Facebook Icon Instagram Icon

Lensic 360 Radio

Lensic 360 is a part of the Lensic Performing Arts Center

Learn More

Sponsors

Upcoming

TOPS

May 20th

Ozomatli

May 24th

Tash Sultana

May 26th

Kevin Morby

May 27th

Bob Schneider

June 4th

The Suffers

June 5th

Fox Fest

June 6th

Lilo and Stitch

June 6th

Ásgeir

June 10th

The Altons

June 11th

Fruit Bats

June 13th

Flamingosis

June 13th

Doctor Nativo

June 14th

Searows

June 18th

Sir Woman

June 19th

Sir Richard Bishop

June 20th

HeartByrne

June 25th

Vincen García

June 25th

Turnover

June 26th

Detroit Lightning

June 26th

Los Lobos

June 29th

Relaay

June 30th

Gia Margaret

June 30th

Wavves

July 8th

Houndmouth

July 14th

James McMurtry

July 16th

Chris Botti

July 17th

Best in Show

July 18th

Rufus Wainwright

July 18th

MarchFourth

July 19th

DWLLRS

July 21st

Old 97's

July 22nd

ABBAquerque

July 24th

BoomBox

July 31st

Thelma & Louise

August 1st

Los Straitjackets

August 7th

Widowspeak

August 11th

Matilda

August 15th

Bill Callahan

August 20th

Thee Sacred Souls

August 22nd

Gov't Mule

August 22nd

Yung Bae

August 22nd

Zootopia 2

August 29th

Blossoms & Bones

September 10th

Meltt

September 13th

Big Thief - SOLD OUT

September 16th

TajMo

September 20th

Pixies - SOLD OUT

September 25th

The California Honeydrops

September 25th

Toadies

September 26th

Joshua Ray Walker

September 26th

Midland

September 27th

Patton Oswalt

October 2nd

Tribal Seeds

October 3rd

Damien Jurado

October 5th

Snarky Puppy

October 9th

LP

October 11th

Punch Brothers

October 11th

Devon Gilfillian

October 14th

Tyler Ballgame

October 18th

Kishi Bashi

October 20th

Thee Sinseers

October 24th

Julian Lage Quartet

October 26th

UB40

November 4th

Bayonne

November 10th

Buena Vista Orchestra

November 11th

Bahamas

November 11th

Bluey's Big Play

November 19th

Nick Shoulders

November 19th

Bonnie Prince Billy

December 4th

Postmodern Jukebox

December 9th
Lensic 360

Houndmouth

w/ Timmy Skelly

Lordy Tour

Time: 7:00pm     Day: Tuesday     Doors: 6:00pm     Ages: 21+ without parent or guardian     Price: $30 - $100

TICKETS 

$30 + FEES | DAY OF SHOW: $35 + FEES

MEMBER PRE-SALE: Thurs, Apr 24, 10 am. Want pre-sale access? Become a Lensic member!

PUBLIC SALE: Fri, May 1, 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


TICKET UPGRADES

VIEWING DECK: $51

Tickets are now available to watch the concert from the Bridge's new VIP Viewing Deck! See the stage and beyond from the deck on top of the Bridge building. Limited availability.

PREFERRED PARKING: $24

Want guaranteed parking close to the venue? You can now purchase a preferred parking ticket. Limited availability.

For preferred parking holders please present your proof of purchase to the parking attendant as you turn on Fire Place and they will direct you to the location.


VENUE: THE BRIDGE AT SANTA FE BREWING CO.

SEATING: Standing room only unless specifically noted otherwise.  

ADA: There is an ADA area with chairs for patrons in need. First come, first served. Check-in at the will-call table upon arrival. 

PARKING: There is FREE parking at the venue. Enter Fire Place from HWY 14. There is also a limited first-come first-served paid parking area available for $24 at the end of Fire Place.

ALCOHOL: Yes, bars on-site

OUTSIDE FOOD/DRINK: Outside food is okay, no outside drinks. Food trucks on site.

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.


HOUNDMOUTH

For two years, Matt Myers struggled to finish new songs.

"I was all raw emotion," says the Houndmouth frontman, who'd spent the previous decade blending rock & roll and American roots music into radio staples like the chart-topping, platinum-selling "Sedona." He'd written four albums in less than 10 years, but inspiration just wasn't showing up anymore. "I was feeling so much that I just couldn't write anything," he adds.

