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Upcoming events and things to do in Asheville, NC. Below is a list of events for festivals, concerts, art exhibitions, group meetups and more.

Interested in adding an event to our calendar? Please click the green “Post Your Event” button below.

Friday, November 10, 2023
Toe River Arts November Studio Tour
Nov 10 all-day
Burnsville-Yancey and Mitchell County

Driving through the Appalachian Mountains in Fall is both breathtaking and awe-inspiring. It is a time when nature itself proves to be the original artist, painting the landscape and the sky with hues of red, orange, and yellow.

 

It doesn’t matter if you live up the hill or across the state, the Toe River Arts Studio Tour, happening November 10-12, 2023, provides the intrepid seeker of art experiences a reason for an adventure.

 

Artist studios are exciting places to visit because they offer a glimpse into the dynamic processes used to create a finished piece. Every artist has their own way of telling a story, inviting visitors to ask questions, hold their work, and share a moment. You can count on the studios being as unique as the artists: the building off to the side of the house, or across the field or down the road or right off the main road or down a gravel one-lane. Two-stories with a gallery space or small and cozy with a table set up or cleared off for display. Still there are others that devote a corner to each artist sharing the space.

 

The art is as diverse as the artists with the tour featuring the work of glassblowers, jewelers, printmakers, potters, fiber artists, ironworkers, painters, sculptors, and woodworkers.

Just 40 minutes north of Asheville and two hours from Charlotte & Greenville, the Studio Tour makes for an exciting day trip. However, with 85 studios and 8 galleries to visit, the Toe River Arts Studio Tour becomes a fantastic way to enjoy a weekend mini vacation. Both Chambers of Commerce in Burnsville-Yancey and Mitchell County provide information on lodging, eateries, and other local events.  Additionally, Toe River Arts is incredibly grateful to Explore Burnsville for being the event sponsor.

 

For more than a quarter century, the Toe River Arts Studio Tour has intrigued those who make the journey to visit places of inspiration and creation. Situated between Roan Mountain, which boasts the world’s largest rhododendron garden, and Mt. Mitchell, the highest peak east of the Mississippi, the Toe River Arts Studio Tour is a free, self-guided journey of the arts. This arts adventure through Mitchell and Yancey Counties will take visitors along the meandering Toe River, across its many bridges, around barns, acres of fields and miles of forests all while visiting the talented studio artists who often take inspiration from the mountains, they call home.

2023 Fall Studio Tour

Friday, November 10 – Sunday, November 12

Mark your calendars for the 2023 Toe River Arts Fall Studio Tour, happening November 10 – 12, 2023.

This driving tour through Mitchell and Yancey Counties will take visitors along the meandering Toe River, across its many bridges, around barns, acres of fields, and miles of forests all while visiting the talented studio artists and galleries participating.

Fall Studio Tour Preview Exhibition 

November 4 – December 30

An exhibition featuring a selection of works from participating studio artists and galleries.
Kokol Gallery, Spruce Pine

Meet the Artist Reception

Friday, November 10, 5:30 PM – 7:30 PM
Kokol Gallery, Spruce Pine

The November Studio Tour Exhibition opens in the Kokol Gallery, in Toe River Arts’ Spruce Pine location at 269 Oak Ave, November 4, 2023, and runs through Saturday December 30, 2023. This exhibition gives visitors an opportunity to have a glimpse into each studio and plan their route. It is also a great place to begin the tour or take a break from a day of non-stop art and artists.

 

Normal gallery hours are 10:30am to 5pm, Tuesday through Sunday; and 10am – 5pm during the Studio Tour, 11/10-11/12.

 

Join artists, staff, and the volunteers who make the tour the best and one of the longest continually running self-guided tours in the country, as we toast the beginning of the season during our “Meet-the-Artists” reception on Friday, November 10, from 5:30-7:30.

 

“Every year is unique. The artists change, and the work evolves. I am always excited when the boxes arrive—to see a new artist’s work or the evolution of a more seasoned artist” said Kathryn Andree, who has been Toe River Arts Exhibits Coordinator for over a decade. The participant shows are the biggest exhibits during the year, averaging over 150 pieces on pedestals, tables, walls, with a few bigger pieces relegated to the floor. They are the most diverse, with media ranging from 2-dimensional to glass, clay, wood, and fiber—something for every palate, every wallet.

Toe River Arts is a non-profit organization that has been connecting the community with the arts for over four decades.

LAZOOM: CITY COMEDY TOUR
Nov 10 @ 10:00 am
LaZoom Room

Learn Asheville’s history, discover hidden gems, and laugh at LaZoom’s quirky sense of adventure.

  • Guided comedy tour bus of historical Asheville
  • 90-Minutes – tours run daily
  • 15-minute break at Green Man Brewing
  • $39 per person (ages 13+ only)
Blue Ridge Orchestra’s Revels
Nov 10 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Warren Wilson Presbyterian Church

Milton Crotts, Conductor

Program:


Rigby’s Escape, Andre Madatian

for flute, clarinet, and string orchestra 

Selections by The Walker Family Band

Scott Walker, Jennie Brunner, Landon Walker, Laura Boswell

Baroque Flamenco for harp and strings, Deborah Henson-Conant (b. 1953)

Tori Parrish, harp

Intermission

Alla siciliana – Allegro vivace – Andante, from Gaelic Symphony, Amy Beach (1867-1944)


The Nutcracker Suite, Op.71a, Pyotr IlyichTchaikovsky (1840-1893)

II. Danses caractéristiques

a. Marche

b. Dance of the Sugar-Plum Fairy

c. Russian Dance (Trepak)

d. Arabian Dance

e. Chinese Dance

f. Reed-Flutes

III. Waltz of the Flowers

Other Holiday Favorites

Featured Composer

Andre Madatian, composer

Andre Madatian is a guitarist, composer, and educator currently residing in Nashville, Tennessee. Andre holds a Bachelor of Music degree in Film Scoring with a minor in Contemporary Conducting from Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts, and a Master of Music in Composition from Middle Tennessee State University. Aside from composing, Andre is also an active touring guitarist, as well as an educator where he mentors students from all around the globe in several areas, including composition, arranging, orchestration, and music theory. Andre recently accepted a full-time professorship position with Tennessee State University, where he teaches arranging and music appreciation, and directs a commercial music ensemble.

