| Singer/Songwriter Chris Vallillo 
			to perform at Atlanta Public Library
 
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			 [February 06, 2019] 
			Popular singer/songwriter Chris Vallillo will perform a program 
			entitled “The Farmer is the Man” in the Loft at Union Hall, 114 Arch 
			Street in Atlanta, on Friday, February 8. The event begins with 
			dinner catered by the Palms Grill Café at 5:30pm and continues with 
			the performance at 7:00pm. Admission to the concert is free with 
			dinner. There is a $10.00 charge for the concert only. This event is 
			part of the Atlanta Library & Museum’s Smithsonian Museum on 
			Mainstreet project and is supported by a grant from the Illinois 
			Arts Council. For reservations, call 217-648-5077.
 Vallillo makes the people and places of “unmetropolitan” America 
			come to life in song. Having spent the last 30 years in the rural 
			Midwest, he has a natural affinity for American roots music. 
			Performing on six-string and bottleneck slide guitars and harmonica, 
			Vallillo weaves original, contemporary and traditional songs and 
			narratives into a compelling and entertaining portrait of the 
			history and lifestyles of the Midwest. Folk Wax Magazine said 
			Vallillo’s guitar playing “flows like warm honey and is a true aural 
			delight.”
 
			
			 
			
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From 1990-1998, Vallillo served as the performing host and co-producer of the 
nationally distributed and award-winning public radio performance series Rural 
Route 3. He has twice served as the Illinois State Scholar for the Smithsonian 
Institution’s traveling exhibit on roots music. 
			 
 
In 2016, Vallillo’s latest recording, Oh Freedom! Songs of the Civil Rights 
Movement charted at Number 6 on the folk music charts. He recently completed the 
sound track for a series of videos for the Illinois Freedom Project for the 
Lincoln Home Historic Site and the music for the nationally syndicated radio 
program Lincoln In Words and Letters for the WFMT radio network.
 Community programs of the Atlanta Public Library are supported in part by a 
grant from the Illinois Prairie Community Foundation Mirza Arts and Culture 
Fund.
 
				 
			[Catherine Maciariello] |