Photo First: Sing a Song of Sisters * Oregon ArtsWatch
Briefly

Photo First: Sing a Song of Sisters * Oregon ArtsWatch
"Sisters, the compact town in ranch and Yeti country below the Three Sisters mountains on the high plateau of Central Oregon, is about to become the folk music capitol of the Pacific Northwest once again, as it's been doing once a year since 1995: The 2025 Sisters Folk Festival, featuring the likes of Loudon Wainwright III, Katie Pruitt, White Horse, Joy Clark, Crying Uncle Bluegrass Band, and Robert Mirabal & Rare Tribal Mob, takes over the town once again, Friday-Sunday, Sept. 26-28."
"With a population of a little more than 3,000, Sisters has about as many residents as it has feet above sea level, a lofty 3,064. And it has its own full cultural calendar, including, in addition to the annual Sisters Folk Festival, the annual Sisters Rodeo, which has been a town stalwart since 1941; the Glory Daze Car Show, which revved up this year on Sept. 13; the Fourth Friday Artwalk, which takes place monthly all year long;"
The 2025 Sisters Folk Festival returns to Sisters, Oregon, Sept. 26–28, featuring more than 30 acts across seven venues ranging from 200 to 1,350 seats. Headliners include Loudon Wainwright III, Katie Pruitt, White Horse, Joy Clark, Crying Uncle Bluegrass Band, and Robert Mirabal & Rare Tribal Mob. Sisters is a compact high-plateau town of roughly 3,064 feet and about 3,000 residents with a rich local cultural calendar. Annual community events include the Sisters Rodeo, Glory Daze Car Show, Fourth Friday Artwalk, Sisters Festival of Books, and the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show. The festival pairs musical programming with the town's visual small-town charms, including frontier-style buildings, statues, classic cars, cowboy-boot shops, and a handmade-ice-cream drive-in.
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