Featured Soloists

The Walker Family Band

1st photo, Pictured Left to Right: Scott Walker, Jennie Brunner, Landon Walker

2nd photo: Laura Boswell

For over two decades, The Walker Family Band has delighted audiences throughout the Southeast with a distinctive take on traditional styles, performing Irish dance music and American old-time music with a forward-reaching attitude. They especially enjoy sharing original tunes, which grow naturally from these roots, and from their thorough training and experience in classical music and jazz. The result is varied music not compartmentalized into a particular genre. All now living in the Asheville area, the band is playing for events in the area. Jennie Brunner is a long-standing member of the Blue Ridge Orchestra.

Jennie leads the way with beautiful and heartfelt fiddle playing, and is a master of connecting with the audience. She is accompanied and supported, very capably, by her dad, Scott Walker, on guitar and fiddle, and her uncle Landon Walker on accordion and bass. For the Blue Ridge Orchestra performances, they will be enhanced by a close friend and extended Walker Family Band member, Laura Boswell.

Tori Parrish, harp

Tori Parrish (they/them pronouns) is a classically trained harpist with a degree in fine art painting from Stanford University and over a decade of experience performing at weddings, concerts and events. Tori has performed worldwide with the American Youth Harp Ensemble, as well as across the United States with the Stanford Symphony Orchestra. Some notable venues include the Stanford Memorial Church, Bing Concert Hall, SLAC Accelerator Lab in California, and St. Peter’s Cathedral in Vienna. You can learn more about Tori’s work at luxuryharpist.com.

LAZOOM Tours: BAND AND BEER TOUR
Nov 10 @ 5:30 pm – 8:30 pm
LaZoom Room

Wanna hear the best local music ​and​ drink the best local beers? Hop aboard LaZoom’s Purple Bus and rock out with a local band while we take you on a journey to Asheville’s premiere local breweries.

  • Curated Live Music & Brewery Bus experience
  • 3 Hours long, includes three 30 Minute Local Brewery Stops
  • You Can Drink on the Funky Purple Bus! **Must be purchased at LaZoom or at brewery stop**
LAZOOM Tours: GHOST COMEDY BUS TOUR
Nov 10 @ 7:00 pm
LaZoom Room


GHOST COMEDY BUS TOUR

Grab a local beer, crucifix and a rubber chicken* —You might survive this hour long hilarious haunted ghost tour of Asheville.

  • Guided comedy bus tour of Haunted Asheville
  • 60 minutes; tours run nightly after dark
  • $33 per person (Ages 17+ only)
  • Departs from 76 Biltmore Avenue

*Legal Note: Crucifix not required to board the bus; we do not condone exorcisms, chickens, rubber, or any combination of the three.

CHARLES WESLEY GODWIN
Nov 10 @ 8:00 pm
The Orange Peel

A native of West Virginia, Charles Wesley Godwin makes cinematic country-folk that’s as gorgeous and ruggedly raw as his homeland. It’s Appalachian Americana, rooted in Godwin’s sharp songwriting and backwoods baritone. With 2021’s How the Mighty Fall, he trades the  autobiographical lyrics that filled Seneca — his acclaimed debut, released in 2019 and celebrated by everyone from Rolling Stone to NPR’s Mountain Stage — for a collection of character-driven songs about mortality, hope, and regret, putting an intimate spin on the universal concerns we all share.

“I started a family around the time Seneca came out,” he remembers. “After my son was born, I remember sitting in the hospital, thinking about how that very experience would eventually become one of those life moments that flash before my eyes when I’m old. I realized that time is passing, and my time will pass, too. Becoming a father made it all sink in.”

Those realizations quickly found their way into his writing. If Seneca painted the picture of a southern son in the middle of American coal country, then How the Mighty Fall — produced once again by Al Torrence — zooms out to focus on wider themes of time, transience, and the choices we make. Songs like “Strong” “Bones” and “Blood Feud” are roadhouse roots-rockers, driven forward by fiery fiddle, lap steel and plenty of electric guitar. Godwin does most of his painting with more subtle shades, though, often waiting until How the Mighty Fall’ssofter moments to make his biggest impact. On “Cranes of Potter,” he delivers a murder ballad with finger-plucked acoustic guitar and elegiac melodies, unspooling the narrative with a storyteller’s restraint. Meanwhile, “Temporary Town” finds him returning to West Virginia after spending five years in the midwest, celebrating his homecoming not with barely-contained enthusiasm, but with measured excitement, light percussion, and a steadily-building arrangement. “I try to write with a sense of place,” he explains. “Up until now, that setting has always been my home, but I don’t think this new album is as locally-focused as my previous release. I hope these songs will connect with people wherever they live.”

The son of a coal miner father and a schoolteacher mother, Godwin began forging those musical connections in 2013, while studying abroad in Estonia. He’d learned the acoustic guitar several years earlier, looking for a diversion after failing to secure a spot on the West Virginia University football team. Halfway across the world in Estonia, he started strumming songs in his apartment, summoning the sights and sounds of West Virginia for a group of new friends who’d never laid eyes on the state. Fans were made, gigs were booked, and Godwin launched his full-time music career shortly after graduation.

