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The Altons & Thee Sinseers
November 4thOsees - SOLD OUT
November 4thJohn Craigie
November 5thRichy Mitch & The Coal Miners - SOLD OUT
November 5thMarcus King Band
November 6thWilli Carlisle
November 6thThe Brian Jonestown Massacre - SOLD OUT
November 8thThunderpussy
November 8thJoshua Radin
November 10thTodd Rundgren
November 11thDaniel Donato's Cosmic Country
November 11thDean Johnson
November 12thLucius
November 12thStanley Clarke
November 13thBreabach - SOLD OUT
November 13thAlgernon Cadwallader
November 15thBreabach
November 15thDesert Dwellers
November 15thJakobs Castle x Strawberry Fuzz
November 16thPeter McPoland
November 17thMarlon Funaki
November 18thInfinity Song
November 19thNew Constellations - SOLD OUT
November 20thWillie Watson
November 21stNeko Case
November 21stDakhaBrakha
December 1stDakhaBrakha
December 3rdDakhaBrakha
December 4thLAERZ
December 5thMegan Hamilton
December 6thThe Klezmatics: Happy Joyous Hanukkah
December 17thDemetri Martin
December 18thSquirrel Nut Zippers Christmas Caravan
December 19thSunSquabi
December 21stShaun Cassidy
January 6thMadison Cunningham
January 16thJason Leech
January 16thGoldford
January 20thTank and the Bangas
January 23rdJosh Teed
January 23rdAndy Frasco & The U.N.
January 25thWelcome To Night Vale: Murder Night in Blood Forest
January 26thWilliam Elliott Whitmore
January 27thBilly F Gibbons
January 28thDon Broco
January 28thHayes Carll
January 29thVincent Neil Emerson
January 31stJoan Osborne & KT Tunstall
January 31stStorm Large
February 5thSheng Wang
February 7thAJ Lee & Blue Summit
February 14thKathleen Edwards
February 14thAJ Lee & Blue Summit
February 15thLadysmith Black Mambazo
February 17thLadysmith Black Mambazo
February 18thKitchen Dwellers
February 24thbbno$
February 25thTig Notaro
February 27thMagic City Hippies
March 1stThe Strumbellas
March 2ndColony House
March 3rdJonah Kagen
March 4thThe Assad Brothers
March 6thPreservation Hall Jazz Band
March 7thOn A Winter's Night
March 11thThe Bad Plus
March 13thLunasa
March 15thPink Martini
March 23rdPink Martini
March 24th54 ULTRA
April 4thChristian McBride & Edgar Meyer
April 7thKathy Griffin
April 9thTINZO + JOJO
April 10thUkulele Orchestra of Great Britain
April 28thMac DeMarco - SOLD OUT
May 21stThe Mavericks - CANCELED
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We are sorry to share the news that The Mavericks have canceled their September 6 performance at the Santa Fe Opera due to health reasons. Tickets will be refunded to the original form of payment.
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TICKETS
$45–$95
MEMBER PRE-SALE: Wed, Apr 30, 10 am. Want pre-sale access? Become a Lensic member!
PUBLIC SALE: Fri, May 2, 10 am
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: SANTA FE OPERA
SEATING: Yes
ADA: Yes, there's a designated ADA section
PARKING: Yes
ALCOHOL: Yes, there are multiple bars located around the venue
OUTSIDE FOOD/DRINK: No
THE MAVERICKS
The Mavericks have always been explorers.
For decades, they've created the kind of multicultural Americana that reaches far beyond America itself, blending their favorite stateside sounds — including rock & roll, country, and R&B — with Tex-Mex twang, Cuban rhythms, Jamaican ska, and other Latin influences. The exploration continues with Moon & Stars, a progressive album that finds Raul Malo and company continuing to push the envelope, exploring the outer orbits of an organic, otherworldly sound that remains entirely their own.
"This record took us to places we've never gone before," says frontman, co-producer, and chief songwriter Malo, whose voice — a booming baritone that continues to age like top-shelf whiskey and fine leather, becoming richer and more pliable with each album — remains one of the band's calling cards. "It's a collection of tales from the universe. We've traveled around the world, gathering new stories and new sounds, and this is what we have to show for it. Moon & Stars is our cosmic energy put into practice."
