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MarchFourth
July 1stFishbone
July 3rdCharley Crockett
July 5thRobert Earl Keen w/ Hayes Carll
July 6thLone Piñon
July 7thRed Baraat
July 9thLa Doña
July 10thDigable Planets w/ The Soul Rebels
July 10thVieux Farka Touré
July 11thVieux Farka Touré
July 12thVandoliers
July 12thM. Ward & The Undertakers
July 12thThe Meditations
July 13thThe Fabulous Thunderbirds
July 14thLow Cut Connie
July 15thMountain Grass Unit
July 15thPhosphorescent
July 16thLumbre Del Sol
July 17thThe Psychedelic Furs - SOLD OUT
July 17thMereba
July 17thImprovement Movement
July 18thBully
July 18thSonia De Los Santos
July 19thThe Wild Robot
July 19thSurprise Chef
July 19thReverend Peyton's Big Damn Band
July 21stFather John Misty - SOLD OUT
July 21stJulian Marley
July 22ndThe Family Stone
July 25thGyedu-Blay Ambolley
July 26thDavid Berkeley
July 26thTanner Usrey
July 27thBuena Vista Orchestra
July 27thBoris McCutcheon and The Salt Licks
July 28thKT Tunstall
July 29thDogs in a Pile
July 31stSanta Fe Salutes: Ladies of the 80's
August 1stGirls Inc. Stronger Together Fest
August 2ndInside Out 2
August 2ndRebirth Brass Band
August 3rdFelix Y Los Gatos
August 4thWaxahatchee
August 4thAl Hurricane Jr.
August 5thMarty Stuart & His Fabulous Superlatives
August 6thThee Sinseers & The Altons
August 7thYelawolf
August 7thBig Daddy Kane With His Live Band
August 8thJunior Toots
August 9thChuck Prophet and His Cumbia Shoes
August 10thRosali
August 10thChuck Prophet and His Cumbia Shoes
August 11thLevi Platero
August 12thMacy Gray
August 12thIndigenousWays Festival: Robert Mirabal
August 15thA Complete Unknown
August 16thHot Buttered Rum
August 16thABBAquerque
August 18thThe English Beat
August 19thCuarenta y Cinco
August 21stNew Breed Brass Band w/ Trombone Shorty
August 22ndA Hawk and A Hacksaw
August 23rdModest Mouse
August 23rdTennis
August 24thThe Dead South
August 24thDetroit Lightning
August 25thPokey LaFarge
August 26thKeb' Mo' and Shawn Colvin - SOLD OUT
August 27thThe Blue Ventures
August 28thScott Bradlee's Postmodern Jukebox
August 28thSam Barber
August 28thJon Batiste Plays America - SOLD OUT
August 31stJon Batiste Plays America
September 1stThe Fixx
September 5thThe Mavericks - SOLD OUT
September 6thA Prairie Home Companion's 50th Anniversary
September 7thTribal Seeds and The Movement
September 9thSamantha Fish
September 10thMelvins
September 10thBlossoms & Bones
September 11thMax McNown
September 11thThe Swell Season
September 15thBirdtalker
September 16thFortunate Youth
September 17thWyatt Flores
September 17thKeller Williams' Grateful Grass
September 19thBad Suns
September 19thPile
September 20thCuco
September 23rdBUNT.
September 23rdJohn Moreland
September 24thNate Sib
September 25thNathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats
September 27thThe Dandy Warhols
September 29thLiam St. John
September 29thI'm With Her - SOLD OUT
September 29thLA LOM
September 30thThe Waterboys
September 30thSoftcult
September 30thDominique Fils-Aime
October 1stNoah Reid
October 1stRainbow Kitten Surprise
October 1stBuilt To Spill
October 2ndThe Head and The Heart: Aperture Tour
October 2ndPanda Bear
October 5thWednesday
October 9thThe Julia Keefe Indigenous Big Band
October 9thStrawberry Guy
October 17thLas Cafeteras
October 19thNicotine Dolls
October 21stThe Last Revel x Oliver Hazard
October 22ndBooker T. Jones
October 25thArlie
October 26thBETWEEN FRIENDS
October 26thLas Cafeteras
October 28thJosh Johnson: The Flowers Tour
November 1stJosh Johnson: The Flowers Tour
November 2ndMurder By Death - SOLD OUT
November 2ndOsees - SOLD OUT
November 4thRichy Mitch & The Coal Miners
November 5thWilli Carlisle
November 6thThe Brian Jonestown Massacre - SOLD OUT
November 8thJoshua Radin
November 10thLucius
November 12thDean Johnson
November 12thStanley Clarke
November 13thInfinity Song
November 19thWillie Watson
November 21stNeko Case
November 21stDakhaBrakha
December 3rdDakhaBrakha
December 4thThe Klezmatics: Happy Joyous Hanukkah
December 17thSquirrel Nut Zippers Christmas Caravan
December 19thWelcome To Night Vale: Murder Night in Blood Forest
January 26thStorm Large
February 5thThe Assad Brothers
February 26thThe Bad Plus
March 13thLunasa
March 15thPink Martini
March 23rdPink Martini
March 24thChristian McBride & Edgar Meyer
April 7thUkulele Orchestra of Great Britain
April 28thMac DeMarco - SOLD OUT
May 21stVincent Neil Emerson
w/ Dirt Rhodes
Add to Cal
TICKETS
$20–25
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VINCENT NEIL EMERSON
Vincent Neil Emerson has become a staple among folk and country music fans nationwide, celebrated for his honest tales of life on the road, heartbreak, and struggles of all sorts. His first LP, Fried Chicken & Evil Women, from 2019, established him as a refreshing voice in the modern country music landscape. The songs from that first album were charming and playful songs, but didn't reveal the entirety of Emerson's story.
