Scarlet Locomotive & Wild Rabbit
When
Occurs on
Friday April 10 2015
Approximate running time: 2 hours
Venue
Event Notes
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McIntyre Hall Presents
Scarlet Locomotive & Wild Rabbit
on Friday, April 10 at 7:30pm
Tickets: General Admission FREE
Enjoy a night of music with local favorites the Scarlet Locomotive and Wuild Rabbit(Formerly known as Br’er Rabbit). The concert is free, but
tickets are required.
The Scarlet Locomotive runs out of Bellingham, Washington to parts unknown. The band is powered by fiddle, acoustic guitar, mandolin, and the shared vocals of Arielle Luckmann and Ted O’Connell. Call it Americana or Story Music, this duo thrives on songwriting. Both Arielle and Ted pick with The Prozac Mountain Boys.
Though all four members of Wild Rabbit (formerly known as Br’er Rabbit) grew up running around wooded areas of the same small town in the farthest Northwest corner of Washington state, brothers Zach and Nathan didn’t meet Miranda, the third founding member, until they had all ended up in New York City. This kind of backyard folk seasoned by the edge, polish, and fervor of big-city inclinations is at the root of the style they call folk-stomp Americana. The group revamps classic string band instrumentation with homespun percussion and the unique integration of six-string ukulele and cello.
The Scarlet Locomotive runs out of Bellingham, Washington to parts unknown. The band is powered by fiddle, acoustic guitar, mandolin, and the shared vocals of Arielle Luckmann and Ted O’Connell. Call it Americana or Story Music, this duo thrives on songwriting. Both Arielle and Ted pick with The Prozac Mountain Boys.
Though all four members of Wild Rabbit (formerly known as Br’er Rabbit) grew up running around wooded areas of the same small town in the farthest Northwest corner of Washington state, brothers Zach and Nathan didn’t meet Miranda, the third founding member, until they had all ended up in New York City. This kind of backyard folk seasoned by the edge, polish, and fervor of big-city inclinations is at the root of the style they call folk-stomp Americana. The group revamps classic string band instrumentation with homespun percussion and the unique integration of six-string ukulele and cello.