Musicians

Kelsey Waldon

Black-and-white promotional poster for Kelsey Waldon's 'Every Ghost Tour' featuring a woman wearing a hat and jewelry, with a blurred, abstract background.

“Comanche” is deeply personal, but Waldon’s most introspective reflections bookend My Ghost. Its penultimate song, “My Kin,” extends the idea of loving yourself in spite of yourself beyond the choices she’s made and the circumstances she’s put herself in, to reckon with both the good and the bad that come from her family tree. Those traits, Waldon concludes, make her who she is.

“As the song says, ‘I’m the best and worst of my kin,’ and I love that for myself,” says Waldon, who was born and raised in a hunting lodge at the end of a dead-end road in the rural, unincorporated community of Monkey’s Eyebrow, Ky. “And I’m also at a point where I’m willing to break these cycles, I’m willing to grow, I’m willing to evolve.”

Among those best parts of her lineage is Waldon’s grandmother, who died in June 2024. “She was a remarkable woman. The women in my family have been rocks, and they’ve all been colorful and full of character,” Waldon says.

“Her garden and her yard, that might have been one of the things she took the most pride in,” Waldon adds, recalling how her granny would often stop to dig up roadside flowers, then transplant them into her yard. A display of tiger lilies, some of which now grow in Waldon’s yard in Tennessee, was a particular point of pride.

Waldon honors her granny with the song “Tiger Lilies.” She didn’t want an over-the-top sentimental song, so she instead leaned into the idea of traditions as a way to remember loved ones. “I’m sure Granny would love it,” Waldon says.

Every Ghost concludes with a Hazel Dickens cover, “Ramblin’ Woman.” Waldon covered two Dickens songs on 2024’s There’s Always a Song and had added “Ramblin’ Woman” to their live sets as well. While Waldon didn’t originally intend to include their cover on this album, it served as “a sonic star” during the recording process and has a message Waldon feels is still relevant decades after Dickens wrote it.

“Hazel was ahead of her time,” Waldon says. “Our existence is more than just what society expects of us. We’re more than just somebody’s girlfriend or wife or mother, and those are all beautiful things, but we can have our own independence, and we don’t have to do it for anybody else. We’re beautiful, magical, and powerful creatures.”

Waldon’s fearlessness is among the reasons she landed at Oh Boy Records in 2019, as the independent label’s first new signee in 15 years. It’s attracted fans to her headline tours and her festival sets, and prompted artists including Tyler Childers, Charley Crockett, Robert Earl Keen, Margo Price, and Lucinda Williams to invite her on tour. It helped earn her both the title of “Kentucky Colonel” — an honor recognizing goodwill ambassadors of Kentucky’s culture and traditions — and a spot in the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s annual American Currents exhibit in 2024.

8:30-10:00pm Saturday, October 18

Downtown Stage

In the six years since she signed to John Prine’s Oh Boy Records, Kelsey Waldon has earned wide praise for her “self-penned compositions [with] the patina of authenticity” (Rolling Stone). On her new album, Every Ghost, she confronts addiction, grief, generational trauma, and even herself — and comes through it stronger and at peace.

Compassion is a through line on Every Ghost, whether it’s for Waldon herself, for the person in the throes of addiction in “Falling Down,” or for a suffering world in “Nursery Rhyme.” The people in Waldon’s songs aren’t irredeemable — they’re struggling.

“You’ve got to have compassion; you gotta stay humble and have gratitude,” Waldon says. However, she’s learned that you also can’t let people take advantage of an empathetic heart. “Comanche” — which Waldon jokes is her very own truck song — finds Waldon grappling with the loss of a loved one, not to death but to boundaries she’s set for her own good. Waldon owns a 1988 Jeep Comanche, and driving it serves as a kind of therapy for her.

“I love the whole aspect of when design mattered,” she says, “and owning your car was an expression of yourself.”

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Magnolia Boulevard

A group of five friends smiling and posing outdoors under a tree with green leaves.

