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Coco Montoya - SOLD OUT!
September 19thHispanic Heritage Celebration
September 20thBands of Enchantment FREE Outdoor Music Festival
September 20thCoco Montoya - SOLD OUT!
September 20thAlasdair Fraser & Natalie Haas
September 24thAlasdair Fraser & Natalie Haas
September 25thJohn Moreland
September 26thJ2B2
September 26thLasotras
September 27thThe Banter Experience
September 30thThe Banter Experience
September 30thMasters of Hawaiian Music
October 3rdSlim Cessna + Maria de Cessna
October 4thMasters of Hawaiian Music
October 4thZar Electrik
October 8thFarah Siraj
October 8thShonen Knife
October 11th"Stop Making Sense" Screening
October 12th"Stop Making Sense" Screening
October 13thIsaac Aragon
October 18thHayden Pedigo
October 22ndIndigenous Heritage Celebration
October 25thGerry O'Connor with Don Penzien
October 31stGerry O'Connor with Don Penzien
November 1stJulian Brave NoiseCat - SOLD OUT!
November 3rdKurbasy
November 8thKurbasy
November 9thRisas y Raíces: Rooted in Laughter
November 13thThe Bébé La La 15-Year Anniversary Concert & Celebration
November 15thLara Manzanares Album Release
November 20thLuca Stricagnoli
November 21stJoseph General & High Vibration
November 22ndLara Manzanares Album Release
November 23rdRyanhood
November 29thRyanhood
November 30thJane Siberry
December 2ndJane Siberry
December 3rdTrey Gunn and David Forlano
December 6thZenobia
December 9thUNM Songwriters Circle
December 10thSadness, Madness, & Mayhem III
January 24thKalos
February 4thKalos
February 5thAlash
March 13thAlash
March 14thLúnasa
March 16thJohn Moreland (New Date!)
S.G. Goodman
Add to Cal
Tickets cost $20 in advance, $25 day of show (including all service charges). They are also available by phone through Hold My Ticket at 505-886-1251.
All tickets to the previous show will be honored for this performance. Contact AMP if you need a refund for the previous show or have questions about your tickets.
Tumbleroot is a mostly-standing-room venue. Limited seating available.
Over the last half a dozen years or so, John Moreland's honesty has stunned us—and stung. As he put hurts we didn't even realize we had or shared into his songs, we sang along. And we felt better. But there has always been far more to Moreland than sad songs. Today, his earthbound poetry remains potent, but in addition to his world-weary candor, Moreland's music smolders with gentle wisdom, flashes of wit and joy, and compassion. And once again, as we listen, we feel better.
"I can't dress myself up and be some folk singer character that I'm not really," Moreland says. "I figured, I can't dress up these songs and try to sell them that way. All I can do is be me."
His latest album LP5 proves John Moreland has gotten really good at being John Moreland—thank God. A masterful display of songwriting by one of today's best young practitioners of the art form, LP5 is Moreland's finest record to date. The album's experimentations with instrumentation and sounds capture an artist whose confidence has grown, all without abandoning the hardy roots rock bed and the lyrics-first approach Moreland's work demands. "I feel like just this year, in the past few months, I've reached a point where I feel like I know what I'm doing here now," he says. "And I feel comfortable with it."
First, there is S.G. Goodman's voice: raw and completely unique. Equal parts grit and balm, it is all emotion. S.G. can fly high with plaintive tones or prowl the low valleys of longing, sometimes within the course of one line. And she possesses the power to stop you in your tracks like a bite from the cottonmouth snakes swimming in the slough water of her Western Kentucky homeland.
Her otherworldly vocals take center stage on her debut Old Time Feeling, which explores the way most people see the South without fully understanding its complexities. As a gay woman who grew up on the banks of the Mississippi River in one of the most isolated parts of Kentucky, S.G. has the unique perspective of the insider who is also the outsider. She says that while writing the album she thought "a lot about the complexity of wanting to carve out a space for yourself in a place that you were born to but doesn't necessarily reflect all your feelings about the place."