By K.D. Norris
Call it what you will — Folk, Americana, blue grass or new grass — mandolin master Sam Bush has played ‘em all and played with ‘em all.
And Bush will bring his new band to Grand Rapids Oct. 6 as St. Cecilia Music Center kicks off its 2021-22 season of return-to-live performances by folk, jazz and chamber music artists.
Mandolin virtuoso Bush will usher in a new season of the Acoustic Café Folk Series, with the concert starting at 7:30 p.m., after a drought of live concerts with a live audience during a 19-month closure caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Tickets for Sam Bush are available at scmc-online.org or by calling 616-459-2224.
Sam Bush has released seven albums over the past two decades, but his fame is rightly grounded in his live performances with the “who’s who” of Americana and bluegrass. Punch Brothers, Steep Canyon Rangers, and Greensky Bluegrass are just a few present-day bluegrass vanguards among so many musicians he’s influenced.
In 2009, the Americana Music Association awarded him the Lifetime Achievement Award for Instrumentalist.
“With this band I have now, I am free to try anything,” Bush said in supplied material. “Looking back at the last 50 years of playing “new grass”, with the elements of jazz improvisation and rock-n-roll, jamming, playing with New Grass Revival, Leon, and Emmylou; it’s a culmination of all of that. … I can unapologetically stand onstage and feel I’m representing those songs well.”
St. Cecilia’s deep, impressive folk series lineup
After the Sam Bush concert Wednesday, Oct. 6, the St. Cecilia Muisc Center’s Acoustic Café Folk Series just does not stop through the fall, winter and into spring 2022.
This fall, Rodney Crowell is scheduled for Friday, Nov. 12; Leo Kottke on Friday, Nov. 19; the Milk Carton Kids on Thursday, Dec. 2; and Watkins Family Hour on Thursday, Dec. 16.
“During this coming season we will be featuring most of the artists who were scheduled to appear last season and had to be sidelined due to COVID-19,” Cathy Holbrook, St. Cecilia executive and artistic director, said in supplied material. “These great artists are looking forward to getting back out on tour to perform in front of live audiences and to bring music back to concert stages in the U.S. and worldwide. … (And) we so missed seeing our loyal supporters and music lovers in person.”
Things really get cookin’ in the Acoustic Café in 2022 as well, starting with local fave May Erlewine on Thursday, Feb. 17 — if you didn’t catch Erlewine’s late 2019 socially/politically charged release “Second Sight”, which was unjustly lost in the shuffle of the pandemic, you missed one of the best local releases in years.
Following Erlewine, Shawn Colvin will make a much-delayed return on Thursday, May 12; followed by the incomparable Judy Collins on Wednesday, May 18.
Special note: as of this day/time, SCMC will require proof of fully vaccinated status, or a negative COVID test taken within 48 hours, to attend a concert at the SCMC venue. Attendees need to bring photo ID and proof of vaccination, or a negative test, the night of a concert.
Also, given the current pandemic status, SCMC also “highly recommends” that all attendees wear a mask while in the building.
“We will continue to monitor the COVID environment and may change policies at any time if necessary,” according to a SCMC statement. “Please note that individual artists may issue mandated mask requirements and we will honor their request.”
All ticket holders will be notified if mandatory mask requirements are in effect for a particular show by an artist. If you a have tickets to an upcoming performance and are unwilling or unable to abide by this policy, please contact the SCMC box office for a refund at kelly@scmc-online.org a minimum of 48 hours prior to the concert date.
For complete information on all shows at St. Cecilia, visit SCMC-online.org.