Circle "D" Productions presents the Noah Gibney Trio w/s/g John Lit (of Jerry Duty)
LIMITED TICKETS - Please grab 'em today
$15 Advance Online
$20 at the door (cash or card)
Doors - 7 PM
The Noah Gibney Trio is fronted by Noah Gibney, a 15-year-old musician from Reading, PA. The soul/jamband group has a following all over the Greater Philly area, and around Reading, Lancaster, Lehigh, the Jersey Shore, and NYC. Noah collaborated with Grammy-nominated musician G. Love (of G. Love and Special Sauce) on his debut EP “The Serendipity Sessions” - that led to a meeting with President Biden! Noah has new music in the works set to be released this year.
Click here for Noah Gibney Info
From bucolic Wilkes-Barre, PA, Johnny Lit (from Jerry Duty) will be our special guest, so expect some cool Jerry Garcia Band / Grateful Dead / Motown music and more...
This is a "dry" event
No alcohol/drugs allowed
No alcohol will be sold/served
Crafts and Food vendors onsite
Outside food permitted
ENTRANCE/ACCESSIBILITY: The general public entrance is on the left side of the building toward the back. There are 7 steps to get into the building. In addition, The Rotunda has a ramp for wheelchairs, strollers, walkers, etc. The ramp is on the right side of the building toward the back. There is also an ADA accessible restroom close to that entrance, and there is a stage ramp at stage right.
COVID-19 UPDATE:
The Rotunda does not require proof of vaccination or temperature checks.
Everyone over the age of 2 is strongly encouraged to wear a mask indoors, regardless of vaccination status.
Performers, presenters, curators, and attendees are asked to stay home if they feel unwell or have been in contact with someone diagnosed with COVID-19 within 10 days of the event. Please let The Rotunda know if you come down with any COVID-19 symptoms up to 10 days after attending an event here. Email information@TheRotunda.org. We will never share your name or personal info.
LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: We recognize and acknowledge that The Rotunda and related programs stand on the Indigenous territory known as “Lenapehoking,” the traditional homelands of the Lenape, also called Lenni-Lenape or Delaware Indians. These are the people who, during the 1680s, negotiated with William Penn to facilitate the founding of the colony of Pennsylvania. Their descendants today include the Delaware Tribe and Delaware Nation of Oklahoma; the Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape, Ramapough Lenape, and Powhatan Lenape of New Jersey; and the Munsee Delaware of Ontario. These are not only nations of the past, but are indeed living, thriving people today. Learn much more about these and other communities at Native American and Indigenous Studies at Penn: https://nais.sas.upenn.edu