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Noah Kahan is Zooming to us proper from the center of Vermont’s stick season, the place issues are trying cloudy with an opportunity of multi-platinum. Now, in case you occur to know what that “seasonal” reference really is, you might be most likely (a) an 80-year-old New Englander who grew up with that time period as a euphemism for the canine days of late fall, or (b) one of many tens of millions of folks that have taken to the music of Kahan, who spent 2023 turning into an almost stealth celebrity.
With the leaves having fallen off the bushes, he’s not in a position to conceal in plain sight. A lot of his accomplishments are there for all to see: a Grammy nomination for greatest new artist (for which he could be the front-runner, out of eight candidates); a first-time “Saturday Evening Dwell” look; a summer time tour for 204 that has already bought out one night time on the Hollywood Bowl (a second was simply placed on sale) and two nights every at Madison Sq. Backyard and Fenway Park. His fame has grown sufficient that even non-fans might have discovered that “Stick Season,” the title of his breakthrough third album, refers back to the pretty forlorn time of yr in New England between the leaves falling off the bushes and the onset of snow dumps. It’s the time of yr to get twiggy with it, if you’ll — and the time to take up Kahan’s music as an antidote. (Even in case you’re dwelling in California and don’t a lot want it.)
Kahan coated a variety of subjects in his dialog with Selection: befriending duet companions from Submit Malone to fellow greatest new artist nominee Gracie Abrams; his change of path from how he began out to the extra folk-leaning type that’s the one which made him a significant pop star; and — simply as paradoxically — why dwelling in a small Vermont city (an actual small city; inhabitants lower than 2,000) cast the id that’s now permitting him to promote out bowls and ballparks.
You lately tweeted a graphic displaying your Spotify Wrapped complete for the yr, which confirmed that you simply had a formidable 1.4 billion streams on the service throughout 2023, representing 46.6 million distinct listeners. You captioned it: “Seasonal affective dysfunction and its penalties.”
Yeah… individuals must get some some vitamin D lamps, dude.
You have got a great tweet for every little thing. When the “Saturday Evening Dwell” look was introduced, you place up a cute one, tweeting, “This man’s taking part in SNL,” with a modest image of a really younger you with… was it reptiles?
These have been my dinos. I used to be obsessive about dinosaurs after I was a child.
You additionally resurrected a tweet from early 2021 the place you wrote, “I wanna carry out on SNL. I don’t even care if it’s an off-brand model known as ‘Sunday Evening Dwell.’” You’ve additionally talked about the way it was a youthful dream to do one thing with Hozier, which got here true whenever you simply obtained him to sing on a brand new model of your tune “Northern Angle.” You’ve achieved fairly a job of manifesting issues.
Each dream I had, it looks like this yr I’ve gotten to have these desires occur or I’ve gotten near it, and a part of it’s scary. You’re blissful in your youthful self and also you’re blissful for the child or the younger grownup who mentioned he wished these items, and also you’re making him proud whenever you obtain them. But it surely all the time feels surreal to me and I by no means actually recover from the craziness of all of it, and I by no means take any of it without any consideration.
Who is aware of what Grammy voters will do within the voting for greatest new artist, but when it have been as much as a well-liked acclamation vote proper now, you’ve obtained the momentum that it feels just like the lots on the market would give that to you. We are able to thank the Recording Academy for not providing you with nominations beforehand, so that you have been nonetheless eligible for greatest new artist… even after three albums, two EPs and a deluxe version over the previous 5 years.
Yeah, I’m appreciative for everyone discovering me now. I’ve been doing this for some time. However getting nominated alone is like a lot of a victory for me, and one thing that I, for the remainder of my life, will probably be pleased with, so I hate to even suppose to the long run. The concept the momentum was there to place me within the rivalry is so cool in itself and looks like a victory. So I’m simply blissful to get to go and produce my mother and have a beer and watch all of the wonderful different artists and get to know individuals.
