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Strangefolk

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Strangefolk

Strangefolk

Latest setlist, strangefolk on january 20, 2018.

Paradise Rock Club, Boston, Massachusetts

strangefolk tour

“Stout Hearted”: Reid Genauer’s Return to Strangefolk

strangefolk tour

After 11 ½ years, tonight is finally the night. The original Strangefolk quartet will take the stage once again, as the group opens a four show tour at Brooklyn Bowl. The group began in 1991 at the University of Vermont where fellow students Reid Genauer and Jon Trafton first performed together on a patch of grass outside their dorms. A bit later they enlisted Luke Smith on drums and Erik Glockler on bass to form a band that blended songwriting chops with an improvisational spirit. Over the course of the ensuing decade, Strangefolk built a fervid fanbase, created the vibrant Garden of Eden festival and signed a record deal with Mammoth. Then, during the summer of 2000, Genauer announced he would be leaving the band to pursue a graduate degree at Cornell University. Some feelings were hurt and frustration ensued.

Trafton, Glockler and Smith soon recruited a new Strangefolk lineup (Smith would depart in late 2003), while Genauer eventually resurfaced after graduation with a new group he dubbed Assembly of Dust. Trafton and Genauer then embarked on parallel journeys even as many of their fans held out hope that their paths might intersect once again. Such faith was rewarded this past January when the reunion gigs were announced, facilitated by the earnest entreaty of a longtime band booster, club owner Peter Shapiro (Brooklyn Bowl, Capitol Theatre, Wetlands Preserve).

In the following conversation Genauer looks back on Strangefolk’s history, shares what the reunion means to him and discusses some classic songs that appear on the group’s new archival release, Live at The Capitol Theatre, 12/27/98 .

For another perspective on these events, check out the interview with Jon Trafton on Jambands.com .

So this all was put in motion through an invitation from Peter Shapiro for the original Strangefolk to appear at the Capitol Theatre when he re-opens the club later this year. Can you talk a bit about that conversation?

Well from Pete’s perspective, I’d imagine he was thinking, “Hey, I’m going to reopen the Capitol and it wouldn’t it be great to see my old friends on stage together? Wouldn’t the combination of these things be fun?” Pete’s got a lot of emotional equity in Strangefolk. We played Wetlands many, many times and we spent a lot of time just getting to know each other. It’s a great thing when the people you work with have emotional connections, so he is definitely emotionally invested in seeing this happen. And in the absence of anybody else taking the helm, he got everybody on the phone and said, “Pick up your toys and let’s play.” (laughs)

There were a couple conversations but the one that inked the deal, so to speak, was when he more or less gave us a rock and roll sermon that lasted all of 35 seconds, concluded that he was right and then hung up on all of us (laughs). We were left on the phone trying to figure out what was agreed upon. It was comedic.

What people might not realize is that Peter made the trek from NYC up to Vermont to see Strangefolk a number of times, including some Eden appearances. He just really enjoyed his Strangefolk.

He did. He was a big part of it. He was our Bill Graham or our Ken Kesey or some odd combination of both.

In his honor, you’ve released a live show that the four of you performed at the Cap on December 27, 1998. What are your memories of that night?

I remember being exceptionally proud to be playing that show because I saw a couple shows there as a kid and I knew the history of the room. It was a marker of legitimacy.

Also, my parents were there. I remember my dad watching the crowd “undulating,” as he called it. I also remember him shaking my shoulders and saying “This is a phenomenon!” (laughs). I don’t think he’d seen it at that scale.

It has certainly surprised me and touched me to know that the band holds a place in people’s hearts and minds all these years later. At the risk of sounding self-deprecating, the part that has always dumbfounded me is I’m not sure I know why. (laughs) But I suppose it doesn’t matter.

At the time did you get it?

No. I’ve always been proud of the music we’ve made and I’ve made since. It works for me, it speaks to my aesthetic. I think part of it is looking at pictures of yourself and you’re always more granular in your self-assessment,. You see the zit on your nose and you realize that your shirt doesn’t fit but somebody else looks at you as a whole and sees something else. So I guess I spent a lot of time staring at the zits.

How does your catalog of music from that era strike you as you revisit it a decade later?

A mixture of emotions. Mainly I’ve seen it with fewer of those blemishes that I was describing. Just because of the time and distance I feel like I’m able to look at it in a more holistic and neutral way. So largely I see the value in it and the artistry in it and the aesthetic that I like. There are a couple little segments or nuggets that make me cringe because they sound a little bit like they were written in a dorm room…which they were (laughs). A couple lyrics, a couple ways that lyrics were sung but by and large I feel more connected than I think I did at the time.

You worked up 60 songs at rehearsal which is impressive and clearly there’s going to be a lot of variety from night to night. However, Strangefolk certainly has its more popular songs and someone who only attends one of the performances likely hopes to see a few of those tunes. Have you thought about how you’re going to address that issue if at all?

