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Rodrigo y Gabriela
May 6thBen Kweller
May 7thAn Evening with Wilco
May 8thJENSEN MCRAE
May 9thBen Folds & A Piano
May 14thDarrell Scott & Rob Ickes
May 16thJake Xerxes Fussell
May 18thTOPS
May 20thMac DeMarco - SOLD OUT
May 21stOzomatli
May 24thTash Sultana
May 26thKevin Morby
May 27thJoe Jackson + Band - SOLD OUT
June 5thLilo and Stitch
June 6thÁsgeir
June 10thFruit Bats
June 13thFlamingosis
June 13thDoctor Nativo
June 14thSearows
June 18thGregory Alan Isakov
June 19thWhen Harry Met Sally
June 20thDirtwire & The Floozies
June 20thSir Richard Bishop
June 20thVincen García
June 25thTurnover
June 26thThe Polish Ambassador
June 27thAn Evening With Brett Dennen
June 28thGia Margaret
June 30thThe Halluci Nation
July 3rdWavves
July 8thKurt Vile And The Violators
July 11thHoundmouth
July 14thJames McMurtry
July 16thIn Conversation with NPR's Mara Liasson
July 16thChris Botti
July 17thPaul Oakenfold + The Crystal Method
July 18thBest in Show
July 18thMarchFourth
July 19thOld 97's
July 22ndABBAquerque
July 24thBeach Bunny & The Beths
July 31stThelma & Louise
August 1stBlack Moth Super Rainbow
August 4thEagles of Death Metal
August 5thDon Was & The Pan-Detroit Ensemble
August 6thLos Straitjackets
August 7thWidowspeak
August 11thMatilda
August 15thRev. Peyton's Big Damn Band
August 16thBill Callahan
August 20thThee Sacred Souls
August 22ndGov't Mule
August 22ndPepper and The Movement
August 23rdZootopia 2
August 29thBlossoms & Bones
September 10thMeltt
September 13thBig Thief - SOLD OUT
September 16thMavis Staples & Nathaniel Rateliff
September 19thTajMo
September 20thPixies - SOLD OUT
September 25thThe California Honeydrops
September 25thToadies
September 26thJoshua Ray Walker
September 26thSammy Rae & the Friends
October 1stPatton Oswalt
October 2ndTribal Seeds
October 3rdAn Evening with Hampton Sides
October 3rdSnarky Puppy
October 9thLP
October 11thTyler Ballgame
October 18thKishi Bashi
October 20thJulian Lage Quartet
October 26thUB40
November 4thBayonne
November 10thBuena Vista Orchestra
November 11thBahamas
November 11thBluey's Big Play
November 19thNick Shoulders
November 19thBonnie Prince Billy - SOLD OUT
December 2ndBonnie Prince Billy - SOLD OUT
December 3rdBonnie Prince Billy
December 4thJake Xerxes Fussell
w/ Trummors
Add to Cal
TICKETS
$20 + fees
DAY OF SHOW: $23 + fees
PUBLIC SALE: Fri, Mar 6, 10 am
For online ticketing sales & support, contact [email protected] or call 1-877-466-3404.
For in-person sales, visit the Lensic box office.
VENUE: TUMBLEROOT BREWERY & DISTILLERY
SEATING: This is a seated show, seats are first-come, first-served.
ADA: Yes, please notify a Tumbleroot representative upon arrival
PARKING: Yes
ALCOHOL: Yes
OUTSIDE FOOD/DRINK: No
Please be advised that by entering this event, you are agreeing to being filmed and/or photographed, and the resulting assets may be used for Lensic marketing or promotional purposes. Should you wish not to be photographed or recorded on video, please notify a staff member or one of the event photographers/videographers.
JAKE XERXES FUSSELL
Reared in Georgia and now settled in North Carolina, Jake Xerxes Fussell has established himself as a devoted listener and contemplative interpreter of a vast array of so-called folk songs, lovingly sourced from a personal store of favorites. He has released five studio albums to-date, beginning with his self-titled debut album, released by Paradise of Bachelors in 2015.