You should not be super-competitive, since you simply put out a duet of “In every single place, All the things” with Gracie Abrams, who’s additionally up for brand new artist. Is the timing on that simply coincidental? It’s not like a mutual nominee victory lap?
It was fully coincidental. Gracie and I’ve struck up a friendship over the past yr… I’ve all the time actually admired the best way she connects together with her fan base and the best way she feels welcoming to the folks that assist her, and that’s one thing that i’ve actually tried to do in my profession — not solely with my touring crew, however I wished my complete fanbase to really feel like a household, and to really feel like a group. And I believe Gracie’s achieved an incredible job cultivating that. And I’m additionally only a large fan of her songwriting, and her collaborations with Aaron Dessner are all the time gorgeous. She was the primary particular person I known as after… oh no, that’s not true, I known as my mother, however I known as Gracie proper after (the announcement), as a result of they learn her identify, and I used to be so blissful for her — and I nonetheless didn’t know in the event that they have been gonna learn mine or not, however I’m like, “Let’s fucking go, Gracie!” This tune is type of the cherry on high, getting an opportunity to work together with her after attending to know her as a good friend somewhat bit. I believe the tune is admittedly particular, and I simply suppose she’s actually particular. So it’s a great mixture.
You’ve additionally put out new variations of the album tracks with Submit Malone, Kacey Musgraves and Lizzy McAlpine in addition to Gracie and Hozier. Are you going to undergo the entire album that manner, to make every monitor a duet?
Effectively… something however making new music, proper? [Laughs.] I’m on the street on a regular basis and I don’t have a ton of time to be making a ton of recent music, so giving these songs new life was a purpose for me from the outset of beginning this touring cycle. [With the collaborations], individuals saved saying sure and being all the way down to do it, and we began being like: Are we going to do the entire file? And I don’t know if we’ll do the entire album, however we actually have just a few extra to return. I simply suppose it’s been a extremely cool train in collaboration and creativity to see artists that possibly wouldn’t usually pair collectively, or artists you’ve all the time wished to listen to collectively, getting to remodel a tune.
And you then reissued some catalog product, for Report Retailer Day’s Black Friday version. I’ve to say, it lastly sank in for me simply how fashionable you might be by way of the private expertise of ready in line earlier than daybreak for Report Retailer Day exclusives, and I believed all of the early risers can be there for the Olivia Rodrigo EP, nevertheless it turned out everybody immediately round me was there in your launch — the vinyl reissue of the 2020 EP “Cape Elizabeth.” There’s such a thirst there for extra from you, even when it’s one thing somewhat bit older that’s rarer and being revived.
You already know, I’m blown away each time I see that we’ve bought out of something. I simply have spent a number of time in my profession [not having that]… I actually used to purchase tickets to my very own reveals in order that they may virtually promote out. I’d have household purchase merch. I wouldn’t get anyone guest-list passes. I’d be like, “You must purchase fucking tickets, man. I must make a dwelling! I must promote these items.” So it’s arduous to clarify how a lot it means to me that persons are ready in strains and taking trip of their lives, that are more and more busy, I’m positive, to return assist me and to get one thing of mine that they’ve linked to.
And that EP specifically is such a particular story, as a result of it was proper in the beginning of the pandemic, and I simply made it with my neighbor, a good friend of mine, who’s an incredible producer. We labored on it for every week, and we didn’t actually put it up for sale an excessive amount of — and it type of turned “Stick Season” earlier than “Stick Season” in a number of methods. It was a research on a spot and a relationship in a spot, and it was the primary time I’d experimented with telling a narrative that felt prefer it had an overarching narrative. And it was additionally the primary time that I let myself simply not care about the way it sounded on the finish. Regardless of the course of was, I simply wished it to make me blissful. And to see it join with individuals actually impressed me to write down “Stick Season.” It type of gave me the arrogance to be like, “All proper, this niche-specific storytelling stuff can really join with individuals in a extra common manner.” I actually owe all of it to that EP, and it’s nonetheless most likely my favourite piece of labor I’ve made. I simply adore it.