I think we’re going to approach it like we did when we were doing this full time, which is I always looked at it as there are classes of songs. The biggest filter is quote,unquote hit or not. Then there’s who’s singing it, what key is it in, the tempo, what other song does it feel like in our repertoire. We’ll build our sets to optimize against all those variables and try to make those sets balanced over the course of several nights. And there are going to be people who miss their favorite but…hopefully it will be that “hurts so good” kind of thing.

I thought you were going to say “but…they’ll get another chance to see us.” To that end what are your thoughts about continuing this beyond these four shows. At the very least you need to put in an encore performance at the Cap…

Absolutely. (Laughs)

I think for all of us it’s been a really fun process to come back together personally and to revisit material and to collectively anticipate the gigs. So I guess where I am in the storyline, is it’s hard for me to say “Yes” with 100% certainty but I think it’s something we’re definitely considering. I think it will partly depend on how it feels for everybody.

In terms of the audience reaction, I’d imagine it’s going to feel quite good. These will be fun, festive nights and I’m confident you’re going to deliver good times and fine music. Not to put any pressure on you…

Believe me, there’s no possibility of you adding any more pressure. It’s fully communicated. (Laughs)

Well beyond how it will feel for the audience what do you hope to get out of all this? What propels you to relearn all those songs and deal with those fan expectations?

Gosh, that’s a deep question…

I think one high level answer is when I look at my life, Strangefolk is one of the top three or four things I’ve ever done and that includes having children. So the notion of revisiting it is profoundly personal and is really revisiting a quarter of my life. I almost feel glossy-eyed just saying that. It’s one of the most meaningful things I’ve ever done. So okay, check that box.

Two: I remember Sam Ankerson who was our publicist and ran merchandising and a friend and roommate, he asked me one day, “Do you want to be a rock star or do you want to be a musician?” I forget the context of the conversation and I can’t remember my answer, I just remember the question. Again, I don’t know what I answered then but I know that I can answer with certainty now that the drive for me is to be a musician. In fact, I think a lot of the stuff that comes along with rock stardom is the bullshit. So here’s a chance to revisit my musical origins and from a creative point of view that’s really enticing.

On a personal level, I basically lived with Jon, Erik and Luke for ten years. I can’t tell you how hard we laughed at these rehearsals just retelling these stories, from getting lost in Georgetown to bathroom malfunctions…

The last thing I think is that to your point, there is a group of people who feel very connected to the music and it feels really good to reconnect with those folks. It’s weird because I can imagine somebody who doesn’t know Strangefolk reading this interview and thinking “This guy’s kind of in his own head.” And the truth is that for the bulk of the world the stuff that we’re talking about is not relevant but for those in the know…

strangefolk tour

Strangefolk began with yourself and Jon coming together while you were still in college. Can you talk about musical and interpersonal relationship as it’s evolved over the years?

Jon and I met at orientation at UVM . In those first few days everybody is in sort of a frenzy to express who they are and figure out how they’re going to fit into this new cauldron of personalities. Somehow we put out markers that said, “There is some point of commonality.” For me I felt some connection with him personally and very shortly after that musically and I can’t exactly say what it was. It was just a chemistry and that chemistry has persisted for all these years. It’s gone sideways on occasions and it’s had some dips but I think if you were to dissect the chemistry, there’s an intensity there. And that intensity shines through for better or worse (laughs). Mostly for better. I’m not trying to describe Keith Richards and Mick Jagger, although there are elements of the way their relationship is portrayed that might apply. I just think we complemented each other well musically and we understood each other well as people.

How would you describe your collaborative songwriting process from those days?

I’m not sure what the word would be but I’ve always been a good coagulant, if you will. What a lot of musicians struggle with are tons of ideas and then the inability for one reason or another to string those ideas into a coherent package. I hear it time and time again and I see it where guys who are 10 times the musicians that I am can’t get out of their own way to finish a song. Now Jon is a fantastic songwriter in his own right, so I’m not saying he necessarily is a victim of that ailment but the way that we worked best together was that he shared an idea with me. They came in different chunks, sometimes it would be a fully fleshed out bed of a song that needed lyrics and other times it was a cool groove that needed a bridge and a chords and lyrics. So it was a lot of batting back and forth and more times than not it started with Jon saying, “Here’s a musical idea.” I would spend some time with it and layer in my contribution which at the very least was lyrics and melody and then go back to him and the group for the detailing. That’s how it always worked.

*I’d be interested to hear your thoughts on a few of those early songs that appear on the Capitol Theatre release. Let’s start with “Valhalla.” *

We spent so much time on the road that a lot of the song titles wound up being little snippets of road signs (laughs). I grew up close to Valhalla, New York. Actually that one I think I heard on the train riding in to Manhattan where the guy would be calling out “Val-Halla!” I don’t think I’ve ever been there but the name of the town struck me. And “Cabin John” is the same, “Mud Spring Draw,” “Poland…” So I constructed stories around these eccentric names for towns.

On “Valhalla” I’d also have to credit moe.’s “Rebubula” which has a long descending line and if you listen to the intro to “Valhalla” it is this long descending line. So that was just following a musical idea.

