FOOTMAD Presents

Our 42nd Concert Season
2023-2024

Enjoy nationally and world-acclaimed musicians
in intimate concert settings in the valley's finest theaters.

  • Kieran Kane & Rayna Gellert

    Kieran Kane & Rayna Gellert

    Modern folk with traditional roots

    2023 November 11 - Saturday
    WV Culture Center
    State Capitol Complex
    Charleston WV

    Before combining talents, Kieran Kane and Rayna Gellert were both recognized as accomplished musicians, songwriters and performers in their own rights.

    Kieran Kane’s seminal work in The O'Kanes and Kane Welch Kaplin, as well as co-founding the independent label Dead Reckoning Records, laid the foundation for the contemporary world of Americana music. A successful solo artist, collaborator, and songwriter (with songs recorded by Alan Jackson, John Prine, Emmylou Harris, and many more), Kieran is a musician's musician: his playing is always understated, always groove-oriented, and always serving the song.

    If Rayna Gellert seems a preternaturally gifted songwriter, it’s because she’s seen farther into the old songs than most. Growing up in a musical family, she turned to Appalachian old-time music at a young age, becoming a prodigious fiddler and leading a new revival of American stringband music through her work with the acclaimed roots band Uncle Earl. An in-demand collaborator, she has toured and recorded with artists such as Scott Miller, Abigail Washburn, Toubab Krewe, and Robyn Hitchcock.

    Kieran and Rayna first met, fittingly, at San Francisco's celebrated Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival, which led to their co-writing songs for Kieran's solo album Unguarded Moments (Dead Reckoning). They joined forces again for Rayna's 2017 release, Workin's Too Hard (StorySound Records), which they also co-produced. Their first duo album, The Ledges, was released in February of 2018 on Dead Reckoning Records, followed up quickly by 2019’s When the Sun Goes Down.

    Fans of either artist will recognize the musical kindred-spiritedness in their restrained and roots-oriented approach to both songs and arrangements.

    kanegellert.com

To duet well is to dance, to step in rhythm in such a way that the two become new and unified; two streams merged into a river, if you will. Kieran Kane and Rayna Gellert dance so closely on their new album, The Flowers That Bloom in Spring, their voices may as well have been forever joined.

Both individually accomplished in their own rights — Kane for shaping country music and Americana as part of The O’Kanes and creating the label Dead Reckoning, and Gellert for her accomplishments as one of the world’s greatest old-time fiddlers — they combined forces yet again for this new album. It is their fifth collaboration since meeting in 2017 at the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival. First they supported each other’s solo albums, but The Flowers That Bloom in Spring represents their third album written together (following The Ledges and When the Sun Goes Down).
— No Depression
Exquisitely graceful, hauntingly joyous, and vividly picturesque, The Flowers That Bloom in Spring showcases the brilliant songwriting and the effusive singing and playing of these two kindred musical souls.
— Folk Alley
  • Concert Time

    Concert starts at 7:30 pm

    Box office sales start at 7:00 pm

    Doors open at 7:00 pm

  • Tickets

    $25 General admission
    $20 Seniors
    $10 Students
    Children under 13 admitted free

    Purchase tickets
    * online at FOOTMAD.org
    * by calling 304.729.4382
    * or at the box office on the night of the concert

  • Concert FAQs

    All the FAQs and nothing but the FAQs

Advance Ticket Options

  • Order Online

    Order tickets online using your credit card or your PayPal account.

  • Order by Mail

    Fill-in a ticket order form. Print form. Mail form and payment to FOOTMAD.

  • Order by Phone

    Call 304-729-4382 to order with your credit or debit card.

This program is presented with financial assistance from the West Virginia Department of Arts, Culture and History, and the National Endowment for the Arts, with approval from the West Virginia Commission on the Arts.

​FOOTMAD appreciates Fund for the Arts major donors ($10,000+) who keep culture strong in the Kanawha Valley: City of Charleston, Cecil I Walker Charitable Trust, Daywood Foundation.