Marriage soon took him to Ohio, where his wife worked as a fundraiser. Even so, West Virginia remained at the forefront of Godwin’s mind, and he saluted the area’s influence with his 2019 debut. Seneca was a hit, with Billboard praising the album’s “the vivid language and scenic ambience,” and Rolling Stone enthusing, “His voice, with its tight, old-world vibrato, is perfect.” Godwin hit the road in support of its release, touring domestically one minute and selling out shows in European destinations like Stockholm the next. When the global pandemic brought his touring to a halt, he set his sights on How the Mighty Fall, creating the album during a period that also witnessed the arrival of his son and the migration of his growing family back to West Virginia.

Charles Wesley Godwin has never been afraid to blur the lines, and How the Mighty Fall proudly straddles the borderlands between several genres. It’s a country album by an Appalachian-borne folk singer and blue-collar believer, laced with enough electricity to satisfy the Saturday night revelers and enough scaled-down acoustic balladry to soundtrack the slow, gentle pace of Sunday morning. For every “Lyin’ Low” — a driving folk anthem, its larger-than-life melodies flanked by banjo — there’s a softly sweeping song like “Lost Without You,” which finds Godwin’s voice echoing between stretches of pedal steel and symphonic strings. This is music for campfires and car rides, for pool halls and mountain peaks, for big-city diehards and small-town loyalists. It’s Charles Wesley Godwin at his best, diving into character studies and richly-created fiction while still offering glimpses of the man behind the music.

Mary Lattimore + Manas + E.M.M.
Nov 10 @ 8:00 pm
Eulogy

Eulogy Presents: Mary Lattimore + MANAS & E.M.M. (a collaborative project between Manas and Efrim Manuel Menuck of Godspeed You! Black Emperor)

with Topographies and Jon Mueller

Tis The Dang Season: A Taylor Swift Dance Party
Nov 10 @ 8:00 pm
The Grey Eagle

ASHEVILLE SWIFTIES, living for the hope of it all? Cancel plans just in case they’d call? Come scream it out at the ultimate Taylor Swift Dance Party on Nov 10th!

TAYLOR SWIFT DANCE PARTY: TIS’ THE DAMN SEASON
Nov 10 @ 9:00 pm
The Grey Eagle

– ALL AGES
– STANDING/DANCING ROOM ONLY

TAYLOR SWIFT DANCE PARTY: TIS’ THE DAMN SEASON

DJ playing Taylor through her eras, costume contest, lipsync battle, themed photo areas, free koozie, bracelet trading, and more!

Saturday, November 11, 2023
Toe River Arts November Studio Tour
Nov 11 all-day
Burnsville-Yancey and Mitchell County

Driving through the Appalachian Mountains in Fall is both breathtaking and awe-inspiring. It is a time when nature itself proves to be the original artist, painting the landscape and the sky with hues of red, orange, and yellow.

 

It doesn’t matter if you live up the hill or across the state, the Toe River Arts Studio Tour, happening November 10-12, 2023, provides the intrepid seeker of art experiences a reason for an adventure.

 

Artist studios are exciting places to visit because they offer a glimpse into the dynamic processes used to create a finished piece. Every artist has their own way of telling a story, inviting visitors to ask questions, hold their work, and share a moment. You can count on the studios being as unique as the artists: the building off to the side of the house, or across the field or down the road or right off the main road or down a gravel one-lane. Two-stories with a gallery space or small and cozy with a table set up or cleared off for display. Still there are others that devote a corner to each artist sharing the space.

 

The art is as diverse as the artists with the tour featuring the work of glassblowers, jewelers, printmakers, potters, fiber artists, ironworkers, painters, sculptors, and woodworkers.

Just 40 minutes north of Asheville and two hours from Charlotte & Greenville, the Studio Tour makes for an exciting day trip. However, with 85 studios and 8 galleries to visit, the Toe River Arts Studio Tour becomes a fantastic way to enjoy a weekend mini vacation. Both Chambers of Commerce in Burnsville-Yancey and Mitchell County provide information on lodging, eateries, and other local events.  Additionally, Toe River Arts is incredibly grateful to Explore Burnsville for being the event sponsor.

 

For more than a quarter century, the Toe River Arts Studio Tour has intrigued those who make the journey to visit places of inspiration and creation. Situated between Roan Mountain, which boasts the world’s largest rhododendron garden, and Mt. Mitchell, the highest peak east of the Mississippi, the Toe River Arts Studio Tour is a free, self-guided journey of the arts. This arts adventure through Mitchell and Yancey Counties will take visitors along the meandering Toe River, across its many bridges, around barns, acres of fields and miles of forests all while visiting the talented studio artists who often take inspiration from the mountains, they call home.

2023 Fall Studio Tour

Friday, November 10 – Sunday, November 12

Mark your calendars for the 2023 Toe River Arts Fall Studio Tour, happening November 10 – 12, 2023.

This driving tour through Mitchell and Yancey Counties will take visitors along the meandering Toe River, across its many bridges, around barns, acres of fields, and miles of forests all while visiting the talented studio artists and galleries participating.

Fall Studio Tour Preview Exhibition 

November 4 – December 30

An exhibition featuring a selection of works from participating studio artists and galleries.
Kokol Gallery, Spruce Pine

Meet the Artist Reception

Friday, November 10, 5:30 PM – 7:30 PM
Kokol Gallery, Spruce Pine

The November Studio Tour Exhibition opens in the Kokol Gallery, in Toe River Arts’ Spruce Pine location at 269 Oak Ave, November 4, 2023, and runs through Saturday December 30, 2023. This exhibition gives visitors an opportunity to have a glimpse into each studio and plan their route. It is also a great place to begin the tour or take a break from a day of non-stop art and artists.