And lyrically, my family used to get together with another family annually in Vermont, which is really where I discovered my love for Vermont. They had three kids, we had two and as we got older, boyfriends and girlfriends came, cousins came, the neighbors came and it would just be this house exploding with biology and personality. And that’s really what that song tried to capture, this overcrowded house of good times.

Since you mentioned “Cabin John,” which is also on the release, how about that one?

I think “Cabin John” is down around DC and it just struck me as a weird name for a town. That is a song where Jon came and he had the chorus fully written. So he had the groove and the musical piece and the “when it rains” refrain and that’s what he gave me. Then I built a song around that name and that refrain.

*Last one: “Stout Hearted.” *

That one Jon gave me the groove for the verse and I had read the phase “he was a stout hearted man” in a book or somewhere and it just struck me as a good name. I would take notes on language and I still do it to this day. A lot of times I’ll put a little star next to something and write “Title,” referencing for myself that this would be a good title for an album, a song or a band.

There is one autobiographical element in there. When I went to college I think my parents were a little worried about me going off the rails. I’d never owned a car and my dad dangled the notion that he’d get me a car my sophomore year if I made a certain grade point average. Well I did, which I think surprised him. So I came home from school and said, “You offered to get me a car if I made these grades,” and I don’t think he remembered. So he looked at me and said, “Well, I lied.” (laughs) You can imagine what ensued after that. And in the wake after that debate he agreed to give me the family roadster, which was a big Oldsmobile with maroon pleather suits. It was not what I had in mind. I had imagined something more consistent with my image and where I lived in Burlington. But ultimately that’s what I got stuck with and for a lot of years I drove that thing around with a ski rack on it and snow tires for four seasons and I caught a lot of heat for it. So the lyrics go, “Stout hearted man, what can I do for you? I heard you wanna buy a car, You’re sick of that old canoe.” I was referring to the Cadillac-like, canoe-like ride that I was driving around. (Laughs)

I’ll leave you with one last thing. You were talking about the emotional quality that is attached to Strangefolk. I don’t fully understand it but I respect it and it’s so valuable to me. What drew me to ever want to be a musician is to feel that way about music. So I don’t really have words to express or metrics to evaluate that in the course of one’s life but it’s enough to make me choke…

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Strangefolk

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Thursday at 5:15 PM on the Main Stage

Strangefolk has continued to be a VibeTribe fan favorite over the last 20 years.

Originally formed at the University of Vermont as an acoustic duo “Strange Folk” in 1991 with Trafton and other founding member Reid Genauer, Strangefolk (now one word) added bass and drums within a year and took to playing the bars in and around the vibrant musical community of Burlington, Vermont. After only a couple years of developing their signature sound in and around the Vermont music scene, the band began touring the club and college circuit around the Northeast, quickly gaining momentum and popularity with each tour. Regional tours paved the way for national tours, with the band logging over 100 shows per year. In 1998, Strangefolk signed with Mammoth Records, only to have the record deal collapse when Disney purchased Mammoth in 1999. “A Great Long While”, which was to be the band’s major-label debut and was produced by Nile Rodgers, was released independently in 2000.

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January 25, 2015

strangefolk tour

strangefolk tour

Strangefolk Tickets

Strangefolk concert tickets.

Get the full alternative rock experience when you secure your Strangefolk tickets today with TicketSmarter. Alternative music or sometimes referred to as alt-rock or simply alternative emerged from the independent music underground in the 1970s and became very popular in the 1980s. Alternative music is in reference to the genre distinction from commercial rock music. In 1988, Billboard introduced alternative music into their charts. Early versions can be found dating back to the 1960s with the Velvet Underground.

Alternative music has helped define new styles of music including indie rock, grunge and noise pop. The music tends to vary from the mainstream as it relates to social context and its sound. The breakthrough of Nirvana in the 1990s brought alternative rock to the mainstream in music. Throughout history, alternative rock has been defined by its rejection of the commercialism of pop culture. However, ironically alt-rock has become so popular, that concert ticket sales have exploded and in many cases surpassed many pop-rock artists. Grab Strangefolk tickets now so you can experience alternative music live and in person.

Strangefolk Ticket Prices

You’ll find that Strangefolk concert tickets vary in price from market to market. Tickets for smaller venues that sell out fast are typically more expensive due to simple supply and demand. While larger venues tend to have more availability, so ticket prices are usually a little lower. Alternative Festival tickets tend to be pricier but you have an opportunity to see Strangefolk along with artists such as Pearl Jam , Green Day and the Foo Fighters .

How much are Strangefolk tickets?

Generally speaking, Strangefolk ticket prices cost more than $50 for most live performances. Tickets to see Strangefolk play at music festivals like Lollapalooza can cost more than $100 for a standard general admission ticket. Premium seating at venues like the United Center can cost more than $275 a seat, while standard tickets for seats in the upper levels of the arena can cost less than $75 a ticket.

Strangefolk concert ticket prices can range up to several hundred dollars per ticket depending on the venue and seat location. Floor seats and VIP are usually the most expensive depending on availability. And of course, the least expensive seats will be farthest from the stage.