8:30pm Friday, October 17

Downtown Stage

Magnolia Boulevard has blossomed through devastation since forming in 2017. In the beginning, front-woman Maggie Noelle played in a bluegrass band, although she’d been yearning for a creative outlet to let loose like her idols Bonnie Raitt and Susan Tedeschi. She met co-founder Ryan Allen and the vision was formed for a rock ‘n soul band tied to their Appalachian roots. Together, they pushed through the turmoil of COVID-19 that devastated the music industry, the sorrow following the death of their beloved drummer, and the joys of welcoming Maggie’s daughter into the world. Much like the band members of Magnolia Boulevard have endured the highs and lows of the past few years, so has their music. The band’s emphatic and empowering anthems of love, self-discovery, grief, and uncertainty serve as a lesson to us all about life’s unpredictable nature and how to better live in the moment so we can appreciate everything and everyone around us before they’re gone.

In the seven years since, Magnolia Boulevard has gone on to develop a close relationship with PRS Guitars Founder and CEO Paul Reed Smith (who helped to mix and master their 2024 EP Things Are Gonna Change) in addition to sharing stages with the likes of Blues Traveler, George Porter Jr., Marcus King, Neal Francis, North Mississippi Allstars, and Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band. The group has also been recognized for their excellence, winning the award for “Best Rock Band” at the Lexington Music Awards in 2018 and 2019 along with taking home first prize in the “On The Rise” band competition at Floydfest, one of the east coast’s biggest music festivals, in 2018.

Alongside Ryan (keys, vocals) and Maggie, the other members include Roddy Puckett (bass, vocals), Austin Lewis (lead guitar), and Brandon Johnson (drums). They’re spending 2025 releasing a new single every month, culminating into a full-length album due out this fall. 

“All I can hope is that folks can relate to each song in their own way & can feel every ounce of love that we put into them. There’s nothing more that I’d personally like to accomplish with our music than to share space for people to bask in.” - Mag

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Bek and the Starlight Revue

A woman with dark brown hair styled in loose curls, wearing a denim jacket over a black top, sitting indoors in front of a brick wall.

7:15pm Saturday, October 18

Downtown Stage

Teamed with the Starlight Revue, Mountain Grrl Experience Co-organizer Bek Smallwood delivers a reverb drenched night of rock-n’-roll.

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Coaltown Dixie

Four women standing behind theater curtains, smiling and laughing.

Coaltown Dixie is a classy, energetic all-female bluegrass band hailing from the Appalachian hills of East Kentucky. The band formed in 2009, taking their name from Dixie Hatfield, the grandmother of the band’s bass player and manager of a coal camp boarding house in East Kentucky. Thus far, the ladies of CtD have released three CD’s and a live performance DVD. Two of their original songs have been used as theme songs on Kentucky Educational Television's "Kentucky Health." They have also written and performed a song for the television pilot “Southern Girl Outdoors.” Coaltown Dixie has been the recipient of a National Bluegrass B.O.R.N. (Bands On the Rise Nationally) Award, been featured as “Future Stars” in the U.S. 23 Country Music Highway Travel Guide and graced the cover of M.E. Music Entertainment magazine. They have been nominated for the past 3 years as Appalachian Arts and Entertainment’s Best Bluegrass Band.

Coaltown Dixie has been honored with prominent television and radio appearances throughout the Southeast including KET’s “Jubilee” and “Tim Farmer’s Homemade Jam,” “The WoodSongs Old Time Radio Hour,” WDVX Knoxville’s “Blue Plate Special,” “CMH 23” and two appearances on Red Barn Radio. Career highlights include packing the house at Suwanee, Georgia's Everett's Music Barn on a balmy summer night; numerous appearances at Dollywood’s Bluegrass and Barbecue Festival (it’s never easy to sing over that train!), The Osborne Brothers Hometown Festival and Dr. Ralph Stanley's Annual Memorial Weekend Festival; sharing the Mountain Arts Center stage with bluegrass superstars Ricky Skaggs, J.D. Crowe, The Boxcars and the Lonesome River Band; twice headlining the Rural Roots Concert Series at the Historic Sipp Theater and opening for Larry Sparks and country music stars Bucky Covington and Randy Houser.

