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May 30thBob Schneider
June 4thThe Suffers
June 5thJoe Jackson + Band - SOLD OUT
June 5thFox Fest
June 6thLilo and Stitch
June 6thÁsgeir
June 10thThe Altons
June 11thFruit Bats
June 13thFlamingosis
June 13thDoctor Nativo
June 14thVincent Neil Emerson
June 18thSearows
June 18thSir Woman
June 19thGregory Alan Isakov
June 19thJuneteenth Celebration: Sudan Archives
June 20thWhen Harry Met Sally
June 20thDirtwire & The Floozies
June 20thSir Richard Bishop
June 20thA Conversation with Deb Haaland
June 21stHeartByrne
June 25thVincen García
June 25thDetroit Lightning
June 26thTurnover
June 26thThe Polish Ambassador
June 27thAn Evening With Brett Dennen
June 28thLos Lobos
June 29thRelaay
June 30thNosotros
July 2ndBlack Uhuru
July 3rdThe Halluci Nation
July 3rdFREE | The Mavericks & Friends
July 4thLos Texmaniacs
July 6thBaile Nuevomexicano
July 7thYeison Landero
July 8thWavves
July 8thMoby Dick
July 9thSinkane
July 10thKurt Vile And The Violators
July 11thMax Gomez
July 11thHooks & The Huckleberries
July 13thFantastic Cat
July 14thHoundmouth
July 14thDylan LeBlanc
July 15thEileen Ivers & The Brigideens
July 16thJames McMurtry
July 16thIn Conversation with NPR's Mara Liasson
July 16thMeow Wolf Monster Battle: Fleetmac Wood
July 17thChris Botti
July 17thPaul Oakenfold + The Crystal Method
July 18thBest in Show
July 18thRufus Wainwright
July 18thMarchFourth
July 19thABBAquerque
July 20thLumbre del Sol
July 21stDWLLRS
July 21stOld 97's
July 22ndABBAquerque
July 24thCracker
July 24thHandmade Moments
July 25thDustbowl Revival
July 27thJoe West's B-Day
July 28thTrish Toledo
July 30thBeach Bunny & The Beths
July 31stSanta Fe Salutes Yacht Rock
July 31stBoomBox
July 31stSanta Fe Cumbiero
August 1stThelma & Louise
August 1stThe Brothers Comatose
August 3rdBobby Alu
August 4thBlack Moth Super Rainbow
August 4thEagles of Death Metal
August 5thLos Straitjackets
August 6thDon Was & The Pan-Detroit Ensemble
August 6thLos Straitjackets
August 7thBanshee Tree
August 8thMonsieur Periné
August 10thGary Farmer & The Troublemakers
August 11thWidowspeak
August 11thIndigenousWays Festival
August 14thTeam Everything
August 15thMatilda
August 15thRev. Peyton's Big Damn Band
August 16thTropidelic & The Boomroots
August 17thManzanares
August 18thD.K. Harrell
August 20thBill Callahan - VENUE CHANGE
August 20thFantastic Negrito
August 21stThee Sacred Souls
August 22ndLisa Morales
August 22ndGov't Mule
August 22ndYung Bae
August 22ndPepper and The Movement
August 23rdIguanas
August 24thOh He Dead
August 25thJay Boy Adams & Zenobia
August 27thBig Bad Voodoo Daddy
August 27thSt. Paul & the Broken Bones
August 28thZootopia 2
August 29thNeal Francis
September 1stNuestra Musica
September 3rdDominique Fils-Aimé
September 5thBlossoms & Bones
September 10thMeltt
September 13thBig Thief - SOLD OUT
September 16thMavis Staples & Nathaniel Rateliff
September 19thTajMo
September 20thThe Midnight
September 24thPixies - SOLD OUT
September 25thThe California Honeydrops
September 25thToadies
September 26thJoshua Ray Walker
September 26thMidland
September 27thThe Magic School Bus
September 28thSammy Rae & the Friends
October 1stPatton Oswalt
October 2ndTribal Seeds
October 3rdAn Evening with Hampton Sides
October 3rdDamien Jurado
October 5thJeremy Dutcher
October 8thSnarky Puppy
October 9thRaynes and David Wimbish & The Collection
October 10thLP
October 11thPunch Brothers
October 11thWild Pink
October 13thDevon Gilfillian
October 14thAkram Khan Company
October 14th49 Winchester
October 15thTyler Ballgame
October 18thKishi Bashi
October 20thSilkroad Up Close
October 22ndAx and the Hatchetmen
October 23rdThee Sinseers
October 24thJulian Lage Quartet
October 26thThe Surge: an ode to Sinéad O'Connor's
November 4thUB40
November 4thGilla Band
November 8thBayonne
November 10thBuena Vista Orchestra
November 11thBahamas
November 11thPhilip Glass Ensemble: Powaqqatsi
November 12thDave Hause and The Mermaid
November 13thBluey's Big Play
November 19thNick Shoulders
November 19thMireya Ramos and The Poor Choices
November 20thBonnie Prince Billy - SOLD OUT
