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DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20231110T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20231110T230000
DTSTAMP:20260422T170106
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LAST-MODIFIED:20231014T212444Z
UID:10000257-1699642800-1699657200@theark.org
SUMMARY:Lake Street Dive
DESCRIPTION:Since forming in 2004\, Lake Street Dive have matched their sophisticated musicianship with a fearless refusal to limit their sound. As shown on their most recent full-length album\, 2021’s critically acclaimed Obviously\, the Boston-bred band also possess a keen talent for combining sociopolitical commentary with immediately catchy pop gems. With their current lineup comprised of founding members Rachael Price (vocals)\, Bridget Kearney (bass)\, and Michael Calabrese (drums) — as well as keyboardist/vocalist Akie Bermiss and touring guitarist James Cornelison — Lake Street Dive continue to create joyously soulful rock & roll with equal parts ingenuity\, intelligence\, and irresistible abandon. \nAlthough a certain spirited eclecticism has defined Lake Street Dive since their earliest days\, the band’s four original members (including former guitarist/trumpet player Michael “McDuck” Olson) first crossed paths while studying jazz at Boston’s New England Conservatory of Music. Their full-length debut In This Episode… arrived in 2007\, followed by three more independently released and rapturously received albums. As the band’s energetic live show continued to earn them a devoted following\, Lake Street Dive made their Nonesuch Records debut with Side Pony: a 2016 effort that instantly shot to No. 1 on three Billboard charts and later landed on Paste’s 50 Best Albums of 2016 list. The following year\, the group experienced a new infusion of creative energy with the addition of Bermiss (previously their touring keyboardist)\, who has since begun sharing writing and arrangement duties. Arriving in 2018\, Lake Street Dive’s selfproduced sixth album Free Yourself Up debuted in the top ten on the Billboard 200 and spent seven-and-a-half months on the non-commercial radio charts\, with the smoldering hit single “Good Kisser” holding steady in the top five at Americana radio for over a month. \nIn recent years\, Lake Street Dive have brought even more boldness to their kaleidoscopic sound while deliberately expanding their songcraft. To that end\, Obviously finds the band examining such complex matters as gender inequality (on “Being a Woman”) and the monumental challenges faced by younger generations (on “Making Do”)\, shaping each track with a profound intentionality and ineffable mastery of melody and groove — a process Price refers to as “putting these messages into three and a half minute snippets\, dropping whatever truth we can and hoping it’s the type of thing that people want to ruminate on.” Made with producer Mike Elizondo (Fiona Apple\, Mary J. Blige)\, the result is an endlessly illuminating body of work that’s earned praise from the likes of Rolling Stone (who noted that “[a]t a moment when pop strives for lo-fi\, solitary-world intimacy\, the jazz-pop-whatever band refuse to think small”). \nLast fall\, to celebrate the 10-year anniversary of their first covers EP\, Lake Street Dive released Fun Machine: The Sequel\, a 6-track EP of cover songs produced by Robin MacMillan and recorded at Figure 8 Recording in Brooklyn and Lucy’s Meat Market in Los Angeles. This new collection of songs reveals what makes the group so unique and their curations so special. Lake Street Dive don’t just inhabit these interpretations; they knock the walls down\, re-finish the floors\, and on some of them add a new room or two — it’s a way to both acknowledge their inspirations while also advancing their own musical foundation\, inspiring a new generation of fans along the way. And as always\, it’s their signature combination of immaculate musicianship\, exceptional\, inventive chops\, and free-wheeling\, playful sense of fun and originality leading the way. \nOver the years\, they’ve captivated massive audiences at such esteemed festivals as Newport Folk Festival\, Telluride Bluegrass Festival\, and Toronto Jazz Festival\, in addition to headlining tours all across the globe and sharing stages with acts like Brandi Carlile and Sheryl Crow. And through their fierce commitment to constantly elevating their artistry\, Lake Street Dive have ultimately emerged as one of the most compelling voices in alternative music today\, both reliably sublime and thrilling unpredictable. \nLake Street Drive have partnered with PLUS1 so that $1 per ticket will go towards supporting gun violence prevention initiatives.
