![]() ![]() Samples are on We Banjo 3's own YouTube channel here's their 'Soldier's joy'. The two groups are acknowledged masters of what is becoming known as 'Celtgrass', a fusion of Irish traditional styles with American tunes and ensemble work. The tour begins on Wednesday 17 May with a show in Whelan's, 25 Wexford St., Dublin 2, together with special guests JigJam from Tullamore, who have also been touring in the US. Now a quartet and looking more like a bluegrass band than ever, We Banjo 3 are back from touring the USA and preparing for a tour in Ireland in the second half of May. Corkįor further information, interview, session or guest list requests, contact Geraint and Deb Jones, G Promo PR. 26th: Levis Corner House, Ballydehob, Co. 25th: Tarred and Feathered Folk Session, Grange Woodbine Club, Raheny Rd, Donaghmede, Dublin 5įri. 22nd May: Mick Murphy’s Bar, Ballymore Eustace, Co. The schedule shows tours in Britain before and after these three dates in Ireland: A three-song audio sampler can be heard on SoundCloud. The album was recorded in Monroe County, Indiana, not all that far from the location of the Annual Bill Monroe Bean Blossom Bluegrass Music Festival. ![]() He will be accompanied on the tour by his sons and collaborators Jackson Grimm (guitars, banjo, octave mandolin, vocals) and Connor Grimm (bass), and his wife, Jan Lucas (harmonica, vocals). The present tour is linked to his latest album, A stranger in this time (Cavalier Recordings CR 255619). ![]() Last October he released the single ‘Woody’s landlord’, commemorating Woody Guthrie's period as a tenant of Donald Trump's father, and this became the #1 US Folk Radio folk radio song of 2016. Grimm, who has been labelled 'the poet laureate of the rural Midwest', is a longtime friend of the legendary Ramblin' Jack Elliott, whom he celebrated in ‘King of the folksingers’, the #1 song on US folk radio in 2014. Geraint and Deb Jones of G Promo PR announce another non-bluegrass touring artist: singer/ songwriter and actor Tim Grimm has been described by the UK online magazine FolkWords asĪmericana to the roots, sometimes there’s a bluesy feel, sometimes folk takes over, and then there’s that rocky edge – definitions don’t fit here, just recognition that you’re listening to music from the heart.
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