Strangefolk Tour Dates & Concert Schedule

Catch Strangefolk on the road possibly at festivals such as  South by Southwest (SXSW) in Austin, Texas, Desert Daze Festival at Moreno Beach, CA or at Pickathon Music Festival in Happy Valley. Pitchfork Music Festival in Chicago brings together some of the biggest names in indie and alternative music. Check out the event schedule above to see when Strangefolk tour dates are coming to an arena or stadium near you. 

Right now, there aren't any shows left on the Strangefolk 2024 concert schedule. 

When do Strangefolk tickets go on sale?

Onsale dates for Strangefolk tickets vary depending on the city or region. You can stay up to date by viewing the event schedule above. There’s no need for a presale code. Typically, tickets go on sale 6-9 months in advance.

Strangefolk Seating Chart

Use the interactive seat map above to select the best seats for you and your group. The filtering option allows you to narrow your search by price and location. So whether you’re looking for VIP seats at Pitchfork Music Festival or lawn seats at AFROPUNK FEST, we have the best selection available. Pitchfork has a capacity of 19,000 while Afropunk Fest has around 70,000 attendees. If you are attending SXSW, expect attendance to be around 417,000 concertgoers. Grab Strangefolk tour tickets now to attend Levitate Festival along with 30,000 other fans so make sure you secure your spot today.

Safe and Secure Strangefolk Ticket Purchasing

Your safety is of the utmost importance to us. We use the industry’s highest standards to ensure a secure purchase with every Strangefolk concert ticket sold on our site and our customer service team is available to assist with any question or concern you may have regarding your purchase.

100% Strangefolk Ticket Guarantee

All TicketSmarter alternative rock concert tickets are 100% guaranteed. Verified customers rate TicketSmarter 4.6/5.0 stars, so you can order with confidence knowing that we stand behind you throughout your Strangefolk ticket buying experience.

Songs from the Strangefolk Tour Setlist

Strangefolk's setlist while performing in Boston , MA at “Paradise Rock Club” included the following songs:

  • Stout-Hearted Man
  • They Love Each Other
  • Rather Go Fishin'
  • Conspire to Smile
  • Burned Down
  • Chasing Away
  • Poohbear's Mistress
  • Shift My Step

Source: Setlist.fm

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  • April 9, 2012

Strangefolk: A Great Long While In The Making

  • By Pete Mason
  • One Comment

Knowing that Strangefolk was reuniting for four nights of shows to celebrate their 20th anniversary as a band, I eagerly made plans to attend the entire run of shows. This was the band that I was introduced to in 1996 alongside great friends at Syracuse University and listened to nearly as much as any other band in the past 16 years. Their music has always brought an errant smile to my face, as much now as back when I saw the original quartet of guitarists Jon Trafton and Reid Genauer, bassist Erik Glockler and drummer Luke Smith at Hungry Charlie’s in Syracuse, as well as throughout upstate New York. They were the band that introduced me and many others to the broad genre of jambands, as well the nascent concept of live music. The music was fun, happy, had high danceability and I found it fun to have my hair bounce up and down as I bobbed and weaved doing the funky chicken from side to side. Strangefolk is and will always be my first jam band love.

strangefolk tour

[Photo Courtesy of Jon Trafton]

Erik Glockler : Last week was great for me in many ways. It was truly awesome to see so many people I hadn’t seen for so long. Many relationships were formed along the way and it was nice to revisit, if only for a short time. I’m always amazed at how strong the community vibe is. I forget that many people all know each other from the past.

But this love was not requited; I loved them, then in 2000 Reid left. I still loved them yet I moved to Florida, well out of their Northeast home base. I came back and they were gone, with Luke having left and a hiatus in effect due to Jon’s cancer diagnosis. I was left with my tapes, discs and the Live Music Archive , I reluctantly dealt with it. In 2007 I caught them at moe.down 8 and although it wasn’t the same four on stage (they had grown to five with Don Scott on keys, plus Luke Patchen Montgomery on guitar and Russ Lawton replacing Luke Smith on drums), the music was the same and I danced throughout the empty pit in the early afternoon sun as though I was back in college.

In 2008 I started making the annual trek out to Boston for the two shows each March and attended with my friend Matt, who had seen them as much as I had during our time in Syracuse and post-college back at home in New England. The annual pair of shows was a shift in step, blending together the old and new perfectly and reigniting my love for this band that started it all. While shows were few in number and spread out over the year, they were that much sweeter and enjoyable. Fewer tour dates continued to make the heart grow fonder.

Jon Trafton : Going to the barn in Vermont for rehearsals was something we did knowing it would set the vibe for the entire reunion run. We’d all been practicing in our own respective woodsheds for months and we’d penciled the first weekend in March as our first rehearsal session but we hadn’t decided where it would take place. Ultimately, the decision to hunker down in our home state of Vermont away from all distractions was a no-brainer. We literally never left the building until it was time to go home.

Fast forward to 2012 and this is still the same band I grew up on in my late teens and throughout my 20s and now 30s. The group always plays their namesake festival, StrangeCreek (né Garden of Eden) as well as Gathering of the Vibes nearly every other year. And then after three months of anticipation and planning, there they were on the stage right in front of me at Brooklyn Bowl, and at Higher Ground and The State Theater over four nights to end an intense March that seemed to last a year.

