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Hooks & The Huckleberries
July 13thFantastic Cat
July 14thHoundmouth
July 14thDylan LeBlanc
July 15thEileen Ivers & The Brigideens
July 16thJames McMurtry
July 16thIn Conversation with NPR's Mara Liasson
July 16thMeow Wolf Monster Battle: Fleetmac Wood
July 17thChris Botti - SOLD OUT
July 17thPaul Oakenfold + The Crystal Method
July 18thRufus Wainwright
July 18thWorld Cup Final Watch Party
July 19thMarchFourth
July 19thABBAquerque
July 20thLumbre del Sol
July 21stDWLLRS
July 21stOld 97's
July 22ndCracker
July 24thABBAquerque
July 24thHandmade Moments
July 25thDustbowl Revival
July 27thJoe West's B-Day
July 28thTrish Toledo
July 30thBeach Bunny & The Beths
July 31stSanta Fe Salutes Yacht Rock
July 31stBoomBox
July 31stSanta Fe Cumbiero
August 1stThelma & Louise
August 1stThe Brothers Comatose
August 3rdBobby Alu
August 4thBlack Moth Super Rainbow
August 4thEagles of Death Metal
August 5thLos Straitjackets
August 6thDon Was & The Pan-Detroit Ensemble
August 6thLos Straitjackets
August 7thBanshee Tree
August 8thMonsieur Periné
August 10thGary Farmer & The Troublemakers
August 11thWidowspeak
August 11thIndigenousWays Festival
August 14thTeam Everything
August 15thMatilda
August 15thRev. Peyton's Big Damn Band
August 16thW.I.T.C.H.
August 16thTropidelic & The Boomroots
August 17thManzanares
August 18thD.K. Harrell
August 20thBill Callahan - VENUE CHANGE
August 20thFantastic Negrito
August 21stThee Sacred Souls
August 22ndLisa Morales
August 22ndGov't Mule
August 22ndYung Bae
August 22ndPepper and The Movement
August 23rdIguanas
August 24thOh He Dead
August 25thJay Boy Adams & Zenobia
August 27thBig Bad Voodoo Daddy
August 27thSt. Paul & the Broken Bones
August 28thZootopia 2
August 29thNeal Francis
September 1stNuestra Musica
September 3rdOzo for Zozo
September 4thDwight Yoakam
September 4thDominique Fils-Aimé
September 5thThievery Corporation
September 7thBlossoms & Bones
September 10thSleep
September 10thMeltt
September 13thBig Thief - SOLD OUT
September 16thNew Mexico Jazz Festival: esperanza spalding
September 18thMavis Staples & Nathaniel Rateliff
September 19thNew Mexico Jazz Festival: René Marie & Experiment in Truth
September 19thDaniel Donato's Cosmic Country
September 19thTajMo - SOLD OUT
September 20thNew Mexico Jazz Festival: Chucho Valdes Royal Quartet
September 20thEthan Regan
September 21stMountain Grass Unit
September 22ndRobert Plant
September 23rdThe Midnight
September 24thPixies - SOLD OUT
September 25thThe California Honeydrops
September 25thToadies
September 26thIrene Diaz
September 26thJoshua Ray Walker
September 26thJMSN
September 26thIrene Diaz
September 27thMidland
September 27thThe Magic School Bus
September 28thSammy Rae & the Friends
October 1stPatton Oswalt
October 2ndThe Sponges + N2N
October 2ndTribal Seeds
October 3rdAn Evening with Hampton Sides
October 3rdHermanos Gutiérrez
October 5thDamien Jurado
October 5thBri Bagwell
October 6thRoute 66: The Main Street of America
October 7thJosh Conway of The Marías
October 7thJeremy Dutcher
October 8thEl Ten Eleven
October 9thSnarky Puppy
October 9thMama's Broke
October 9thMolly Tuttle
October 10thThe ReMemberers present "The Firebird"
October 10thRaynes and David Wimbish & The Collection
October 10thLP
October 11thPunch Brothers
October 11thWild Pink
October 13thDevon Gilfillian
October 14thAkram Khan Company
October 14th49 Winchester
October 15thTyler Ballgame
October 18thKishi Bashi
October 20thSilkroad Up Close
October 22ndAx and the Hatchetmen
October 23rdKatie Pruitt
October 24thThee Sinseers
October 24thJulian Lage Quartet
October 26thJay Webb
November 4thThe Surge: an ode to Sinéad O'Connor's
