Genre: americana
Ticket Price: $27 advanced / $30 day of show / $48 reserved loft seating (available over the phone 858-481-8140 or in person at our box office) (seating chart / virtual venue tour) /
$119 VIP Love Songs for Winners Pre-Show Experience** (online only)
**Love Songs For Winners Pre-Show Experience Details:
- One general admission ticket
- Early venue entry
- Intimate pre-show acoustic performance by The Lone Bellow
- Q&A with The Lone Bellow
- Collectible "Love Songs For Losers" tour poster, signed by The Lone Bellow
- Exclusive Lone Bellow tote bag
- Commemorative VIP laminate
- Merchandise shopping before doors open to the general public
- Limited availability
For questions regarding the VIP packages, please reach out to info@future-beat.com.
VIP merchandise will be distributed at the show.
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There are No Refunds or Exchanges on tickets once purchased.
The Lone Bellow
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Throughout their lifespan as a band, The Lone Bellow have cast an indelible spell with their finespun songs of hard truth and unexpected beauty, frequently delivered in hypnotic three-part harmony. In a departure from their past work with elite producers like Aaron Dessner of The National and eight-time Grammy-winner Dave Cobb, the Nashville-based trio struck out on their own for their new album Love Songs for Losers, dreaming up a singular sound encompassing everything from arena-ready rock anthems to the gorgeously sprawling Americana tunes the band refers to as “little redneck symphonies.” Recorded at the possibly haunted former home of the legendary Roy Orbison, the result is an intimate meditation on the pain and joy and ineffable wonder of being human, at turns heartbreaking, irreverent, and sublimely transcendent.
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Tall Heights
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The third full-length from Tall Heights, Juniors emerged from a period of profound turmoil and revelation for the Massachusetts duo. In the span of five months, Paul Wright and Tim Harrington experienced a convergence of events that included major health and substance-abuse crises among their closest loved ones, saying goodbye to Harrington's grandfather and to a beloved grandfather figure for Wright, and -- in far happier, yet still intense news -- the announcement that each of their wives was expecting. Compounded by a series of shake-ups in their professional life, that upheaval coincided with the start of the pandemic. Rather than succumbing to the tremendous pressure of that point in time, Tall Heights chose to confront the chaos by creating within it. The result: an album that precisely channels the pain, uncertainty, and unbridled joy of its inception. As they set to work on Juniors, Harrington and Wright discovered an unexpected outcome of the loss that they'd endured: a shift in mindset that enabled them to embrace a boundless curiosity and exploratory spirit even more powerful than when they first formed Tall Heights (an endeavor that began when Harrington, on guitar, and Wright, on cello, used to busk on the streets of Boston back in the late 2000s). In a nod to the wide-eyed perspective that arose from the album's creation, the duo chose a title evocative of youthful wonder. "After everything we went through, we came to a place of understanding that we have no control, that each new day is an adventure we need to approach with beginner's eyes," says Harrington. Wright adds: "Through all the discomfort, we took it as our mission to stay humble and hungry, to know that everything will change and to be prepared to find something of real value in that -- and to find ourselves in it, too." The follow-up to 2018's Pretty Colors For Your Actions, Juniors came to life at "The Tall House" -- the Northeastern Massachusetts home where Wright and Harrington lived together for six years with their wives, pets, and Harrington's firstborn son, eventually moving out in August 2020. In a departure from the elaborate production process that yielded its predecessor, the two musicians wrote and recorded most of Juniors in isolation, holing up on the third floor of the household they liken to a joyfully anarchic artist commune. "It all happened in this tiny, hectic, beautiful space where our wives were also working from home, both pregnant, and there's a dog and a cat that hated each other, and then Tim's toddler who'd just started walking would come barging in and start dancing mid-take, joining in a song with us," Wright recalls. Despite the nonstop disruption, Tall Heights soon found their way to a shapeshifting sound that illuminates their singularity like never before. "Because we were cut loose and isolated within this space and time, we ended up capturing something incredibly and uniquely us in the new sound we created," Harrington points out. In putting the finishing touches on Juniors, Tall Heights headed to Omaha and worked with producers Mike Mogis (Paul McCartney, Phoebe Bridgers, Bright Eyes) and Oliver Hill, who helped refine and enrich the backdrop of their emotionally raw songwriting. On the opening track "Keeps Me Light," the band muses on the ineffable comfort and safety of true connection, intensifying the track's radiant mood with the luminous vocals of a Berklee College of Music a cappella group called Upper Structure. Revealing the complexity of Juniors, Tall Heights then drift into the wistful reverie of "Locked Out," a song inspired by Wright's struggle to help his wife through a severe bout of anxiety. "Paul and I each wrote the lyrics to 'Locked Out,' which I think points back to how intertwined our lives have become," says Harrington. "It's so unlikely that I could have felt his pain as hard as I did -- but because I was living it too in that house, what's fiercely personal to Paul became fiercely personal to me." The most commanding track on Juniors, "Hear It Again" took shape as Tall Heights messed around with an assortment of synthesizers they'd borrowed from their friend and tourmate Ben Folds, arriving at a tender rumination on home and belonging. "We've spent so much of our time living on the road, and that song is our way of asking, 'What if that's the place where we feel the most safety and consistency and stability?'" says Harrington. In a particularly poignant turn, "The Mountain" reflects on the losses that Harrington and Wright recently suffered, transforming that heartache into a moment of healing. "A friend had texted us a photo of his grandfather on the day before he died: he was sitting in a hospital bed looking out the window at the mountains, and the sun was shining on his face," says Wright. "That song came from thinking about our friend's grandmother saying goodbye to his grandfather and sending him off on his journey, but in a way it also speaks to how there's been so much collective loss over the past year." Meanwhile, on "Raindrop," Tall Heights offer up a meditation on emotional responsibility. "Sometimes a relationship can get intense in the wrong place and time," says Harrington. "So, in the end, it's a song about choosing which relationships deserve your all, and when to let things go and move on with your life." Looking back on the tumultuous year that gave rise to their latest album, Harrington and Wright note that they've adopted the Juniors outlook as something of a spiritual ethos: a realization that every new endeavor -- no matter how familiar -- will undoubtedly present new challenges and extraordinary surprise, ultimately reminding them that they are still but juniors. "I feel ready to view each next chapter of Tall Heights as another round of Juniors," says Harrington. "This experience has emboldened us to create in any situation -- because when life got very intense, we doubled-down on what we care about the most: creating songs together. And it felt fresh and new in that context." And although leaving the Tall House proved nothing short of heartbreaking, the duo have found their devoted bond to be stronger than ever. "This record gave us the chance to really understand what we have in each other as weird partners on the great journey of self-exploration," says Wright. "We know now that the Tall House can be a state of mind, not just a place of refuge. So while chaos continues, we're able to fully see the beauty that can come from it." |