 

Normal gallery hours are 10:30am to 5pm, Tuesday through Sunday; and 10am – 5pm during the Studio Tour, 11/10-11/12.

 

Join artists, staff, and the volunteers who make the tour the best and one of the longest continually running self-guided tours in the country, as we toast the beginning of the season during our “Meet-the-Artists” reception on Friday, November 10, from 5:30-7:30.

 

“Every year is unique. The artists change, and the work evolves. I am always excited when the boxes arrive—to see a new artist’s work or the evolution of a more seasoned artist” said Kathryn Andree, who has been Toe River Arts Exhibits Coordinator for over a decade. The participant shows are the biggest exhibits during the year, averaging over 150 pieces on pedestals, tables, walls, with a few bigger pieces relegated to the floor. They are the most diverse, with media ranging from 2-dimensional to glass, clay, wood, and fiber—something for every palate, every wallet.

Toe River Arts is a non-profit organization that has been connecting the community with the arts for over four decades.

LAZOOM: CITY COMEDY TOUR
Nov 11 @ 10:00 am
LaZoom Room

Learn Asheville’s history, discover hidden gems, and laugh at LaZoom’s quirky sense of adventure.

  • Guided comedy tour bus of historical Asheville
  • 90-Minutes – tours run daily
  • 15-minute break at Green Man Brewing
  • $39 per person (ages 13+ only)
LAZOOM Tours: Kids’ Comedy Tour
Nov 11 @ 11:00 am
LaZoom Room


Kids’ Comedy Tour: 
Wildly funny, this educational and entertaining tour features the perfect blend of Asheville’s history and kid-centric comedy. Geared specifically toward the 5–12 year old crowd, you’ll explore the town with our famously outlandish tour guides leading the way.

  • Perfect for birthday parties
  • Makes for memorable school field trips
  • Tickets are $27 per person
  • Beverages available for purchase at the LaZoom Room
  • Departs from 76 Biltmore Avenue
Tours of the Episcopal Church of St. John in the Wilderness
Nov 11 @ 11:00 am
Episcopal Church of St. John in the Wilderness

The church and churchyard (cemetery) tours are sponsored by the St. John Episcopal Church
Docents. They will begin inside the Carriage Door entrance of the church. Reverend Josh
Stephens said, “The response has been overwhelming since we resumed tours last year to
learn about this historic church and churchyard. Beginning in 1836 and to this day, a vibrant
congregation has welcomed all to come to this sacred place and share in the story of St. John
in the Wilderness.”
The tours are free but advance reservations must be made online through the church’s
website, www.stjohnflatrock.org/tours.  Space is limited for each tour.
The guided tours will be held the third Saturdays in November and December.
They begin promptly at 11 a.m. and last about an hour. Participants are encouraged to wear
comfortable shoes. There will be no rain dates.
The historically significant churchyard contains graves of un-named 19th century people who
were enslaved as well as distinguished political figures, and local citizens.
The church is located at 1895 Greenville Highway. For more information call the church
office at 828-693-9783 or visit www.stjohnflatrock.org.

In 1827, Charles Baring, a member of the Baring banking family of England, built a home in
Flat Rock. He and his wife, Susan, wanted a summer place to escape the oppressive heat,
humidity, and malaria of the South Carolina Lowcountry where they lived.
The Barings built a chapel on the property of their newly constructed home. Soon after it was
built the small wooden structure burned down in a woods fire. In 1833 work began on a
second church built of handmade brick.
In August of 1836 the Barings deeded their chapel to the Diocese of North Carolina and 20
members of the Flat Rock “summer colony” formed themselves into an Episcopal parish. In
the 1890s when the Missionary District of Asheville (later Diocese of Western North
Carolina) was formed, St. John in the Wilderness transferred its affiliation. It is the oldest
parish in the diocese.
With almost all the church members traveling back to the Lowcountry after the summer
season, the church mainly operated during summer months for its first 120 years. So rapid
was the growth of the Flat Rock community during the 1830s and 1840s that the parish
membership outgrew the capacity of the small chapel. In the early 1850s the decision was
made to rebuild the church, essentially doubling its size. With only a few minor modifications
the structure was completed in 1852. It is the one that stands today.

ArtsAVL Connect Trolley
Nov 11 @ 12:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Central Business District to the River Arts District

Starting April 8th, you can ride ArtAVL’s new free ArtsAVL Connect Trolley – connecting the Downtown and River Arts Districts with two overlapping routes.

The initiative is a partnership between ArtsAVL and Gray Line Asheville. Beginning April 8th, two chartered Gray Line trolleys will circulate on 20-30 minute intervals from 12-8 pm on every Second Saturday. Riders are welcome to hop on and off anywhere along the trolley routes.

The Downtown Trolley connects the main areas of the Central Business District to the River Arts District. The River Arts Trolley loops throughout the River Arts District. Residents and visitors can view stops and current location of trolleys through the interactive trolley map on ArtsAVL’s website and the new ArtsAVL app.

Walking Tour of Historic Downtown Black Mountain
Nov 11 @ 1:00 pm
Swannanoa Valley Museum

Learn the history of Black Mountain and the Swannanoa Valley on this walking tour! Museum staff will lead attendees through historic State Street, Cherry Street and Black Mountain Avenue, relaying the history of several buildings and discussing topics including the building of the Swannanoa Tunnel and the disastrous downtown fire of 1912.

Location: Attendees will meet at the Swannanoa Valley Museum (223 West State Street, Black Mountain, NC 28711)

Timing: Tours take place once a month on Saturdays, with a break in October, beginning at 1:00pm. Tours last approximately 1.5 hours.

