Anderson Fair is one of the oldest folk and acoustic music venues in continuous operation in the United States. It has been called an "incubator" of musical talent for the folk scene, especially during the folk music heyday of the 1960s-1980s. Artists such as Lyle Lovett, Nanci Griffith, Robert Earl Keen, Lucinda Williams and many more have graced the Anderson Fair stage.
And now, Amanda Pascali returns to the historic listening room accompanied by classically trained multi-instrumentalist, Addison Freeman ahead of their summer performance at the World Expo in Osaka, Japan and the release of their upcoming album, Roses and Basil.
As the rising voice of America's most ethnically diverse generation of young people, singer-songwriter Amanda Pascali writes music that speaks to the experience of growing up as a first-generation American. After her songs went viral on social media, she amassed hundreds of thousands of fans around the globe. Now, her long-awaited new record, Roses and Basil (a collection of Sicilian-English translations and original music produced by Robert Ellis,) is slated for release in June 2025. Her music, coined, Immigrant American Folk delivers a powerful narrative on being, “too foreign for here, too foreign for home, and never enough for both.”
Blending folk/Americana influences with Mediterranean, Balkan, and Latin rhythms Pascali’s songs are powerful tales of America told through the eyes of immigrants and those who have always felt like the “other”. With a father who was thrown out of his home country for rebelling against the government and an immigrant mother who built a career from scratch in 1980s Brooklyn, Amanda was driven from a young age to be a messenger of her family’s stories and diaspora.
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