Join Cosy Sheridan and her band at 7 pm at the DubHub for an evening of songs and stories.
Cosy has played at Carnegie Hall and the Cowgirl Hall of Fame as well as at coffee houses throughout the country. She plays a percussive, bluesy guitar, often in open tunings and occasionally with two or more capos on the neck. Backed by the strong rhythms and harmonies of Charlie Koch on bass and Kent Allyn on keyboard, her concerts are a wide-ranging, entertaining, and tuneful experience. Cosy first appeared on the national folk scene in 1992 when she won songwriting contests at both the Kerrville Folk Festival and Telluride Bluegrass Festival. She likes to make people happy at her concerts, and has been called one of our era’s finest and most thoughtful songwriters.
Cosy teaches workshops in songwriting, guitar, and performance all over the country, and is the founder and director of Moab Folk Camp in Moab, Utah.
“A wonderfully lively, very funny, and enormously amiable entertainer,” wrote The Boston Globe
“You can’t continue touring for twenty or so years, unless you know what you’re doing, and do it well,” said The Chicago Examiner.
The Albuquerque Journal dubbed Cosy “a buddhist monk in a 12-step program trapped in the body of a singer-songwriter.”
Tickets are $20 pre-sale, and $25 at the door. This concert is sure to sell out.
Contact info@dublincommunitycenter.org for more ticket information.
Join Cosy Sheridan and her band at 7 pm at the DubHub for an evening of songs and stories.
Cosy has played at Carnegie Hall and the Cowgirl Hall of Fame as well as at coffee houses throughout the country. She plays a percussive, bluesy guitar, often in open tunings and occasionally with two or more capos on the neck. Backed by the strong rhythms and harmonies of Charlie Koch on bass and Kent Allyn on keyboard, her concerts are a wide-ranging, entertaining, and tuneful experience. Cosy first appeared on the national folk scene in 1992 when she won songwriting contests at both the Kerrville Folk Festival and Telluride Bluegrass Festival. She likes to make people happy at her concerts, and has been called one of our era’s finest and most thoughtful songwriters.
Cosy teaches workshops in songwriting, guitar, and performance all over the country, and is the founder and director of Moab Folk Camp in Moab, Utah.
“A wonderfully lively, very funny, and enormously amiable entertainer,” wrote The Boston Globe
“You can’t continue touring for twenty or so years, unless you know what you’re doing, and do it well,” said The Chicago Examiner.
The Albuquerque Journal dubbed Cosy “a buddhist monk in a 12-step program trapped in the body of a singer-songwriter.”
Tickets are $20 pre-sale, and $25 at the door. This concert is sure to sell out.
Contact info@dublincommunitycenter.org for more ticket information.