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Ryan Shupe and his band prove
rubber can stick
to your ears like glue |
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PRESS RELEASE
Tuesday,
January 5, 2010
Contact:
Chip Herter
chip@swallowhillmusic.org
303.765.2488 |
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DENVER — Ryan Shupe dubbed his group of extraordinary musicians the
RubberBand to describe their ability to stretch out musically in all
directions. This high-energy quintet from Salt Lake City will take over the
stage at Swallow Hill on Friday, January 29 at 8 p.m.
Ryan Shupe and the RubberBand have built a
reputation for wowing audiences as they ping their music back and forth with
joyful spontaneity; creating a concert experience that stays with you long after
the show has ended, proving that "Rubber" can indeed stick to you like glue.
Intentionally avoiding the "over-produced"
tendencies of today's music, Ryan Shupe and the RubberBand have built an organic
approach to performing that has earned them quite a following throughout the
West and around the country. "It’s a musician’s music," says Shupe, "but it’s
also for people who want a good tune...If you're a musician you like it, because
it has complex arrangements and things that are different than what's out there…
[We're] doing a rock country hybrid with banjo and fiddle. But you're still
getting the songs that you’d like to hear played on the radio."
The group has already produced one Top 15 Country single with their track "Dream
Big" and is currently working on a new album.
New folk/bluegrass/country music quartet, Finders & Youngberg, will open
the show.
About Swallow Hill Music Association:
Helping people make and enjoy music since 1979, Swallow Hill Music Association
celebrates its 30th anniversary in 2009 as one of the largest nonprofit
institutions of its kind in the United States as a source for folk, roots and
acoustic music. In 2008, Swallow Hill Music served more than 80,000 people
through their concert, school and outreach programming. 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, 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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