December 2ndBonnie Prince Billy - SOLD OUT
December 3rdBonnie Prince Billy
December 4thAoife O'Donovan and Chris Thile
December 7thPostmodern Jukebox
December 9thJudy Collins
December 22ndJoe Illick and The New Year's Eve Orchestra
December 31stBallet Hispánico New York
January 24thThird Coast Percussion: Ripples in the Water
January 27thAudra McDonald
January 29thPeking Acrobats
February 3rdDelfeayo Marsalis & The Uptown Jazz Orchestra
February 9thMalpaso Dance Company
February 18thInternational Guitar Night
February 24thJazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
March 1stPalaver Strings
March 4thThe Boy Who Cried Wolf
March 7thThe Hot Sardines
March 12thLang Lang
April 1stAga Khan Master Musicians
April 4thBranford Marsalis and Dianne Reeves
April 7thYAMATO--The Drummers of Japan
April 21stChanticleer
April 30thThe Wailin' Jennys
June 1stThe Wailin' Jennys
June 2ndOdie Leigh
w/ Valley James
at
Meow Wolf
Add to Cal
TICKETS: $20-25
Member pre-sale: Tuesday, June 11, 10 am
Public sale: Friday, June 14, 10 am
Want pre-sale access? Become a Lensic member! Learn more here.
FOR ONLINE CUSTOMER TICKETING sales and support contact [email protected] or call 1-877-466-3404.
IN-PERSON WALK-UP SALES ONLY for all shows are available at the Lensic Box Office during Box Office hours.
VENUE INFO: Meow Wolf
Alcohol: Yes
Seating: Standing
Outside Food/Drink: No
Parking: Yes
ADA: Yes, please speak to a Meow Wolf team member
PROHIBITED ITEMS: Recommend to leave the following items in your car or secure them in a locker. Please review our Prohibited Items list for further questions.
-Backpacks & oversized bags
-Laptops or Tablets
-Oversized coats
-Umbrellas
-Luggage
-Strollers
-Skateboards
-Professional recording equipment
ODIE LEIGH
Odie Leigh would never have called herself a musician before the depths of the 2020 pandemic, when her rapper roomies made a bet: Whoever records a song that goes viral first, wins. Slightly ticked off that they hadn’t included her in the wager, she decided to hit them with her best shot, and Odie was crowned the victor when a track she wrote blew up on TikTok. “I was like, ‘I'm gonna show y'all. I'm gonna win,’” she recalls, laughing. “Then I woke up to a bunch of comments on TikTok being like, ‘Oh my God, release this. This is amazing!’ Now, I’m a musician.”
Four years after posting what she calls “that silly joke song” on TikTok, Odie Leigh has continued to transform and evolve as an artist — from what she calls “acoustic, ethereal folk sad girl music” to a harder-edge tunes that flirt with early Aughts pop-punktivism. That trajectory culminates in her first LP, Carrier Pigeon. “All the music I've released up until this point can kind of be thrown into the indie folk acoustic genre,” Odie says. “But I never set out to make Americana music. I never set out to make folk music. I'm just a girl with an acoustic guitar.”
The fact that Odie Leigh never set out to make music is key here. Unlike a lot of musicians who grew up picking out tunes on toddler guitars or belting it out in garages, Odie never pictured herself on stage. Born and raised in Louisiana, she sang in the church choir, sure — her grandfather built the building, after all, and her family attended three times per week. But after moving to New Orleans to study English, she fully intended on making her bones in the film industry. That 2020 wager changed things, though, when she realized that she could win hearts in addition to bets. Although she’d taught herself to play guitar as a child, Odie didn’t know that much about music from the get-go, but she was inspired by the likes of ‘50’s singer-songwriter Connie Converse and her out-of-the-box style. “I didn't realize that music could be like this. It was all so unique and not pretentious,” she says. “I was like, ‘I can do this.’” Her first real single, “Ronnie’s Song,” followed in 2021, a sweetly silly track she wrote to cheer up a friend. Coming from the film world, she found songwriting freeing, unbound from the rigidity of screenplay and discovered that simplicity can be a strength.