Luke Smith : There was a lot of teamwork that went into this, each person did their part and there were support systems for us as we worked to make it happen. Andy Herrick, Pete Shapiro, Alex Crothers, the fans who booked plane tickets and took time from work and lives, all were great motivators on that ride, but knowing people and fans put chips into the game, it served as a constant reminder to stay true to the task at hand, to play the best we could play.

Despite lineup changes, the heart of the band is still there and through a month of practice and rehearsals, the band I grew up on hadn’t changed or lost their ability to play their classic songs. The only notable difference among the band – quite a bit less hair, but the same can be said about the crowd, for they have cut their locks and grown older too. The fans that went to these shows were able to get their fill of songs, with few repeats and nearly every tune fans could have asked for was played at some point in the more than 12 hours of music over the four days.

strangefolk tour

The appeal of the music of Strangefolk is found in their memorable lyrics, riffs and songs that are very inviting to the average ear. At one point on Friday, I struck up a conversation with a fan who remarked that he had seen over 50 shows since the mid ’90s and, like many, was thrilled to be seeing the original lineup again. Then he said something that stuck and made great sense – Strangefolk is campfire music : the songs are easily sung as a group, can be played over and over without getting bored and provide a pleasant and upbeat soundtrack to travel and the outdoors. Certainly, this is due in part to their roots in the music of CSNY, Neil Young, Phish, The Grateful Dead and others of the same ilk, but also in part due to their Burlington and New England roots. If there was a soundtrack to the region, Strangefolk would surely be a great part of it, echoing from Valhalla to Reuben’s Place.

Reid Genauer : In terms of excitement, preparation, the “collective think” the days and even months were like a long ramp. It started with a simple phone call and the commitment to do some shows. The shows were booked and announced. Emails flew around. Long hours locked in my rehearsal space unfolding tunes or at least parts of tunes that had gotten dusty. Rehearsing the material with the band and solidifying the forms. Writing a set list! BAM – taking the stage! It was like one little milestone after another that really culminated at the State Theater in Maine with a few good hours of Rock and Roll. It was a really intense and in some ways condensed journey from the private preparation to public display. From dormant to live!

Brooklyn Bowl is nearly three years old yet already has a certain mysticism about it. Pete Shapiro doesn’t just own the venue, he brought Strangefolk to play there the night prior to the three other announced shows and let the band practice for the shows at the soon to be reopened Capitol Theater in Portchester. Flying back for the shows from vacation in Florida, his encouragement was instrumental in getting the band to pick up where they left off 12 years prior. His effort paid off with a great first show back, starting with Poland, which referenced not only Brooklyn but hinted at the elephant in the room of their breakup and reuniting after all this time. “I was thinkin’ about my life, thinkin’ where I’ve come; things he might have said, things he might have done.”

The first night back started off strong, with highlights of As… being short and sweet, Pawn stretched out into a highlight of the night jam, the lone version of Alaska of the run, this lyrical odyssey and sing-a-long was classically jammed and extrapolated as though they had never stopped playing. Crowd favorites Rather Go Fishin’ and Westerly elicited the greatest cheers and dancing from a crowd that although slightly smaller in number after setbreak, were nonetheless appreciative of the band as the night progressed. This reunion was apropos for the timing, being the band’s 20th year and they were both well-received and well-rehearsed.

3/28 – Brooklyn Bowl Set 1: Poland, Bus Driver, Valhalla, …As, Pawn, Chasing Away, Alaska, Stout Hearted Set 2: Speculator, All The Same, Oxbow, Elixir, Fishin, I Tell Myself, So Far Gone, Westerly Encore: Roads [All Four Setlists via  Strangefolk Reunion ]

Erik Glockler : It feels like Strangefolk is just the catalyst for this community to get together and laugh, dance and share some time together. It was also very fun to play those old songs again. It didn’t take long to get back in the groove and find some of those elusive notes. And lastly, it was great making music with three friends again, who started out on this road nearly 20 years ago. It felt the same as it ever did. Well, maybe it was a little more exciting this time.

Venturing up to their original haunt of Burlington, Vermont, the crowd was even livelier, with some having made the trek from the Brooklyn show and parts all around the country for a show where it all started. Opening up with Lines and Circles, the lyrics again beckoned deeper meaning, “Am I asking forgiveness?” as well as discussed the paths taken by the band members: “Some people follow lines, some people follow circles” and was interspliced by a surprising spoken word piece of CSNY’s Find the Cost of Freedom that brought the crowd to near silence as they focused on Reid’s passionate rendition. Two Boys, the first Strangefolk song written by Reid and Jon, was played while friends rekindled old relationships, laughed and hugged over Long Trails and Heady Toppers. Versions of Neighbor, Cabin John and the classic So Well added up in total to more than 45 minutes of pure rock and impressive improvisation. A unique encore of Things That Fly, another of the first Strangefolk songs written by the original duo, was patient, smooth and left the crowd anticipating Friday before they were even out of the venue.