URL:https://theark.org/event/lake-street-dive-231110/
LOCATION:Masonic Jack White Theatre\, 500 Temple Street\, Detroit\, MI\, 48201\, United States
CATEGORIES:Special Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theark.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/145972-scaled-1.jpeg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20231013T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20231013T230000
DTSTAMP:20260422T170106
CREATED:20230228T195918Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231014T202735Z
UID:10000362-1697223600-1697238000@theark.org
SUMMARY:Tommy Emmanuel
DESCRIPTION:“If you like guitar playing\, it simply doesn’t get any better than Tommy.” – Jason Isbell \nTommy Emmanuel has achieved enough musical milestones to satisfy several lifetimes. Or at least they would if he was the kind of artist who was ever satisfied. At the age of six\, he was touring regional Australia with his family band. By 30\, he was a rock n’ roll lead guitarist burning up stadiums in Europe. At 44\, he became one of five people ever named a Certified Guitar Player by his idol\, music icon Chet Atkins. Today\, he plays hundreds of sold-out shows every year from Nashville to Sydney to London. All the while\, Tommy has hungered for what’s next. When you’re widely acknowledged as the international master of the solo acoustic guitar\, what’s next is an album of collaborations with some of the finest singers\, songwriters and\, yes\, guitarists alive today. \n“For me\, music has always been about collaboration–the push and pull you get from another human being’s energy\,” explains Tommy. “Even when I play solo\, it feels like I’m playing to the emotions I’m getting from the crowd. To feel the love or the joy or the hope coming through these other pickers and singers was electric–I played in ways I never would on my own.” \nAccomplice One is a testament to Tommy’s musical diversity\, the range of expression that stretches from authentic country-blues to face-melting rock shredding\, by way of tender and devastating pure song playing. The songs are a mix of new takes on indelible classics and brand new originals from Tommy and his collaborators. \nThe artists who stepped forward to join Tommy in the studio are an impressive list of some of today’s most respected performers\, from across the musical spectrum–a lineup including Jason Isbell\, Mark Knopfler\, Rodney Crowell\, Jerry Douglas\, Amanda Shires\, Ricky Skaggs\, J.D. Simo\, David Grisman\, Bryan Sutton\, Suzy Bogguss and many more. \nThis is an album for all types of Tommy Emmanuel fan–from longtime guitar aficionados who’ve followed his career for decades\, to lovers of great songs and melodies who flock to Tommy’s shows for the emotional authenticity driving every performance. \nGrammy-winning singer-songwriter Jason Isbell conjures up the sweaty atmosphere of his Muscle Shoals roots on opener “Deep River Blues\,” a classic fingerpicked blues which has been a longtime staple of Tommy’s live shows. Country and bluegrass legend Ricky Skaggs lends his mandolin and unmistakable voice to “Song and Dance Man\,” a chronicle of a life lived for the next show. Tommy’s subtlety and tastefulness blends with Amanda Shires’ gorgeous vocal and fiddle playing to transform Madonna’s “Borderline” and Rodney Crowell’s “Looking Forward to the Past” could’ve topped the country charts in another era\, with Tommy’s propulsive rhythm supporting Crowell’s sly lyrics while his tasty lead playing weave in and out. \nFor those hankering for virtuosic hot picking\, the rave-up “Wheelin’ and Dealin’” sees him trading licks with J.D. Simo and Charlie Cushman\, while a jaw-dropping rendition of “Purple Haze” with Dobro master Jerry Douglas captures all the fire and energy of the Hendrix original as the two modern masters push each other to new heights with each raunchy slide and bend. \nOn “You Don’t Want to Get You One of Those\,” a sly vocal and acoustic duet with Dire Straits’ legend Mark Knopfler\, there was a third\, invisible presence in the studio– the late Chet Atkins. \n“Mark and I both learned so much from Chet–he was a hero and a mentor to each of us\, and we’ve tried to bring his spirit forward into the future in our own playing\,” says Tommy. “This song that Mark wrote captured Chet’s sense of humor so well and I had the time of my life in the studio with him conjuring the master as we laid it down.” \nWhile this was the first time he and Knopfler had collaborated\, the album also featured some of Tommy’s longtime fellow road