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Chris Smither & Sierra Hull Autographed Poster Fur Peace Ranch 9/7/19
$ 50.16
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Description
Awesome singer-songwriter legend Chris Smither & mandolin superstar Sierra Hull hand signed concert poster!Poster is in good condition. Please see photos of actual poster. Poster will be shipped in cardboard poster shipping tube.
Chris Smither
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Chris Smither
Smither at Joe's Pub, New York City, September 2006
Background information
Born
November 11, 1944
(age 76)
Miami, Florida, U.S.
Genres
Folk
, rock,
blues
Occupation(s)
Singer-songwriter
Instruments
Vocals, guitar
Years active
1967–present
Labels
Poppy,
United Artists
,
Adelphi
,
Flying Fish
,
High Tone
,
Signature Sounds
Website
www
.smither
.com
William Christopher Smither
(born November 11, 1944)
[1]
is an American
folk
/
blues
singer, guitarist, and songwriter. His music draws deeply from the blues,
American folk music
, and modern poets and philosophers.
Contents
1
Early life, influences and education
2
Professional career
3
In pop culture
4
Discography
4.1
Albums
4.2
Live recordings
4.3
Compilation albums
5
References
6
External links
Early life, influences and education
[
edit
]
He was born in
Miami
,
Florida
, United States.
[1]
Smither's family lived in
Ecuador
and the
Rio Grande Valley
in Texas before settling in
New Orleans
when Chris was three years old. He grew up in New Orleans, and lived briefly in Paris where he and his twin sister Mary Catherine attended French public school. It was in Paris that Smither got his first guitar, one his father brought him from Spain. Shortly after, the family returned to New Orleans where his father taught at
Tulane University
.
[2]
[3]
In 1960, Smither and two friends entered and won a folk "
Battle of the Bands
" at the
New Orleans Saenger Theatre
. Two years later, Smither graduated from
Benjamin Franklin High School
in New Orleans and went on to attend the
University of the Americas
in Mexico City planning to study
anthropology
. It was there that a friend played Smither the
Lightnin' Hopkins
' record "Blues in My Bottle".
[1]
After one year in Mexico, Smither returned to New Orleans where he attended Tulane for one year and discovered
Mississippi John Hurt
's music through the
Blues at Newport 1963
album on
Vanguard Records
. Hurt and Hopkins would become cornerstone influences on Smither's own music.
In 1964, Smither flew to New York City two days prior to boarding the
SS United States
for the five-day transatlantic voyage to Paris for his Junior Year Abroad program. While in New York, he stopped at
The Gaslight Cafe
to see his hero, Mississippi John Hurt. Once in Paris, Smither often spent time playing his guitar instead of attending classes.
[3]
Smither returned to New Orleans in 1965. With a few clothes and his guitar, he soon took off for Florida to meet another musical hero,
Eric von Schmidt
. Smither arrived uninvited at von Schmidt's door; Von Schmidt welcomed Smither in, and upon listening to him play, advised him to go north to seek a place in the burgeoning folk scene in New York City or
Cambridge, Massachusetts
.
[4]
Smither followed this advice, and arrived at
Club 47
in
Harvard Square
several weeks later only to find von Schmidt performing. Von Schmidt invited Smither on stage to play three songs.
Professional career
[
edit
]
Smither soon began writing and performing his own songs. He achieved some local notice and by 1967 was featured on the cover of
The Broadside of Boston
magazine.
[5]
In 1968, music photographer David Gahr's book,
The Face of Folk Music
featured Smither's picture.
By 1969, after living in several places around Cambridge, Smither moved to Garfield Street in Cambridge and often visited
Dick Waterman
's house where
Fred McDowell
,
Son House
and other blues musicians were known to congregate. It was there that Smither first performed his song "Love You Like a Man" for Waterman's friend,
Bonnie Raitt
. That summer, he appeared at the
Philadelphia Folk Festival
for the first time.
In 1970, he released his first album
I'm a Stranger Too!
on Poppy Records, followed by
Don't It Drag On
the next year.
[1]
He recorded a follow up,
Honeysuckle Dog
, in 1973 for
United Artists Records
but Smither was dropped from the label and the album went unreleased until 2004, when it was issued by
Tomato Records
.
[3]
Despite no longer having a recording contract, Smither continued to tour and became a fixture in New England's folk clubs.
