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May 2ndTíos Míos
May 7thJuani De La Isla Quartet
May 9thMike Zito
May 15thEric Johnson
May 17thTíos Míos
May 19thGhalia Volt
May 27thTab Benoit
May 28thTab Benoit
May 30thLone Piñon CD Release Celebration
June 3rdLone Piñon CD Release Celebration
June 5thWendy Rule
June 11thEl Gozao & Los 33
June 12thSlim Cessna + Maria de Cessna
June 14thA Word with Writers - Andrew Sean Greer
June 16thBuckethead
June 17thSevero y Grupo Fuego and Lara Manzanares
June 19thAndy Mason
June 20thAndy Mason
June 20thRed Light Cameras and NEH
June 26thBoth Sides Now
June 28thVibestrong and Dre Z Melodi
July 10thWonder Women of Country
July 16thMac Heartbreakers
July 17thMary Gauthier
July 18thMary Gauthier
July 19thScott and Johanna Hongell-Darsee
August 1stSteve Earle
August 8thLiz Melendez and Caroline Aiken
August 22ndRon Crowder
August 28thYungchen Lhamo
September 11thYungchen Lhamo
September 12thCoco Montoya
October 8thCoco Montoya
October 9thCoco Montoya
October 10thAly & AJ (New Date!)
December 16thInternational Guitar Night XXVII
February 23rdSarah Shook & The Disarmers
Danielle Durack
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Tickets cost $17 in advance, $22 day of show (including all service charges). They are also available by phone through Hold My Ticket at 505-886-1251.
"I'm starting to realize that being an outlier and a weirdo—it doesn't have to be a bad thing," says Sarah Shook. Shook pauses, then adds with a grin, "It can be whatever you want it to be."
Shook is home in North Carolina, talking about Nightroamer, the hotly anticipated new album from their band, Sarah Shook & The Disarmers. Backed by white-knuckle playing from Eric Peterson on guitar, Aaron Oliva on upright bass, drummer Jack Foster, and Adam Kurtz on pedal steel, Shook has pulled from Hank Williams, Elliott Smith, the Sex Pistols, and Shook's own inquisitive, open, outlying self to create pop-savvy, honky-tonk punk that's both an escape and a reality check—a re-opened wound and a balm. Relationships and life-changing realizations are dissected with honesty and humor, three tight minutes at a time.
When Sarah Shook & The Disarmers released Sidelong four years ago, the irreverent quintet's debut turned heads around the world. Then 2018's follow-up Years hooked everyone from Rolling Stone to Vice. "This ain't no country for hipsters or posers," said No Depression. "It's real, raw, mean-and-evil-bad-and-nasty bidness." Then, the first two albums turned into a tease: The pandemic shut down the world, just as The Disarmers finished recording Nightroamer in Los Angeles. The band has had to sit on the album—until now.
Nightroamer is worth the wait. This is still a band whose recordings beg to be heard live, either in a punk-rock hole in the wall or honky-tonk roadhouse. Shook's voice is crystalline—but boozy, too, with a cadence that sounds comfortable resting in the pocket before lagging, jumping, or cozying up to the offbeat. What initially may feel like a slip is actually a stroke—and listeners cannot get enough.

Born and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, Danielle Durack emerged onto the indie-rock music scene with a refreshingly earnest and unpretentious sound. A true child of 2000's pop, Durack's music has always boasted saccharine hooks, streamlined songwriting, and a penchant for the dramatic. In 2021, Durack released No Place—a self-professed breakup record and a towering achievement, both its lyrical honesty and its musical ambition. No Place is Danielle Durack at her most refined and focused; it is both the most vulnerable and the most poised she has ever been on the record. Propelled by its standout singles—the fuzzy and sarcastic "Broken Wings" and the slow-burning "Eggshells"—the album drew the attention of Pitchfork, NPR, Uproxx, among other prominent indie music outlets.

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