warriors\, who have covered the miles in buses and planes around the world on tour over many years. “Djangology” is a gypsy jazz treat cut live in Havana\, Cuba with Frank Vignola and Vinny Raniolo and “Rachel’s Lullaby” reunites Tommy with Hawaiian ukulele master Jake Shimabukuro. \nThe song\, written for Tommy’s youngest daughter\, shows him continuing to find inspiration from an evergreen source–his love of his family. Since he and his brother Phil taught themselves to play as toddlers\, the guitar has been Tommy’s real first language–and he’s more articulate on his signature Melbourne-made Maton acoustics than most people are with words. \nHis unerring sense of groove marked him as Australia’s youngest rhythm guitarist as The Emmanuel Quartet crisscrossed the country. By the time he made it to the big city in his late teens\, Tommy was a rock star\, slinging a Fender Telecaster alongside the biggest stars of the day. It was a good life\, but deep down Tommy knew there was more to his musical destiny. A shy country kid with little confidence\, it took an encouraging meeting turned jam session with his guitar hero Chet Atkins to build his self-belief. \nBy the late 80s he was ready to go it alone\, to make instrumental guitar records made for an audience broader than just guitar fans–a move with zero precedence in Australian music. Despite the odds\, Tommy released a string of hit albums\, racking up awards wins and nominations\, and becoming a huge celebrity in his home country\, culminating in an incendiary performance with his brother Phil at the Sydney Olympics in 2000. \nInfluenced by the Merle Travis/Chet Atkins fingerstyle of guitar picking\, Tommy developed a style of solo guitar playing that encompasses the range of a whole band– covering drums\, bass\, rhythm and lead guitar and a vocal melody simultaneously. No loop pedals\, no overdubs\, just one man and ten fingers. While some artists take ten-piece bands on the road and still fill out the sound with backing tracks\, Tommy builds a complete sonic world entirely on his own. For many players\, the technical mastery of the technique would overwhelm the emotion of the music\, but not for Tommy. His idols are not just the great players\, but also the great pop songwriters and singers–Stevie Wonder\, Billy Joel\, Paul Simon\, The Beatles and their ilk. \nWhile thousands of fans have spent years trying to unpack and imitate Tommy’s technique\, for him it’s just the delivery system. His approach is always song and emotion first\, his music the embodiment of his soulful spirit\, sense of hope and his love for entertaining. Which is not to say he dismisses the CGP\, the Guitar Player awards\, the Grammy nominations\, the numerous magazine polls naming him the greatest acoustic guitarist alive. He’s grateful for it all\, and the incredible journey that’s led him to the most invigorating period of his career–six decades into it. For Tommy though\, the greatest reward is always the same–to make the next great record\, and to see the beaming audience at the next great show. “When I was a kid\, I wanted to be in show business. Now I just want to be in the happiness business–I make music\, you get happy. That’s a good job.” \nTommy isn’t the kind of man who looks to nostalgia–it’s more that he treats his history in the same way he treats the history of music overall: There’s magic threaded in through all the eras that’s worth celebrating and revisiting. Now in his sixties –although on stage he can seem 25–life and music are about improvisation\, variety and happiness. \n“Making Accomplice One has been this great journey through so many of the worlds I’ve inhabited through the years\,” concludes Tommy. “Playing with old friends\, new friends\, heroes\, people I’ve been like an older brother to… and musically to jump around from bluegrass to jazz to blues to just pure songs\, it’s like going to the world’s greatest buffet and picking out all my favorite meals. People try to categorize what I do\, to put me in a genre or put a label on me. I always go back to that old Duke Ellington line\, about there being two types of music\, good and bad.” Well I try and play the good kind\, and on this record I got to play it with the best people.” \n\nOnSale: Fri\, 3 Mar 2023 at 12:00PM EST
URL:https://theark.org/event/tommy-emmanuel-231013/
LOCATION:Royal Oak Music Theatre\, 318 W 4th St\, Royal Oak\, MI\, 48067\, United States