His most recent studio album When I’m Called was produced by James Elkington and features the playing of Ben Whiteley (The Weather Station), Joe Westerlund (Bon Iver, Califone), and others. Blake Mills contributes guitars on several tracks. Joan Shelley and Robin Holcomb provide backing vocals. In their review of the record, Pitchfork wrote: “No other American singer is repurposing our old folk scripts with so much authority or ingenuity.”
More recently, Fussell and Elkington collaborated on the music for Rebuilding - a feature film directed by Max Walker-Silverman and starring Josh O’Connor. A soundtrack of the same name was released on Fat Possum Records in November 2025.
“Critics love to call things unclassifiable, which can sometimes feel like a subtle admission of defeat. But Jake Xerxes Fussell’s music, which draws heavily from nineteenth- and twentieth-century vernacular folk songs and archival field recordings, is idiomatic, and entirely his own…he is a folksinger in the truest sense, collecting ideas and melodies and lyrics from distant and disparate traditions, looking for the things that unite us in our humanity.” - The New Yorker
“(Fussell) is one of the great magpies of American song, collecting forgotten, tarnished gems with a folklorist’s zeal…” – The Guardia
“…maybe the leading interpreter of American folk music right now.” – Ann Powers, NPR
TRUMMORS
The trouble with so much Cosmic American Music is that it’s not all that ‘cosmic’ at all. The moves are there—the mood, the ingredients, musical and (ahem) otherwise, the clothes—but the substance too often comes up a little thin. Maybe that’s fine: the Flamin’ Groovies weren’t quite the Beatles either, and so to criticize the heirs of the Flying Burrito Brothers for failing to equal their forebears’ sense of stoned celestial wonder feels a little mingy, like criticizing tomorrow for not being 1972. Enter David Lerner and Anne Cunningham’s duo Trummors, though, with their fifth and possibly best album—“possibly” only because the others, too, are so damn good—to blow this frequent quibble clean out of the water. 5 (yeah, they went ahead and made their Numerical Album, just like J.J. Cale once did) is so fresh, so sparkling, and so lovely, whatever debts it owes to anybody else are immediately canceled. This may be music with an abundant sense of history, a deep, almost Talmudic knowledge of a thousand country rock records, but it steps outside the shadow of that knowledge with a confidence that feels rare indeed.
Some of that is in the writing. A song like “Hey Babe” might seem a wisp of a thing, until you listen twice and clock lyrics as fatalistic, and as beautifully compressed, as a Robert Creeley poem, coupled with a melody that feels like it’s lived inside you forever. Some of that is in the performances, the way Lerner and Cunningham’s vocals fit together just so, as ideally paired as George and Tammy’s as they float atop accompaniments from their supporting players—Dan Horne’s spacious pedal steel on “Yellow Spanish Roses,” say, or C.J. Burnett’s spare, not-quite-barroom-feeling piano on “The Jalisco Kid”—that somehow manage to be at once understated and arresting. Some of it might be the occasional ways they make subtle adjustments to genre conventions (“Cosmic Monster” sounds closer to English psych monsters Dantalian’s Chariot than it does to canyon country, thanks to Clay Finch’s electric sitar) without sounding schizoid or breaking faith with the record’s overriding mood and identity. But none of that really accounts for 5’s startling and unshakeable immediacy, its ability to cut through the fog in one’s head and one’s mood every time it comes pouring out of the speakers.
Lerner and Cunningham lived with these songs a long while, writing them before the Pandemic struck in 2020, demoing them at home repeatedly before finally deciding to get together with Horne—an alumnus of previous records, too, as a player—in the producer’s chair for the first time. They tracked the record in LA over the span of about a week, did a bit of overdubbing later in Taos, and thus, after that long period of uncertainty, 5 arrived at its final form fairly quickly. Maybe it’s this paradox, this meeting of speed and deliberation, that gets at the record’s most striking quality, how these songs feel at once heavy and light, ancient and new, like something carved into stone with a feather. It’s a quality that fills me with admiration. Indeed, with something close to awe.
—Matthew Specktor, Los Angeles, 2024





