The Southwest Michigan band with a new album is part of a robust lineup for next weekend’s Fretboard Festival taking place at Kalamazoo Valley Museum. The Artist Spotlight and festival schedule.

Cold Mountain Child: Honoring life-changing music with an upcoming festival set. (Courtesy Photo)
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For the last 17 years, Cold Mountain Child has crafted a sound that’s crossed genre lines and county lines.
Hailing from Kalamazoo, the psychedelic dream-folk band has made an impression on the region and beyond with its captivating live show and layers of immersive musicality.
The band includes musicians Tyler Bradley (vocals and guitar), David Spalvieri-Kruse (lead guitar and piano) and Gerren Young (multi-percussionist). Together, the trio explore themes of nature, grief and spirituality through their carefully constructed music.
“I think that the craft and the practice itself is what is kind of the through line or the guiding compass, the North Star, whatever you want to call it. I think the more that I turn towards the actual craft of making songs, honoring music and sound, the more it guides me,” says Tyler Bradley over the phone from his home and recording studio on the rural fringes of Kalamazoo.

Performing Again: Joel Mabus at the 2025 festival. (Photo/Derek Ketchum)
“It’s a hard path if you’re basing it all on external metrics, which we live in a world where that has influenced and contaminated everything. So to bring it back into the core of each day being about the practice, just the daily dedication without a particular goal in mind, other than to keep honoring music. It has changed my life and I don’t know what I would do without her.”
Cold Mountain Child will perform at the Kalamazoo Fretboard Festival which takes place Friday and Saturday (March 20-21) at Kalamazoo Valley Museum, 230 N. Rose St. in Kalamazoo, as well as at Anna Whitten Hall next door.
The event is free of charge, opening with a kickoff event at 6 p.m. Friday starring rock and blues guitarist Billy Davis, a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee and Detroit native who was part of the band Hank Ballard & The Midighters.
Saturday’s day-long event boasts performances by 16 artists, including sets by Elisabeth Pixley-Fink, Samuel Nalangira Trio, The Incantations, Joel Mabus and others. The festival also features guitar and other music-related vendors and instrument workshops. More here and scroll down for the complete performance schedule.
Fresh from the release of their new album “Moon Pine All Night,” Cold Mountain Child performs at 11 a.m. Saturday at Anna Whitten Hall. The new record, which the trio chipped away at over six years, displays the band’s sonic evolution over the span of 11 colorful tracks.
LISTEN: “Country Reverie,” Cold Mountain Child
“It’s a process of labor, and a labor of love, but the day to day is proof to me that music is a beautiful path because if I think of it as a collection of days. What would just be an average beautiful day for me, would be to get up, make some coffee, go up stairs to the studio and work for eight hours on music sounds. That sounds pretty alright,” says Bradley.
“We’ve been playing the arc of the album with our recent sets and so we’re gonna move through the emotions and tones of the record and live in the real sounds of it,” he adds.
Started more than 20 years ago, the Kalamazoo Fretboard Festival — which attracts well over 1,000 people every year — strives to preserve and showcase the city’s rich stringed-instrument heritage.
Many of the festival’s workshops revolve around the instruction and technique of playing various instruments. Workshops include “Strings of Uganda,” “Zondo” (exploring African polyrhythms) and “The Art of Finding Your Own Sound.”
KALAMAZOO FRETBOARD FESTIVAL 2026: THE SCHEDULE


The Return of the Fretboard Festival: Guitar vendors, workshops and lots of live music. (Photo/Derek Ketchum)
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