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VICTORIA VOX/ JACK & THE VOX

VICTORIA VOX/ JACK & THE VOX

From the cover of the Spring Issue of Ukulele Magazine to the front page of The Wall Street Journal, Victoria Vox is making appearances everywhere—and rightly so. The artistry of her performances is both unique and endearing, captivating an incredibly diverse audience and drawing even the least musical of folks into her harmonious web. This evening, she’ll be accompanied by her husband, Jack Maher, who is an accomplished singer and guitarist. Recently married, however, the two met in 1998 at the Berklee College of Music (Boston, MA) where they both received degrees in Songwriting. After calling Baltimore home for the past 11 years, Vox moved to California to join Jack, where they now reside in Costa Mesa. The two perform as solo artists, but occasionally join forces as Jack adds wonderful harmonies and tasteful guitar riffs adding to the Victoria Vox show, and sometimes appear under their new and cheeky moniker "Jack & the Vox”.

Soon after graduating from the Berklee College of Music (Songwriting 2001), a friend gave Vox a ukulele, and the small, four-stringed instrument proved to be the unexpected, but welcomed vehicle to showcase the upbeat, rhythmic drive that is characteristic of her music. The 'ukulele-toting and an award winning songwriter — including for songs she has written in French— has donated songs to causes like the American Asbergers Association and the Duchenne Foundation. Her music has also been used in indie films and featured on NPR's "To the Best of Our Knowledge". Vox’s infectious pop-folk-jazz style has earned her fans who truly appreciate her art. She has fan-funded several albums and a songwriting project, where Vox hunkered down in 2012 to write a song a week for the year. The “52 Original Song Project” was preceded in 2011 with a YouTube “52 Cover Song Project” where she learned and memorized 52 cover songs. Vox has headlined at many ukulele festivals around the world, even performing alongside 2,500 ukulele-playing-children in New Zealand, performing the Vox-penned “Bird Song”.

In addition to her songwriting and ukulele playing, Vox has received praise for her “invisible” instrument: The Mouth Trumpet. She was invited to blow her own horn on the Jay Leno Show in 2009 and in 2015, Vox was featured on the front page of the Wall Street Journal as a leader in the mouth trumpet “revival”.

Event Contact

Cyd Wolf
410-752-4515

Event Details

Sunday, March 11, 2018, 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM
Prices:
$20
$20
1
Full price:
20
Half price:
10
Offer good
03/03/18 to 03/11/18

Location

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