CATEGORIES:Special Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theark.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/Tommy-Emmanuel-2023-web-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20231002T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20231002T230000
DTSTAMP:20260422T170106
CREATED:20230613T183453Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231014T200252Z
UID:10000352-1696273200-1696287600@theark.org
SUMMARY:Broken Social Scene
DESCRIPTION:In celebration of the 20th anniversary of their album\, You Forgot It In People\, Broken Social Scene are playing songs from their seminal sophomore album\, among many more hits. \nAt the dawn of the 21st-century\, just as the internet began infecting every aspect of our daily lives\, Toronto musicians Kevin Drew and Brendan Canning began building a social network of their own. Like other such networks you’re familiar with\, it quickly expanded to include friends\, and friends of friends. It became a place where they could live out their best lives or fret about the fragile state of the world. And yes\, occasionally\, it became a forum for arguments and oversharing. But this social network didn’t require you to stay glued to your smartphone to take part in it. Quite the opposite: Since debuting in 2001\, Broken Social Scene have personified the unyielding\, incomparable power of IRL human connection. \nIt’s hard to know what to make of an ongoing experiment like Broken Social Scene. Is it a band? Not quite. Bands tend to have defined memberships and aesthetics and goals; Broken Social Scene have never been bothered with such limitations. Is it a cult? Nah— some of them have the beards\, but they could never agree on the right robes. Is it a collective? Certainly\, it can seem that way when you see some 15 people crowding the stage\, but BSS aren’t so much a united front as a perpetually mutating aggregate of competing creative energies. \nOnce a two-person basement recording project\, Broken Social Scene came to life onstage as a shadowy improvisational entity with a revolving-door roster\, each concert a wholly unique experience dependent on the room\, the weather\, what they ate for dinner that night\, and who was dropping in to play. Where the band’s 2001 debut album\, Feel Good Lost\, presented BSS as an anonymous ambient project that reflected its humble\, homespun origins\, their electrifying live performances from that era rallied an extended family of performers with roots in post-rock (Justin Peroff\, Do Make Say Think’s Charles Spearin)\, Latin jazz (Andrew Whiteman)\, art-folk (Feist)\, synth-pop (Amy Millan and Evan Cranley\, also of Stars)\, dance-punk (Metric’s Emily Haines and Jimmy Shaw)\, and country rock (Jason Collett). \nBut by pursuing improvisational freedom over commercial considerations\, Broken Social Scene set a new gold standard for indie rock in the 21st century with 2002’s You Forgot It In People\, an album that pushed the genre far beyond its noisy ’90s slacker roots toward a more sonically expansive\, emotionally expressive vision. And with follow-up releases like the blissfully chaotic Broken Social Scene (2005)\, the rapturous Forgiveness Rock Record (2010)\, and the intricate\, insidiously melodic Hug of Thunder (2017)\, Broken Social Scene have amassed a thrillingly amorphous\, unpredictable body of work. \nThroughout their two-decade run\, Broken Social Scene have achieved all the markers of modern indie success—rave reviews from Pitchfork\, invites to play Coachella and Lollapalooza\, multiple Juno Awards and Letterman appearances\, and name-drops in Lorde songs. And their victories have ultimately been Toronto’s\, through the establishment of a record label (Arts & Crafts) and music festival (Field Trip) that became rallying points for the local scene and nurtured the next generation of indie upstarts. But arguably Broken Social Scene’s greatest accomplishment is their mere existence\, as a conglomerate that continues to defy all logistical convention and musical expectations. They’re living proof that underdogs are most effective when travelling in a pack\, that mass audiences can be led into uncharted waters through collective enthusiasm\, and that the better world we all dream of begins with community. \nIn both sound and personnel\, Broken Social Scene has changed a lot since their 2001 inception. But one thing has remained constant—at the end of every show\, Kevin Drew bids the crowd adieu by telling everyone to “enjoy your lives.” More than just a simple farewell\, those words are a call to action—to put down your goddamn phone\, get outside\, and be part of a social scene of your own.
