Katie Trautz Plays Kids Music at Montpelier Library

Past event
Jul 20, 2018, 10 AM

Katie Trautz Plays Kids Music at Kellogg-Hubbard Library

Friday, July 20th – 10am
The Hayes Room, Kellogg-Hubbard Library
135 Main St., Montpelier, VT 05602
Admission is free!

Start your summer morning with timeless tales told through the music. Katie Trautz will be playing folk songs that tell stories in the Hayes Room at the Montpelier library. All ages welcome.

Katie Trautz (www.katietrautz.com) is a native Vermont fiddler who has toured nationally and internationally sharing traditional music and original folk songs. Katie plays fiddle, guitar and banjo crossing genres with her numerous ensembles.  She has studied with some of the greatest fiddle players in the US including Dirk Powell, Pete Sutherland, David Greely and Bruce Molsky.  Katie has released a number of albums in the past seven years with her various bands (Mayfly, Wooden Dinosaur, Kick em Jenny, and more). Katie is the co-founder of the non-profit folk music school 'Summit School of Traditional Music and Culture' based in Montpelier, VT.  Following her 8-year directorship at the Summit School, she became the Executive Director of Chandler Center for the Arts in Randolph, VT.  Following the release of her book 'American Harmony Singing: Kid Songs' in the fall of 2016, she decided to return to teaching fiddle lessons from her home in Vermont, while raising her new baby son.  

"Katie Trautz is representative of many young people playing traditional music today. On (her album) Remembering, she has used the traditional style to establish her own distinctive and lovely repertoire."— TD, Sing Out Magazine

"On her new solo recording, Trautz does her mentor proud and really shines as a vocalist, instrumentalist and songwriter. Her fiddling is full of old-timey swing, her five-string banjo playing leisurely, and her alto voice confident and full of emotion." –Robert Resnik, VPR

 "In the spotlight by herself, Trautz reveals nuance and depth.  She approaches singing the way she does the fiddle: with a subdued directness, creating a sound that's beautiful in its simplicity." –Dan Bolles, Seven Days Review

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