Chris & Meredith Thompson/The Secret Sauce
Parish Center for the Arts 10 Lincoln Street, Westford, MA, United StatesDOUBLE BILL! Chris & Meredith Thompson with The Secret Sauce
DOUBLE BILL! Chris & Meredith Thompson with The Secret Sauce
David Dodson writes great songs that run the gamut of American styles—folk, rock, blues, jazz and country. His songs cover a variety of topics and range from poignant to hilarious. He […]
The Clements Brothers are George (guitar) and Charles (upright bass), identical twins from the heart of New England. The two have been playing and writing music together for as long […]
Terry Kitchen is a musical storyteller, and more. Award-winning Boston singer/songwriter Terry Kitchen pares songwriting to its most essential - a voice, a guitar, a story, a glimmer of hope. Whether in […]
Newton Corner, MA $20 at the door ($5 for students) Reservations required: HouseConcerts@fssgb.org The Kossoy Sisters, Irene Saletan and Ellen Christenson, performed at the first Newport Folk Festival, sang in the […]
Critically acclaimed American singer-songwriter and guitarist Mark Erelli is known for his distinctive blend of rock, folk, and Americana. His music is known for its lyrical depth and intricate instrumentation, […]
Louise Coombe grew up on a farm in middle TN with English parents; is a late bloomer; writes lots of Americana-folk songs and tells the stories behind them.
$20 at the door ($5 for students) Reservations required: HouseConcerts@fssgb.org You can pay with cash at the door, or purchase tickets in advance. Sally Rogers and Howie Bursen have been a […]
Pennsylvania-based House of Hamil is a fixture on festival stages across the US, and have shared their music and stories on the country’s premier folk stages. Their original song “Banks […]
The South Shore Folk Music Club will present the ‘Third Annual Thanksgiving Hootenanny’ at 7 p.m. Saturday November 29, 2025. Steve Folino and the Folk Ensemble, in the round, will […]
Cold Chocolate is a genre-bending Americana band that fuses folk, funk and bluegrass to create a unique sound all their own
Rooted in rural New England since the age of ten, McCarthy grew up in towns where the economies teetered on marginal subsistence from logging and paper and woolen mills. It wasn’t until his sister made a visit home from college, bringing an armful of recordings by Dylan, Baez, and Eric Anderson, that things clicked musically for McCarthy: he traded his clarinet for a Western Auto guitar, purchasing the Black Diamond strings across the street at the barber shop.