Jayme Stone & Friends: Live in Concert
Jayme Stone & Friends: Live in Concert
Jayme Stone has performed throughout Boulder leading his band, Folklife. In this concert, you’ll hear a different side of Jayme Stone: personal and introspective, disarmingly honest and even mournful, expressed through a wide tonal palette born from new experimentation with electronic sounds. Experience this deep, experienced, constantly exploratory artist––who makes the banjo sound “like a whole new instrument” (Washington Post).
$18 General Admission / $15 Students & Seniors / $12 Museum Members
About the Artists
Jayme Stone is a musician, composer, instigator, producer, and educator. On any given day, you might find him in his studio reworking a little-known hymn learned from a field recording, producing a session with musicians from Bamako or New York, creating experimental soundscapes, or tucking his kids in on time so he can get back to writing the next verse of a new song.
As a young banjoist, Stone was obsessed with learning from both traditional players and modern masters. He quickly assimilated his endless fascinations—from learning an Ali Farka Touré song to playing free-improvised music. In his late teens, Stone spent hours at the headphone station of his local record shop listening deeply to different kinds of music. He was interested in the “heart and guts” of what he heard—the warmth and grit of folk songs, the camaraderie and risk in jazz, the dynamics of chamber music, the cyclical rhythms of West Africa—but no one genre felt quite like his own. He might have forever remained a listener were he not compelled to make the music he heard in his head.
Guided by his own aesthetic compass and a desire to let his collaborators “make the sounds that only they know how to make”, Stone has made a surprise album every two or three years—seven total. Albums like Africa to Appalachia, a polyrhythmic tale of two continents; the Lomax Project, which re-imagines songs collected by American folklorist Alan Lomax; and most recently, Folklife, an album that treats old field recordings not as time capsules, but as heirloom seeds planted in modern soil. It’s for this reason that Stone has also been called “a musical evangelist” who “loves using fresh approaches that get people hooked on wider musical traditions” (Edmonton Journal).
Stone has always drawn on tradition for his own revisionings, but in recent years he’s been drawing from a more personal well. In July 2017, his brother—Michael Stone, a well-known teacher of yoga and Buddhism—died suddenly and tragically. Grieving and grappling with Michael’s death led Stone to begin writing lyrics for songs unlike any of his previous compositions. Words have become windows through which Stone looks at memory, loss, and paradox. These words have also given Stone a reason to sing, along with playing guitar, banjo, and OP-1 (a synthesizer/sampler/drum machine).
On AWake Stone breaks new ground: from folk musician and composer to experimental pop singer and producer. A unique tonal palette blends with deft storytelling and disarmingly honest lyrics to create a sonic world both eminently engaging and full of nuance and surprise. Co-produced by David Travers-smith, AWake features Felicity Williams (Bahamas), Daniela Gesundheit (Feist), Jason Burger (Big Thief), Jason Linder (David Bowie), Shahzad Ismaily (Sam Amidon), and more.
Career highlights for Stone include winning two Juno Awards, three Canadian Folk Music Awards, being featured on NPR, BBC, and the CBC, and performing thousands of concerts at places like the Lincoln and Kennedy Centers, Library of Congress, Bumbershoot, Rockygrass, Celtic Connections, Vancouver Folk Festival, Lotus Festival, Chicago World Music Festival, Montréal Jazz Festival, and more.
Stone is a sought-after producer who can carefully craft the cast, atmosphere, and ethos needed to make captivating records. In addition to producing albums for other artists (including Grant Gordy and Kyle James Hauser), he has produced, composed, or arranged over 250 tracks for a new sound collection at Facebook. For that project he’s worked with such varied artists as Trio Da Kali, Ranky Tanky, Trio Brasiliero, Julian Lage, Manik Khan, Jo Lawry, Ben Sollee, Michael Daves, Jane Bunnett & Maqueque, and many others.
As an educator, Stone has taught workshops and masterclasses at universities and music camps and has been on faculty at the Silk Road Global Musician Workshop. Fellow musicians frequently seek Stone’s advice, keen to discover how he’s managed to craft a career that both hews closely to his creative vision and finds success in the world. This has resulted in the creation of two offerings: the popular workshop How to Book Yourself Without an Agent and a yet-to-be-launched online course that teaches “businesscraft for musicmakers” called Compose Your Career.
Kayla Marque’s musical journey began in her childhood Park Hill home in Denver, Colorado, coming from a creative and musical family, with her uncle, Larry Dunn of the legendary Earth, Wind, and Fire, her dad a saxophonist, her mom a writer, and her sister a Musician and dancer. While not originally set on a music career, in her teenage years her relationship with music shifted from a lighthearted hobby to an essential outlet for her to process her pain into beauty. She started going by her birth name, “Kayla Marque”, in 2012, and went on to release Live and Die Like This in 2016, an ethereal alternative pop album which launched Marque to the forefront of the Denver music scene.
Meeting her “studio soulmate” in veteran producer Glenn Sawyer in 2017, Marque began working on Brain Chemistry (Right Brain and Left Brain). Released in two parts in 2020, Brain Chemistry is a transcendent double album that dives deep into themes of self love, trauma and mental health all through the concept of examining the Right Brain and Left Brain. Beginning a new era of her music career focused on “getting out of your head and into your body”, in 2021, Kayla Marque’s side project “The Grand Alliance” with Sur Ellz (Khalil Arcady) and Crl Crrll (Carl Carrell) released its funky, genre bending self-titled debut, The Grand Alliance. Kayla’s long term goals are to utilize her platform for music as a way to impact positive change in her Denver community and globally participating in groups like Creative Strategies for Change (CSC), Art from Ashes (AFA), and the Creative Bodies of Culture Advisory Board. Looking to the future, Kayla Marque’s next solo project promises to continue in a more playful energy, exploring themes of beauty, pleasure and fantasy, while still grounded by the raw honesty that ties all her music together.
$20 General Admission / $18 Students & Seniors / $15 Museum Members
Buy Tickets Online, or call 303-651-8374.
Thursday Nights at the Museum
The Longmont Museum is open on Thursday evenings until 9 pm. In addition to visiting our new exhibit, Tipi to Tiny House: Hands-on Homebuilding, you could take an Art & Sip class or attend a film, performance or talk. View upcoming programs at Thursday Night at the Museum.