[
citation needed
]
In 1972, a longstanding working relationship with Bonnie Raitt
[3]
took shape as Raitt's
cover
of "Love Me Like a Man" appeared on her second album
Give It Up
.
[1]
Raitt has since made it a signature song of her live performances, and the song has been included on several of her live albums and collections. She has openly expressed admiration for Smither's songwriting and guitar playing, once calling Smither "my
Eric Clapton
."
[6]
In 1973, Raitt covered Smither's song "I Feel the Same" on her
Takin' My Time
album.
[1]
Following this mixed early success, Smither's recording and songwriting career had a long fallow period while he struggled personally.
[3]
[7]
In his official biography, Smither is quoted: "I was basically drunk for 12 years, and somehow I managed to climb out of it; I don't know why."
[
citation needed
]
Smither began to re-emerge as a performer in the late 1970s, and gained a few press notices. In 1979, he was featured in Eric von Schmidt and Jim Rooney's book,
Baby Let Me Follow You Down
,
[8]
and the next year in the UK's
Melody Maker
magazine.
In 1984, Smither's belated third album,
It Ain't Easy
was released on
Adelphi Records
,
[1]
which the
Boston Phoenix
acoustic music critic Jon Herman called "the naked and sophisticated blues album that Eric von Schmidt, Rolf Cahn, Spider John Koerner, and other white revivalists groped for more than 20 years ago, at the dawn of the folk revival."
[
citation needed
]
He recorded his next album,
Another Way to Find You
, in front of a live audience at Soundtrack Studio in Boston and in 1991 released it on
Flying Fish Records
.
[1]
Later that year he received a
Boston Music Award
. Two years later, he was invited to compose music for a documentary on Southern folk artists and met Southern folk artist
Mose T
. In 1993, Smither recorded and released his fifth album,
Happier Blue
(Flying Fish),
[1]
which earned Smither a National American Independent Record Distributors NAIRD award. Another two years later, he released
Up on the Lowdown
(
Hightone Records
), which was recorded at the Hit Shack in
Austin, Texas
. This was the first of three records produced by
Stephen Bruton
. Also that year, the
Chris Smither Songbook I
was published.
In 1996, he began recording live concerts in the US and Ireland for what would later become a live CD. The next year, he released his seventh album,
Small Revelations
(Hightone), and filmed an instructional guitar video for
Happy Traum
's Homespun Tapes in
Woodstock, New York
. In 1997, Smither's music was used exclusively on the entire score of the short film,
The Ride
, directed by John Flanders and produced by Flanders's company, RoughPine Productions. Flanders plays a folk-singer in the film who is largely influenced by Smither.
The Ride
won the Audience Best Film Award at the 2002 Moscow Film Festival.
[
citation needed
]
1998 was a year of small breakthroughs and the start of a fertile songwriting and recording period for Smither. HighTone reissued
Another Way to Find You
and
Happier Blue
and
Jorma Kaukonen
invited Smither to teach at his Fur Peace Ranch in Ohio. In addition, Smither toured with
Dave Alvin
,
Ramblin' Jack Elliott
and
Tom Russell
as Hightone's Monsters of Folk tour, and
Emmylou Harris
recorded his song "Slow Surprise", for the
Horse Whisperer
soundtrack.
[7]
In 1999, Smither released
Drive You Home Again
(HighTone). Also in 1999 he went to New Zealand and played at the
Sweetwaters Music Festival
. In 2000, he released,
Live As I'll Ever Be
(HighTone), comprising the live recordings made two years earlier. His song "No Love Today" was featured in the
Bravo
network program
Tale Lights
. The following year, songwriter
Peter Case
invited Smither to be part of a Mississippi John Hurt tribute record for which he contributed the opening track, "Frankie and Albert".
[9]
In 2003,
Train Home
was released on Hightone. In 2004, jazz singer
Diana Krall
covered "Love Me Like A Man" on her CD,
The Girl in the Other Room
.
In September 2006, Smither released
Leave the Light On
(
Signature Sounds Recordings
) produced by David 'Goody' Goodrich. His song, "Diplomacy," from the CD was named No. 42 on
Rolling Stone
Magazine's list of 100 Best Songs of the Year 2006. Smither was also named as 2007's Outstanding Folk Act by the
Boston Music Awards
. That year he also contributed an essay entitled "Become a Parent" to the book
Sixty Things to Do When You Turn Sixty
(Ronnie Sellers Productions).