As recipients of a Kentucky Foundation for Women "Artist Enrichment" grant in 2021, Coaltown Dixie members helped develop and host the first Mountain Grrl Experience event in Pikeville, Kentucky.

Photo cred: Lisa Sullivan.

3:00pm Saturday, October 18

Downtown Stage

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Carla Gover

A woman smiling and playing a banjo, with a purple background and golden lines radiating outward behind her.

5:15pm Saturday, October 18

Downtown Stage

Carla Gover is an eighth-generation Kentuckian who hails from the small coal town of Whitesburg in Eastern Kentucky, and her rural sensibilities permeate the work that she does and the music that she plays. A veteran of the folk scene, she has performed and recorded with such artists as Jean Ritchie, Mark Schatz, Dudley Connell, Stuart Duncan, Dirk Powell, Jesse Wells, Bruce Molsky, and many more. 

Her three most recent albums ("Kentucky Queen," "Wings" & "Fresh Picked Kentucky Music") have all reached #1 on the Folk Music DJ Charts. The Old-Time Herald says, "Carla's music contains the best elements of traditional Appalachian Music, including purity, intensity, integrity, and vivid imagery."

An award-winning singer-songwriter, she has won numerous national awards including the Chris Austin Songwriting Contest at MerleFest and the Kerrville New Folk Award. Her original songs have been covered by major artists and featured in film and documentary soundtracks. She was selected as a Master Artist in both Traditional Flatfoot Dancing as well as Appalachian Music by the Kentucky Arts Council.

Onstage, she sings, plays guitar, and showcases the rhythms of Appalachia through flatfooting and clawhammer banjo. She has toured for nearly three decades, performing at such prestigious venues as the Glasgow Royal Hall, MerleFest, and The Kennedy Center. She performs with various ensembles including the traditional Kentucky CornMaiz String Band and the bilingual Folk Opera Cornbread & Tortillas. 

Beyond performing, Carla is the founder of the groundbreaking online Appalachian Flatfooting & Clogging Academy, which recently won the "Appy" for Best Dance Educator from the Appalachian Arts & Entertainment Awards. She is the Artistic Director of the Cornbread & Tortillas Artist Collective, whose mission is to build community by sharing art, music, dance, and cultural heritage. She also hosts the "What Dreamers Do" podcast and shares her passion with hundreds of students each year in schools throughout Kentucky, teaching Appalachian music and dance.

A colorful illustration featuring a woman playing a banjo, standing in front of a decorative backdrop with the words 'Kentucky Queen' and 'Carla Gove.' She wears a skirt, cowboy boots, and blue earrings, with various objects around her, including a pocket knife, a jar, a frying pan, and a pair of shoes. The background is decorated with floral patterns and corn motifs.

Help celebrate the release of Carla’s new album, KENTUCKY QUEEN at Mountain Grrl Experience!

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Chelsea Nolan

A woman with long brown hair and round sunglasses gazes to the side in a field of yellow flowers during sunset.

6:15pm Saturday, October 18

Downtown Stage

Chelsea Nolan, is building a fire. Lit by growing up in arguably the most beautiful countrysides in the nation, surrounded by self-taught musicians who could play the pants off most any instrument, and occasionally guided by big brother and fellow singer-songwriter, Josh Nolan, Chelsea has found a way to shine a light on all the dirty corners of life. Saying more in one line than most do in an entire song, her stories are candid, gritty, real, and they carry you right along with her through the heartbreak, humility, and life lessons learned. 

With crowds soon singing their favorite lines like, “You’d steal the pennies off a dead man’s eyes”, “You’re what rock bottom looks like”, “We stay wild enough to shoot at, you can put that on our stones”, and “You’re the one I look for when I’m ready to go home”, Chelsea found herself being pushed to record her songs, and though initially hesitant, finally decided it was the right time.

Having graduated from songwriter stages to festival main stages (Master Musicians, Well Crafted, Kickin’ It On The Creek, Red Fest) in less than a year, Chelsea is carving her own path and making quick work of it.

