Voted Westword
Best of Denver
2008!

Folk icon and trailblazer
Rosalie Sorrels comes to
Swallow Hill to release a CD in honor of Utah Phillips

PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Contact: Rodolfo Betancourt
rudy@swallowhillmusic.org
Laura McGaughey
laura@swallowhillmusic.org
303.765.2488

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DENVER, COLO. (11/11/08) --  Folklorist and storyteller Rosalie Sorrels returns to Swallow Hill on Friday, December 12 with a new CD that features songs by the late great Utah Phillips.

One critic described Rosalie Sorrels' singing voice as one of the most wonderful voices in American music, an instrument as mellow and finely aged as an antique viola. Gamble Rodgers referred to her as the hillbilly Edith Piaf. Born in Idaho nearly 70 years ago, she began her career as a folklorist in the 1950s and has an encyclopedic knowledge of the folk idiom, ranging from the English ballads to Mormon songs to the work of contemporary songwriters—not just the songs but also the tradition from which they are derived. Her songs and stories serve to create and preserve the oral tradition.

A trailblazer, Sorrels left her husband in the 1960s to hit the road as a musician. Her homes in Boise and Salt Lake City became stopping points for many pivotal figures in music as well as the Beat Generation. In recognition of her role as a creator of and collaborator in the American culture of the second half of the twentieth century, the University of California at Santa Cruz has set up a Rosalie Sorrels Archive as part of its Beat Generation Archives. The University of Idaho awarded her an honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts degree in 2000. An advocate of peace, she was presented with a peace quilt in 2001 by the Boise Peace Quilt Project, her name alongside other peace and justice workers.

Through her career, she has recorded more than 20 albums and written three books, including Way Out in Idaho, published in honor of the Idaho centenary—a monumental collection of songs, stories, pictures, and recipes gathered in the course of three years spent traveling around her home state and listening to its people. The Chicago Reader says, "Sorrels has decried the music industry's attempt to homogenize women and ethnicity into something blander. She's living proof that there are some things the biz just can't whitewash."

For tickets visit www.swallowhillmusic.org or call (303) 777-1003 x2. Discounts are available for Swallow Hill members. Buy in advance and save! This press release is also available online at http://www.swallowhillmusic.org/newsroom/newsmain.htm and also as a RSS Feed at http://www.swallowhillmusic.org/xml/newsroom/rss/SwallowHillNews.xml.

About Swallow Hill Music Association:
Helping people make and enjoy music since 1979, Swallow Hill Music Association is one of the largest nonprofit institutions of its kind in the United States as a source for folk, roots and acoustic music. With more than 2,300 members, Swallow Hill provides a place to celebrate music that is rarely heard elsewhere in the Rocky Mountain Region. Three concert venues house more than 200 performances a year, featuring some of the world's great artists as well as up-and-coming new talent.
Swallow Hill’s Julie Davis School of Music offers classes for every interest, skill level and member of the family. Each year, a faculty of 60 instructors provides training to more than 4,000 students. A Tier II member of the Scientific and Cultural Facilities District (SCFD), Swallow Hill has been named one of the Top 25 Movers & Shakers in Arts & Culture by the Rocky Mountain News, has won both the Mayor's and Governor's Awards for Excellence in the Arts and countless "Best of Denver" awards, has been recognized by the North American Folk Alliance, and is one of the most sought-after venues by folk and roots performers in the country.

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