Joe's On Weed St.
Charles Wesley Godwin with The Piedmont Boys, Nolan Taylor
$15.00 - $30.00
$12.00 General Admission Advance / $15.00 General Admission Day of Show /
$30.00 4 Pack
7PM Doors / 7:30-8PM Nolan Taylor / 8:15-9PM The Piedmont Boys / 9:30PM Charles Wesley Godwin
A native of West Virginia, Charles Wesley Godwin makes cinematic country-folk that's as gorgeousand ruggedly raw as his homeland. It's Appalachian Americana, rooted in Godwin's sharpsongwriting and backwoods baritone. With 2021's How the Mighty Fall, he trades theautobiographical lyrics that filled Seneca— his acclaimed debut, released in 2019 and celebrated byeveryone from Rolling Stone to NPR'sMountain Stage— for a collection of character-driven songsabout mortality, hope, and regret, putting an intimate spin on the universal concerns we all share.
Charles Wesley Godwin has never been afraid to blur the lines, andHow the Mighty Fallproudlystraddles the borderlands between several genres. It's a country album by an Appalachian-bornefolk singer and blue-collar believer, laced with enough electricity to satisfy the Saturday night revelers and enough scaled-down acoustic balladry to soundtrack the slow, gentle pace of Sundaymorning. For every "Lyin' Low" — a driving folk anthem, its larger-than-life melodies flanked by banjo— there's a softly sweeping song like "Lost Without You," which finds Godwin's voice echoingbetween stretches of pedal steel and symphonic strings. This is music for campfires and car rides,for pool halls and mountain peaks, for big-city diehards and small-town loyalists. It's Charles WesleyGodwin at his best, diving into character studies and richly-created fiction while still offering glimpses of the man behind the music.
$30.00 4 Pack
7PM Doors / 7:30-8PM Nolan Taylor / 8:15-9PM The Piedmont Boys / 9:30PM Charles Wesley Godwin
A native of West Virginia, Charles Wesley Godwin makes cinematic country-folk that's as gorgeousand ruggedly raw as his homeland. It's Appalachian Americana, rooted in Godwin's sharpsongwriting and backwoods baritone. With 2021's How the Mighty Fall, he trades theautobiographical lyrics that filled Seneca— his acclaimed debut, released in 2019 and celebrated byeveryone from Rolling Stone to NPR'sMountain Stage— for a collection of character-driven songsabout mortality, hope, and regret, putting an intimate spin on the universal concerns we all share.
Charles Wesley Godwin has never been afraid to blur the lines, andHow the Mighty Fallproudlystraddles the borderlands between several genres. It's a country album by an Appalachian-bornefolk singer and blue-collar believer, laced with enough electricity to satisfy the Saturday night revelers and enough scaled-down acoustic balladry to soundtrack the slow, gentle pace of Sundaymorning. For every "Lyin' Low" — a driving folk anthem, its larger-than-life melodies flanked by banjo— there's a softly sweeping song like "Lost Without You," which finds Godwin's voice echoingbetween stretches of pedal steel and symphonic strings. This is music for campfires and car rides,for pool halls and mountain peaks, for big-city diehards and small-town loyalists. It's Charles WesleyGodwin at his best, diving into character studies and richly-created fiction while still offering glimpses of the man behind the music.
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