91直播

Martha Redbone Hears Her Musical Call

March 18, 2025

Stephanie Manning '23

woman with short hair and colorful clothing singing, eyes closed while holding percussion instrument

Photo credit: Cedric Pilard

鈥淚f it鈥檚 meant to happen, the music will find you.鈥 That鈥檚 how Martha Redbone sees it. And it wasn鈥檛 until she was in college studying illustration in the late 鈥80s, that the music found her for good.  

Back then, the advent of the first Mac was rapidly changing the art world..鈥溾夾s an illustrator who loved painting and drawing people, that digital world was not for me,鈥 she said. Feeling torn, she turned to music as a creative outlet, starting as a background vocalist before progressing into a career as a lead singer. Together with her songwriting partner (and later life partner) the pianist Aaron Whitby, she began to write music that had stories to tell.

鈥溾奣here was a connection and a resonance that I got from singing, and it gave me a sense of peace,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檒l always be an artist, I鈥檒l always be an illustrator. But the music is what ended up calling me, and I just listened to that call.鈥

Today, through her group the Martha Redbone Roots Project, the vocalist performs and creates songs across a wide range of cultural genres.

鈥溾奧e play gospel music, we play blues, ballads, mountain hollers, we sing poetry from William Blake 鈥 we do all kinds of things,鈥 says Redbone, who was raised in rural Kentucky and New York City.  She and Whitby, together with violinist Charlie Burnham and bassist Fred Cash, Jr., will bring this cross-disciplinary performance to 91直播 on April 6 as part of the Artist Recital Series.

woman sitting in front of a classroom of people, smilingRedbone鈥檚 Sunday night concert in Finney Chapel will be the second part of her 91直播 residency this academic year. In October, she visited the school to host a career talk and a number of musical workshops, which were made possible by the Ed Helms American Roots Residency Fund. This visit marked her first time in 91直播, 鈥渂ut my goodness, it won鈥檛 be my last,鈥 she says. The students 鈥溾妔eemed really happy with the curriculum and excited about the things that are going on.鈥

She especially praises the American Roots Residency program, which provides opportunities for 91直播 students to engage with bluegrass, roots, and Americana music. 鈥溾奊iven the history of the school, I think it鈥檚 a really powerful way to preserve American history through music,鈥 she says. 

Keeping these regional styles of music alive is important to her, thanks to her childhood in Kentucky and her family connections throughout Appalachia. 鈥淭here鈥檚 so many different cultures in that area, and this long history, but at the same time, there鈥檚 been this kind of one-note narrative鈥 about the region, she says. 鈥淚 feel it鈥檚 my responsibility to share the culture through my eyes 鈥 as a person of color, a person with indigenous roots and African American roots.鈥

Redbone has been spending a lot of time thinking about colleges recently. Her son will be starting the application process soon, and she鈥檚 encouraging him to put his passions first. 鈥溾奣he reality is, for undergrad, I think you really gotta do what you love,鈥 she says. 

Today, Redbone embraces her own passions by taking  her music on tour, often performing in wildly different corners of the country. But certain things have remained consistent everywhere. 鈥淭he people who invite us to share our music truly love what they do,鈥 she says. 鈥淣o matter where we are, we have been welcomed with so much love and kindness 鈥奻rom arts presenters, faculty, and audiences.鈥

On stage, the Roots Project musicians make the effort to foster camaraderie between themselves and their listeners. 鈥溾奧e want people to sing along 鈥 we try to make it like church in an old country town,鈥 Redbone says. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 expect people to sit there in total silence. It鈥檚 just not what the music that we sing is for.鈥

Their audiences often share a sense of curiosity and openness, 鈥渆specially in a place like 91直播, where everyone in the surrounding area knows that this is a music haven. That鈥檚 really special, and that鈥檚 very different from some of the other places that we鈥檝e played in.鈥

Ultimately, there鈥檚 one simple way to describe the listeners who will come out to Finney Chapel in April: 鈥淭hese are people who truly love live music.鈥

Concert details

Martha Redbone Roots Project

7:30 p.m.
Sunday, April 6, 2025
91直播 College Finney Chapel
90 N. Professor St.
91直播, OH 44074

Tickets:
$35 Public | $30 OC Staff/Faculty/Alumni, Seniors, Military | $10 Students

Concert tickets are available online and by phone at 800-371-0178. Patrons may also purchase them in person between noon and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, at 91直播 College's Central Ticket Service, located at 67 N. Main Street, in the lobby of the Eric Baker Nord Performing Arts Complex.

Free Artist Recital Series tickets for enrolled 91直播 students are available through the Claim Your Seat program, made possible through the generosity of Richard 鈥62 and Linda 鈥62 Clark.   

Learn more about the Arts at 91直播.

This program is proudly supported by , official media partner of the Artist Recital Series.

Stephanie Manning 鈥23 completed her bassoon performance degree while finding her way into journalism as a classical music critic. She recently returned to Cleveland after finishing a graduate diploma in journalism at Concordia University in Montreal. Her writing has appeared in The Montreal Gazette, Early Music America, and ClevelandClassical.com.

You may also like…

Richard Goode鈥檚 Musical Short Stories

The acclaimed pianist returns to the Artist Recital Series on April 29 with the charmingly curated 鈥淔ancies and Goodnights,鈥 along with works by Mozart and Schubert.