That solutions a query I had, as a result of it does really feel like an entry level for “Stick Season,” which was your third album… despite the fact that, going again in your discography, I remembered it really got here out between the primary and second albums. “Cape Elizabeth” feels just like the sign change that pointed to a brand new path.
I believe I used to be attempting to guard myself from failure — from the sensation of being dangerous or making one thing dangerous — by being like, “It’s simply an EP; we’re simply going to work on it for every week.” That was my mindset moving into. I used to be like, “If I don’t think about this my subsequent mission in a extra pronounced or intentional manner, then if individuals don’t prefer it, it doesn’t matter.” And I believe which may not be the healthiest option to strategy making music, however I really suppose it helped me simply let go somewhat little bit of expectation, or of sending my music over to the label on daily basis each time I end a tune, or sending 1,000,000 individuals the concepts. It’s stepping right into a room and saying “I’m going to make one thing this week, and no matter it’s, it’s going to be what it’s, and it’s not going to suffocate underneath the burden of expectation.” It really opened up the door to feeling inventive freedom, which is one thing that I took into “Stick Season” on a much bigger scale. So it was extremely necessary as a blueprint for making music that I’m keen about, and with a course of that I’m keen about, which had type of been stagnating for me in my life proper earlier than the pandemic. It was a massively necessary course of and only a actually magical expertise to say, “Fuck it.” It was enjoyable.
I used to be watching you lately on the Americana Awards, overlaying a Paul Simon tune with the Milk Carton Youngsters, and considering that it was stunning that one thing Americana, or not less than adjoining to that, was an area Republic went after in signing any individual. After which I re-listened to a few of your early releases and realized how a lot issues had developed with you since you bought signed. Whther Republic essentially knew what they’d ultimately getting, clearly they’ve gone loopy selling it. However was there some extent in making “Stick Season” the place you ever needed to say, “This isn’t what I used to be going after with the primary couple albums, however belief me”?
There actually was by no means the scary story of the label saying, “No, you might be this particular person.” They’ve all the time been supportive of the tune, actually, regardless of the tune was for me. I believe there was undoubtedly some … I don’t know if concern is the fitting phrase, however there have been undoubtedly some questions on what I used to be attempting to do. And I believe, on my finish, there was some lack of readability. However a number of it was being like, “Belief me, I must make this mission,” and I continued to indicate them what was occurring because it was being made, which helped them perceive what we have been doing. However I believe it undoubtedly took, yeah, a shift of considering for my administration and my label to be like, “OK, we’re attempting to strategy the people base somewhat bit extra” and strategizing change with that path. However they have been actually supportive and all the time keen to listen to me out and, after they have been accepting of what I wished to do, they began to allocate their wonderful advertising and sources and connections to type of assist me get into the house. I really feel actually grateful for these connections, as a result of I didn’t have a lot of them of my very own. All I actually had was the will to make this sort of music, and the assist of a workforce that was there for me to make it. So it wasn’t a lot of a battle, nevertheless it undoubtedly took some questioning and a few strategizing.
So far as the business success, it looks like there was a collection of turning factors, greater than a single one — even simply within the lifetime of this album. Clearly the title tune was successful, after which the expanded version actually blew some new life into one thing that was already going properly. Do you’re feeling just like the deluxe version was a turning level in possibly giving the turbo increase to what was already a reasonably fast-speeding automotive?
Yeah, completely. It got here at a extremely good time. It was a complete fucking ache within the ass to make, as a result of I used to be on the street and simply exhausted. You get two weeks off the street, and that’s not sufficient time to really feel like a human once more. So I used to be proper again within the studio, so it was an actual labor… a labor of affection, however a labor. So when it got here out, I used to be like, “Man, I hope that this helps proceed to inform the story. I hope we’re not simply making music simply to make it.” So when the response to the deluxe model got here with such pressure, it felt very vindicating for that type of more durable course of for me. It did really feel prefer it raised the profile, and it additionally launched a brand new tune (“Dial Drunk”), which was going to be a single, which Submit Malone jumped on, which type of skyrocketed issues. I imply, I keep in mind the night time it got here out — my identify was trending on Twitter, and I used to be like, “Oh my God, that is my worst fucking nightmare.”