She released her first EP, How Did It Seem to You?, in 2022, about a situationship gone wrong. Recorded everywhere from Louisiana to Miami, “That first EP was born out of desperation to feel heard and be connected,” she says. “Releasing that EP is probably like one of the scariest things I've ever done because it was just so real and embarrassing. All of my music is stuff I would never say out loud.” In 2023, Odie Leigh dropped her second, EP, The Only Thing Worse Than a Woman Who Lies Is a Girl Who’ll Tell Truths, which was recorded in the woods of Tennessee. “That second project was definitely like the edgier, angrier step up from: I'm a girl that makes folk music,” she says.
After those releases began gaining steam on social media, Odie Leigh started hitting stages hard — an impressive show of hustle for someone who never really dreamed of life on the road. Nevertheless, she toured Europe, North America, and played Newport Folk in 2023; she also has festival gigs like Shaky Knees and Kilby Block Party, among others, later this year. Odie eventually achieved many an indie musician’s dream when she signed with Mom + Pop in 2023, mostly due to their diverse catalog: Yes, she’s made Americana music in the past, but she’s no one-trick pony. She craved the room to stretch and change and scream. And for Carrier Pigeon, she did just that, teaming up with a producer/musician Derek Ted — and infusing the 10-track suite with a more hard-edged sound, and plenty of fun. “I wanted to call it Carrier Pigeon because as I was writing these songs I just kept on thinking how silly it is that I'm writing all these thoughts and feeling down about someone and for someone who is only going to hear it months if not years after I write it,” she says. “I was like 'I might as well be putting letters in bottles and throwing them into the ocean or just strapping it to a pigeon and hoping it lands at the right house.' This album is the carrier pigeon and the songs are the messages.”
Album opener “A Good Thing” showcases Odie Leigh’s new sensibilities as she goes from tentatively considering talking to a crush to almost wailing: “It’s hard for more me to not romanticize every man I meet.” “I feel like it’s the perfect opener, because it slowly brings you into my new sonic world,” she says. “The entire record is me falling in love.” The ebullient “Already (on My Mind)” follows — a simple song, Odie says, about infatuation: the early stages, the terror and excitement of new love. She wrote “Party Trick” in that same vein after an incident in the Airstream trailer where she lives. She was getting ready to meet friends at the Day of the Dead parade when she found herself almost paralyzed — door wide open, one shoe on — agonizing over texting a boy she’d met on Halloween. Instead of picking up the phone, she picked up the guitar — finishing the track after an exhilarating experience ziplining with fans in L.A. “All of these things were happening, but yet I was still sitting here thinking about this boy,” she sighs.
We get past the first-text paranoia on “Conversation Starter” — a glorious sugar rush — in which Odie Leigh debates how to flirt with her new guy without revealing all her quirky weirdness right off the bat. “The song is me showing all of my insecurities,” she says. “But it's also not not about sexting,” she adds with a laugh. Things get considerably more “cutesy, and hopesy” on straight-ahead-rocker “No Doubt,” which is about, well, having zero of the titular doubts. “I can be stuck in my head and worry all I want, but at the end of the day, I know how I feel. You got me if you want. I'm here,” she says.
“Finer Things” honeys in next, a “moment of chill on a sometimes not-chill album,” followed by the achingly lovely “Either Way,” velveteen vocals on full display. “It's one of the songs that, when I wrote it, I was like, ‘Is this amazing? Or is this the worst thing I've ever written?’” Odie Leigh says, laughing again. “But I feel like songs like that always end up being ones that are actually good.” After the song’s dizzying denouement, Odie gets a little wicked, darkly ruminating on being in the bottom of a ditch of “Common Denominator” and entering her villain error on “Idiom.”
The record wraps with “My Name on a T-Shirt,” Odie Leigh’s “angry-girl song” about ditching a dude after he shows up to a gig with…you guessed it, her name on his shirt. Here, Odie’s ethereal sad girl takes the backseat as she nearly growls about being a “loser” and a “full-time sinner.” Nevertheless, it’s kind of a triumphant image for a woman who bet against her more experienced roommates that she could break the Internet: getting so big a love interest fanboys out. In the end, Odie did show us all. And she’s having an absolute blast.
VALLEY JAMES
Brought up in the high desert, Valley James was raised by the golden hills behind her childhood home in Star, Idaho. There she rode horses through fields of cheatgrass and sagebrush, unknowingly searching for something beyond the confines of her life. It wasn't until after a failed marriage at age twenty-two, that James pawned her wedding ring for a black telecaster and discovered music as her lifeblood. James' art can be described as dark, alluring, and heartbreaking. Influenced by artists like Patsy Cline, Chris Issak, and Gillian Welch, James brings an ethereal quality distinctly her own. Her debut record, set to release October 2024, will take listeners into the depths of trangenerational trauma and James' personal journey from girl to woman and hopelessness to meaning.