Cost: FREE to museum members with promo code, $10 for general admission (some fees apply). Museum members can email [email protected] to receive their promo code.

LAZOOM Tours: BAND AND BEER TOUR
Nov 11 @ 5:30 pm – 8:30 pm
LaZoom Room

Wanna hear the best local music ​and​ drink the best local beers? Hop aboard LaZoom’s Purple Bus and rock out with a local band while we take you on a journey to Asheville’s premiere local breweries.

  • Curated Live Music & Brewery Bus experience
  • 3 Hours long, includes three 30 Minute Local Brewery Stops
  • You Can Drink on the Funky Purple Bus! **Must be purchased at LaZoom or at brewery stop**
An Evening of Folk Music with Tina + Her Pony
Nov 11 @ 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Story Parlor

In recordings as well as live performances, Asheville based band Tina & Her Pony (queer fronted indie Appalachian folk) always strives to provide the listener with a deep oceanic counterpoint balanced with an earthy, time-honored musical approach. It’s an apt metaphor for the dark and the light of life, for the transformation of life’s joys and sorrows into songs that Tina & Her Pony has strived to create since 2010. Playing songs and telling stories from their latest album “Marigolds” (March 2023) as well as even newer songs, this concert will feature Tina’s 4-piece band, which weaves a fascinating web of sound and intention that draws the audience in. Listening to Tina & Her Pony offers a window into an interior landscape that begs to be explored.

OUTPOST: MEL BRYANT + THE MERCY MAKERS AND SHAUNA DEAN COKELAND
Nov 11 @ 6:00 pm
The Outpost
Doors Open: 5:00 PM
– ALL AGES
– STANDING ROOM ONLY
– RAIN OR SHINE

Mel Bryant & the Mercy Makers write songs for screaming from the passenger seat. A nashville based, east coast born rock band inspired by modern punk, classic blues, and indie sad girls, the group embodies the spirit of a DIY band, recording all their own music in a barn-turned-studio in their backyard. Their gritty guitars, raucous grooves, raging feminine energy and frank, witty lyricism have gained them a dedicated following on social media and a Spotify stream count in the multi millions. Check out the links below to hear more and watch them live.

Shauna Dean Cokeland is an acoustic folk pop artist with lyricism beyond her years and over 500,000 followers on TikTok and Instagram, comprised of real, engaged fans who know all the words to her songs—even the unreleased ones. Hailing from a small beach town in Maryland with dreams of taking over the world as the “Last Best Pop Star”, her long anticipated latest single asserts, she is bold and confident and weaves tantalizing stories in her songs. Inspired by all things 2000s, Britney Spears, Eminem, Kesha, Tyler Childers, and low rise jeans, her infectious brand of Y2K nostalgia combined with a teenage passion for both emo and country music has fostered a sense of community among the Gen Z that’s hard to put to words.

McKinney is a queer femme bass player and singer/songwriter living in Asheville, NC. She is a resident artist with LEAF Global Arts and has a been a regular performer at the LEAF festivals for the past 6 years. She grew up touring with an empowerment concert tour that educates youth about mental health resources. Her diverse and inclusive ensemble combines elements of rock, jazz, blues, funk, and soul to craft songs that resonate with authenticity and vulnerability. She released her debut single in 2021 entitled “Stay,” produced by Josh Blake at Echo Mountain. You can feel the desire she has to create new music that stays true to her unique sound. With new music, coming in 2024, produced by Ted Marks & Thommy Knowles, this young woman is ready to take her place as the next powerhouse coming out of Asheville.

Avey Tare + Geologist + Deakin of Animal Collective (Solo Sets)
Nov 11 @ 7:00 pm
Eulogy

Avey Tare

You remember how it was, don’t you, back in the Spring of 2020? Knowing so little about what any of us should do, so many of us crawled inside our quarters to find new obsessions or indulge the familiar ones, unencumbered by anything else we could do. At home in the woods on the eastern edge of Asheville, N.C., Avey Tare took the latter path, sequestering himself in his small home studio to sort the songs he’d written and recorded with friends in the instantly distant before times — Animal Collective’s Time Skiffs, of course, their astonishing document of communal creativity a quarter-century into the enterprise. He often worked there for 12 hours a day, tweaking mixes alone, save the birds and bears and his girlfriend, Madelyn. By Fall, though, it was done, so what next? How else should Avey now occupy himself in his cozy little room? The answer became 7s, his fourth solo album (and first in four years), an enchanting romp through the playground of his head. He wasn’t, however, going to do it alone.

During the first week of January 2021, Avey began making regular drives to his friend Adam McDaniel’s Drop of Sun Studios to give guts and flesh and color to the skeletal demos he’d made at home. They turned first to “Hey Bog,” a tune Avey had been tinkering with since he wrote it to have new material for a rare live performance years earlier. The inquisitive electronic meditation — all tiny percussive pops and surrealist textures at first — slowly morphs into a gem about surrendering cynicism and accepting the world a bit more readily, the call buttressed by trunk-rattling bass and spectral guitar. It feels like a lifetime map for new possibilities, encapsulated in nine absorbing minutes. The plot for 7s, then, was set: trusting, intuitive, exploratory collaboration among friends, after a Winter without it. These songs are like overstuffed jelly jars, cracking so that the sweetness oozes out into unexpected shapes. Still, the sweetness — that is, Avey’s compulsory hooks — remains at the center, the joy inside these Rorschach blots.

