by Stephanie Manning

When Clay Ross moved to New York City in 2002, he encountered people from all over the world during jam sessions at the popular jazz clubs.
“It was like a United Nations of talent,” says the South Carolina native, who moved to the city to pursue a jazz career. After learning where he grew up, “people would often say, ‘Oh, you must really know a lot about American folk music and country music,’ because they had this idea about what it means to be from the American South.”
But there’s a lot more to Ross than that first impression. The guitarist and vocalist spent 10 years studying music from Brazil and Latin America, during which he founded the group Matuto. He’s also won two Grammys with his group Ranky Tanky, which focuses on Gullah music of the southeastern Sea Islands.
In 2019, those years of conversations about cultural assumptions and expectations took shape into something new when Ross founded the American Patchwork Quartet. This collective of musicians reinterprets American folk tunes through their varied cultural backgrounds and musical training. And on September 13 at 7:30 pm, the group will perform in Finney Chapel as part of the Oberlin Artist Recital Series. Tickets available online. [Read more…]











