When:January 22, 2023
Time:7:00 pm - 9:30 pm
Where:eTOWN HALL / 1535 Spruce Street, Boulder, CO 80302
Cost:$38.50GA + taxes & fees
Doors:18:00:00
Show:19:00:00
Buy TicketsJoin Nick and Helen back at eTown Hall for a live taping with the Secret Sisters and Jake Blount!
Doors @ 6 pm ~ Show @ 7 pm
All ages welcome
No refunds or exchanges
The Secret Sisters
As we age, we face obstacles that are beyond our control. Some forces are internal:
insecurity, anxiety, fear. Some are external: the loss of loved ones, an unjust system
and the fragility of time. Yet the mark of maturity is how you respond when you realize you’re not in control. Where do you find your resilience?
This album is a reflection of us coming to terms with how to find our power in the face of an unfair world. These songs lead listeners past “where happy man searches, to a place only mad women know.” We question our purpose, our relationships, and our faith. Trading the fears of our youth for the dread that rages within us as mature women.
With Saturn Returns, our hope is that women can feel less alone in their journey
through the modern world. We need each other more than we ever have; the less
competition and the more inclusiveness and understanding, the better. We are southern women in the 21st century, convicted by our beliefs.
A powerfully gifted musician and a scholar of Black American music, Jake Blount speaks ardently about the African roots of the banjo and the subtle, yet profound ways African Americans have shaped and defined the amorphous categories of roots music and Americana. His 2020 album Spider Tales (named one of the year’s best albums by NPR and The New Yorker, earned a perfect 5-star review from The Guardian) highlighted the Black and Indigenous histories of popular American folk tunes, as well as revived songs unjustly forgotten in the whitewashing of the canon. Jake Blount’s new album, The New Faith, is a towering achievement of dystopian Afrofuturism and his first album for Smithsonian Folkways (coming September 23, 2022). The New Faith is spiritual music, filled with hope for salvation and righteous anger in equal measure. The album manifests our worst fears on the shores of an island in Maine, where Blount enacts an imagined religious ceremony performed by Black refugees after the collapse of global civilization due to catastrophic climate change. Jake Blount’s music is rooted in care and confrontation. On stage, each song he and his band play is chosen for a reason - because it highlights important elements about the stories we tell ourselves of our shared history and our endlessly complicated present moment. The more we learn about where we’ve been, the better equipped we are to face the future.