There’ve been so many moments this yr which have been instrumental in informing this part in my profession, however the deluxe model undoubtedly gave us a much bigger canvas to color on and gave us extra alternative to succeed in a much bigger audiences. And so I’m blissful I did it, and I’m blissful I fucking went loopy making it. Generally that’s the purpose. It’s all the time a disgrace whenever you lose your thoughts and no one likes it, and it’s like, “Effectively, I might have simply had a pleasant, blissful couple months there.”
Potential trip time properly spent, there. And now we’re in most likely the primary “stick season” since individuals in all places discovered what stick season really is. You’ve talked so much in regards to the sense of regionality and specificity that has fed into individuals having fun with this work, and the way, as a author, you don’t all the time need to go for probably the most common factor. We perceive why individuals from New England go loopy over this, however there’s additionally a way of individuals latching on to the New England-ness of it, wherever they’re. Folks in large city areas can relate to it in their very own vogue. Additionally, small cities have been related to xenophobia or anger somewhat bit these days — we had Jason Aldean’s hostile “Strive That in a Small City” — and so possibly individuals have been prepared for a return to the romance of small cities, too. Despite the fact that there’s a possible depressive side of it you carry up, too.
Yeah. To type of develop on what you’re saying, which I completely agree with, it’s been actually cool to see individuals in cities or locations which can be distant from New England resonate with these concepts. You already know, I lived in New York and felt lonelier than I ever did in Stratford. I believe there may be loneliness in all places, and there may be isolation and there may be nostalgic, homesick, longing in all places you go. Everyone’s from someplace, whether or not that’s New York Metropolis or Boise, Idaho or a small city in Ohio. And it’s good to get an opportunity to be pleased with that, and to look at what makes the place you’re from nice, and to look at what makes the place you’re from not so nice. So I believe what’s been good has been having the ability to replicate on my hometown, and to observe different individuals replicate on the place they’re from as properly, whether or not they nonetheless dwell there or not. I believe it’s a extremely fascinating train.
One factor I like about New England is, there’s some cultural examination that occurs, the place you’ll be able to see one thing and say, “That’s so New England.” You’ll be able to meet somebody and say, “Oh, you’re so northern New England.”
Within the final tune on the album, you speak about driving between cities which have a protracted distance between them. You’ve actually talked about the way you tackle psychological well being stuff, and there’s one thing in regards to the geography of wider-open areas, possibly, that appeals to individuals as they consider possibly a bodily or metaphorical manifestation of isolation they is likely to be feeling. They will think about themselves in that automotive, driving the half-hour it takes to get to the shop, despite the fact that that’s not their actuality, due to the emotional theme.
Yeah, I believe that’s an incredible level. I hope that individuals can discover in these songs what I discovered within the house itself, whether or not or not they’ve the house. I believe being imaginative and dreaming and reflecting whenever you hear music is my favourite half about music. I can take heed to a tune and it brings me instantly again to a second in my life, or a thought that I had, and it doesn’t matter the place I’m. If I’m on a airplane to London or if I’m driving on Mass Ave. in Boston, I nonetheless really feel like I’m in that second. So I actually hope that these songs carry that to individuals. What I like about the place I grew up is that each one the house, and the dearth of actual issues to do apart from be exterior and take into consideration the woods, lent a number of creativeness to me. It lent a number of creativity and dreaming and a way of questioning about why issues are the best way they’re. I believe I didn’t have that exterior stimulus to distract me from deeper ideas. And so I used to be grateful for that house, rising up, and I believe it led to some extra creativity and creativeness.
