Saturday, October 5, 2013

Shifting Skies ~ Seasons Moving - October News

"The dreams of my life are so simple and few...
Just to be back with you, back with you....in the heartland."   ~ Denise Hagan, "Heartland"

Hey Friends,

Wow, it's already Autumn...doesn't it seem like it snuck up on you?  It does me, although I'm always happy to have it arrive.  I've been reading Linda Ronstadt's fine memoir, "Simple Dreams" and really enjoying it.  I recommend it if you would like to read about one of the true ground zero locations of the development of country rock in the sixties-seventies.  Kind of amazing that such ground-breaking work all got done in such a small area of the world ~ The Troubador in LA!! 

And the shifting sands are already moving beneath us...

I've also been inspired by our busy wood-shedding at the house these last couple of months.  Since coming off tour in July, and after some R&R, the guys and I have become enraptured of our new songs.  Many of them have emerged from our songwriter in residence, Rob Carlson, who has pulled out a treasure trove of songs that seem to have been waiting for us to discover them.  First off, I have to tell you about the great new instrumental "Independence" that will open our show at McCabe's ~ oh!  we are going back to McCabe's Guitar shop on November 16!  More about that below (and our cool new poster is above - thanks to Russ Paris for the design!)  ~ it sounds like the opening of a great, epic, cinematic adventure!

Then there's a song that Rob wrote for me called "Not That Kind of Girl" that we debuted at the Labor Day Harvest Fest at Bedford Winery.  So much fun ~ a real swinging and sweet old fashioned love song.  Mark Indictor, our amazing fiddler, brought us Denise Hagan's gorgeous song "Heartland," a bittersweet song about the pull and tug of feelings for going back to your land of birth and the life you have made outside of it.   Steve Rankin is going to literally "rev it up" for his lead vocal on Rob's fabulous rockabilly song "427" (this is about a car, I'm told...).  There is also a possibility of yours truly actually singing a rock and roll song called "Never Give Up" which the guys are urging me to get ready.  So I'm working hard on that one. And some older, new favorites (you'll see, just come to the show!), Fred's "Take Me Along," the whimsical "Don't Resist Me" and Steve on lead on the David Olney classic "Millionaire."  Check out our great music video of this song from our tour last May on our Home or Video page.

We're really excited and happy about our return to the finest acoustic venue in all of Los Angeles, the famed and famous McCabe's Guitar Shop, on November 16.  I've also got a singing workshop planned for that day and I hope you'll call and sign up.  Also in November we're going to shoot a music video of our song "April Fools" from our most recent release "White Swan."  

In January we'll be starting a new series at the Coffee Gallery Backstage in Altadena, on four first Fridays, we're calling "The Woodshed Sessions" featuring our new material as well as one guest songwriter each month, bringing us their new songs in development.  It will be cutting edge!  So stay tuned for that.

Later this fall I'll also be telling you about a show I'm producing as a benefit for the Howard Larman Scholarship Fund of the FAR-West Folk Alliance Regional organization (FAR-West Website).  A very worthy cause indeed, so please make plans to join us on Saturday, January 25th at the Thousand Oaks Library.  A stellar line up of music will attend!

Other NewsBits:
 "White Swan" was Number 1 on the Top 50 Internet Folk Chart, Roots Music Report for all of August!

Pandora Radio ~ Find the Hilonesome Band on Pandora!  Here’s the link:  http://www.pandora.com/station/1432298446106166587

Teaching at Boulevard Music
I've been put on the roster at Boulevard Music in Culver City as a voice instructor, teaching vocal technique for bluegrass and folk music styles in private sessions. Call Boulevard Music to schedule your voice lessons! I look forward to seeing you there!  Find them at www.boulevardmusic.com

New Column on FolkWorks
I'm proud of the new column on FolkWorks, sharing the great writing of our friend, Terry Roland, in his article "Unsung Heroes of Americana" which originally appeared in No Depression.  The article includes some wonderful video from Jean Ritchie's documentary on her life and work, "Mountain Born."   Find it at www.folkworks.org

As always we send you all our very best and hope to see you at a show!

Susie and the Hilonesome Band:  Mark Indictor, Rob Carlson, Steve Rankin and Fred Sanders

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

June 2013


Hey Friends,


Lots going on here in Hilonesome Land this late spring/early summer!

Our first music video is ready and we're really proud of the great work done by SunDog Studio on this project for our recording of Ernest Troost's song "Harlan County Boys" from our new album "White Swan." 