If Animal Collective has forever been defined by its charming inscrutability, Avey surrenders to a new intimacy and candor with 7s. Take “The Musical,” a bouncing ball of rubbery synths and wah-wah guitars that contemplates what draws someone to sound and how turning that calling into a profession can alter the source. “I can hear the mountains singing,” he counters with an audible smile wiped across his face, painting a postcard of his home amid one of the United States’ folk hubs, “and I do believe they could do that forever.” Obligations aside, this is a self-renewing love, he realizes, the source as captivating as it was the first time. “Have you ever felt a thing and known that’s how you felt about it all along?” he ends this guileless love song for everything.

Geologist

As Animal Collective’s resident sound manipulator, Brian “Geologist” Weitz has played an integral role in one of the most innovative bands of the 21st century. Weitz’s earliest musical forays were with fellow Animal Collective members Dave “Avey Tare” Portner and Josh “Deakin” Dibb as Auto Mine, a high school indie rock project that predated the formative jam sessions with Noah “Panda Bear” Lennox a couple years later. The quartet formed Animal Collective in NYC in 2000, with Weitz joining Portner and Lennox for live shows and first contributing to the band’s recorded catalog on 2001’s Danse Manatee. He split time in the early 00’s between playing in Animal Collective and working in environmental policy, getting his degree in the latter while studying at the Biosphere 2 Center in Oracle, AZ. After completing an ocean policy fellowship with the US Senate in 2005, he turned his attention to Animal Collective full time.

You can hear his love of sound collage and horror film soundtracks in the band’s creaking-door ambience, and his appreciation for natural soundscapes in their use of field recordings. He’s performed internationally as a solo artist, and released the Live in the Land of the Sky cassette, and the New Psycho Actives Vol.1 split release with Portner. He has scored Coral Morphologic’s short film Man O War, as well as sound installations at Desert Daze in 2017 and Iceland’s List i Ljosi festival in 2018 with visual artist and director Danny Perez. In 2018 he collaborated with artist Kyle Simon on The Sirens, a live performance/art installation at Joshua Tree’s Integratron, in which the duo converted moonlight into sound through Geologist’s modular synthesizer. Weitz’s collaboration with Coral Morphologic, as well as his own background in ocean conservation and environmental policy, played a role in Animal Collective’s latest album, 2018’s Tangerine Reef, an audiovisual collaboration with Coral Morphologic that drew attention to coral reef preservation. He also drew inspiration from his environmental studies while creating the original score to Marnie Ellen Hertzler’s film Crestone, using his time at the Biosphere and the sensory memories of the Sonoran Desert to guide the sounds.

Deakin

Josh “Deakin” Dibb has explored a variety of sounds in his work as part of Animal Collective and in his own solo material—shaping the band’s directional shifts he’s been a part of and consistently contributing a unique flavor to their boundary-breaking career. Growing up in Baltimore with future bandmate Noah “Panda Bear” Lennox, the pair began writing and recording songs together in middle school. In high school, Dibb met Dave “Avey Tare” Portner and Brian “Geologist” Weitz, later joining the pair’s band Automine. By the end of high school, Dibb had connected Lennox to Portner and Weitz and the foursome began to collaborate. By 2000, Dibb was running the band’s record label, Animal, which released their first album Spirit They’re Gone, Spirit They’ve Vanished. He first appeared musically on the band’s 2003 releasesCampfire Songs and Ark; his guitar-centric approach played a pivotal role in the freaked-out rock of 2005’s Feels and the experimental pop of Strawberry Jam in 2007. While sitting out the Merriweather Post Pavilion (2009) album and touring cycle following the sudden death of his father, Dibb stayed involved in studio projects (Water Curses, 2008) and the development, filming, music, and sound design of the band’s first visual album ODDSAC (2010). In 2010, Dibb began playing his first solo shows, worked with Portner to engineer and produce three albums (Avey Tare’s Down There, Tickley Feather’s 123, Prince Rama’s Shadow Temple), and was involved in the band’s collaborative performance with Danny Perez at the Guggenheim, which lead to the 2012 release of Transverse Temporal Gyrus. After a temporary stent away from the band, Dibb returned to begin writing and touring for Centipede Hz (2012) before stepping back again to focus on his solo album Sleep Cycle (2016), a meditative collection of experimental pop songs and his first solo effort since contributing to the band’s Keep cassette mixtape in 2011. Along with mixing and production work on solo albums from Lennox (Young Prayer) and Portner (Down There, Eucalyptus, Conference of Birds EP), and contributing a variety of remixes to artists ranging from M83 and Phoenix to Tinariwen, Steve Spacek, and Goldfrapp, Dibb’s recent projects as part of Animal Collective include 2018’s Tangerine Reef, an audiovisual collaboration with Coral Morphologic that drew attention to coral reef preservation, a 2018 performance at the Music Box Village in New Orleans which inspired the music the band is currently making, and last year’s Bridge to Quiet EP, a selection of improvisations from 2019 and 2020 that the band remixed, collaged and built into songs. Most recently, Dibb and

Weitz scored Marnie Ellen Hertzler’s debut film and documentary Crestone (2021).

All ages

LAZOOM Tours: GHOST COMEDY BUS TOUR
Nov 11 @ 7:00 pm
LaZoom Room


GHOST COMEDY BUS TOUR

Grab a local beer, crucifix and a rubber chicken* —You might survive this hour long hilarious haunted ghost tour of Asheville.

  • Guided comedy bus tour of Haunted Asheville
  • 60 minutes; tours run nightly after dark
  • $33 per person (Ages 17+ only)
  • Departs from 76 Biltmore Avenue

*Legal Note: Crucifix not required to board the bus; we do not condone exorcisms, chickens, rubber, or any combination of the three.

