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Joel Mabus – CD Release

DATE
Friday, October 25, 2024
TIME
7:30 pm - 10:00 pm
VENUE
University Lutheran Church (ULC)
1020 S Harrison Rd, East Lansing
COST
$25 Public; $20 Fiddle Members; $5 Students. Available online or at the box office at 6:30 PM
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"It's hard to imagine another artist on the folk scene who combines the same concise, deceptively understated, lyrical insight and sometimes devastating wit with such world-class instrumental prowess." -MUSICHOUND FOLK

Celebrating the release of:

Lonesome Road: Suite for solo guitar & voice
Songs of The Lost Generation: 1924-1928

This collection is a re-thinking and revival of the rich popular music of a century ago — the music of the Lost Generation in the late 1920’s. Not a brash “roaring 20s” razzmatazz, but rather a suite of fluid guitar music with a deep, honest voice in an intimate space, with some surprisingly provocative lyrics. The songs take you from Broadway to Texas dance halls to Argentina to Mississippi. Both high-brow and lowbrow. All on a carpet-ride of fingerstyle acoustic guitar. Recorded without dubbing or synthetic processing, it is an up-close & intimate session with a mature artist and his music. One voice and one guitar in conversation.

Click here to listen on Youtube Music or preview below on Spotify:

More about Joel: 

“The dean of singer-songwriters” – Rich Warren, host of Chicago’s Midnight Special on WFMT-FM

“Joel Mabus is the Joe DiMaggio of the folk music world – a virtuoso who can make the toughest plays appear effortless.” -Ron Olesko of WFDU-FM  (Fordham University, New York)

Joel Mabus is a longtime fixture in the American folk music scene. He’s a songwriter with roots deep in tradition, and a risk-taking multi-instrumentalist with a well-travelled voice. He’s toured the major folk clubs and festivals all over North America but is firmly centered in the Midwest.
Joel was born in 1953 to a family of old-time country music performers, who had worked in the 1930’s in a traveling “Hillbilly” troupe for Chicago’s radio station WLS, the home of the famed “National Barn Dance” radio show. His father was a champion fiddler, his mom a singer and banjo & accordion player. Widowed when Joel was 2 years old, Ruby Lee Mabus raised her three kids in a small Southern Illinois town on meagre survivor-benefit checks from Gerald’s social security, plus income from accordion lessons and other odd jobs.

Joel started playing melodies on the family mandolin at age 9 and played bluegrass and sang harmonies with his older brother at home; he learned his gospel by singing in a store-front Pentecostal church. Guitar, banjo & fiddle were soon in Joel’s mix. There was no money from home for college, but he earned a National Merit Scholarship, and attended Michigan State University. Studying cultural anthropology and English Lit by day, he made his spending money at night as a folk & blues performer in local bars.
Making Michigan his home after college, Mabus traveled the folk & bluegrass circuit, playing festivals and small concert venues. Beginning his recording career in 1978, Joel has since traveled all over America (and parts of Texas, he adds) performing at the fabled folk clubs and festivals of the day.

He has played on stage with many of his music heroes: Tom Paxton, Doc Watson, Peggy Seeger, Jethro Burns, Sonny Terry, Odetta, Buffy Saint Marie and many more. He has worked alongside many of his friends & songwriter fellows: Greg Brown, John Gorka, Claudia Schmidt, Si Kahn, Christine Lavin, Sally Rogers, Jack Hardy, Susan Werner…and the list goes on.

Joel has 27 solo albums to his credit (some featuring songwriting, others focusing on traditional guitar or banjo, and some very eclectic), along with studio work as side musician. His latest album is Time & Truth in 2019.

Where is he from? Smalltown Illinois & Mississippi River: 105 miles southeast of Mark Twain, 190 miles northwest of Bill Monroe, 110 miles southwest of Burl Ives and just over the river and up the hill from Scott Joplin. That’s where Joel Mabus is from. He lives in Kalamazoo, Michigan now.

http://www.joelmabus.com/

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