Go Back
*** CANCELED ***

Dear Companion Tour featuring BEN SOLLEE and DANIEL MARTIN MOORE

with Angie Stevens

Time: 8:00pm     Day: Tuesday     Ages: 21+ Ages     Price: $12
This Event Has Ended

DEAR COMPANION TOUR FEATURING BEN SOLLEE & DANIEL MARTIN MOORE

Dear Companion, out February 16th on Sub Pop Records, is collaboration between three Kentucky musicians: the songs are written and performed by Ben Sollee and Daniel Martin Moore, produced by and featuring Yim Yames of My Morning Jacket and Monsters of Folk.  Recorded in the first half of 2009 in their home state, Dear Companion explores their ties to the place they love and aims to draw attention to the problem of mountaintop removal coal mining and its impact on the people and heritage of central Appalachia. A portion of the proceeds from Dear Companion will benefit Appalachian Voices, an organization devoted to ending mountaintop removal and finding a better way forward.
Learn more at: www.ilovemountains.org or www.subpop.com


About the Artists

Ben Sollee infused his much-lauded 2008 debut album Learning to Bend, with his unique synthesis of folk, soul, and bluegrass. No Depression put the album on their top five of 2008, Paste listed him on The Best of What's Next, NPR raved, and music blogs continue to provide Sollee a steady torrent of praise. His impressive debut also landed him prominent spots on the festival circuit, including Austin City Limits and Bonnaroo, as well as a riveting set on Jimmy Kimmel Live.
 
After serving in the Peace Corps, Daniel Martin Moore won over Sub Pop Records in 2007 with an unsolicited demo of deceptively simple songs, and found himself working with producer Joe Chiccarelli (The White Stripes, U2, The Shins) on his first album, the 2008 releaseStray Age.
With Stray Age, Daniel became a critical darling, eliciting comparisons from Nick Drake to M. Ward.
 
The album’s producer, Yim Yames, renowned guitarist/singer/songwriter from Monsters of Folk and My Morning Jacket needs little in the way of further introduction.
 
About Mountaintop Removal
Mountaintop removal is a radical form of surface mining that uses massive explosives to blast off several hundred feet of mountaintop in order to expose and remove thin seams of coal. The resulting rubble, or overburden, is then pushed into nearby valleys, burying streams.  This has devastating impacts on the land, air and water of local communities. To date, this practice has destroyed more than 500 mountains and buried more than 2000 miles of streams.
 
About Appalachian Voices & iLoveMountains.org

Appalachian Voices created iLoveMountains.org in conjunction with local, state, and regional partners to grow and support the national movement to end mountaintop removal coal mining and help create a prosperous future for the region.
Willa Mays, Executive Director for Appalachian Voices said, “We realized the most effective way to end mountaintop removal mining is to create a national movement of people who love America's Appalachian Mountains. We thank Ben, Daniel, Yim and Sub-Pop for helping grow this movement.”