[10]
And he narrated a two-CD audio book recording of
Will Rogers' Greatest Hits
(Logofon Recordings).
Smither released a 78-minute live concert DVD,
One More Night,
(Signature Sounds) in February 2008. In May 2009, Smither's short story "Leroy Purcell" was published in
Amplified
(
Melville House Publishing
), a collection of fiction by fifteen prominent performing songwriters. Smither's thirteenth CD
Time Stands Still
was released on September 29, 2009, on Signature Sounds.
[11]
On this, his most stripped down recording in some time, Smither worked with just two accompanists after the same trio had played a rare band performance – a non-solo setup required to play a Netherlands festival. About the recording Smither says, "We're the only three guys on this record, and most of the songs only have three parts going on. We had a freewheeling feeling at that festival gig, and we managed to make a lot of that same feeling happen in this record."
[
citation needed
]
On February 8, 2011, Smither was profiled in
The New York Times
"Frequent Flier" column,
[12]
entitled, "The Drawbacks of a Modest Celebrity," in which he recounts anecdotes from his four decades as a traveling musician.
Always wanting to treat his fans well, in 2011 Smither put out two fan projects: a collection of live tracks from newly discovered concert recordings from the 1980s–1990s titled
Lost and Found
and the rollicking EP,
What I Learned in School,
on which Smither covered six classic rock and roll songs. Smither followed these fan-projects with
Hundred Dollar Valentine
(2012), a five-star (MOJO) studio record. With longtime producer David "Goody" Goodrich at the helm, this collection sported the unmistakable sound Smither has made his trademark: fingerpicked acoustic guitar and evocative sonic textures meshed with spare, brilliant songs, delivered in a bone-wise, hard-won voice.
American Songwriter
magazine published Smither's blog about making his first record of all original material in his four-decade career.
[13]
In 2014, Chris Smither marked fifty years of songwriting with the release of
Still on the Levee
– a double-CD retrospective. Recorded in New Orleans at the Music Shed, this career-spanning project features fresh new takes on 24 iconic songs from his vast career – including "Devil Got Your Man," the first song he penned, on up to several of his most recent originals. The band included
Billy Conway
on drums. Coming out at the same time as
Still on the Levee
, the book
Chris Smither Lyrics 1966–2012
features his complete set of lyrics complemented by select images and performance memorabilia from his decades-long career. To commemorate his career to-date, on September 30, 2014, Signature Sounds released an all-star tribute record (
Link of Chain: A Songwriters' Tribute to Chris Smither
) including a list of artists offering their takes on some Smither favorites including
Josh Ritter
, Bonnie Raitt,
Loudon Wainwright III
, Dave Alvin,
Peter Case
, Tim O'Brien, and
Patty Larkin
.
The 2018 release
Call Me Lucky
also included Conway on drums.
In pop culture
[
edit
]
Several of author
Linda Barnes
’ books make reference to Chris Smither.
[3]
Keys to Tetuan
by Israeli novelist
Moshe Benarroch
uses a line from Smither's song "I Am The Ride" on the opening page.
Discography
[
edit
]
Albums
[
edit
]
1970 –
I'm a Stranger Too!
1971 –
Don't It Drag On
1984 –
It Ain't Easy
1991 –
Another Way to Find You
1993 –
Happier Blue
1995 –
Up on the Lowdown
1997 –
Small Revelations
1999 –
Drive You Home Again
2000 –
Live as I'll Ever Be
2003 –
Train Home
2005 –
Honeysuckle Dog
(recorded in 1973)
2006 –
Leave the Light On
2009 –
Time Stands Still
2011 –
Lost and Found
2012 –
Hundred Dollar Valentine
2014 –
Still on the Levee
2018 –
Call Me Lucky
2020 –
More From The Levee
[14]
Live recordings
[
edit
]
Stuck in Amber
, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania (1985)
Chris Smither Live at McCabe's Guitar Shop 3/14/03
(2003)
Compilation albums
[
edit
]
Blues Live From Mountain Stage
(
The Devil's Real
) (1995)
Avalon Blues: A Tribute to the Music of Mississippi John Hurt
(
Frankie and Albert
) (2001)
Raise the Roof – A Retrospective
(
Winsome Smile
) (2004)
Various – 89.3 The Current
by Minnesota Public Radio (
Train Home
) (2005)
A Case for Case: A Tribute to the Songs of Peter Case
(
Cold Trail Blues
) (2006)
Tales from the Tavern, Vol.1
(
Train Home
) (2006)
True Folk
(
Step It Up and Go
with
Jorma Kaukonen
) (2006)
Sierra Hull
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Sierra Hull
Hull in 2009
Background information
Birth name
Sierra Dawn Hull
Born
September 27, 1991
(age 29)
Byrdstown
,
Tennessee
Genres
Bluegrass
Occupation(s)
Musician, singer, songwriter
Instruments
Mandolin
, guitar, vocals
Years active
2007–present
Labels
Rounder
Associated acts
Alison Krauss
,
Barry Bales
,
Ron Block
,
Chris Thile
,
Sturgill Simpson
Website
www
.sierrahull
.com
Sierra Dawn Hull
(born September 27, 1991) is an American
bluegrass
singer-songwriter,
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
mandolinist, and guitarist.