Speaking of "White Swan" we have a great new review up on No Depression thanks to Terry Roland ~ here's an excerpt: 

"From the earthy opening fiddle strains on White Swan to the final song's sweet homage to Appalachian singer-songwriter Jean Ritchie, it's clear this is not an album to listen to once and put away.  Susie Glaze and The Hilonesome Band have made an album that is a ride through a wide range of Americana meadows and valleys. From skilled instrumentation bluegrass jams, Appalachian vocals, sweet high lonesome harmonies and old-time folk influences, White Swan sings with the richness of a tapestry of American music that weaves together each genre through  song-craft, clear production and authentic performance in such a seamless way, it feels like we're hearing just one genre; great American music...With an already considerable string of successful albums behind them, White Swan brings Susie Glaze and Hilonesome Band to a new and rare place for a band veteran traditional musicians; a breakthrough album stepping into new musical territory.  As the final track, Jean Ritchie's "The Soldier," echoes with the Appalachian fiddle and Glaze's haunting voice, it's clear this album is a rare and timeless gem and one of 2013's best Americana albums."

Find the entire review here:  No Depression Reviews "White Swan"

We Have a Pandora Channel!

We've gotten our channel on Pandora up and running!  See below news item and link over to the Pandora radio channel!  Pandora Radio for Susie Glaze & the Hilonesome Band 

Teaching at Boulevard Music!

I'm happy to announce that I've been put on the roster at Boulevard Music in Culver City as a voice instructor, teaching vocal technique for bluegrass and folk music styles in private sessions. Call Boulevard Music to schedule your voice lessons! I look forward to seeing you there! Visit Boulevard Music Online

Writing ~ New Column For FolkWorks

I've started a new column for the online music magazine Folkworks called "Singin' the Moon Up."  It'll be a bi-monthly posting about Appalachian music and often featuring reflections on my friend Jean Ritchie and her music legacy. The new column for May/June has just been published, dedicated to Jean's fine song "West Virginia Mine Disaster."

Read the Latest Column Here on Folkworks for a special announcement about a very special CD tribute project also coming soon.


Special House Concert  ~ June 1

We're thrilled to be returning to Russ & Julie's House Concert series in Oak Park on June 1 with our dear friends Jeni & Billy, the great Nashville old-time duo.  Both J&B and we have new albums to share and we hope you'll join us!  It will be a really stellar evening of roots music from the hollars and the fields.  Russ & Julie's is the premier house concert series in Southern California and we always have a blast with these great hosts!


See you at the show, and online!
~  
Susie and the Hilonesome Band
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

     

Wednesday, April 10, 2013


West Virginia Mine Disaster



Hello again, Friends,
I’d like to devote a blog to the great Jean Ritchie original song “West Virginia Mine Disaster.”

I first heard Jean herself perform this song several years ago at a music festival where we were appearing together.  It is sung a ccapella, and she did so, sitting in a chair under a tent with lots of folks listening.  It was transformative for me.  The story of a woman whose husband disappears into the mines one day never to return was one that hadn’t been told quite like that ever in my experience.  And, true to Jean’s introduction of the song when she sings it, it hadn’t ever been written from that perspective before either ~ of the woman’s view of things when a tragic accident falls on a mining community. 

Jean always says that when she ever heard of a story that didn’t have a song to go with it (as was always the case when she was growing up in Eastern Kentucky), she knew she had to write one.

So this is how Jean introduces the song and it’s now what I say to audiences of my own: 

“When a mining accident occurred in the neighboring state of West Virginia, it came to my mind that all the mining disaster songs were about the places, the men’s names and the dates.  None of them told how the women felt when they had to stay home. It was taboo then for women to go into the mines and the women would often wonder what goes on when the whistle blows off time.”

Say did you see him going, it was early this morning?
He passed all your houses on the way to the coal.
He was tall, he was slender, and his dark eyes so tender,
His occupation was mining, West Virginia his home.
 
It was just before twelve, I was feeding the children.
Ben Mosely came running to give us the news;
Number eight is all flooded, many men are in danger,
And we don’t know their number, but we fear they’re all doomed.

So I picked up the baby and I left all the others
To comfort each other and pray for our own;
There’s Timmy, fourteen, and there’s John not much younger,
Their own time soon will be coming to go down the black hole.
 
