Facebook Icon Instagram Icon

Lensic 360 Radio

Lensic 360 is a part of the Lensic Performing Arts Center

Learn More

Sponsors

Upcoming

Demetri Martin

December 18th

SunSquabi

December 21st

Shaun Cassidy

January 6th

Madison Cunningham

January 16th

Goldford

January 20th

Tank and the Bangas

January 23rd

Josh Teed

January 23rd

Andy Frasco & The U.N.

January 25th

Blade Runner: Live

January 27th

Billy F Gibbons

January 28th

Don Broco

January 28th

Hayes Carll

January 29th

Vincent Neil Emerson

January 31st

Matteo Mancuso

February 3rd

Storm Large

February 5th

Sheng Wang

February 7th

Patty Griffin

February 11th

Cyril Neville

February 11th

Mama's Broke

February 12th

Patty Griffin

February 13th

AJ Lee & Blue Summit

February 14th

Kathleen Edwards

February 14th

Sons of Legion

February 14th

Colter Wall

February 15th

AJ Lee & Blue Summit

February 15th

Ladysmith Black Mambazo

February 16th

Ladysmith Black Mambazo

February 18th

Cedric Burnside

February 20th

Warren Haynes Solo

February 20th

David Ramirez

February 20th

Cedric Burnside

February 21st

Kitchen Dwellers

February 24th

bbno$

February 25th

Tig Notaro - SOLD OUT

February 27th

Tig Notaro

February 27th

Magic City Hippies

March 1st

The Strumbellas

March 2nd

East Forest

March 3rd

Colony House

March 3rd

Jonah Kagen

March 4th

On A Winter's Night

March 11th

Neko Case

March 12th

The Bad Plus

March 13th

SoDown

March 13th

Esther Rose

March 14th

Lunasa

March 15th

Pink Martini

March 23rd

Pink Martini

March 24th

Charlie Parr

March 28th

The Wood Brothers

March 31st

Mindchatter

March 31st

Big Richard

April 3rd

Sarah Kinsley

April 3rd

Big Richard

April 4th

54 ULTRA

April 4th

Sierra Hull

April 8th

Kathy Griffin

April 9th

Al Di Meola

April 9th

TINZO + JOJO

April 10th

Supertask

April 11th

The Wallflowers

April 28th

Janeane Garofalo

April 29th
Lensic 360

Lucero

w/ Vandoliers

Time: 7:30pm     Day: Wednesday     Doors: 6:30pm     Ages: 21+ without parent or guardian     Price: $29.50
This Event Has Ended

$40 DOS ALL IN 

SHOW IS HAPPENING TONIGHT 

Member pre-sale: Wednesday, July 17, 10 am
Public sale: Friday, July 19, 10 am
Want pre-sale access? Become a Lensic member! Learn more here

FOR ONLINE CUSTOMER TICKETING sales and support contact support@holdmyticket.com 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 INFOTumbleroot Brewery & Distillery

Alcohol: Yes

Seating: Limited

Outside Food/Drink: No

Parking: Yes

ADA: Yes

 

 

LUCERO

The search for one’s identity is a lifelong process that every individual must go through. Who someone is today, is not the person they were yesterday nor who they may be tomorrow. Despite those changes, there is a general idea of a defined sense of self.  No matter what happens, it is that small yet solid and grounding definition of self that continues to drive us forward in our search for identity and whatever may come with it. 

 

It would be difficult to find any artist who understands that better than the band Lucero. 

 

Since forming in Memphis in the late 90’s, Lucero’s base musical hallmarks have remained similar to the band’s initial sound established with their first record The Attic Tapes. In the history of their expansive discography, Lucero has evolved and embraced everything from southern rock to Stax-inspired Memphis soul, whilst simultaneously maintaining their distinctive sonic foundations. Over 20 years later, dedicated fans of the group still flock to hear the band’s punchy driving rhythms, punk-rooted guitar licks, and lyrics that evoke the whiskey drenched sentimentality of Americana singer-songwriters. As expected of any band built to survive, Lucero has welcomed change over the course of their career, but it has always been on their terms. 

 

The band’s twelfth album, Should’ve Learned by Now, began its life as hardly more than some rough demos and lingering guitar parts. These pieces that were left behind from the band’s previous albums, Among the Ghosts (2018) and When You Found Me (2021) were deemed too uptempo and capering for the prior records’ darker themes. 