[7]
Hull was signed to
Rounder Records
at the age of 13
[8]
and released her debut vocal album,
Secrets
, in 2008 at the age of 16. The album peaked at No. 2 on the
Billboard
Top Bluegrass Albums chart.
[9]
Her second album,
Daybreak
, was released on March 8, 2011.
[10]
Contents
1
Early life and career
2
Touring
3
Recordings
3.1
Secrets
3.2
Daybreak
3.3
Features
3.4
Weighted Mind
3.5
Treasure Of The Broken Land: The Songs Of Mark Heard
3.6
25 Trips
4
Personal life
5
Discography
5.1
Albums
5.2
Other singles
5.3
Music videos
6
Awards and nominations
7
References
8
External links
Early life and career
[
edit
]
Sierra Hull was born and raised in
Byrdstown
, Tennessee and attended Pickett County High School before accepting a Presidential Scholarship
[11]
to study at the
Berklee College of Music
.
Hull began playing the mandolin at the age of eight and put out the album
Angel Mountain
at 10. She was soon playing jam sessions with other musicians in her family, and by 2001 she was entering local talent contests. Her parents, Stacy and Brenda Hull, took her to numerous bluegrass festivals and it was during an
International Bluegrass Music Association
festival that she came to the attention of
Rounder Records
chief talent scout Ken Irwin.
[12]
At age 11 she was mentored and befriended by
Alison Krauss
, herself once a child prodigy on the fiddle.
[13]
Hull and Krauss, along with
Dan Tyminski
, performed at the
White House
on November 21, 2011.
[14]
Hull at MerleFest in 2017
She has a brother, Cody, and is a distant cousin of former United States Secretary of State
Cordell Hull
.
[15]
Hull has already received five International Bluegrass Music Association nominations in the past three years.
[
citation needed
]
Hull received the Bluegrass Star Award, presented by the Bluegrass Heritage Foundation, on October 19, 2013. The award is bestowed upon bluegrass artists who do an exemplary job of advancing traditional bluegrass music and bringing it to new audiences while preserving its character and heritage.
[16]
Touring
[
edit
]
Hull performed with the band Highway 111 at the Gettysburg Bluegrass festival in 2005. She continued to tour, even while she attended Berklee College of Music.
[17]
Recordings
[
edit
]
Secrets
[
edit
]
Hull's vocal debut album on
Rounder Records
, released in May 2008, was co-produced by
Alison Krauss
and
Ron Block
which follows a self-released CD
Angel Mountain
, in 2002. The production by Hull and Ron Block paid tribute and honored the tradition and style of bluegrass music. The album contained 3 original songs penned by Hull. She was just 15 when she recorded the album and released at 16.
Daybreak
[
edit
]
On her 2011 second release on Rounder Records, the 20-year-old has composed seven of the 12 songs and it was produced by
Alison Krauss & Union Station
bassist
Barry Bales
. The album features collaborations with Bryan Sutton on guitar and Randy Kohrs on dobro. Guest singers include
Dan Tyminski
, Shawn Lane and Ronnie Bowman.
Features
[
edit
]
Hull was a guest vocalist with lead singer James Adkins on the male-female duet "Love Song,"
[18]
featured on the 2015 self-titled album from Americana group,
Big Virginia Sky
.