3/29 – Higher Ground Set 1 :  Lines and Circles, Rachel > Walnut, Shift My Step, Fountain, Blue and Grey, Two Boys, Burned Down Set 2: Furnace, Sinner, What Say You, New Glock II > Whatever, Far From yourself, Cabin John, Utterly, Neighbor, So Well Encore: Things That Fly

Reid Genauer : It was a dreamscape in some ways – elevated reality. We really enjoyed seeing each other. Having so many friends and family members around lent to the glow. It was like a warm bubble of personalities, places and musical color. The energy of the crowd could not have been higher. It felt like a high school reunion times 100. We were happy with how we played as well, which was a question mark until it actually happened. Kind of a harsh comparison but its like war – you can train all you like but you don’t know how you’re going to hold up until you are under fire. I think we held the line! We’re still processing what went down but I can say for sure it was a special few days for all of us. We are still coasting on the glow…

PAGE TWO = Higher Ground Night Two and State Theater + Videos

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Great article- thanks for the write up on what would have been just a whirlwind of mixed memories for me! Kudos.

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Published: 2022/11/09

Strangefolk’s Luke Smith to Make Live Solo Debut as Supraluke at Nectar’s

Strangefolk’s Luke Smith to Make Live Solo Debut as Supraluke at Nectar’s

Vermont-based multi-instrumentalist Supraluke, also known as Luke Smith of Strangefolk, is set to make his live solo debut at Burlington, Vt.’s beloved, Nectar’s, on Nov. 19. The performance will serve as the opening act for The Ammonium Maze, a new project from Percy Hill.

Under his new moniker, Smith stepped out from behind the drum kit, where he usually sonically navigates with the rudder to attend to the sails and man the helm, taking on lead guitar, bass and vocals. On his first album, Songs For The Great Blue Heron –which was released on Aug. 3–Smith’s ship ascended to the sky. The 11-track project featured an eclectic crew, including Jon Trafton (Strangefolk), Erik Glockler (Strangefolk), Richard James (Neighbor, Pink Talking Fish), and Kevin Gift (Wendel Patrick), and after months in the air, Smith is finally ready to share the project live.

“I am thrilled to finally bring this music to a live audience, and I could not think of a better place, or with a better group of friends, to do it,” Smith said in a press release. “Burlington is my musical home in many ways, and I’ve known members of The Ammonium Maze for decades. I look forward to taking the stage at the legendary Nectar’s for what is sure to be a special night for all.”

Songs For The Great Blue Heron was produced at Tank Studio by Ben Collette, an acclaimed audio engineer for Phish, which is also in Burlington, and the evening is sure to be an homage to the creative spirit of the iconic Vermont town.

Tickets for Luke Smith and The Ammonium Maze are on sale now. Find tickets here .

Listen to Songs For The Great Blue Heron here .

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Strangefolk

Strangefolk concert setlists & tour dates, strangefolk at garden of eden festival 2019.

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Strangefolk at Jay Peak Resort, Jay, VT, USA

Strangefolk at paradise rock club, boston, ma, usa.

  • Stout-Hearted Man
  • They Love Each Other
  • Rather Go Fishin'
  • Conspire to Smile
  • Burned Down
  • Chasing Away

Strangefolk at Garden of Eden 2017

  • Sweet Libation
  • Angel From Montgomery
  • Come On Down
  • Far From Yourself
  • California Luck
  • Will the Circle Be Unbroken?
  • Viva Las Vegas
  • Like You Anyway
  • Oh the Wind and Rain
  • Comes a Time
  • Crest of My Wing
  • I Tell Myself
  • What Say You
  • New Glock II

Strangefolk at Terrapin Crossroads, San Rafael, CA, USA

  • All the Same
  • Blue and Grey
  • Utterly Addled

Strangefolk at Garden of Eden 2016

  • Strange Ranger
  • So Far Gone
  • Juicy Fruit Jingle
  • Folka Polka
  • Sunday Soon
  • Near & Far
  • Shift My Step
  • Paperback Book
  • While My Guitar Gently Weeps
  • Take It Easy on Me
  • Memory of a Free Festival
  • Space Oddity
  • Mud Spring Draw
  • Woman Child
  • Rag Top Down

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Most played songs

  • Like You Anyway ( 108 )
  • Rather Go Fishin' ( 108 )
  • Lines and Circles ( 104 )
  • Poland ( 93 )
  • So Well ( 88 )

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Assembly of Dust Reid Genauer moe. Pork Tornado

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Artists covered

[traditional] [unknown] Gregg Allman The Beatles Beck The Black Crowes David Bowie Edie Brickell & New Bohemians Bill Browning and His Echo Valley Boys Johnny Bush Sam Bush J.J. Cale Eric Clapton Cream Crosby, Stills & Nash Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young Mac Davis The Doors Bob Dylan Free Jesse Fuller Peter Gabriel Jerry Garcia Gomez Grateful Dead The Jimi Hendrix Experience Robert Hunter George Jones Quincy Jones Steve Karmen KC and the Sunshine Band The Kinks Led Zeppelin Lipps, Inc. Lynyrd Skynyrd Madonna Bob Marley & The Wailers Paul McCartney Memphis Jug Band Mighty Clouds of Joy moe. Johnny Nash Willie Nelson Harry Nilsson The Johnny Otis Show Carl Perkins Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers Wilson Pickett Pink Floyd The Police