 
O if I had the money to do more than just feed them,
I’d give them good learning, the best could be found,
Then when they grew up, they’d be checkers and weighers,
And not spend their time drilling in the dark underground.
 
O what can I say to his poor little children?
And what can I tell his old mother at home?
And what can I say to my heart that’s clear-broken?
To my heart that’s clear broken, if my darling is gone?
 
Say, did you see him going, it was early this morning?
He passed all your houses on the way to the coal,
He was tall, he was slender, and his dark eyes so tender,
His occupation was mining, West Virginia his home.
 
Jean’s beautiful recording of this song can be found on her 1971 album “Clear Waters Remembered.”   Clear Waters Remembered
It was also included on the marvelous soundtrack album to the PBS documentary “The Appalachians”  The Appalachians
 
 
 
I was lucky and honored to perform this song for Jean herself when we worked together on our 2005 Jean Ritchie tribute show “Singin’ the Moon Up: The Voice of Jean Ritchie” at Penn State.  Later that same year I began adding West Virginia to our regular concerts with the Hilonesome Band.  Here it is from The Coffee Gallery Backstage in Altadena, California:
 
 
Discussion of this song brings to mind the singing of a ccapella songs in the Appalachian style and tradition.  I was reminded of the power of this type of performance when seeing the Chieftains in concert recently.  Their percussionist came to the front of the stage early in their first set to sing un-accompanied, and it was powerful, pure and beautiful. 
In my research, I found that singing solo served a purpose in the country community:  it was always a time of quiet respite in the midst of noisy gatherings, and the singer would always tell a tale with his or her tune.  It was implicit that the story not be “acted out” but simply sung plainly:  heartfelt, yes, but not animatedly, as an actor would, “trying to put the song over.”  In my experience, either listening or singing, when the story is “told” this way it is more able to be vividly imaged by the listener.  The singer just simply needs to “get out of the way” and trust the song, trust its own integrity and life.  For me, it truly becomes an internal journey.  And to underline the spiritual nature of the performance, I would remind everyone that in fact, the old-time rural Baptist church didn’t allow accompaniments to their hymns, believing that God didn’t need the “decoration” for an expression from the human to the Divine. 
 

The Jean Ritchie Tribute Project

 
There’s some great news coming out of the East coast that I can let you know about! It’s the soon-to-be-announced tribute CD project to honor Jean Ritchie, produced by long-time colleagues and friends Dan Schatz, Charlie Pilzer and Mick Lane.  This CD project will be a treasure to honor Jean’s life's work and will feature new recordings of her original songs and songs from her family tradition, with all proceeds benefiting Jean as well as organizations that work against mountaintop removal.  Some wonderful and amazing artists are involved, and I eagerly await its official announcement.  I was honored and happy to be invited to sing on this project, and my recording of “West Virginia Mine Disaster” will be there. 
Please stay tuned for more news of this landmark album coming soon.
In the meantime, I send you blessings and love,
Susie

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

February-March Newsletter ~ Announcing the Release of "White Swan"


Announcing the Release of Susie Glaze & the Hilonesome Band's new 2013 album

"White Swan"

 
"Glaze and company have done a wonderful job of charming us in the past but now it seems like her recent vintage live set was to clear the palette before the next stage was set. A bluegrass crew that could easily stand toe to toe with Union Station, this crew has elected to widen the lens and take newgrass into the wide open mixing in Celtic, folk, roots, Americana and a full range of indigenous sounds that blend into a wonderful down home, home grown stew. Boldly powering their way down their own new cut road, if you haven't had the chance to enjoy the Glaze sound yet, this is the place to jump in to be totally blown away. This is the perfect record for anyone that's ever wondered what the big deal about roots/Americana is to find out what's what."   Chris Spector for Midwest Record

 
"Exceptional musicianship... stunning, timeless ballads... like a clear mountain stream is the pure, clear voice of Susie Glaze...this is one gorgeous album - a 'must discover.'" 
Folkworks

"I've said it before, 'new is easy different is hard' - many artists achieve the former, some the latter, few manage both. Well here's one that falls into the 'achieved both' category. Susie Glaze & The Hilonesome Band have with 'White Swan' blended unadulterated Americana folk from a mix of influences - poetic narrative, a soupcon of bluegrass, a touch of mountain-muse and pure invention to create a folk-fusion of that's both steeped in tradition and fresh as the sunrise...'White Swan' blends the inspiration of tradition with the charisma of contemporary - and does it faultlessly."
Tim Carroll, FolkWords (www.folkwords.com - UK)