Weighted Mind
[
edit
]
Released on January 29, 2016,
Weighted Mind
, Hull's third LP, was produced by the highly regarded banjo player
Béla Fleck
, who encouraged Hull to consider recording it solo.
[19]
Hull, however, decided to enlist an accompanist, bassist Ethan Jodziewicz, who is featured on every track. The album also includes vocal contributions by
Alison Krauss
,
Abigail Washburn
, and
Rhiannon Giddens
.
NPR reviewer Jewly Hight called
Weighted Mind
a "stunning coming-of-age album," adding that "Hull has joined the rarefied company of Nickel Creek expats Chris Thile, Sara Watkins and Sean Watkins, pedigreed virtuosos whose youthful, searching musical minds have taken them into postmodern singer-songwriter territory and beyond."
[20]
Treasure Of The Broken Land: The Songs Of Mark Heard
[
edit
]
Hull contributed her cover of "Strong Hand of Love" in a
Mark Heard
tribute album entitled "Treasure Of The Broken Land: The Songs Of Mark Heard" (Storm Weathered Records) in 2017.
25 Trips
[
edit
]
Released on February 28, 2020, co-produced by Hull and producer / engineer Shani Gandhi, features guitarist Mike Seal, bassist Ethan Jodziewicz, violinist Alex Hargreaves, and fiddler Christian Sedelmyer, together with bassist Viktor Krauss, guitarist Bryan Sutton, multi-instrumentalist Stuart Duncan, and steel guitarist Paul Franklin, and guest appearances by Molly Tuttle, Ron Block, Mindy Smith, Ronnie Bowman, Katie Pruitt, Angel Snow, and Hull’s husband, acclaimed multi-instrumentalist Justin Moses.
Liam Lewis opined, "25 Trips is an eclectic album, with a contemporary feel, showcasing Hull’s songwriting and exceptional vocals, crystal clear but with emotion and character, on 13 songs, self and co-written on the pleasures and travails of becoming the person and the musician she is today."
[21]
Hull appeared as one of the musicians on
Cuttin' Grass
, the 2020 bluegrass album by
Sturgill Simpson
.
Personal life
[
edit
]
Hull married fellow bluegrass musician
Justin Moses
on May 14, 2017. Hull and Moses tour together.
[22]
She lives in
Nashville
.
[23]
Discography
[
edit
]
Albums
[
edit
]
Title
Details
Peak chart
positions
Sales
US Grass
[24]
US Heat
[25]
Angel Mountain
Release date: 2002
Label: self-released
—
—
Secrets
Release date: May 6, 2008
Label:
Rounder Records
2
—
Daybreak
Release date: March 8, 2011
Label: Rounder Records
5
—
Weighted Mind
Release date: January 29, 2016
Label: Rounder Records
1
5
25 Trips
Release date: February 28, 2020
Label: Rounder Records
1
—
"—" denotes releases that did not chart
Other singles
[
edit
]
Year
Single
Artist
Album
2007
"Hullarious"
Sierra Hull
An American Tradition
2008
"Just As I Am"
Sierra Hull
Billy: The Early Years
2010
"Gospel Plow"
The
Lovell Sisters
, Bearfoot, Sierra Hull & The New Generation Jam
MerleFest
Live
"Big Sciota"
2011
"Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree"
Sixties Invasion featuring Sierra Hull
Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree
2013
"Cups (When I'm Gone)"
The Bankesters with Sierra Hull
Love Has Wheels
2014
"You're a Flower Blooming in the Wildwood"
Mac Wiseman
with Sierra Hull
Songs from My Mother's Hand
2014
"Promises"
Jeff Pippin and the Apple Valley Band featuring Sierra Hull
A Malibugrass Christmas
2014
"Let the Wind Be My Friend"
Jon Weisberger featuring Sierra Hull & the Lonesome Heirs
I've Been Mostly Awake
2014
"New Camptown Races"
David Naiditch featuring Sierra Hull, Dennis Caplinger, Jake Workman, Austin Ward,
