Sunday, November 02, 2014


Hungrytown:
Traditions-based Folk Music November 7, 7:30 PM,
Main Room

Please join us for another Friends of the Library fundraising concert on Friday, November 7, 7:30 PM, with Vermont folk-based traditions duo  Hungrytown.  Tickets are available at Main Circulation Desk and at Brattleboro Tix,

$10, Friends of Library member; $15/non-member.

Hungrytown is the musical and married duo of Rebecca Hall and Ken Anderson.  They have released two highly acclaimed CDs,  Hungrytown (2008) and Any Forgotten Thing (2011), both of which continue to receive much airplay on folk and Americana stations worldwide.

Ken is an accomplished multi-instrumentalist as well as a talented producer and arranger.  He learned to play drums and keyboards as a child, and has since moved on to bass, guitar, mandolin, banjo and harmonica.  He also has a remarkable gift for musical harmony, and is responsible for Hungrytown's luxuriant vocal stylings.  Having produced all of their recorded works, his artistry has been singled out for praise:

 "Anderson has a knack for crafting rich arrangements that don't clutter things up," writes Casey Rea of Seven Days (VT) magazine.

When not touring with Rebecca, Ken is often hiding out in their home studio, Song Catcher Recording, working with other songwriters and instrumentalists.

 Rebecca and Ken tour full time; their adventures have taken them throughout the US, Canada, Europe and New Zealand.  Their songs have been performed by many other artists, including Nashville songwriting legend David Olney and bluegrass veterans the Virginia Ramblers.

Hungrytown's music has also appeared on several television shows, including the Independent Film Channel's hit series, Portlandia.Before Hungrytown, Rebecca made two well-received CDs under her own name (with help from Ken behind the scenes), Rebecca Hall Sings! (2000) and Sunday Afternoon (2002).  Rebecca learned to sing in church as a child, and had developed into a skilled interpreter of jazz and blues standards by the time she was in her 20s.  Her discovery of roots music coincided with the reissue of the Harry Smith Anthology of American Folk Music in 1997, and inspired her to write her own material.  She soon developed a reputation for crafting classic, instantly memorable songs, weaving modern themes into traditional song structures.

"Rebecca Hall is a true rarity: a new folk classicist." wrote Daniel Gewertz of the Boston Herald.