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Gigs seen live by

90 people have seen Strangefolk live.

werevotingyes mutedtones jryandoherty Kimlinson criddery Skibetty3 natty TheeUltraviolet RandM hartmoney Liveyoursong mkdevo scott_bernstein gkratochwill crowleysmc mxthor hmendrysa YEM930 gingamann Ststeve80 weasuL dehringer Lincolndubois MJKeras scrufjz1 tdo814 markblint ajsutter237 Drfunkenstein NolanD Relsnops Martinb PatrickEspey DSVJR senorstash realjams chooglincharley Songcatcher TheDude31 MarkB touchboards rrainer44 Ampollin wpeofiwufspdoi thebigz deadhead1968 mtausig goyagirl106 DaleMoody growpe

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As of right now there haven't been any big Strangefolk concerts or tours announced for cities in North America. Sign up for our Concert Tracker to get notified when Strangefolk shows have been unveiled to the calendar. For announcements for Strangefolk shows, visit us on Twitter @ConcertFix . In the meantime, check out other Alternative performances coming up by William Elliott Whitmore , Sungazer , and Givers .

Strangefolk Concert Schedule

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Strangefolk could be coming to a city near you. View the Strangefolk schedule above and push the ticket icon to checkout our huge inventory of tickets. Browse our selection of Strangefolk front row tickets, luxury boxes and VIP tickets. As soon as you locate the Strangefolk tickets you desire, you can purchase your tickets from our safe and secure checkout. Orders taken before 5pm are generally shipped within the same business day. To buy last minute Strangefolk tickets, check out the eTickets that can be downloaded instantly.

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Strangefolk

Formed together by two college students from the University of Vermont, Reid Genauer (vocals/ guitar) and Jon Trafton (guitar) spent the first year together under the name Stranefolk while performing…

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IMAGES

  1. Strangefolk Concert Tickets: 2023 Live Tour Dates

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  2. Strangefolk Concert & Band Photos at Wolfgang's

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  3. Strangefolk w/Funky Dawgz Brass Band: In Deep [4K] 2015-07-30

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  4. Strangefolk

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  5. Original Strangefolk Lineup Announces First Shows of 2018

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  6. Strangefolk Confirms Garden Of Eden Festival 2020

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VIDEO

  1. STRANGEFOLK G.O.T.V 09- SUGAREE

  2. Reuben's Place- Strangefolk 4-26-97

  3. Strangefolk Reunion Performs "Cabin John" at Gathering of the Vibes 2012

  4. Lines & Circles- Strangefolk 8-9-97

  5. Neighbor- Strangefolk 12-31-97

  6. Strangefolk (Reid Genauer) at the Garden of Eden (New Glock II) 1999/9/4

COMMENTS

  1. Strangefolk

    SupraLuke (Smith) Tales of the Great Blue Heron. Erick Glockler. Brighter Nights - Solo Album. Reid Genauer. Angels and Alibis (2024) - Solo Album. Reid & Assembly of Dust. The Promised Hour - Live Album.

  2. Strangefolk Concerts & Live Tour Dates: 2024-2025 Tickets

    His influences draw from artists like Bruce Hornsby, Oscar Peterson, Brent Mydland, Herbie Hancock and Ray Manzarek, to name a few. Find tickets for Strangefolk concerts near you. Browse 2024 tour dates, venue details, concert reviews, photos, and more at Bandsintown.

  3. Strangefolk Tickets, 2024 Concert Tour Dates

    Buy Strangefolk tickets from the official Ticketmaster.com site. Find Strangefolk tour schedule, concert details, reviews and photos.

  4. Strangefolk Tour Announcements 2023 & 2024, Notifications ...

    Find information on all of Strangefolk's upcoming concerts, tour dates and ticket information for 2023-2024. Unfortunately there are no concert dates for Strangefolk scheduled in 2023. Songkick is the first to know of new tour announcements and concert information, so if your favorite artists are not currently on tour, join Songkick to track ...

  5. Strangefolk

    Find concert tickets for Strangefolk upcoming 2024 shows. Explore Strangefolk tour schedules, latest setlist, videos, and more on livenation.com

  6. Strangefolk Concert Tickets, 2024 Tour Dates & Locations

    To buy . Strangefolk; tickets, click the ticket listing and you will be directed to SeatGeek's fast checkout process to complete the information fields.SeatGeek will process your order and deliver your . Strangefolk; tickets. For the fastest day-of entry, download SeatGeek's mobile app to access your tickets right on your phone.

  7. Strangefolk Tickets

    Get Strangefolk tickets, 2023 - 2024 tour information and the Strangefolk concert schedule from Vivid Seats. 100% Buyer Guarantee!