"Susie Glaze & the Hilonesome Band continue to hone and refine their brand of rootsy Americana on their very appealing new album, White Swan. Alison Krauss and Union Station remain the most obvious reference point for this troupe which comprises Glaze on lead vocals, guitars and mountain dulcimer; Rob Carlson on guitar; Steve Rankin on mandolin and bouzouki; Mark Indicator on fiddle; and Fred Sanders on bass. But with White Swan, the band have broadened their bluegrass sound to encompass folky Celtic elements, and the results stand up well alongside the best of AKUS.
 
The playing throughout is supple and evocative and the choice of material is stellar, combining original (mostly penned by Carlson), traditional material and well-chosen covers. The Irish tune “Si Bheag, Si Mhor” ushers in a fine opening take on James Taylor’s “Mill Worker”; Glaze channels Joan Baez for a gripping “Fair Ellender”; Rankin takes a low-key lead on a cover of Steve Earle’s “Me and the Eagle”; and a spare, evocative reading of “The Soldier” by Jean Ritchie (about whom Glaze composed the acclaimed theatre show “Singing the Moon Up: The Voice of Jean Ritchie”) brings the album to an elegant end. The best tracks, however, are two stunning songs from the pen of Ernest Troost: the murder ballad “Evangeline”—sung from the perspective of the now-remorseful culprit—and the exceptional “Harlan County Boys” which economically traces a family history from the early 1900s to the present day. Glaze inhabits these songs with absolute conviction and subtle dramatic flair, making them the highlights of an altogether beguiling record."
 
Alex Ramon, Pop Matters, London  http://www.popmatters.com/
 
“The net has been cast wide,” says Susie Glaze of Susie Glaze & The Hilonesome Band, referring to the range of influences on their latest collaboration, “White Swan.” The West Coast quintet’s eleven-track project reflects a love for bluegrass, folk and Celtic music, with five originals written by various configurations of the band, plus well-picked covers by the likes of masters, such as Steve Earle (“Me And The Eagle”) and James Taylor (“Mill Worker”).
 
These artists have a performance chemistry that works, with tight arrangements of fiddle, mandolin, guitar and upright bass, and Glaze’s authentic Appalachian voice – by way of Southern California – is icing on their musical confection. The Ernest Troost song, “Evangeline,” allows her an opportunity to show more ache and tenderness in her confident holler style, and she sings in downright shades of Sandy Denny (Fairport Convention, Fotheringay) on the dulcimer-and-fiddle traditional English/Irish folk ballad “Fair Ellender.”
 
Glaze has a hand in penning “The Dark Eileen,” with its flowery recitation start, and her softer-side delivery glides over the Emerald Isle-inspired hills and valleys of its melody. The title track is where the band lives up to its high-lonesome moniker, and Jean Ritchie’s “The Soldier” closes out the set with a haunting Irish drone. SGTHB give listeners a fresh take on tradition."   
 
Janet Goodman, Music News Nashville
 
"If Susie Glaze were a newscaster, this crazy world would be a lot easier to take. On grisly murder ballads and carefree romps alike, the Tennesse native sings smooth and sweet, her voice like buttermilk pie. Having appeared on Broadway, Glaze has a knack for theatrics, and that serves her well on "Fair Ellender", "Evangeline" and "The Dark Eileen", the three of this album's darker narrative tunes. Relief comes in the form of "April Fools", a bubbly Appalachian bossa nova love song with giddiness to spare. Wherever Glaze goes, her band is right there with her, providig impeccable acoustic instrumentation and sometimes handling lead vocals. The presentation is as seamless as the songs are engaging." 
 
M Magazine for Musicians
__________________________________________________________________        
 
"White Swan," Susie Glaze's fifth release, is truly her most eclectic and collaborative album in over ten years of her critically-acclaimed career as a bluegrass/folk recording artist.  With this CD her Hilonesome Band has veered into the realms of new Celtic-inspired folk songs that harken back to the ballad form from the pen of lead guitarist Rob Carlson, as well as re-interpreted classic cover songs from such diverse sources as James Taylor, Steve Earle and Jean Ritchie.  Also featured are two songs from Los Angeles singer-songwriter and Kerrville New Folk Winner Ernest Troost. Arrangements and new interpretations of songs you think you knew are here for re-discovery from this gifted acoustic quintet in a lush and orchestral folk setting.