Photo cred: Cory Graham.

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Jeri Katherine Howell

Woman with wind-blown hair playing an acoustic guitar against a red wall.

4:15pm Saturday October 18

Downtown Stage

Jeri Katherine Howell — award-winning singer-songwriter, cultural producer, and educator — cultivates creative experiences that inspire care for ourselves, one another, and the planet. Her compelling performances connect and rejuvenate audiences and center vulnerable lyrics, dynamic vocals and guitar, and a grounding Folk/Americana sound that sprouts from her Bluegrass and old-time roots. Listen to Jeri Katherine’s new album, Woman, on Bandcamp and where your music streams.

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Zoe Howard & Yellow Line

Female musician singing into a microphone and playing an acoustic guitar on an outdoor stage during a live concert.

7:30pm Friday, October 17

Downtown Stage

Zoe Howard is an Appalachian Rock artist from Salyersville , KY, located in the beautiful hills of East Ky. She has taken the stage at the Mountain Arts Center several times as well as other venues. She writes original songs about her  life , people around her,  and the beautiful state of Kentucky!! Check out all her songs on all digital media and on hard copy CD’s as well.

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Grace Rogers

Group of five young adults standing and sitting against a blue wall outside, with a brick sidewalk and some trash on the ground.

5:30pm Friday, October 17

Downtown Stage

Kentucky singer , songwriter and poet, Grace Rogers, comes from a family of old time, traditional and string band musicians. Her great grandpa Charlie Rogers played guitar in the Kentucky String Ticklers, recorded on the Gennett Record Label in Richmond Indiana during the Great Depression.

Grace, herself, has been playing solo shows and traditional music for around ten years. But on Mad Dogs (Sophomore Lounge, May 2025) her debut studio album, Rogers has ventured beyond the music she cut her teeth on with the help of a group of skillful, kind-hearted musician friends: Ian Gordon on electric guitar, Chris Cupp on bass and cello, and Fiona Palensky on drums and vocal harmonies.

Drawing nourishment from the deep roots of her home place in Bath County and watered by the freak waters of Louisville, Rogers has crafted eight original tracks that hum like hymns and drive like rain. The album was recorded by Jim Marlowe at End of an Ear (Ryan Davis & the Roadhouse Band, Joan Shelley, Young Widows) in Louisville, KY , and mixed and mastered by Carl Saff at Saff Mastering.

Mad Dogs has received praise from Stereogum, New Commute, Songlines, Post Trash and more. Mad Dogs was named one of Stereogum’s 50 best albums of 2025 so far.

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UPike Bluegrass Band

Group of young people performing on stage with musical instruments, during a music event at the University of Pikeville, with a mountainous background.

4:30pm Friday, October 17

Downtown Stage

The University of Pikeville Bluegrass Band Ensemble proves that our Appalachian musical traditions are in excellent hands. Enjoy their impressive harmonies and instrumentation as the ensemble leads you through well-known bluegrass and country songs!

Collage of students performing on stage at University of Pikeville music event, including singing and playing guitar.

UPike Rock Band

5:00pm Friday, October 17

Downtown Stage

The University of Pikeville Rock Band will get you amped and ready for a fun filled Mountain Grrl Experience weekend!

Mountain Man Jam

A wooden display box labeled 'Mountain Man Preserve' filled with small jars of preserved berries and fruits.

6:30pm Saturday, October 18

Downtown Stage

We love our MOUNTAIN MEN. Can’t wait to hear what some of of our favorite Appalachian male musicians have cooked up for us!

Mountain Grrls Onstage!

2:00pm Saturday, October 18

Downtown Stage

Has the Mountain Grrl Experience Inspired you? There is a spot on our stage, just for Mountain Grrls of all ages to sing a song or play an instrument.

Stay tuned for a QR code to sign up soon! Space is limited!

A young girl singing into a microphone while holding a piece of paper, with a woman playing an acoustic guitar beside her. They are performing on a stage with a whiteboard behind them listing titles of famous ballads and their names.