November 4thUB40
November 4thTodd Rundgren
November 6thRodrigo y Gabriela
November 7thLiana Flores
November 7thTommy Castro & The Painkillers + GA-20
November 8thGilla Band
November 8thLyle Lovett
November 9thPuma Blue
November 9thLyle Lovett
November 10thTwo Runner
November 10thBayonne
November 10thBuena Vista Orchestra
November 11thBahamas
November 11thPhilip Glass Ensemble: Powaqqatsi
November 12thSlothrust
November 13thDave Hause and The Mermaid
November 13thBuzzcocks
November 18thBluey's Big Play
November 19thNick Shoulders
November 19thMireya Ramos and The Poor Choices
November 20thDweezil Zappa
November 24thBonnie Prince Billy - SOLD OUT
December 2ndBonnie Prince Billy - SOLD OUT
December 3rdBonnie Prince Billy
December 4thAoife O'Donovan and Chris Thile
December 7thPostmodern Jukebox
December 9thThe Wooten Brothers
December 16thJudy Collins
December 22ndJoe Illick and The New Year's Eve Orchestra
December 31stBallet Hispánico New York
January 24thThird Coast Percussion: Ripples in the Water
January 27thAudra McDonald
January 29thPeking Acrobats
February 3rdDelfeayo Marsalis & The Uptown Jazz Orchestra
February 9thMalpaso Dance Company
February 18thInternational Guitar Night
February 24thJazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
March 1stPalaver Strings
March 4thThe Boy Who Cried Wolf
March 7thThe Hot Sardines
March 12thLang Lang
April 1stAga Khan Master Musicians
April 4thBranford Marsalis and Dianne Reeves
April 7thYAMATO--The Drummers of Japan
April 21stChanticleer
April 30thThe Wailin' Jennys
June 1stThe Wailin' Jennys
June 2ndBuzzcocks
w/ special guest Grade 2
Add to Cal
TICKETS
$29.50 + fees
Day of show: $34.50 + fees
MEMBER PRE-SALE: Tues, Jul 14, 10 am. Want pre-sale access? Become a Lensic member!
PUBLIC SALE: Wed, Jul 15, 10 am
VENUE: EL REY THEATER
SEATING: Limited
ALCOHOL: Yes
OUTSIDE FOOD/DRINK: No
PARKING: Yes, downtown street parking, and paid parking lot across the street
ADA: Yes, please ask for accommodations prior to the show
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.
BUZZCOCKS
In a darkening musical landscape where viral fads and AI-generated fakery share chart-space with the self-absorbed products of the nation’s stage schools, Buzzcocks shine out as a gleaming beacon of hope.
A constant, ever-evolving presence over the last 45 years of pop culture, the band’s legendary status will be set in stone — literally — with their inclusion in the Music Walk Of Fame in September, joining an illustrious roll call including David Bowie, The Who, Madness and Amy Winehouse.
The band’s never-better live shows, meanwhile, are electrifying reminders of rock music’s power to inspire, educate and inform. All delivered with an energy and conviction of a band half their age.
“It’s my lifeblood,” says Steve Diggle — 68 years young — of a non-stop touring schedule which over the summer will see them play to thousands of fans across Europe and the UK.
“I’ve still got the fire in my belly. Some musicians get bored of being on the road, but I’m institutionalised. I’ve done 50-odd years of staying in hotels. It’s what I signed up for. Ever since I saw Bob Dylan in the back of a black taxi in (D.A. Pennebaker’s 1967 documentary) Don’t Look Back, I always wanted to live this kind of life — being interviewed in the back of a black taxi on the way to the studio.”
While most of their punk peers are content to traverse the globe in jukebox-style revue shows, Buzzcocks continue to move with the times, attracting new fans wherever they go. A case in point being the huge all-ages crowd the band pulled at the Iggy Pop-headlined Dog Day Afternoon in July.
