×

Laurel Premo and Jake Shulman-Ment to perform two shows

JAKE SHULMAN-MENT

CRYSTAL FALLS — Crystal Falls native Laurel Premo will perform with Jake Shulman-Ment at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Crystal Theatre in Crystal Falls.

They will also perform at 7 p.m. Eastern time Saturday at the Bonifas Arts Center Studio in Escanaba, in for a concert sponsored by the Northwoods Music Collaborative.

Tickets for both shows are by donation at the door.

Premo and Shulman-Ment share a certain ruminant, compositional style in their work, each drawing from deep roots in the folk music and stories of their ancestors. Featured in this program will be voice and fiddle, joy and grief weaving as sound fills these large resonant spaces.

In this concert, their two separate sets as soloists will culminate in collaborative performance that explores new sounds and connections in a shared American story of migration, search for identity and community, and innovation.

LAUREL PREMO

According to her website, Premo is known for her rhythmically deep and rapt delivery of roots music, voiced on finger-style electric guitar, lap steel, fiddle, and voice. The glowing heartiness and rich grit of her sound reveal a love of and complete submersion in heavy archaic roots–from the crossover of old-time and blues American traditions to darker Nordic sounds.

She has been writing, arranging and touring since 2009 with vocal and instrumental roots acts, and is internationally known from her duo Red Tail Ring. Her 2021 solo release, “Golden Loam,” continues her weaving of old wild and soundscape, with ruminant power, a masterful use of space, and dynamic waves of warm, gritty sustain.

According to his website, Shulman-Ment is at the helm of a new generation of Klezmer performers. He tours, records, and teaches internationally and has spent two decades traveling and living in Eastern Europe, learning violin traditions and researching old Jewish music from master fiddlers.

Drawing from his upbringing in a community of people dedicated to practicing secular Yiddish culture in New York City as well as from his extensive travel, research and study, he has synthesized an expressive and individual style that is deeply rooted in the diasporic history of Yiddish culture.

Newsletter

Today's breaking news and more in your inbox

I'm interested in (please check all that apply)
Are you a paying subscriber to the newspaper? *
   

Starting at $2.99/week.

Subscribe Today