After which simply musically, speaking in regards to the house your music exists in… You’ve cited individuals like Cat Stevens, who not all people of your era is completely educated about. And whenever you have been a young person, issues like Mumford and Sons have been occurring. So tthere’s an fascinating cross-generational factor there the place it isn’t simply ‘70s singer-songwriter music you grew up on, but additionally this wave of stuff occurring that individuals have known as stomp-and-holler. You probably did an interview the place you mentioned you felt like there was “unfinished enterprise” with that wave of music. Do you’re feeling such as you’re a mixture of a few of these influences that have been really 10 years in the past, whenever you have been a young person, and a for much longer custom?
Yeah. I undoubtedly really feel just like the stomp-and-holler label has been placed on me — and that’s completely wonderful, as a result of I actually do join with that music again then. I actually don’t really feel like I’m “All proper, I’m going to carry again Mumford and Sons” or “carry again the Lumineers.” I believe I took a number of what impressed me a lot about them into my very own music and into my life for the final 10 years.
They write in tales. They use extra easy melodies, for positive, and emotional deliveries. However I believe the storytelling of that music is all the time what drew me to it. I all the time felt like I used to be, in a extremely great way, on the surface, trying into one thing. You already know, in case you didn’t learn about the place Mumford and Sons have been from, you’d be like, “Man, are you guys from, like, the 1700s? What’s your story? What is occurring on this music?” And also you take heed to the Lumineers, they usually have data about completely different locations and tales that really feel intimate to them, and I all the time felt like I used to be studying like a novel. You have got this sense of being neglected that makes you wish to dig again in and be part of it and perceive all of it. Outdoors of their unbelievable dwell reveals, I all the time appreciated the best way they strategy writing with tales and utilizing completely different prolonged storylines in several songs, and having type of Easter eggs was all the time actually fascinating to me. I believe a number of that type of stuff was carried on by different artists like Sam Fender and Phoebe Bridgers, who type of gave you that outside-looking-in feeling as properly that I all the time actually cherished.
So I’m blissful to have the parallel be drawn to me, as a result of I all the time thought that their songwriting was actually fascinating and impressed me a lot. I’ve completely no qualms by any means with the comparability, and I’m honored. I’m blissful that storytelling is on the forefront. I believe it’s necessary that issues advance all the time, for a greater future, in the best way we’re making music and interested by how you can current the music. However I believe it’s necessary to hearken again to the good storytellers of our time. You look again at Paul Simon, Cat Stevens, James Taylor, and also you look to the more moderen ones as properly, and also you hope that that continues to occur. You already know, I’m not saying that I’m a grasp storyteller, however I’m gonna hold attempting to maintain telling tales, like my heroes did.
Actually you’ve obtained attraction for an older viewers in addition to a youthful one. There’s a sure agelessness to a few of it. I used to be a live performance evaluate the place the reporter mentioned you mentioned, “I do know I appear to be I’ve been by a grisly divorce and custody battle, however I’m solely 26.” And it was humorous, as a result of then I did see like a photograph of you in highschool, the place you had quick hair and no beard and it was instantly clear how younger you have been… and also you’re not so a few years past that at this level. However then there’s one thing in regards to the lengthy hair and the beard the place, like with the Beatles in “Let It Be,” they all of the sudden look 40 as an alternative of of their 20s, or possibly actually ageless… However you’re as outdated as you’re feeling. So possibly the query is: How outdated do you’re feeling proper now?
Oh my God. The opposite day, my tour supervisor mentioned that being within the new music trade ages you eight years yearly, particularly the touring trade. I really feel outdated proper now. I rise up and my fucking again hurts. … I used to be in my highschool alumni soccer recreation the opposite day, and I might barely transfer. I really feel like I’ve all the time felt older, although. Folks name it being an outdated soul, however I all the time thought that that was only a good manner of claiming: “You have got despair and also you’re 9.”
However I do really feel that, though this yr has been unbelievable, it’s additionally been emotionally and bodily actually tiring. So I’ve been looking for the time to really feel like a child, and to really feel 26, nevertheless it’s arduous. There’s a lot occurring, and I discover myself not letting myself completely get pleasure from all of it. Generally I really feel like I’ve a tough time greedy the moments and processing them.