  

“I had a particular sound I was looking for on each record and there was no room for any goofy rock & roll or cute witticisms or even simply upbeat songs,” said primary lyricist and frontman, Ben Nichols. “But now finally, it was time to revisit all of that stuff and get it out in the world. That’s how we got to the appropriately-for-us-titled album Should’ve Learned by Now. The album is basically about how we know we are fuckups and I guess we are ok with that.” 

 

The band, comprised of all its original members (which in addition to Ben Nichols, includes Brian Venable on guitar, Roy Berry on drums, John C. Stubblefield on bass, and Rick Steff on keys) teamed up for a third time with producer and Grammy Award-winning engineer and mixer, Matt Ross-Spang. Lucero began the recording process in Sam Phillips Recording Service before transitioning and finishing the record in Ross-Spang’s newly opened Southern Grooves Productions in Memphis, TN. Ross-Spang appears to have settled in with the band’s more trademark sound whilst very much making his touch known to listeners.

 

 “He knows how to take the sounds we’re making on our own and just kind of polish them up in the right way. Or dirty it up in the right way. Whatever it takes, he just kind of does it,” says Nichols. 

 

The first track from the album “One Last F.U.” is a punchy and somewhat combative song which was one of the original remnants of Among the Ghosts. Despite its title, “One Last F.U.” is less about standoffishness and more a self-reflection on the kind of people we are capable of being in difficult situations. According to Nichols “The rest of the song was simply about wanting to be left alone while I drank at the bar. That could be taken in a kind of grumpy/antagonistic way, but I feel ok singing the song because I’ve been both characters in the song at different times. Sometimes I’m the one wanting to be left alone and sometimes I’m the drunk one blabbing all night to someone that just wants to be left alone.” Right off the bat, Nichols’ vocals are awash in rock and roll slap-back reverb. The effect pushes Nichols' naturally upfront vocals wider, so they fill the space in a manner more akin to a live performance. It’s one of a few new production effects that extend throughout the record and add a new level of presence and attitude to the band’s sound. 

 

The second track, “Macon if We Make It”, was inspired by the band having to traverse through Georgia during a hurricane. When asked where the next stop on the tour was, the band responded with, “Macon, if we make it.” Continuing to be reminiscent of older works, “Macon if We Make It” has echoes of the band’s 2009 album 1372 Overton Park. The song is really driven by guitarist Brian Venable’s formidable electric guitar. The lyrics seem at first to be mostly preoccupied with a literal storm situation at hand but turn out to be more about a troubled relationship back home. The proverbial dam breaks when the narrator sings “I don’t know if we were in love. I just know it wasn’t enough. Got caught in the storm and the water it’s rising…” The song gives way to a powerful drum lead up by Roy Berry and the listener is carried out, like a raft, on a ripping guitar solo. 

 

The pushes and pulls, builds and breakdowns are all over the album’s subsequent tracks, but it isn’t all hard-edged rock and roll all the time. “She Leads Me”, is inspired somewhat by the classic tale of Orpheus and Eurydice, and delves into a softer and more nostalgic sound. With backing vocals supplied by Jesse Davis and Cory Branan, it’s a song that lyrically rests on the concept that we sometimes need to recognize and acknowledge our past for a gentle enough reassurance to move forward. 

 

The rest of the album dives right back into its more rock and roll songs with “At the Show” and “Nothing’s Alright”, both of which examine the highs and lows of remembering old loves, reminiscing on the old days, and contented introspection. Aspects which finally come to a head in the album’s title track “Should’ve Learned by Now”, a rough and edgy song that tackles the fact that all the lessons, though clearly recognized, have yet to sink in. Quite poetically, the song is set to a tune that may be the greatest call back to Lucero’s punk upbringing. 

 

 

From its original Ben Nichols-designed cover art to its credits, the album is a reflection of a band that knows itself. Should’ve Learned by Now bridges the gap musically between “old Lucero” and “new Lucero” in a manner which affixes the band’s position as the perfect intersection of punk initiative with hard-earned artistry. It’s an album that recognizes the past in its sound and content, but leaves the door wide open to the future and for the lessons still in store.

 

Sign up for our mailing list to stay in the know, look out for special deals, free shows, and more!

The Lensic Performing Arts Center Logo

Performance. Community. Education.

View programming at the Lensic.