
Country/Folk
Emily Scott Robinson Tickets
Concerts5 results
Concerts in Ireland
- 24/10/2025Friday 20:00DublinUpstairs At WhelansEmily Scott Robinson
Venue
International Concerts
- 11/09/2025Until 14/09/2025Louisville, KY, USHighland Festival Grounds at KY Expo CenterBourbon & BeyondOn partner site
Lineup
- Bourbon & Beyond
- Phish
- Noah Kahan
- Sturgill Simpson
- The Lumineers
- Jack White
- Benson Boone
- Alabama Shakes
- Cage The Elephant
- Khruangbin
- Megan Moroney
- Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats
- Rilo Kiley
- Goo Goo Dolls
- Vance Joy
- Third Eye Blind
- Lake Street Dive
- Ringo Starr and His All Starr Band
- Myles Smith
- Foreigner
- Pat Benatar
- Joe Bonamassa
- Pixies
- Dylan Gossett
- TV On the Radio
- The Teskey Brothers
- Flatland Cavalry
- Waxahatchee
- Dashboard Confessional
- Blues Traveler
- Trombone Shorty and Orleans Avenue
- Collective Soul
- Trampled By Turtles
- Muscadine Bloodline
- Guster
- 49 Winchester
- Mary Chapin Carpenter
- Colbie Caillat
- Iron & Wine
- Morgan Wade
- Lawrence
- Sammy Rae & The Friends
- Julien Baker
- Dawes
- Gavin DeGraw
- Gin Blossoms
- Spin Doctors
- The Hold Steady
- SWITCHFOOT
- Robert Cray Band
- John Waite
- Michael Marcagi
- Austin Snell
- Matt Maltese
- Ashe
- St. Lucia
- The Waterboys
- Blind Melon
- The Old 97's
- 10000 Maniacs
- Josiah & the Bonnevilles
- Bonny Light Horseman
- Squirrel Nut Zippers
- Marc Cohn
- The Baseball Project
- The Paper Kites
- Redferrin
- Kolby Cooper
- Jade Bird
- The Ocean Blue
- The 502s
- Nolan Taylor
- Marshall Crenshaw
- Madison Ryann Ward
- Waylon Wyatt
- Bayker Blankenship
- iDKHOW
- The Heavy Heavy
- Darren Kiely
- NRBQ
- Marcy Playground
- Hazlett
- Certainly So
- Jonah Kagen
- Yachtley Crew
- Chance Emerson
- The Band Feel
- Reid Haughton
- Kelsey Waldon
- Miles Miller
- Meg McRee
- Brit Taylor
- Cale Tyson
- Leftover Salmon
- Steep Canyon Rangers
- Rhonda Vincent
- AJ Lee & Blue Summit
- Fruition
- TopHouse
- Wyatt Ellis
- Jett Holden
- Chatham Rabbits
- Emily Scott Robinson
- Gooseberry
- 26/10/2025Sunday 19:00Glasgow, GBGlad CafeEmily Scott Robinson
Venue
- 28/10/2025Tuesday 19:00Manchester, GBThe Lodge, ManchesterEmily Scott Robinson
- 29/10/2025Wednesday 19:30London, GBSt Matthias ChurchEmily Scott Robinson
Venue
About
Colorado songwriter Emily Scott Robinson beckons to those who are lost, lonely, or learning the hard way with ‘American Siren’, her first album for Oh Boy Records. With hints of bluegrass, country, and folk, the eloquent collection shares her gift for storytelling through her pristine soprano and the perspective of her unconventional path into music.
Robinson grew up in Greensboro, North Carolina, and turned toward guitar at age 13, after a summer camp counsellor closed out the nights by playing songs by Joni Mitchell, Cat Stevens, and Dar Williams every night. She taught herself to play in the early 2000s by printing guitar tabs from the internet and singing to CDs by Indigo Girls and James Taylor. But she didn’t pursue songwriting until after seeing Nanci Griffith perform in Greensboro in 2007.
“I went home and I wrote a really sad, beautiful country song,” Robinson remembers. “I was like, ‘Wow, that was easy.’ And then I kept trying to write through college and I realized, ‘This is not actually that easy.’
Graduating from Furman University with degrees in history and Spanish, Robinson took a job as a social worker and translator in 2011. “I moved to Telluride when I was 24 to work as a victim’s advocate for victims of domestic violence and sexual assault,” she says. “I fell in love with Telluride. That’s really where my dream started to be born of doing music.”
In 2013, she found kindred spirits at Planet Bluegrass’ The Song School, a songwriting retreat in Lyons, Colorado, where other participants encouraged her talent, and just as importantly, showed her that being a touring musician could be a viable financial option. Before temporarily moving away from Telluride, Robinson went into town and sat on the empty stage where the city’s annual bluegrass festival is staged, promising herself that she’d be singing on it someday.
Bolstered by the positive response of her 2016 debut album, Magnolia Queen, Robinson and her husband packed everything into an RV and hit the road, with Robinson booking her own shows along the way. That same year, her songwriting landed her among the Kerrville New Folk Winners at the esteemed Texas festival. The winners embarked on an eight-city tour of Texas that fall, introducing Robinson to an audience that remains invested in her career.
“That was my first time touring,” she says. “It was so much more fun than I thought it would be. I’m a homebody and I was anxious about it because I hadn’t done it. I thought it would run me ragged. What I didn’t account for was how much energy I would get from it and how great it would feel to get in touring shape and be singing every night and have my stories be super on-point and loving the experience of finding an audience.”
Robinson received significant acclaim for her 2019 album, Traveling Mercies. And her long-held dream came true later that year when she sang on the Telluride Bluegrass Festival stage as the winner of the Telluride Troubadour Contest. A poignant standalone single in 2020, titled “The Time for Flowers,” prompted a private Instagram message from Oh Boy Records’ Jody Whelan, letting her know how meaningful the song was to his family. They struck up a fast friendship, then decided to partner for a release of American Siren.
“It is bigger and riskier and more expansive than my last collection,” Robinson says. “It feels like I wrote some songs that I’m going to grow into as I continue to perform them. I actually cried after I finished every one of them. I was so relieved that I was able to write them. I carved out a little more of my own experiences into these songs. They’re excavating some deeper stuff than I’ve touched on before. I think they will have a healing quality for people who listen.”
For her fans and for herself, this revealing collection proves that heeding the call to make music was the right decision. “Ever since this dream was born, I don’t think it’s ever left my mind,” Robinson says. “I’ve worked toward it every day, even when I felt like I was stumbling in the dark. Now I can look back and see how beautifully it all knits together.”