The end of one relationship. The beginning of another. The all-consuming feeling of new love. Myers' life had been eventful, both onstage and off, and all that living didn't leave him much time to create. Things changed when he paid a visit to Brad Cook, the Grammy-winning producer who'd overseen Houndmouth's fourth record, Good For You. What began as a reunion of two friends soon gave away to something bigger: the restart of Myers' songwriting engines and, in its wake, the creation of Lordy.

With its naked honesty and uncluttered arrangements, Lordy takes a stripped-back approach to Houndmouth's ever-evolving sound. It's an album about surviving, rebuilding, accepting, and thriving once more. Myers wrote most of the record's songs at home, strumming his Martin guitar while sunshine streamed through the kitchen windows. Years ago, he might've composed the record at night, tossing back a few drinks for encouragement. This was different. Clear-headed and wide awake, Myers reclaimed his muse during the daytime hours, starting with songs like "Tiger Blood" — a ragged folk-rocker that builds its way toward a screaming finish — and the album's gorgeously intimate title track.

"I let unfiltered emotion inform the words," he says. "With several songs, I learned to be ok with just letting some syllables line up, and letting the emotion behind it all do the talking."

This marked a change from the band's early days. Back then, Myers and company agonized over the precise placement of every snare hit and vocal harmony on albums like Little Neon Limelight, Houndmouth's commercial breakthrough. Steeped in the influence of 1970s roots-rock, those early records were collaborative efforts that merged Myers' vision — as a songwriter, vocalist, and fiery lead guitarist — with the input of his three bandmates. "I needed those albums to be collaborative projects because I was scared of being completely in charge," he admits. "Maybe that stunted me. This is the first time I've been able to write a record completely on my own, and there's a pressure that comes with that. I had to relearn everything."

Recording sessions were scattered throughout the course of a year, but Lordy still came together quickly. Myers would record a one-take performance of each song on his acoustic guitar, then build it into something bigger with help from other musicians. He told himself not to get lost in the mechanics or the minutia. After all, the goal wasn't be to perfect; it was to capture a moment, allowing the thoughts that swirled inside Myers' head to find the quickest way into his music.

Cook played an integral role in Lordy's creation — not just as a producer, but as a close friend and confidante, too. "When I visited him in North Carolina for the first time, he walked out of his garage and gave me a big bear hug," Myers said. "He told me he was happy for me, and he gave me a lot of confidence with my new songs." Cook also reached out to others, surrounding Myers with a small circle of musicians who, like him, blurred the lines between modern-day indie music and the old-school roots of Americana. Iron & Wine's Sam Beam stopped by the studio during the creation of the album's final track, "Holy Moses," to offer advice and encouragement. MJ Lenderman paid a visit, too, adding his trademark guitar licks — loose, lo-fi, and full of life — to multiple tracks. Phil Cook (Megafaun, Hiss Golden Messenger) played on several songs, as did Caleb Hickman, Houndmouth's keyboardist. Hickman and his wife, Kay Robertson, also contributed to the songwriting process, and for Myers, the musical input was uplifting. "I've spent years working with peers and contemporaries," he says, "but this felt different. I was surrounded by people who were literally trying to pick me up and help me out. They pushed me to do the work."

Between recording sessions, he headed back to Louisville to rehearse the songs with his bandmates in a warehouse basement. Something about the basement's vibe — gritty, frills-free, and utterly unlike the restored 19th century house that had served as the band's headquarters for years — seemed to suit the new music. Steadily, the songs came together. "Heavy Eyes" explored the intersection of fatigue and hope, building its way toward a cinematic finish. "Don't Wanna Talk About" bounced between scaled-back verses and singalong choruses. "Never Gonna Die" turned simplicity into beauty, with Myers singing about challenging relationships over an uncluttered mix of hooks, harmonies, and groove.

Lordy asks its audience to lean in, listen closely, and engage, kickstarting a new era for Houndmouth. From Golden Age's embrace of shimmering electronics to Good For You's return-to-form focus on American roots music, this is a band that's spent years in evolution, unafraid to examine new sounds and different perspectives. Lordy continues that exploration — and if it often sounds like the most intimate record in the band's catalog, it still packs an emotional punch that lingers long after the music fades.


TIMMY SKELLY

midwest y'allternative from Sandwich, Illinois

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.