URL:https://theark.org/event/broken-social-scene-231002/
LOCATION:The Majestic Theatre\, 4140 Woodward Ave.\, Detroit\, Michigan\, 48201\, United States
CATEGORIES:Special Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20230916T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20230916T230000
DTSTAMP:20260422T170106
CREATED:20230306T140016Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241016T122937Z
UID:10000721-1694890800-1694905200@theark.org
SUMMARY:The Tallest Man on Earth
DESCRIPTION:Kristian Matsson has never remained in one place for very long. Having spent much of the last decade touring around the world as The Tallest Man on Earth\, Matsson has captivated audiences using\, as The New York Times describes\, “every inch of his long guitar cord to roam the stage: darting around\, crouching\, stretching\, hip-twitching\, perching briefly and jittering away…Mr. Matsson is a guitar-slinger rooted in folk\, and his songs are troubadour ballads at heart.” \n  \nThen came 2020\, when Matsson left New York City and returned to his farm in Sweden. There\, during that quiet\, dreary time of isolation\, he drowned out his thoughts by manically growing vegetables in his garden. When he tried writing again\, during those many months of collective forced solitude\, “I just found myself commenting on the darkness\,” Matsson says. “I lost my imagination.” Playing live\, music and inspiration returned near the end of 2021\, and his produce became less of a priority. “When I’m in motion\, I can focus on my instinct\, have my daydreams again. When I was finally able to tour again\, I started writing like a madman.” He eventually had twenty songs he wanted to record in ten days. \n  \nNow\, Matsson returns as The Tallest Man on Earth with Henry St.\, his sixth studio album following 2012’s There’s No Leaving Now\, full of “vivid imagery\, clever turns-of-phrase\, and devastating\, world-weary observations” (Under The Radar) and 2015’s Dark Bird Is A Home\, his “most personal record… surreal and dreamlike” (Pitchfork). Henry St. notably marks the first time he recorded an album in a band setting. “My entire career I’ve been a DIY person––mostly fueled by the feeling that I didn’t know what I was doing\, so I’d just do everything myself.” But now\, longing for the energy that’s only released when creating together with others\, Matsson invited his friends to come and play. \n  \nNick Sanborn (of Sylvan Esso) produced Henry St.\, which includes contributions from Ryan Gustafson (of The Dead Tongues) on guitar\, lap steel and ukulele\, TJ Maiani on drums\, CJ Camerieri (of Bon Iver) on trumpet and French horn\, Phil Cook on piano and organ\, Rob Moose (of Bon Iver\, yMusic) on strings and Adam Schatz on saxophone. “They opened everything up\, and understood what the songs that I’d written needed: sounds that I couldn’t ever have thought of or created myself. We recorded so many of the songs live in the studio\, playing\, having fun and being really open with each other.” \n  \nAn overarching theme of Henry St.\, he says\, is “how to be a person in this world.” The title track is about the deception that\, “as individuals\, we’re told that we should strive for success. But when we have it\, it doesn’t solve anything. The song is about stepping away and thinking: why am I actually doing this?” While writing the song back in Sweden\, he knew it would be the centerpiece of the album. “It’s the low point and the turnaround: the other songs are a reminder that I will always be a stubborn optimist\, even at the darkest of times.” He was about to record the track as a solo piece\, until Phil Cook came in on his first day in the studio. “I had Phil basically hanging over my shoulders at the piano while we were playing\, and then he recorded it. He improvised that beautiful outro. When he did\, our jaws dropped––I was in tears.” \n  \n“Looking for Love” is one of those songs about Matsson’s stubborn optimism\, and a shining example of Sanborn’s influence on the album. “The first day in the studio\, Nick created this hissing noise while I was feedbacking electric guitar. We had so much fun jamming like that. Then Nick put down some piano to overdub my guitar\, and we knew we had the song.” The tone for their collaboration was set. “Nick is so emotionally intelligent\, and we