Age, Biography and Wiki
Chris Vallillo was born on 3 August, 1954, is an artist. Discover Chris Vallillo's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 69 years old?
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70 years old |
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Leo |
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3 August 1954 |
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3 August |
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 3 August.
He is a member of famous artist with the age 70 years old group.
Chris Vallillo Height, Weight & Measurements
At 70 years old, Chris Vallillo height not available right now. We will update Chris Vallillo's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Chris Vallillo Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Chris Vallillo worth at the age of 70 years old? Chris Vallillo’s income source is mostly from being a successful artist. He is from . We have estimated
Chris Vallillo's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
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Pending |
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Under Review |
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artist |
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Timeline
In 2006, Vallillo hosted and performed on Chicago Public Television's Arts Across Illinois Centerstage, Live! That year, he also took on the first of two tours as the Illinois State Scholar for New Harmonies, the Smithsonian Institution's traveling exhibition on Roots Music.
His 2005 release,"The Dance," represented a return to original and contemporary singer-songwriter material. Like "Aural Traditions," “The Dance" was recorded in Studio 13, his home recording studio, but for the first time, this project was mixed there as well. It contains seven original tunes, plus songs by John Gorka, Garnet Rogers, Greg Brown, Joel Mabus, and Stephen Foster, and was released in the early summer of 2005.
Immediately following the 2005 release of "The Dance," Vallillo began researching, writing, and performing a one-man show on the life of Abraham Lincoln. The resulting project, "Abraham Lincoln in Song," would go on to receive the endorsement of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission, and resulted in a recording of the music from the show. The recording would go on to chart at No. 10 on the Billboard Bluegrass Album Charts in March 2008, and received excellent critical reviews.
In 2001, a family tragedy led Vallillo to return to his rural roots to record "Aural Traditions" [2001]. This recording also marked his strong move into the bottleneck slide style of playing, and featured music written and played between the 1860s and the 1930s by folks like Stephen Foster, The Carter Family, and Jimmie Rogers. Vallillo cut the tracks in his home studio, then mixed them at First Bass Audio in Macomb, I!linois. "Aural Traditions" marks the first of an ongoing series of self-produced recordings.
During the early 2000s, Vallillo continued to perform throughout the Midwest. In 2001, he was again tapped by the Illinois Arts Council to conduct fieldwork, this time for the Illinois Mississippi River Valley Project, documenting the work of artists along the section of the Mississippi River that passes through the state. In 2003, he produced and hosted the Illinois Mississippi River Valley Project Festival featuring performers documented in the first phase of the project.
In 1995, between taping sessions for the "Rural Route 3" program, Vallillo teamed up with Grammy-winning producer Rich Adler, and traveled to Nashville to work on a new, original music project. The result was the 1995 release "Best Of All Possible Worlds" which featured some of the finest acoustic players in Nashville – folks like Roy Huskey Jr. on bass, Kenny Malone on drums, Rob Ikes on dobro, David Schnaufer on dulcimer, and Andrea Zahn on violin. "Best Of All Possible Worlds" was well received and generated airplay across the US and Europe.
During this time, Vallillo composed, performed, and recorded the soundtrack music to the 13-part TV series "Illinois Historic Panorama" [1992/93]. He also went on to pen the theme song and soundtrack music for the 22-part TV series "The Civil War and Reconstruction" [1993/94] and continued to perform and tour full-time.
In 1990, Vallillo was invited to become the performing host and co-producer of what became the award-winning syndicated radio program "Rural Route 3," a live musical performance show recorded with a studio audience. The program featured some of the finest names in acoustic and singer-songwriter music. Vallillo hosted and performed on each program along with two musical guests. During the seven year run of the show, these guests included Bob Gibson, John Hartford, Alison Krauss and Union Station, John Gorka, Tom Russell, Tish Hinojosa, The Austin Lounge Lizards, Norman and Nancy Blake, John McEuen, and Trout Fishing in America. At its peak, the show was heard on over 60 stations from Boston to Puerto Rico to Alaska. It remained on the airwaves till 1998. In 1995, the program gained the National Federation of Community Broadcaster's Bronze Reel Award. In its final season, the National Federation of Community Broadcasters awarded Rural Route 3 its Special Merit Award.