You noticed an image of me with quick hair. I appeared like somewhat salamander — like a 9-year-old child. And I like this look higher as a result of it permits me to not bathe. And it’s type of the model! From the start, I mentioned I wished to make my model be the least quantity of self-care I probably need to do to be acceptable. And if I can go that alongside to my fellow depressed burnout buddies, then that’d be nice.
You do have a protracted yr forward, with a lot touring — together with accompishments like promoting out the Hollywood Bowl, promoting out two nights at Madison Sq. Backyard, two sold-out nights at Fenway Park. So it’s not like 2024 is a yr to dread. However do you get to have a break, earlier than you go do Europe prematurely of returning to the States in the summertime?
Yeah, we get somewhat break, which is good. We get a couple of month, however I’m most likely gonna attempt to make some music. And making the music is the half that feels probably the most rewarding to me. So I’m hoping to get an opportunity to relaxation, recalibrate, make some extra music, and in addition simply type of keep in a single place. I really feel like I hold getting up and going to the shop or driving into Lebanon or driving to Boston as a result of I simply don’t wish to be in a single spot. So I’m simply gonna pressure myself to sit down in a room and relax the fuck out for a second. However after the break, then we begin the yr in Mexico, which is gonna be good as a result of we’ll be on the nice and cozy seashore. Then we go to Australia, and it’s summer time there, so there’s some heat torrent and worldwide torrent arising on the very least.
Within the meantime, you’ve obtained some chilly to cope with, staying residence… which you’ve additionally made the model. I used to be imagining that possibly the Vermont tourism Board ought to capitalize on this. They might have a “Come to Vermont for stick season!” marketing campaign and make November their large touring season. Like: Relive the Noah Kahan album! Come through the dreariest a part of fall!
I believe if you realize something about Vermonters, they are going to fucking hate that. They’ve been so supportive, and I believe a bunch of individuals coming in… You already know, it’s humorous. Vermont wants extra individuals to dwell there, however there’s additionally part of the satisfaction of being from Vermont that’s like, “Don’t come right here. That is our place.” So I strive to not step on any toes in that manner and exploit something. However I do suppose that extra persons are all in favour of stick season, and I’ve been listening to extra individuals use the time period, and as a Vermonter, that does make me proud.
Kahan’s 2024 tour dates:
WE’LL ALL BE HERE FOREVER TOUR 2024 AUSTRALIA, UK + EUROPE DATES:January 17 Melbourne, AU Sidney Myer Music Bowl – SOLD OUTJanuary 18 Melbourne, AU Sidney Myer Music Bowl – SOLD OUTJanuary 20 Brisbane, AU Riverstage – SOLD OUTJanuary 23 Sydney, AU The Hordern Pavilion – SOLD OUTJanuary 27 Perth, AU Crimson Hill Auditorium – SOLD OUTFebruary 08 Dublin, IE 3Arena – SOLD OUT *February 10 Glasgow, UK OVO Hydro – SOLD OUT *February 11 Leeds, UK First Direct Enviornment – SOLD OUT *February 13 Cardiff, UK Cardiff Worldwide Enviornment – SOLD OUT *February 14 London, UK OVO Enviornment Wembley – SOLD OUT *February 15 London, UK OVO Enviornment Wembley – SOLD OUT *February 17 Paris, FR L’Olympia – SOLD OUT *February 18 Cologne, DE Palladium – SOLD OUT *February 21 Berlin, DE Columbiahalle – SOLD OUT *February 23 Copenhagen, DK Okay.B. Hallen – SOLD OUT *February 25 Amsterdam, NL AFAS Dwell – SOLD OUT *February 26 Brussels, BE Forest Nationwide *