Trey McLaughlin + The Sounds of Zamar
Nov 11 @ 7:00 pm
Wortham Center for the Performing Arts

With rich harmonies, powerful vocals and an electrifying stage presence, this contemporary gospel group creates an unforgettable and uplifting musical experience that’s gained them viral success, amassing millions of fans and followers from all corners of the globe. Whether performing traditional standards, hits from musical theatre or their own original music, these prolific singers deliver jubilation as they transcend genre and speak to the heart of every listener.

The performance by Trey McLaughlin & the Sounds of Zamar is funded in part by a grant from South Arts in partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts and the North Carolina Arts Council.

Lee Mills + Simone Porter: THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS
Nov 11 @ 7:30 pm
Peace Concert Hall

Lee Mills, conductor
Simone Porter, violinist

Program:
Mary D. Watkins: Soul of Rememberance
Philip Glass: Violin Concerto No. 1
Robert Schumann: Symphony No. 2

To learn more about the conductor and guest artist, please visit www.greenvillesymphony.org.

Lee Mills and Simone Porter: Through The Looking Glass
Nov 11 @ 7:30 pm
Peace Concert Hall

Lee Mills, Conductor
Simone Porter, Violinist
Mary D. Watkins: Soul of Remembrance
Philip Glass: Violin Concerto No. 1
Robert Schumann: Symphony No. 2

Philip Glass and Robert Schumann are composers separated by two centuries.  One, an American from Baltimore whose music defies genre: it’s two parts driving rhythm and one part rich string texture.  You could even say it’s got a hint of rock n’ roll.  Add a true rockstar of the violin, the one and only Simone Porter, and the fear of missing out factor is on another level.

Robert Schumann, best friend of Johannes Brahms and husband of the legendary Clara Schumann was a musical celebrity in 19th century Germany who struggled with mental illness. He found relief and sanctuary in music and the result is some of the most complex and fascinating compositions of the German Romantic period. Despite the composer’s depression, this symphony cuts through the darkness and leaves us feeling hopeful and uplifted.  This energetic and elegant second symphony turns the traditional structure on its head by opening with a quiet first movement. Don’t take it from us—come hear this revolutionary and redemptive work for yourself.

CLICK TO LEARN MORE ABOUT THE CONDUCTOR & GUEST ARTIST

HISS GOLDEN MESSENGER
Nov 11 @ 8:00 pm
The Orange Peel

HISS GOLDEN MESSENGER

 Show: 8pm | Doors: 7pm
Ages 18+
SOUTHERN CULTURE ON THE SKIDS with Pleasure Chest
Nov 11 @ 8:00 pm
The Grey Eagle
– ALL AGES
– STANDING ROOM ONLY

SOUTHERN CULTURE ON THE SKIDS

Southern Culture On The Skids has been consistently recording and touring around the world since 1983. The band (Rick Miller – guitar and vocals, Mary Huff – bass and vocals, Dave Hartman – drums) has been playing together for over 30 years. Their musical journey has taken them from all-night North Carolina house parties to late night TV talk shows (Conan O’Brien, The Tonight Show), from performing at the base of Mt. Fuji in Japan to rockin’ out for the inmates at North Carolina correctional facilities. They’ve shared a stage with many musical luminaries including Link Wray, Loretta Lynn, Hasil Adkins and Patti Smith. Their music has been featured in movies and TV, parodied by Weird Al, and used to sell everything from diamonds to pork sausage. In 2014 the band was honored by the Southern Folklife Collection at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill with an exhibition featuring their music and cultural contributions. Their legendary live shows are a testament to the therapeutic powers of foot-stomping, butt-shaking rock and roll and what Rolling Stone dubbed “a hell raising rock and roll party.”

At Home with Southern Culture on the Skids is the latest full length album from the band and was released in March of 2021. It was recorded during the stay at home period of the pandemic when the band was at home and not touring. The album consists of 11 tracks recorded and mixed in Rick Miller’s living room with some additional tracks recorded at his studio, The Kudzu Ranch.

The first radio single off the album is “Run Baby Run”—a rocking number with deep garage roots. SCOTS bassist Mary Huff provides an urgent vocal while the band pulls back the throttle on a full race fuzz fest—cause she’s gotta to go fast! Run Baby Run!

The other songs on the album are a combination of the band’s unique mix of musical genres: rock and roll, surf, folk and country—all a bit off-center, what Rick proudly calls “our wobbly Americana”. Rick goes on, “We put a few more acoustic guitars on this one, as you would expect if you recorded in your living room, but it still rocks like SCOTS. So put your headphones on, get in your favorite chair/sofa/recliner, put on “At Home With” and let’s hang out for a while.”

PLEASURE CHEST
Pleasure Chest is a high energy Blues, Soul, Rock and Roll band hailing from Asheville NC. With the humor of Bo Diddley and Screamin’ Jay Hawkins to the swampy, dirty grit of Slim Harpo and Elmore James they’re guaranteed to please and get your booty shaking!

Straight No Chaser
Nov 11 @ 8:00 pm
Thomas Wolfe Auditorium

 IF THE PHRASE “MALE A CAPPELLA GROUP” CONJURES UP AN IMAGE OF STUDENTS IN BLUE BLAZERS, TIES, AND KHAKIS SINGING TRADITIONAL COLLEGE SONGS ON IVIED CAMPUSES… THINK AGAIN.

Anywhere in the world, nine dapper vocalists walk across the stage and immediately bring audiences to their feet.

They do so with nothing more than microphones in hand, grins ear-to-ear, witty banter on point, and an uncanny ability to belt out holiday staples, R&B smooth jams, and stadium anthems carried by style, swagger, and spirit. For as much as the story of Straight No Chaser belongs to the nine guys on stage, it also belongs to a devoted community of millions worldwide affectionately dubbed, “Chasers,” who cemented the a cappella collective’s status as an international phenomenon.