 
Susie states about this album:  "The fine players of the Hilonesome Band and I have created these tracks together and on this album you hear their voices alongside my own.  We've come a long way from the early years of our band's inception.  We reached for the sounds of bluegrass because it was the music we loved ~ we were drawn to the stories, the romance, the warnings, the humor and the tragedies.  Now we have found our sound branching out with a natural evolution ~ it came with exploring the older stories and longing for more complex music.  Rob has been inspired to capture the darkness and mysteriously tragic elements of balladry from Ireland, England and Scotland. With the integration of real historical elements along with new and deeper complexity in music, our sound has made a most interestingly subtle shift:  we've cast a wider net to discover a sound unlike anything we've done before.  What is here is a true melting pot of influences that move us, from bluegrass to country to Celtic to Appalachia, and we've found our true home in this, our new, unique sound."

 
The eclectic range takes the listener from bluegrass ("Little Rabbit") to pensive country ("Evangeline") to Bossa Nova ("April Fools") to Celtic-inspired torch song ("Dark Eileen").  The album begins with a newly-interpreted "Mill Worker," James Taylor's classic, introduced by Mark Indictor's beautiful fiddle on the traditional "Si Bheag, Si Mhor."  Indictor's fiddle is featured again on Carlson's new take on the old "Polly Vonn" story, this time as the title track "White Swan."  Jean Ritchie's little-known but powerful "The Soldier" sends a message about the costs of war on the soul.

 
The innovation of this formerly-bluegrass band is taking them to a distinctly folk-driven Americana music, the sounds that came to America with the first immigrants:  Appalachia, old-English balladry, Irish barn-burner fiddle music (the outro of "White Swan" was penned in the studio) and tender stories of family and legacy ("Harlan County Boys").

 
One great album bonus is the inclusion of a previously-recorded live onstage sound track of the classic Childe ballad, "Fair Ellender," arranged by Jean Ritchie, with Susie accompanied by Ritchie sons Peter and Jon Pickow and famed East coast fiddler, Kenny Kosek.  At this concert, the Hilonesome Band will re-interpret "Fair Ellender" in their own way with bouzouki, guitar, fiddle and bowed bass.

 
The album is now released and available for purchase on CDBaby, iTunes and Amazon.

 

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Happy New Year - January 2013 Newsletter


Dear Friends,


 

Happy New Year!

 
I hope the New Year is off to a great start for everyone.  Here in Los Angeles we are laughing at ourselves at how we cannot take this cold snap ~ our friends and family in more northern climates are chuckling too, as they are used to below freezing for this time of year.  Angelenos, it seems, are mightily “put out” when the temps get below 85!

Otherwise, we’ve been lucky out here so far (knock wood) this winter.  I had a most marvelous Christmas season, with luminous Hilonesome Band shows mixed with a lot of great singing at my beloved All Saints in Pasadena.  The cool new thing was that our Christmas Eve service was streamed on the web, so friends in other parts of the country (and city) who couldn’t attend could watch and hear the whole thing on the internet.  It was great to hear from them how much they enjoyed the music and it’s great to be able to share it this new way.

Now, as I write, we are thick into the campaign to release our new album “White Swan.”  We’ve set our CD release concert at the venerable McCabe’s Guitar Shop (www.mccabes.com) for Sunday, March 3rd and you’ll be hearing more about that below and next month.  Also, we received a nice new review on the album just a few days ago:

“Glaze and company have done a wonderful job of charming us in the past but now it seems like her recent vintage live set was to clear the palette before the next stage was set. A bluegrass crew that could easily stand toe to toe with Union Station, this crew has elected to widen the lens and take newgrass into the wide open mixing in Celtic, folk, roots, Americana and a full range of indigenous sounds that blend into a wonderful down home, home grown stew. Boldly powering their way down their own new cut road, if you haven't had the chance to enjoy the Glaze sound yet, this is the place to jump in to be totally blown away. This is the perfect record for anyone that's ever wondered what the big deal about roots/Americana is to find out what‘s what.”
Chris Spector for Midwest Record

 
And from Folkworks:
“Exceptional musicianship…stunning, timeless ballads…like a clear mountain stream is the pure, clear voice of Susie Glaze…this is one gorgeous album – a ‘must discover.’”

