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Ketch Secor and Molly Tuttle @ The Floyd Country Store
December 5, 2019 : 7:30 pm - 9:30 pm
$28. – $32.Ketch Secor & Molly Tuttle Live
December 5 @ 7:30 pm | $28.00
Join us Thursday, December 5, 2019 at 7:30 pm for a live show with Ketch Secor & Molly Tuttle. Tickets are $28 advance, $32 day of show.
Molly Tuttle
A virtuosic, award-winning guitarist with a gift for insightful songwriting, Molly Tuttle evolves her signature sound with boundary-breaking songs on her compelling debut album, When You’re Ready.
Already crowned “Instrumentalist of the Year” at the 2018 Americana Music Awards on the strength of her EP, Tuttle has broken boundaries and garnered the respect of her peers, winning fans for her incredible flatpicking guitar technique and confessional songwriting. Graced with a clear, true voice and a keen melodic sense, the 26-year-old seems poised for a long and exciting career. When You’re Ready, produced by Ryan Hewitt (The Avett Brothers, The Lumineers) showcases her astonishing range and versatility and shows that she is more than simply an Americana artist.
Since moving to Nashville in 2015, the native Californian has been welcomed into folk music, bluegrass, Americana, and traditional country communities – even as When You’re Ready stretches the boundaries of those genres. Over the past year, Molly has continued to accumulate accolades, winning Folk Alliance International’s honor for Song of the Year for “You Didn’t Call My Name” and taking home her second trophy for the International Bluegrass Music Association’s Guitar Player of the Year (the first woman in the history of the IBMA to win that honor).
“I love so many types of music,” she says “and it’s exciting to be a part of and embraced by different musical worlds, but when I’m creating I don’t think about genres or how it will fit into any particular format – it’s just music.”
Ketch Secor
For the last twenty years, multi-instrumentalist Ketch Secor has been front man and fiddler for Old Crow Medicine Show. Described variously as alt-country, folk, and mountain music revivalists, Old Crow is an American roots string band with punk rock attitude and energy. Its earliest days stretch back to Ketch’s seventh grade year in Harrisonburg, Virginia, when he and friend Christopher “Critter” Fugua began playing music together – and its explosion onto the folk / Americana scene in the early 2000s led to a revival in banjo-driven old time music.
“All of American music comes from the same place. It’s just sort of where it ends up. And country music is one of the destinations. You have the banjo, which comes from Africa. And you have the fiddle, which comes from the British Isles and from Europe. And when they meet, they meet in the American South. And that’s the big bang.”
Born Jay Ketcham Miller Secor, Ketch attended New Hampshire’s prestigious Phillips Exeter Academy on scholarship. There, he learned to play banjo and fell in love with Bob Dylan. One of the Dylan songs Ketch discovered was a snippet entitled “Rock Me Mama,” an outtake from a 1973 Dylan recording session in Burbank, California. Homesick for Virginia, Ketch expanded upon the song, adding verses about long New England winters and hitchhiking south. That song, later co-copyrighted with Dylan, became “Wagon Wheel” – Old Crow’s signature song, released in 2004, and a No. 1 country hit for Darius Rucker in 2013.
After Phillips Exeter, Ketch attended Ithaca College where he immersed himself in the local old-time music scene, officially forming Old Crow with Fuqua and three others. In 1999, the band settled in a backwoods cabin near the college town of Boone, North Carolina. There, busking on a street corner, they were discovered by bluegrass-folk-country-blues legend Doc Watson, who invited them to participate in his annual MerleFest music festival. “That gig,” Ketch would later say, “changed our lives.” The group moved to Nashville and began recording with labels Nettwerk, ATO Records, and eventually Columbia Nashville.
Old Crow Medicine Show became members of the Grand Ole Opry on September 17, 2013. That same year, they received the Trailblazer Award from the Americana Music Association and, two years later, won the 2015 GRAMMY Award for Best Folk Album with their LP, Remedy. Known for his interest in Appalachian history and musicology, Ketch recently wrote a children’s book, Lorraine – his retelling of a Southern folktale, interwoven with the power of music.