On his brilliant new album, The Golden Crystal Kingdom, Emerson transcends the role of a honky-tonk country singer and becomes a chronicler of his history. The album is a bold continuation of the story he tells on Vincent Neil Emerson, with songs like the title track exploring the feelings he was left with after his days spent playing in Texas honky-tonks and dancehalls, and the track "The Time of The Rambler," inspired by the early days of living in his car and busking on the streets.
He was born and partly raised in East Texas, around his Choctaw-Apache family, and spent most of his life moving around the state. Raised by a single mother, he lost his father to suicide when he was nine. Emerson dealt with those feelings of abandonment and loss on his self-titled album, with the track "Learning to Drown" in particular.
His grandmother and grandfather brought the family to Texas when Emerson's mother was a child, leaving their ancestral Choctaw-Apache homelands in Louisiana behind to try and build a better life for themselves and their children. Emerson always identified with his Native American roots, but it wasn't until 2021's self-titled album that he examined and tried to shed light on the devastating history of his tribe with the song "Ballad of the Choctaw Apache."
Sonically, The Golden Crystal Kingdom finds Emerson expanding his scope into rock and roll territory, tapping into the storied sounds of folk music gone electric, and following in the footsteps of artists like Bob Dylan and Neil Young. On the album, Emerson retains his diamond-sharp storytelling while imbuing the work with a freewheeling rock and roll aesthetic, creating an album as fun as his live shows and as cathartic as his previous work.
With production from Shooter Jennings, Emerson wanted to establish some sounds as touchstones but emphasized following his own intuition for the aesthetics of his record. "I didn't really want to model this record after anybody else's music, but I've been heavily influenced by a lot of old rock and roll music from the sixties and seventies singer-songwriter music," Emerson explains.
The album wasn't necessarily created as an opposing force to the country and folk sounds his fans have come to expect, but he did want to make a record that showcased another side of himself as a writer. He also leaned on friends and collaborators like Jennings, Steve Earle, and Rodney Crowell to help him flesh out this album.
Emerson has been able to call these one-time heroes friends and mentors, and it is these relationships that have helped the songwriter find his confidence in writing about his personal history and standing up for the causes he believes in. Emerson wrote "Man From Uvalde" after the horrific and tragic mass shooting in the city of Uvalde, Texas, and he was initially hesitant to include the track on The Golden Crystal Kingdom. "It's a daunting thing to try to dive into social issues in songwriting because I wasn't sure how people would really take it," Emerson says. "I recorded a rough demo version of the song, and I sent it to Steve [Earle]. I just wanted to get his thoughts on it and see if it was worth anything. He got back to me, and he said he really liked the song and thought it was great. He gave me a few ideas and ways to look at the subject differently, and it really helped me finish the song. That encouragement gave me the confidence to include it on the album."
The Golden Crystal Kingdom also pays tribute to some of the peers Emerson cut his teeth with in the music scene. He covers the Charley Crockett song, "Time of the Cottonwood Trees," and is quick to pay tribute to his labelmate and dear friend Colter Wall. "Those two had my back since day one. They've been some of my biggest supporters, and they've always inspired me to write better songs and encouraged me to pursue this," Emerson reflects. "Especially at a time when I was starting out and I didn't really have a lot of encouragement or even self-confidence to do this, they were always there for me."
As a kid who grew up in a trailer with a single mother, went through bouts of homelessness as a young man, and grinded through countless shows to get where he's at, Vincent Neil Emerson is never quick to praise his own work ethic. He always refers to the friends, family members, and collaborators who have shown their faith in his vision.
But humility doesn't mean Emerson isn't one of the hardest working, most talented songwriters to emerge from the alt-country underground in years. His style is one of a kind, and his ability to blend tales of the everyman with tributes to his past, present, and future make him a peerless songwriter. On The Golden Crystal Kingdom, Vincent Neil Emerson carries on the torch of his singer-songwriter forebears while infusing the legacy with his unique and thrilling point of view.