share an almost childlike joy in things that can happen with music. He makes the songs come truly alive by keeping the performances and the humanity in––the kind of stuff that just happens during the session.” \n  \nThe song “Every Little Heart\,” he says\, came from a feeling of fearlessness\, a confidence in making music after two years of relative silence. “But of course I still have little demons inside of me. I wrote some key changes in the song that came natural to me\, but I worried they might sound unnatural to others. When TJ Maiani heard it\, he straightaway went into this drumbeat that shocked me a little at first\, but came completely natural to him. It fit the song perfectly.” \n  \nMatsson’s longing for social interchange\, after months spent with only his crops\, led to the collaboration that delivered the warm\, unique and sprawling sound of Henry St. “It’s the most playful\, most me album yet\, because it covers so many of the different noises in my head. When you overthink things\, you get further away from your original ideas. And God knows I overthink things when I’m by myself.” The time in isolation also brought him some newfound peace of mind. “Having been away from it taught me that making music and performing is what I’m doing for the rest of my life\, and I’m so grateful for it. It has given me new confidence and playfulness. This is what I do. It’s unconditional.”
URL:https://theark.org/event/the-tallest-man-on-earth-230916/
LOCATION:The Majestic Theatre\, 4140 Woodward Ave.\, Detroit\, Michigan\, 48201\, United States
CATEGORIES:Special Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theark.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/MAIN-TTMOE-by-Stephan-Vanfleteren-scaled-for-web-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20230302T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20230302T230000
DTSTAMP:20260422T170106
CREATED:20221116T222113Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221116T222113Z
UID:10000218-1677783600-1677798000@theark.org
SUMMARY:The Wood Brothers
DESCRIPTION:The Wood Brothers didn’t know they were making a record. Looking back\, they’re grateful for that. \n“If we had known\, we probably would have been too self-conscious to play what we played\,” reflects bassist/vocalist Chris Wood. “At the time\, we just thought we were jamming to break in our new studio\, so we felt free to explore all these different ways of performing together without worrying about form or structure. It was liberating.” \nRecorded live to tape\, those freewheeling\, improvised sessions became a vast pool of source material from which The Wood Brothers would go on to draw ‘Kingdom In My Mind\,’ their seventh studio release and most spontaneous and experimental collection yet. While on past records\, the band—Chris\, guitarist/vocalist Oliver Wood\, and drummer/keyboardist Jano Rix—would write a large batch of songs and then record them all at once\, ‘Kingdom’ found them retroactively carving tunes out of sprawling instrumental jam sessions like sculptors chipping away at blocks of marble. A testament to the limitless creativity of the unharnessed mind\, the record explores the power of our external surroundings to shape our internal worlds (and vice versa)\, reckoning with time\, mortality\, and human nature. The songs here find strength in accepting what lies beyond our control\, thoughtfully honing in on the bittersweet beauty that underlies doubt and pain and sadness with vivid character studies and unflinching self-examination. Deep as the lyrics dig\, the arrangements always manage to remain buoyant and light\, though\, drawing from across a broad sonic spectrum to create a transportive\, effervescent blend that reflects the trio’s unique place in the modern musical landscape. \n“My brother came to this band from the blues and gospel world\, and my history was allover the map with jazz and R&B\,” says Chris\, who first rose to fame with the pioneering trio Medeski Martin & Wood. “The idea for this group has always been to marry our backgrounds\, to imagine what might happen if Robert Johnson and Charles Mingus had started a band together.” \n‘Kingdom In My Mind’ follows The Wood Brothers’ most recent studio release\, 2018’s ‘One Drop Of Truth\,’ which hit #1 on the Billboard Heatseekers Chart and