfestival.org/
winterconcertseries. Tickets
can be purchased online in
advance or at the door. SFF
Winter Concert Series season
passes  are  $55  for  adults  or 
$40 for youth 18 and under. 
Tickets are also available for
individual shows. All shows
are at the Sisters High School
auditorium and start at 7 p.m. 
The Nugget Newspaper Crossword
By Jacqueline E. Mathews, Tribune News Service
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