WE’LL ALL BE HERE FOREVER TOUR 2024 NORTH AMERICA DATES:March 2 Tempe, AZ Further Innings Competition ~March 26 Vancouver, BC Rogers Enviornment – SOLD OUTMarch 28 Calgary, AB Scotiabank Saddledome – SOLD OUTMarch 29 Edmonton, AB Rogers Place – SOLD OUTMarch 30 Saskatoon, SK SaskTel CentreApril 02 Winnipeg, MB Canada Life CentreApril 06 Toronto, ON Scotiabank Enviornment – SOLD OUTApril 07 London, ON Budweiser Gardens – SOLD OUTApril 09 Ottawa, ON Canadian Tire Centre – SOLD OUTApril 10 Quebec Metropolis, QC Videotron CentreApril 13 Montreal, QC Bell Centre – SOLD OUTApril 14 Toronto, ON Scotiabank Enviornment – SOLD OUTApril 16 Toronto, ON Scotiabank Enviornment – SOLD OUTApril 20 North Charleston, SC Excessive Water Competition ~Might 3 Atlanta, GA Shaky Knees Competition ~Might 5 Charlotte, NC Lovin’ Life Music Competition ~Might 20 Asheville, NC ExploreAsheville.com Enviornment – SOLD OUTMay 22 Asheville, NC ExploreAsheville.com Enviornment – SOLD OUTMay 24 Nashville, TN Bridgestone Enviornment – SOLD OUTMay 25 Nashville, TN Bridgestone Enviornment – SOLD OUTMay 28 Cuyahoga Falls, OH Blossom Music Heart – SOLD OUTMay 29 Burgettstown, PA The Pavilion at Star Lake – SOLD OUTJune 01 Lexington, KY Railbird Music Competition ~June 04 St. Louis, MO Hollywood On line casino Amphitheater – SOLD OUTJune 05 Kansas Metropolis, MO Azura Amphitheatre – SOLD OUT *June 07 St. Paul, MN Xcel Vitality Heart – SOLD OUTJune 08 St. Paul, MN Xcel Vitality Heart – SOLD OUTJune 11 Dallas, TX Dos Equis PavilionJune 13 Houston, TX The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion – SOLD OUTJune 14 Austin, TX Moody Heart – SOLD OUTJune 15 Austin, TX Moody Heart – JUST ADDEDJune 18 Chula Vista, CA North Island Credit score Union AmphitheatreJune 20 Los Angeles, CA Hollywood Bowl – JUST ADDEDJune 21 Los Angeles, CA Hollywood Bowl – SOLD OUTJune 25 Denver, CO Fiddler’s Inexperienced Amphitheatre – SOLD OUT *June 26 Denver, CO Fiddler’s Inexperienced Amphitheatre – SOLD OUT *June 29 George, WA The Gorge – SOLD OUTJuly 01 Ridgefield, WA RV Inn Fashion Resorts Amphitheater – SOLD OUTJuly 03 Wheatland, CA Toyota AmphitheatreJuly 05 Berkeley, CA The Greek Theatre – SOLD OUT *July 06 Berkeley, CA The Greek Theatre – SOLD OUT *July 09 Salt Lake Metropolis, UT USANA Amphitheatre – SOLD OUTJuly 13 East Troy, WI Alpine Valley Music Theatre – SOLD OUTJuly 15 New York, NY Madison Sq. Backyard – SOLD OUTJuly 16 New York, NY Madison Sq. Backyard – SOLD OUTJuly 18 Boston, MA Fenway Park – SOLD OUT ^July 19 Boston, MA Fenway Park – SOLD OUT ^August 2 Montreal, QC Osheaga Competition ~
SUMMER 2024 UK + EUROPE DATES:August 13 Manchester, UK Co-op Dwell *August 14 Newcastle, UK Utilita Enviornment *August 20 Birmingham, UK Utilita Enviornment *August 21 London, UK The O2 *August 24 Amsterdam, NL Ziggo Dome *August 26 Hamburg, DE Stadtpark Open Air *August 27 Berlin, DE Zitadelle Spandau
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