Throughout this time, Vallillo continued to perform and record full-time. His first project was "The Western Illinois Rag." It was followed in 1990 by "The Putnam Museum Concerts," a recording drawn from a series of concerts given by Vallillo in Davenport, Iowa, and focused on material documented in the first collecting project.
From 1990 through 1998 he served as the performing host and co-producer of the nationally distributed, award-winning public radio performance series Rural Route 3 where he performed next to (and with) a number of contemporary and traditional folk musicians. His most recent project, a one-man show titled Abraham Lincoln in Song, received the endorsement of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission and the accompanying CD of music reached #10 on Billboard’s Bluegrass Album Chart in March 2008.
In 1987, Vallillo released his first recording of original music, "The Western Illinois Rag." The recording sessions took place in Experimental Music Studio at the University of Illinois at Champaign, home of the first electronic music in the early 1960s. Support players included a fifteen-year-old fiddle player, Alison Krauss, and members of the original Union Station. There are currently plans to reissue the recording on CD. The following year, Vallillo served as the director of The Schuyler Arts Folk Music Collecting Project for the Illinois Arts Council and the Schuyler Arts Council. This Project was carried out in conjunction with the Library of Congress Folklife Centre. He interviewed and recorded oral histories and performances from the last of the pre-radio generation in Western Illinois. The collection was accepted into the Library of Congress Folklife Archives in 1988. This would prove to be very influential in his future work as both a musician and a songwriter.
A recipient of a 1986 Illinois Arts Council Artist Fellowship Award for music composition, Vallillo was also a nominee for the Illinois Arts Council's 1987 Governor's Award for Individual Artist. In 1987 he conducted the Schuyler Arts Folk Music Project to document the last of the pre-radio generation recordings. These recordings were accepted into the American Folklife Collection at the Library of Congress.
In 1980 the band released the album "Live At The Black Stallion." The band had four songwriters – Vallillo, Ron Kimbrow, Ken Carlysle and Lonnie Ratliff – and went on to release a string of 45 rpm singles. Pedal steel player Marty Muse, who has been based in Austin for many years, was a band member during the early eighties. Vallillo left the band in late 1983 and began working as a soloist. In his early days as a solo act, Vallillo performed songs by writers such as Guy Clark, Townes Van Zandt, Gram Parsons and Jerry Jeff Walker, but gradually brought his own compositions into sets, particularly after making the transition to folk venues. In 1985, Vallillo was a New Folk finalist at the Kerrville Folk Festival.
Chris Vallillo (born August 3, 1954, in Hammond, Indiana) grew up the son of a civil engineer who often moved house, the family living in many parts of the U.S. Great Lakes region. His earliest musical memory is that of seeing singing cowboys on television, which made him yearn to play guitar himself. Given a Kay Archtop guitar at age ten, while the family lived near Detroit, home of the Motown Records studios, Vallillo was inspired both by his guitar lessons and by the music he heard then, not just Motown but that of the Beatles and of folk musicians such as Mississippi John Hurt and John Fahey.
Following the success of the Lincoln show, Vallillo turned towards a new project. Many reviews had complimented his bottleneck slide work and expressed a desire to hear more of it. With that in mind, Vallillo began to write and record his follow-up album,"The Last Day of Winter." He performed the nine instrumentals and four original songs in this collection on his own extensive collection of vintage instruments. These included a 1924 Gibson Tenor Lute, a 1936 wood bodied Dobro, a 1929 National Triolian (the oldest known to exist according to National Guitars), and a custom made reproduction of a turn-of-the-century Lyon and Healy nine-string parlor guitar.