It's also the sound of a band that refuses to be limited by its own legacy. Three days after receiving the Trailblazer Award at the 2021 Americana Music Honors & Awards, The Mavericks hit the highway once again, resuming the busy touring schedule that's kept the band in sharp shape. Joined by longtime co-producer Niko Bolas, they recorded portions of Moon & Stars while on the road, setting up camp at studios in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Maurice, Louisiana, before finishing the record at home in Nashville. Tracking sessions were fast and inspired, built around the chemistry of four musical brothers — Malo, guitarist Eddie Perez, keyboardist Jerry Dale McFadden, and drummer Paul Deakin — who've logged thousands of hours onstage together, racking up multiple Grammy, ACM, and CMA Awards along the way.
On Moon & Stars’' 11 songs, The Mavericks are larger than life: not only musically, but literally, too, thanks to an expanded roster that features a three-part horn section, an accordionist, and a guest list stocked with powerhouse singers like Nicole Atkins, Maggie Rose, and Sierra Ferrell. Songs like the album's tropical title track prove there's strength in numbers, with Ferrell and Malo piling their voices into thickly-stacked harmonies over a Cuban charanga groove. Rose appears on "Look Around You," an album highlight that splits the difference between timeless country-soul and classic R&B. Saxophonist Max Abrams takes centerstage on "Here You Come Again" to channel the steamy 1980s textures of George Michael's "Careless Whisper," while Atkins adds sauce and swagger to "Live Close By (Visit Often)," a roadhouse roots-rocker whose horn arrangement nods to the influence of Stax Records and Muscle Shoals.
Malo co-wrote "Live Close By (Visit Often)" with K.T. Oslin, and it's not the only high-powered songwriting collaboration to fuel Moon & Stars. None other than Bernie Taupin, the iconic lyricist behind countless Elton John hits, contributed to the record's opening track, "The Years Will Not Be Kind." A brooding song that evokes western trail rides one minute and Quentin Tarantino film scores the next, "The Years Will Not Be Kind" dates back to the early 2000s, when The Mavericks were still riding high on the success of songs like "All You Ever Do Is Bring Me Down" (their genre-bending hit with Flaco Jiménez) and the Grammy-winning "Here Comes the Rain." It's a song about exhaustion and rough-and-tumble durability, and Malo — a road warrior who's seen plenty of both — delivers each line with a low register that channels Johnny Cash. "When I found that old demo and listened to it, I remembered exactly why I didn't record it back when we first wrote it," he says. "It wasn't believable yet! I would've sounded like a kid — too sweet, too pristine — because I hadn't experienced enough life. But now, I can embody that song better. I've lived it."
Moon & Stars doesn't spend much time looking backward, though. "Look Around You" is a modern-day rallying cry for brotherhood, aimed at a society threatened by violence and partisan bickering. "Our differences are what will make the world go on," Malo sings, his velvety voice backed by Maggie Rose and Kaitlyn Connor's harmonies. He goes even deeper with "And We Dance." The song's operatic vocals and tremolo guitars may channel Roy Orbison, but its message — inspired by a poignant, emotionally-charged news segment about Russia's invasion of Ukraine — is a contemporary call for strength, resistance, and resilience.
Everything comes full circle with the album's final track, "Turn Yourself Around." Heavily inspired by the Beatles, the song was recorded on Ringo Starr's birthday at Nashville's Blackbird Studios. For Malo, it represents a blending of past and present — as a commitment to whatever the future may hold.
"The Beatles were so influential in this band's musical development," he says, "and a song like 'Turn Yourself Around' couldn't have happened at any other time than right now. We've spent years establishing our own thing, our own sound, our own community. Now, we feel like it's OK to venture out and have some fun, too. If you're not going to do it today, then when? And who better to do fun stuff than us?"
To the moon and back, The Mavericks are still exploring.



												
												
												
												
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