garnered the band their first GRAMMY nomination for Best Americana Album. NPR praised the record’s “unexpected changes and kaleidoscopic array of influences\,” while Uncut hailed its “virtuosic performances and subtly evocative lyrics\,” and Blurt proclaimed it “a career-defining album.” Tracks from the record racked up roughly 8 million streams on Spotify alone\, and the band took the album on the road for extensive tour dates in the US and Europe\, including their first-ever headline performance at Red Rocks\, two nights at San Francisco’s legendary Fillmore (captured on their 2019 release\, ‘Live At The Fillmore’)\,and festival appearances everywhere from Bonnaroo to XPoNentia
URL:https://theark.org/event/the-wood-brothers-230302/
LOCATION:The Majestic Theatre\, 4140 Woodward Ave.\, Detroit\, Michigan\, 48201\, United States
CATEGORIES:Special Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theark.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/0302-Detroit-TheWoodBrothers-1920x1080-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20230225T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20230225T230000
DTSTAMP:20260422T170106
CREATED:20221019T164044Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221019T164044Z
UID:10000198-1677355200-1677366000@theark.org
SUMMARY:Margo Price
DESCRIPTION:Margo Price has something to say but nothing to prove. In just three remarkable solo albums\, the singer and songwriter has cemented herself as a force in American music and a generational talent. A deserving critical darling\, she has never shied away from the sounds that move her\, the pain that’s shaped her\, or the topics that tick her off\, like music industry double standards\, the gender wage gap\, or the plight of the American farmer. (In 2021\, she even joined the board of Farm Aid.) \nNow\, on her fourth full-length Strays\, a clear-eyed mission statement delivered in blistering rock and roll\, she’s taking on substance abuse\, self-image\, abortion rights\, and orgasms. Musically extravagant but lyrically laser focused\, the 10-song record tears into a broken world desperate for remedy. And who better to tell it? Price has done plenty of her own rebuilding—or as she shout sings in explanation on “Been to the Mountain\,” the set’s throat-ripping opener\, “I have been to the mountain and back alright”—and finds herself\, at long last\, free. Feral. Stray. \nSo\, while the last few years have seen remarkable moments of acclaim—a Best New Artist Grammy nomination\, Americana Music Honors\, a Saturday Night Live performance\, and just about every outlet and critics’ year-end Best Of list—Price is still hungry. “I still have a lot of drive inside of me\,” she says. “I have a chip on my shoulder. It feels like I still haven’t been able to fully realize all my dreams yet\, and that eats me up.” Just wait. \nWhen Tré Burt was signed to John Prine’s Oh Boy Records in 2019\, he was one of only two artists -including label mate Kelsey Waldon\, to join the label in the past 15 years. Caught It From The Rye\, Tré Burt’s debut album was re-released on Oh Boy in Jan 2020. The album showcases Burt’s literary songwriting and lo-fi\, rootsy aesthetic\, which he honed busking on the streets of San Francisco and traveling the world in search of inspiration. Like labelmate and songwriting hero John Prine\, Burt has a poet’s eye for detail\, a surgeon’s sense of narrative precision and a folk singer’s natural knack for a timeless melody. Caught It From The Ryeis an urgent missive from an important new voice in songwriting. \nFor a songwriter who thoughtfully documents what he sees in the world\, 2020\, while challenging\, was rich with inspiration. The year birthed the single\, Under The Devil’s Knee\, a song that continues the tradition of outspoken political folk songwritersof yore. It is an incredibly moving protest song tracing the lives of George Floyd\, Eric Garner\, and Breonna Taylor. Recorded remotely featuring Allison Russell\, Sunny War and Leyla McCalla. “Humanity feels like it’s slipping away from us\, as a country. Iwanted to reinstate the humanity of George Floyd\, Breonna Taylor\, Eric Garner and so many other brothers and sisters slain by police in the way I know how. I wanted to immortalize their dignity and make the work easy for future historians and remind the present that no matter what side of the aisle you’re on\, this is about actual pain and real human suffering caused by a system of governance that is morally bankrupt. This\, I felt was my duty as an American songwriter to do. Music is a powerful force\, especially when you put it through a protest song. It makes the fight more tangible. Reframes perspective. None of which entered my mind when writing this\, at all. That was out of anger. I wrote this song out of anger. They should all be alive.” -Tré Burt