Rob Ickes
&
Stuart Duncan
Bluegrass in the Backwoods
"Little Rock Getaway"
David Naiditch featuring Sierra Hull, Dennis Caplinger, Jake Workman, Christian Ward, Rob Ickes & Austin Ward
"The Smooch On the Porch / Bus Stop Reel"
David Naiditch featuring Sierra Hull, Jake Workman & Austin Ward
"Jamboree"
David Naiditch featuring Dennis Caplinger, Sierra Hull, Rob Ickes, Christian Ward, Jake Workman & Austin Ward
2014
"I Always Do"
Missy Werner featuring Jon Weisberger, Megan McCormick, Stephen Mougin, Maggie Estes White, Thomas Wywrot, Artie Werner & Sierra Hull
Turn This Heart Around
"Wish I Was"
Missy Werner featuring Sarah Siskind, Artie Werner, Megan McCormick, Jon Weisberger, Sierra Hull, Maggie Estes White & Thomas Wywrot
"Cloudless Blue"
Missy Werner featuring Sierra Hull, Megan McCormick, Jon Weisberger, Maggie Estes White, Thomas Wywrot & Artie Werner
"Dead Man Walking"
Missy Werner featuring Thomas Wywrot,
Larry Cordle
, Val Storey, Sierra Hull, Megan McCormick, Jon Weisberger & Maggie Estes White
"Come Back to Me"
Missy Werner featuring Megan McCormick, Jon Weisberger, Maggie Estes White, Thomas Wywrot & Sierra Hull
2015
"Can't Help Yourself"
Cindy Morgan
featuring
Gabe Dixon
& Sierra Hull
Bows & Arrows
2015
"Seneca Square Dance"
Ron Block
featuring Sierra Hull
Hogan's House of Music
2017
"They Call The Wind Maria"
Bobby Osborne
featuring
Alison Brown
, Sierra Hull & Stuart Duncan
Original
"Country Boy"
"Kentucky Morning"
Bobby Osborne featuring
Dale Ann Bradley
,
Darrell Scott
, Rob Ickes, Sierra Hull & Stuart Duncan
"I've Gotta Get a Message to You"
Bobby Osborne featuring Alison Brown,
Claire Lynch
, Rob Ickes, Sierra Hull, Stuart Duncan & Trey Hensley
2017
"Roanoke"
David Naiditch featuring Stuart Duncan, Sierra Hull & Jake Workman
Bluegrass That Swings
"Back Home Again in Indiana"
"East Tennessee Blues"
"All of Me"
"Cattle in the Cane"
"Exactly Like You"
"Sweet Georgia Brown"
David Naiditch featuring Stuart Duncan, Sierra Hull, Jake Workman & Rob Ickes
"Twinkle Little Star"
"Ookpik Waltz"
2017
"The Guitar"
Mac Wiseman featuring Sierra Hull & Justin Moses
I Sang the Song (Life of the Voice with a Heart)
2017
"
I Need Thee Every Hour
"
Shane Clark featuring Sierra Hull
The Hymn Awakening
2017
"Strong Hand of Love"
Sierra Hull
Treasure of the Broken Land: The Songs of
Mark Heard
2018
"Swept Away"
Missy Raines
featuring Alison Brown, Beck Buller,
Molly Tuttle
& Sierra Hull
Swept Away
2018
"Merlefest Mando Mania"
Tony Williamson
featuring
Sam Bush
& Sierra Hull with
Rebecca Lovell
,
Mike Compton
, Darin Aldridge,
Tim O'Brien
, James Nash,
Tom Rozum
&
Barry Mitterhoff
Heritage
Music videos
[
edit
]
Year
Title
Director
2011
"Easy Come, Easy Go"
[26]
David McClister
"
Someone Like You
"
[27]
Brad Paul
"Chasin' Skies"
[28]
"Tell Me Tomorrow"
[29]
"Daybreak"
[30]
David McClister
2016
"Black River"
Awards and nominations
[
edit
]
Year
Association
Category
Nominated Work
Result
2010
IBMA Awards
Recorded Event of the Year
(with various artists)
"Proud To Be A Daughter of Bluegrass"
Won
2016
Mandolin Player of the Year
Sierra Hull
Won
2017
Won
Recorded Event of the Year
(with
Bobby Osborne
and various artists)
"
I've Gotta Get a Message to You
"
Won
Grammy Awards
Best Folk Album
Weighted Mind
Nominated
2018
IBMA Awards
Mandolin Player of the Year
Sierra Hull
Won
Recorded Event of the Year
(with Missy Raines, Alison Brown, Becky Buller,
and Molly Tuttle)
"Swept Away"
Won