PUTNEY — Next Stage Arts Project and Twilight Music present mandolin duo Matt Flinner and Joe K. Walsh at Next Stage on Saturday, Nov., 15 at 7:30 pm. Known for their mastery of the mandolin and tasteful musicality, Matt and Joe are said to bring rich voices and diverse textures to the acoustic and bluegrass worlds.
Flinner, a Vermont-based multi-instrumentalist, has made a career out of playing acoustic music in new ways. Starting out as a banjo prodigy who was playing bluegrass festivals before he entered his teens, Flinner later took up the mandolin, won the National Banjo Contest at Winfield Kansas in 1990, and took the mandolin award there the following year. Since then, he has become recognized as one of the premiere mandolinists as well as one of the finest new acoustic/roots music composers today. He has toured and recorded with a variety of bluegrass, new acoustic, classical and jazz artists, including Tim O’Brien, Frank Vignola, Steve Martin, Darrell Scott, Leftover Salmon, Alison Brown, The Ying Quartet, Tony Trischka, Darol Anger, and the Nashville Chamber Orchestra. His two solo CDs on Compass Records “The View from Here” and “Latitude” are considered classics in the new acoustic/modern bluegrass style.
Portland, Maine-based musician Joe K. Walsh is best known for his collaborations and recordings with acoustic music luminaries including Darol Anger, Brittany Haas, Molly Tuttle, Sam Grisman, Danny Barnes, Scott Nygaard, Mike Marshall’s Ger Mandolin Ensemble, and pop-grass darlings Joy Kills Sorrow, a band he co-founded. He has performed at festivals, clubs, and theaters all over North America and Europe. After a number of award-winning years with bluegrass stars the Gibson Brothers, Walsh currently splits his time between the stylistically-omnivorous string band Mr Sun (featuring Darol Anger, Grant Gordy and Aidan O’Donnell), the Mike Block Trio, a duo with Matt Flinner, and a trio with Ella Jordan and Jed Wilson, moving between mandolin, mandola, octave mandolin, and mandocello. Walsh is an associate professor at the Berklee College of Music, and he teaches regularly at music camps and workshops across North America and Europe, and online through Peghead Nation.
As part of Next Stage’s 15th anniversary celebration, two of its founders, Eric Bass and Virginia Scholl, will be honored at this event.
Tickets are $22 Advance / $25 At the Door / $10 Livestream. Advance tickets are available at nextstagearts.org. Next Stage is located at 15 Kimball Hill.
Funded in part by the New England States Touring program of the New England Foundation for the Arts, made possible with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts and the six New England state arts agencies.
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