“There’s not a lot of intellectual or emotional thinking in music these days,” observes Steve. “People are being controlled. They’ll watch a video of someone falling over a banana skin and think they’re being entertained. They don’t realise the beauty of words, and the power of music. I’d like to think young kids who come to see us feel the same excitement I got from Little Richard and Chuck Berry. It goes back to the punk thing. It was about attitude and a way of thinking. We had the questions, but we didn’t have the answers. But the questions are the important thing.”
This desire to challenge both themselves and their audiences was reflected in 2022’s Sonics In The Soul. An eclectic mix of gilt-edged power-pop (‘Venus Eyes’), Big Star-esque bangers (‘Nothingness World’) and Groundhogs-style riffing (‘Experimental Farm’), it was both a critical and commercial success — a reminder that Steve Diggle has always been a master songwriter: a Lennon to Pete Shelley’s McCartney.
The album also caught the ear of rock royalty. ‘Little’ Steven Van Zandt put in a request to remix Who-like epic ‘Manchester Rain’, while Elton John got in touch with Steve to rave about first single ‘Senses Out Of Control’, playing the track on his Apple Radio show.
“Sonics In The Soul was a bridge from the old Buzzcocks to the new,” says Steve.
“At the time, a lot of people said, ‘You can’t carry on without Pete.’ But I’d always written my own songs. Looking back, we were like two mountain climbers. We needed each other. But since then I’ve taken [the band] on and it made it more heroic.”
Buzzcocks have always been about innovation, experimentation and taking risks. In 1977, the band’s self-financed debut ‘Spiral Scratch’ EP gave birth to the independent sector. A primary influence on everyone from Orange Juice to Green Day, the string of timelessly melodic hit singles which followed (including Diggle-penned classics ’Promises’ and ‘Harmony In My Head’ ) brought radical ideas to a Top Of The Pops audience — reflecting influences ranging from Bob Dylan to Harold Pinter; Samuel Beckett to Stockhausen.
“I had a Stockhausen box set,” he says of his listening as a teenager. “I had the box room at home and I’d record my mum doing the hoovering and play it back. I loved the idea of white noise. We always had that discordant, uncomfortable element in Buzzcocks.”
For Steve and his bandmates, punk wasn’t so much a wake-up call as a signal that other people across the country were feeling the same way.
“I didn’t need Joe Strummer or Johnny Rotten to tell me what was going on,” he explains. “Buzzcocks were probably the most philosophical of all the punk bands. I loved The Clash and The Jam, but most of them were just there for the party —writing songs about getting a job. We’d read the existentialists. We were interested in the complexity of life. It was deep thinking wrapped up in a pop song. Rather than being linear, we were using abstract images to create a mood — the same way James Joyce did with Ulysses. That inspired a song like ‘Fast Cars’. At 17 I’d seen my best mate die in a car crash, and it gave me a different perspective. The Joyce thing of only knowing the meaning of life through knowing the meaning of death.”
While punk is widely considered as rock’s Year Zero, the truth is that Buzzcocks were simultaneously tapping into a far older tradition, stretching back via Chuck Berry and Little Richard to the Delta Blues.
“We were white blues,” explains Steve. “My theory now is that instead of the cotton fields, we had the cotton mills, where kids would be sent up chimneys and made to work 18 hours a day. That was our blues — the white trash of Manchester.”
Having toured the world and released three classic albums — Another Music In a Different Kitchen, Love Bites and A Different Kind Of Tension — in quick succession, the band imploded in 1981. A successful reunion of the classic line-up (Pete Shelley — guitar vocals; Steve Diggle — guitar vocals; Steve Garvey — bass; John Maher — drums) in 1989 led to a non-stop touring schedule prior to Shelley’s death in 2018.
However, the band’s next chapter promises to be their most exciting yet.
“I’m halfway through the new record, which is going to be called Attitude Adjustment,” says Steve in conclusion.
“It’s a step on from Sonics In The Soul. It feels like an exciting new era, and a new spirit. I can’t wait to get out there and play these songs to people. It’s not about ego, for me. I'm a working-class kid, who always loved music. I never thought I’d be involved in it. But I’ve got my chance, so I’ll give back as much as I can, because I believe in it as much as I always did. We’re the holiest church in rock ’n’ roll.”
With Steve Diggle as High Priest, Buzzcocks are still the band to believe in.





