Event
Cosy Sheridan & TR Ritchie
Sheridan has been called "one of the era's finest and most thoughtful singer-songwriters." A storyteller as well as a songwriter; she weaves children's fables into metaphors of modern adulthood: The Little Engine That Could talks with Ferdinand The Bull. Her modern renditions of mythology (we meet Hades the biker) have won her fans and praise from the press. The Cornell Folksong Society wrote: "Sheridan is frank, feisty, sublimely and devilishly funny. She fuses myth with modern culture; Persephone with Botox." In 1994 Sheridan wrote and produced a one-woman-show entitled "The Pomegranate Seed an Exploration of Appetite, Body-Image and Myth" which she performs at colleges around the country. Ritchie, who learned his musical chops as a street singer in Seattle's Pike Street Market in the early 80's, is a master of understated yet powerful imagery in his songs. Dubbed a "classic folk troubadour" by Performing Songwriter magazine, Ritchie's roots-influenced music has a timeless appeal. This past July he was invited to accompany Alexandra Cousteau and her Blue Legacy crew of photographers and writers on a trip though Cataract Canyon to add a musical perspective to the National-Geographic-sponsored expedition. The crew filmed him singing "Let This Mighty River Roll," his song for Glen Canyon. Sheridan and Ritchie met at the Kerrville Folk Festival in 1992, and moved to Moab in 1994. In 2008 they co-founded the Moab Folk Camp, a folk and acoustic camp for adults and high school students that takes place each November before the Moab Folk Festival.
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LocationAvogadro's Number
605 S. Mason
Fort Collins, CO 80521
United States
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