Sunday, November 12, 2023
Toe River Arts November Studio Tour
Nov 12 all-day
Burnsville-Yancey and Mitchell County

Driving through the Appalachian Mountains in Fall is both breathtaking and awe-inspiring. It is a time when nature itself proves to be the original artist, painting the landscape and the sky with hues of red, orange, and yellow.

 

It doesn’t matter if you live up the hill or across the state, the Toe River Arts Studio Tour, happening November 10-12, 2023, provides the intrepid seeker of art experiences a reason for an adventure.

 

Artist studios are exciting places to visit because they offer a glimpse into the dynamic processes used to create a finished piece. Every artist has their own way of telling a story, inviting visitors to ask questions, hold their work, and share a moment. You can count on the studios being as unique as the artists: the building off to the side of the house, or across the field or down the road or right off the main road or down a gravel one-lane. Two-stories with a gallery space or small and cozy with a table set up or cleared off for display. Still there are others that devote a corner to each artist sharing the space.

 

The art is as diverse as the artists with the tour featuring the work of glassblowers, jewelers, printmakers, potters, fiber artists, ironworkers, painters, sculptors, and woodworkers.

Just 40 minutes north of Asheville and two hours from Charlotte & Greenville, the Studio Tour makes for an exciting day trip. However, with 85 studios and 8 galleries to visit, the Toe River Arts Studio Tour becomes a fantastic way to enjoy a weekend mini vacation. Both Chambers of Commerce in Burnsville-Yancey and Mitchell County provide information on lodging, eateries, and other local events.  Additionally, Toe River Arts is incredibly grateful to Explore Burnsville for being the event sponsor.

 

For more than a quarter century, the Toe River Arts Studio Tour has intrigued those who make the journey to visit places of inspiration and creation. Situated between Roan Mountain, which boasts the world’s largest rhododendron garden, and Mt. Mitchell, the highest peak east of the Mississippi, the Toe River Arts Studio Tour is a free, self-guided journey of the arts. This arts adventure through Mitchell and Yancey Counties will take visitors along the meandering Toe River, across its many bridges, around barns, acres of fields and miles of forests all while visiting the talented studio artists who often take inspiration from the mountains, they call home.

2023 Fall Studio Tour

Friday, November 10 – Sunday, November 12

Mark your calendars for the 2023 Toe River Arts Fall Studio Tour, happening November 10 – 12, 2023.

This driving tour through Mitchell and Yancey Counties will take visitors along the meandering Toe River, across its many bridges, around barns, acres of fields, and miles of forests all while visiting the talented studio artists and galleries participating.

Fall Studio Tour Preview Exhibition 

November 4 – December 30

An exhibition featuring a selection of works from participating studio artists and galleries.
Kokol Gallery, Spruce Pine

Meet the Artist Reception

Friday, November 10, 5:30 PM – 7:30 PM
Kokol Gallery, Spruce Pine

The November Studio Tour Exhibition opens in the Kokol Gallery, in Toe River Arts’ Spruce Pine location at 269 Oak Ave, November 4, 2023, and runs through Saturday December 30, 2023. This exhibition gives visitors an opportunity to have a glimpse into each studio and plan their route. It is also a great place to begin the tour or take a break from a day of non-stop art and artists.

 

Normal gallery hours are 10:30am to 5pm, Tuesday through Sunday; and 10am – 5pm during the Studio Tour, 11/10-11/12.

 

Join artists, staff, and the volunteers who make the tour the best and one of the longest continually running self-guided tours in the country, as we toast the beginning of the season during our “Meet-the-Artists” reception on Friday, November 10, from 5:30-7:30.

 

“Every year is unique. The artists change, and the work evolves. I am always excited when the boxes arrive—to see a new artist’s work or the evolution of a more seasoned artist” said Kathryn Andree, who has been Toe River Arts Exhibits Coordinator for over a decade. The participant shows are the biggest exhibits during the year, averaging over 150 pieces on pedestals, tables, walls, with a few bigger pieces relegated to the floor. They are the most diverse, with media ranging from 2-dimensional to glass, clay, wood, and fiber—something for every palate, every wallet.

Toe River Arts is a non-profit organization that has been connecting the community with the arts for over four decades.

LAZOOM: CITY COMEDY TOUR
Nov 12 @ 10:00 am
LaZoom Room

Learn Asheville’s history, discover hidden gems, and laugh at LaZoom’s quirky sense of adventure.

  • Guided comedy tour bus of historical Asheville
  • 90-Minutes – tours run daily
  • 15-minute break at Green Man Brewing
  • $39 per person (ages 13+ only)
PATIO: Country Brunch w/ Jackson Grimm + Motel Pearl
Nov 12 @ 2:48 pm
The Grey Eagle
– ALL AGES (free admission for kids) 
– LIMITED SEATING IS FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED
Country Brunch at The Grey Eagle – a music series for early birds. Country Brunch showcases a goldmine of local country bands that can usually only be found playing late nights in local and regional venues, and brings them out  into the light of day for lovers of an early matinee show. The series runs monthly with a different band each month.
Monthly Lineup:

Show runs 12-3pm on the indoor music room stage. Food and drink available from The Grey Eagle Taqueria. Family friendly show! Kids get in free. Come fill your Sunday day with food, drink, fun and some of the best live music Asheville has to offer – all in one place.

Four Seasons Chamber Orchestra “Danzón”
Nov 12 @ 3:00 pm
Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Hendersonville

The 4SCO is pleased to present an exquisite program featuring influences of Spanish and Latin American cultures. This dance inspired concert is titled “Danzón,” and features works by Arriaga, Márquez, and Piazzolla.