础听child of the 鈥60s in the San Francisco Bay Area, Shari Ulrich was part of the hippie generation that grew up listening to The Beatles, Joni Mitchell, Neil Young and other legends who still inspire songwriters today.聽
It was an era when the beatniks, a wave of disenfranchised poets, writers and thinkers who spoke out against the established order, influenced youth counterculture across North America.聽
Ulrich bolted to Canada at a time when the U.S. was shaken by the Kent State shootings and protesters held rallies against the Vietnam War. While backpacking and bicycling across the continent, she discovered music was her undeniable true calling.聽
Today, the singer-songwriter, who performs solo and as part of several bands, calls Bowen Island home and confesses she 鈥渟till has a hippie heart hiding in there.鈥
Ulrich is playing with Vancouver-based bluegrass group The High Bar Gang at the Brackendale Art Gallery (BAG) on Saturday at 8 p.m. Their second album, Someday the Heart Will Trouble the Mind, produced by True North Records, is set to release on June 24.
The High Bar Gang鈥檚 repertoire is firmly rooted in the golden age of bluegrass music with songs by the likes of Bill Monroe, The Stanley Brothers and Del McCoury.
鈥淥ur last album was more gospel, and this time we鈥檙e the more 鈥榗heating and hurting鈥 side of bluegrass,鈥 Ulrich said last week in an interview with The 麻豆社国产 while on a solo tour in Alberta.聽
She has been playing at the BAG since it opened in the early 1970s. On Saturday, Ulrich will be joined by Wendy Bird and Kirby Barber, guitarist Barney Bentall and banjo player Dave Barber, supported by Rob Becker on bass and Colin Nairne on guitar and mandolin.聽
In 2014, The High Bar Gang鈥檚 debut album, Lost and Undone: A Gospel Bluegrass Companion, was nominated for a Juno Award in the Contemporary Christian/Gospel category, as well as a Western Canadian Music Award nod in the Spiritual category. They won Best Vocal Group at the Canadian Folk Music Awards the same year.
鈥淏eing part of a band is a refreshing change from solo. I don鈥檛 have to make decisions; I just get to be the best I can be,鈥 said Ulrich, whose main instrument is the violin. She also plays the sax, flute, piano, guitar, dulcimer and mandolin 鈥 all of which she uses for writing songs too.聽
鈥淚 can do anything as a solo artist, but I don鈥檛 feel the need to carve out my own identity while part of the group because I have that in my solo career.鈥
Ulrich says her diverse career provides the perfect balance. She has released 21 albums and has been a part of The Pied Pumpkin, UHF, BTU and The Hometown Band.聽
鈥淎s far as comraderie in the High Bar Gang goes, it鈥檚 always been great,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very liberating to be able to focus on serving the music.鈥
Tickets for The High Bar Gang鈥檚 performance this weekend are available at the BAG or Xoco Westcoast Chocolatiers on Cleveland Avenue in downtown Squamish.聽