 
Here’s some writing from our liner notes:
 

Stories of tragedy and transcendence ~ the overpowering confrontation with one's destiny ~ the sweet pathos in losing love and growing older ~ this is the human condition that gave rise to the urge to create folk songs from the earliest ages of human history...With the introduction of new evocative writing by our Rob Carlson, integrating historical elements along with new and deeper complexity in music, our sound has made a most interestingly subtle shift: we've cast a wider net to find a sound unlike anything we've done before. What is here is a true melting pot of influences that move us, from bluegrass to country to Celtic to Appalachia, and we've found our true home in this, our new, unique sound.

 
The innovation of this formerly-bluegrass band is taking them to a distinctly folk-driven American music that contains the sounds that came to America with the first immigrants:  Appalachia, old-English balladry, Irish barn-burner fiddle music (the outro of “White Swan” which was penned in the studio) and tender stories of family and legacy (“Harlan County Boys”).

 
Lead guitarist Rob Carlson's original songwriting is again a main focus of this album with four new songs, and some of the most sophisticated folk music on the scene today.  The eclectic range takes the listener from bluegrass (“Little Rabbit”) to pensive country (“Evangeline”) to Bossa Nova (“April Fools”) to Celtic-inspired torch song (“Dark Eileen”).  The album begins with a newly-interpreted “Mill Worker,” James Taylor’s classic, introduced by Mark Indictor’s beautiful fiddle on the traditional “Si Bheag, Si Mhor.”  Indictor’s fiddle is featured again on Carlson’s new take on the old “Polly Vonn” story, this time as the title track “White Swan.”  Jean Ritchie’s little-known but powerful “The Soldier” sends a message about the costs of war on the soul.

 
Also included is a recording originally appearing on Susie's "Singin' The Moon Up" Jean Ritchie tribute, the great "Lord Thomas and Fair Ellender (here as "Fair Ellender"), one of the most well-known of the original "Child Ballads" developed by Ritchie. Susie on the haunting lead vocal is joined by Ritchie sons Peter and Jon Pickow, and famed East coast fiddler, Kenny Kosek.

 
**************************************
 

The album is now out for pre-release review and will be posted for sale on line after the official release date, March 19th.  I’ll make sure to let you know when it’s out there!  Until then, if you’re in the area, please come out to a show and pick up a copy from us!  We’ve made commemorative posters of the album art which we’ll have signed and available for collecting also.  The album cover is getting a lot of nice attention ~ our graphic artist Anita Atencio again did a magical job on our package design.

We’ve got nice things going on during January and February, so please read below.  We hope to see you at a show and please stay tuned for more news of “White Swan.”

 
Susie and the Hilonesome Band
Steve Rankin, Mark Indictor, Rob Carlson and Fred Sanders 

 
**************************************

Friday, January 18, Camarillo Café Concert Series

Camarillo Community Center, 1605 East Burnley Street
Camarillo, CA  93010. 8:00 p.m. show.  $10.00
www.camarillocafe.com. Contact Phone:  805.907.8318
or email: WhatsHappening@CamarilloCafe.com

Saturday, January 26 NAMM show

12 noon show at the Shubb Capo booth
Anaheim Convention Center
http://www.namm.org/

Saturday, February 2, David Harvey Presents

At the Cahuenga General Store, 5510 Cahuenga Blvd, North Hollywood, CA  91601
Call for more info: 818-985-5916.  An intimate venue furnished as an early 1900's General Store with great homemade food (all ages welcome!). http://cahuengageneralstore.com.s121086.gridserver.com
Show at 7:30, $10 cover charge.  http://cityofangelsacoustic.weebly.com/  

Saturday, February 16, West Valley Music Center

With Ernest Troost.  24424 Vanowen Street, West Hills, CA 91307.  8:00 p.m. Call for info:  818.992.4142 and visit http://www.westvalleymusiccenter.com/acoustic-music-series.html

Sunday, February 24, KCSN

Live performance on Americana Matinee with Kat Griffin.  http://www.kcsn.org/programs/americana-matinee/

Sunday, March 3 “White Swan” CD Release Concert

McCabe’s Guitar Shop, 3101 Pico Blvd., Santa Monica, CA 90405.  7:00 p.m.  $15.00.  Call for information: (310) 828-4497.  Find more info at http://www.mccabes.com/ and order tickets on line at http://www.mccabes.com/condata.html.  Tickets can be purchased either at the store, through the online store or by phone with your credit card at (310) 828-4497.