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Since co-founding the Carolina Chocolate Drops in 2005, Rhiannon Giddens has long since branched out on her own. NPR named her one of its “25 Most Influential Women Musicians of the 21st Century,” and American Songwriter called her “one of the most important musical minds currently walking the planet.”

The eclectic folk music artist is an opera-trained, two-time Grammy Award-winning singer; a reproduction instrumentalist; a MacArthur “Genius” grant recipient; the artistic director of Silkroad; and a prize-winning composer of opera, ballet, and film.

Giddens centers her work around advocating an understanding of the country’s musical origins by celebrating people whose contributions to American musical history have been overlooked or erased.

Charly Lowry, a musical powerhouse from Pembroke, North Carolina, is proud to be an indigenous woman belonging to the Lumbee and Tuscarora tribes. She celebrates the diversity of her hometown swamps in all aspects of her life. While she may be familiar to some from her success as a semi-finalist on “American Idol,” she has maintained close ties to her Native American roots and culture.

Among her community, native women are traditionally barred from the hand drum, singing behind the men’s drum and/or dancing instead. Lowry defies that norm, following in the footsteps of her mentor Pura Fé. She chooses to battle with her songs, storytelling, hand drum, and guitar to deliver performances that not only tell the plight of her people but all who face oppression.

American Sign Language interpretation will be provided for this performance. Contact the Arts Ticket Center via email at [email protected] or by calling 814-863‑0255 to discuss ASL seating preferences.