  8. Strangefolk Concert & Tour History

    Strangefolk Concert History. 161 Concerts. Originally formed as an acoustic duo "Strange Folk" in 1991, Strangefolk (now one word) added bass and drums within a year and took to playing the bars in and around the vibrant musical community of Burlington, Vermont. The band rounded out its sound further in 2000 by adding keyboards to the lineup.

  9. Strangefolk

    Strangefolk is an American rock-oriented jam band originally from Burlington, Vermont.Since forming in 1991, the band has released five studio albums, four live albums and one live concert DVD.The band consists of Jon Trafton (lead guitar, vocals), Erik Glockler (bass, vocals), Reid Genauer (rhythm guitar, vocals), and Luke Smith (drums).

  10. Strangefolk Concert Tickets and Tour Dates

    Strangefolk tickets for the upcoming concert tour are on sale at StubHub. Buy and sell your Strangefolk concert tickets today. Tickets are 100% guaranteed by FanProtect. StubHub is the world's top destination for ticket buyers and resellers. Prices may be higher or lower than face value.

  11. Going Out Westerly: Guitarist Jon Trafton Talks Strangefolk's Terrapin

    The so-called "original Strangefolk" first reunited in 2012 — more than 12 years after Genauer departed the band — and in the five years since, has continued to come back together.

  12. Strangefolk: Live at The Capitol Theater

    The remastered recording Live at The Capitol Theater captures Strangefolk at the renowned venue on Dec. 27, 1998, and, encapsulates what fans had known all along - that Strangefolk was one of ...

  13. "Stout Hearted": Reid Genauer's Return to Strangefolk

    Dean Budnick on March 30, 2012. After 11 ½ years, tonight is finally the night. The original Strangefolk quartet will take the stage once again, as the group opens a four show tour at Brooklyn ...

  14. Strangefolk

    Strangefolk has continued to be a VibeTribe fan favorite over the last 20 years. ... quickly gaining momentum and popularity with each tour. Regional tours paved the way for national tours, with the band logging over 100 shows per year. In 1998, Strangefolk signed with Mammoth Records, only to have the record deal collapse when Disney purchased ...

  15. Buy Strangefolk Tickets, Prices, Tour Dates & Concert Schedule

    Grab Strangefolk tour tickets now to attend Levitate Festival along with 30,000 other fans so make sure you secure your spot today. Safe and Secure Strangefolk Ticket Purchasing. Your safety is of the utmost importance to us. We use the industry's highest standards to ensure a secure purchase with every Strangefolk concert ticket sold on our ...

  16. Strangefolk: A Great Long While In The Making

    Knowing that Strangefolk was reuniting for four nights of shows to celebrate their 20th anniversary as a band, I eagerly made plans to attend the entire run of shows. This was the band that I was introduced to in 1996 alongside great friends at Syracuse University and listened to nearly as much as any other band in the past 16 years.

  17. Strangefolk's Luke Smith to Make Live Solo Debut as ...

    Vermont-based multi-instrumentalist Supraluke, also known as Luke Smith of Strangefolk, is set to make his live solo debut at Burlington, Vt.'s beloved, Nectar's, on Nov. 19.

  18. Strangefolk Concert Setlists

    Get Strangefolk setlists - view them, share them, discuss them with other Strangefolk fans for free on setlist.fm! setlist.fm Add Setlist. Search Clear search ... Strangefolk Concert Setlists & Tour Dates. Aug 10 2019. Strangefolk at Garden of Eden Festival 2019. Artist: Strangefolk ...

  19. Strangefolk

    Strangefolk - Full ConcertRecorded Live: 7/22/1999 - Woodstock 99 West Stage (Rome, NY)More Strangefolk at Music Vault: http://www.musicvault.comSubscribe to...

  20. Strangefolk Tour Dates & Concert Tickets

    Strangefolk tour dates has recently been reported. Tickets for the forthcoming Strangefolk concert are now available. Front row tickets will not be any concern, we always have terrific tickets. Tour dates for Strangefolk can be found on this page. Strangefolk could be coming to a city near you. View the Strangefolk schedule above and push the ...

  21. Strangefolk Songs, Albums, Reviews, Bio & More

    Strangefolk Biography by Mike DaRonco. Formed together by two college students from the University of Vermont, Reid Genauer (vocals/ guitar) and Jon Trafton (guitar) spent the first year together under the name Stranefolk while performing in pubs and coffee houses all throughout campus. Armed with only their acoustic guitars and distortion ...

  22. Strangefolk

    Strangefolk's strengths are brotherly-like harmonies and upbeat bluesy grooves. Clean guitar hooks, tight, earnest harmonies, and contemplative lyrics are Strangefolk's stock and trade. "The Warehouse at Fairfield Theatre Company is one of my favorite places to play. The sound system, lights and sight lines make for a great show for the ...

  23. What Say You? Chapter 1: Jon Trafton

    What Say You? Chapter 1: Jon Trafton. Join Jon, Erik, Luke & Reid at Eden 2019 - August 9/10 - Jay Peak VT. Eden Info & Tickets. Jon Trafton. RG:How has music has played a huge role in your life - more specifically The Grateful Dead and Phish? JT: Music has played a huge role in my life, as a listener and as a player. I'd be lost without it.