Blues Artist to Address Civil Rights

Blues artist Gaye Adegbalola – singer, songwriter, storyteller and international performer – will present “Civil Rights, Voting Rights, Gay Rights and the Blues” inside the Hurley Convergence Center Digital Auditorium at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 21. The performance is free and open to the public.

Blues artist Gaye Adegbalola will perform at UMW Thursday, Sept. 21.
Blues artist Gaye Adegbalola will perform at UMW Thursday, Sept. 21.

The show, a concert-and-talk combination, will feature Adegbalola’s music about such topics as racism, political activism, feminist concerns and the LGBTQ+ community. She also will intersperse stories from her life about civil rights, Black Power and segregation in Fredericksburg, where she graduated valedictorian at the once-segregated Walker-Grant High School.

Adegbalola has performed around the world solo; with her former group of 25 years, Saffire – The Uppity Blues Women; and with the a capella blues quartet The Wild Rūtz.

The show is sponsored by “Race and Revolution,” a course that explores the life and work of James Farmer, the U.S. Civil Rights leader who taught at Mary Washington during the 1990s. It is among UMW’s First Year Seminars, a series of small, interactive courses designed to give freshmen with unique academic passions a chance to connect with like-minded classmates.

For more information, call 540-654-1023.