CONTEST OVER Win tickets NOW to Uncle Mountain (final show!), Holy Ghost Tent Revival at the Grey Eagle this Fri.

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Jason Sandford

Jason Sandford is a reporter, writer, blogger and photographer interested in all things Asheville.

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Two tickets to the first one who can comment and tell us what year Uncle Mountain made a splash by opening for Band of Horses. Please comment with your full first and last name, so we know who to tell the Grey Eagle to hold tix for.

Sad news: This is the last show for the fine local band Uncle Mountain, who is calling it quits after 11 years.

See you there.

Uncle Mountain
http://www.myspace.com/unclemountain

Three distinct songwriters with their own styles, Ryan Furstenberg, Ryan Lassiter, and Dan Shearin steer their tunes in different directions until they’ve reached a destination often that they had never expected.  Now touring the eastern US, playing regional festivals and cultural events, Uncle Mountain has seen a bloom in regional support with the release of their second album, Miles of Skyline. The result is one that they are proud of both in headphones and on stage, blending the organic soul of rock and folk with lively percussion, rich harmonies and colorful textures from all of their favorite music from around the globe.

Holy Ghost Tent Revival
http://www.holyghosttentrevival.com/

Holy Ghost Tent Revival, based in Greensboro, NC, has swept away audiences over the past five years and built a reputation for energetic, tightly crafted music with meaningful lyrics presented in signature memorable, passionate performances. It is this music that moved Chris Hillman from The Flying Burrito Brothers to exclaim “Man! You guys have really got something,” as he watched from offstage at the Loveless Cafe in Nashville. This feeling manifests itself in the band’s second full length album, Sweat Like the Old Days. Listeners will find the group maturing away from their blend of Dixieland- and ragtime inspired folk rock into a more electric, horn and rock driven sound.

Their first release from 2008, So Long I Screamed, is indicative of the national folk explosion taking hold of musicians at that time. Essentially an acoustic album, it has the ring of bluegrass, yet has all the sensibility and infectious energy of rock; an album chock full of driving horn sections, rich harmonies, and catchy melodies. This progression continued the next year with their second release, Family, enlisting A-list musicians to supply additional talent to their expanding electric sound. Here, the band allowed the tape to roll well before and after each take, and this laidback approach not only calls to mind the quality of an Alan Lomax field recording from the 1930s, but also invites listeners into the loose and raucous affair.

Since 2009, the band has played 300 dates per year up and down the East coast and as far west as Chicago and Austin, headlining festivals like Shakori Hills, Bele Chere, and Bristol Rhythm & Roots. Withstanding the loss of their founding bassist in the fall of 2011, the band has nursed their sound after months in the studio into an even more concentrated rush of electric joy that may surprise listeners accustomed to vintage Ghost. Their third studio album, Sweat Like the Old Days, which is slated for release summer of 2012, reveals a group of songwriters producing mature, thoughtful lyrics atop lush arrangements. It is a wholly original sound, unshaken by change, which signals a bright and enduring future for years to come.

9pm. $8 advance / $10 day of show.

Advance tickets available online and at our local outlets.

Standing room only. Facebook page here.

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Jason Sandford

Jason Sandford is a reporter, writer, blogger and photographer interested in all things Asheville.

  • 1

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3 Comments

  1. Ed Kizer August 27, 2012

    2010

    Reply
  2. David San Juan August 27, 2012

    Fall 2010

    Reply
    1. Jennifer Saylor August 27, 2012

      David, you’re our winner! I’ll be in touch about tickets!

      Reply

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