URL:https://theark.org/event/margo-price-230225/
LOCATION:The Majestic Theatre\, 4140 Woodward Ave.\, Detroit\, Michigan\, 48201\, United States
CATEGORIES:Special Event
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20221204T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20221204T230000
DTSTAMP:20260422T170106
CREATED:20220823T153212Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220823T153212Z
UID:10000172-1670180400-1670194800@theark.org
SUMMARY:Trampled By Turtles
DESCRIPTION:Trampled by Turtles are from Duluth\, Minnesota\, where frontman Dave Simonett initially formed the group as a side project in 2003. At the time\, Simonett had lost most of his music gear\, thanks to a group of enterprising car thieves who’d ransacked his vehicle while he played a show with his previous band. Left with nothing more than an acoustic guitar\, he began piecing together a new band\, this time taking inspiration from bluegrass\, folk\, and other genres that didn’t rely on amplification. Simonett hadn’t played any bluegrass music before\, and he filled his lineup with other newcomers to the genre\, including fiddler Ryan Young (who’d previously played drums in a speed metal act) and bassist Tim Saxhaug. Along with mandolinist Erik Berry and banjo player Dave Carroll\, the group began carving out a fast\, frenetic sound that owed as much to rock & roll as bluegrass. \nTrampled by Turtles released their first record\, Songs from a Ghost Town\, in 2004. In a genre steeped in tradition\, the album stood out for its contemporary sound\, essentially bridging the gap between the bandmates’ background in rock music and their new acoustic leanings. Blue Sky and the Devil (2005) and Trouble (2007) explored a similar sound\, but it wasn’t until 2008 and the band’s fourth release\, Duluth\, that Trampled by Turtles received recognition by the bluegrass community. Duluth peaked at number eight on the Billboard bluegrass chart and paved the way for a number of festival appearances. When Palomino arrived in 2010\, it was met with an even greater response\, debuting at the top of the bluegrass chart and remaining in the Top Ten for more than a year. Two years later\, their crossover appeal landed them at number 32 on the Billboard 200 pop charts upon the release of their sixth album\, Stars and Satellites. In addition to major bluegrass and folk festivals\, they began showing up at Coachella\, ACL Fest\, and Lollapalooza. The official concert album\, Live at First Avenue\, followed in 2013\, recorded at Minnesota’s most famous venue. A year later\, the band returned with the darker-toned Wild Animals\, which bettered its studio predecessor on the album charts\, reaching number 29 on Billboard. Countless tours with bands like Lord Huron\, Wilco\, Caamp\, Mt Joy and Deer Tick to name a few have followed. 2022 will see the release of the band’s latest body of work called Alpenglow which was produced by Jeff Tweedy of Wilco. \n  \nFull Cord out of Grand Haven\, Michigan has been stealing the scene with an extraordinary song base that spans through originals\, newgrass\, traditional\, covers\, country\, Texas swing\, jazz and more. \nTheir infectious stage show and breadth of material pushed Full Cord through to a win of the 2022 Telluride Bluegrass Festival Band Competition in June and a nomination as the Momentum Band of the year at the upcoming International Bluegrass Music Awards.  With two shows never the same\, their followers in Michigan and beyond try to catch every show\, never knowing what teaser or new song will be in the set list.
URL:https://theark.org/event/trampled-by-turtles-221204/
LOCATION:The Majestic Theatre\, 4140 Woodward Ave.\, Detroit\, Michigan\, 48201\, United States
CATEGORIES:Special Event
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