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Moore Kismet w/ Angl + BC x FREEKA

Lost Lake Presents Moore Kismet with Angl and BC x FREEKA on Sunday, June 23 — VIP PACKAGE INFO: SEE EVERY COLOR! TRIO $90 – Includes a Friday Larimer Lounge guaranteed entry ticket, Saturday Treehouse Set ticket, Sunday Lost Lake ticket, a custom jersey and Meet & Greet access. – 16+, under 16 admitted with ticketed guardian

Kelsey Waldon w/ Jackie Straw + Patrick Dethlefs

Lost Lake Presents Kelsey Waldon with Jackie Straw and Patrick Dethlefs on Thursday, August 8th.     “I’ve always been attracted to singular voices.”   More than a decade and a half into her career, Kelsey Waldon is herself one of those singular voices. Across four acclaimed full-length albums full of both “heavy twang and spitfire pedal steel” and “coffeehouse confessionals” (Rolling Stone), she’s brought listeners into her world and shared her own experiences and perspectives. Her new project, There’s Always a Song, however, is about the singular voices that shaped her into the artist she is today.   “It’s like, I kind of was able to find my voice through these voices, you know?” Waldon says. “A part of me doing this album is expressing so much gratitude for the music that I love, for music that has meant a lot to me and helped me.”   These eight songs, from the earliest pages of the country and bluegrass music songbooks, helped the singer-songwriter from Monkey’s Eyebrow, Ky., find her place in the world before she became an artist whose own work generates buzz, lands on year-end best-of lists, and, in 2019, led Waldon to become the first artist in 15 years to sign a deal with John Prine’s Oh Boy Records. These days, they remind Waldon of why wanted to make music in the first place.   “There’s a lot of bullshit out there, and sometimes our goals and dreams get clouded by competition or become jaded. [These songs are] like something tapping into me and being like, ‘That’s why you love this.’ It feels like home to me; it feels like the truth,” Waldon shares. “It just brought me so much joy to work with my peers, my friends, people I really admire.”   There’s Always a Song might not even exist, in fact, if not for S.G. Goodman, who in addition to also being a fellow western Kentuckian has been one of Waldon’s good friends since before they were making headlines with their music. During one of their frequent catch-up phone calls, Waldon told Goodman she would love to find a reason to collaborate and asked Goodman if she’d be up for recording a song together. Goodman suggested “Hello Stranger,” specifically citing the 1973 version by Hazel Dickens and Alice Gerrard.   Waldon didn’t stop with Goodman, though. Fellow John Prine devotee and “kindred spirit” Amanda Shires joins Waldon on fiddle for the Bill Monroe classic “Uncle Pen” — arranged in half time like Goose Creek Symphony’s version from 1971 — while Isaac Gibson, lead singer of 49 Winchester, helps Waldon honor his fellow Virginian, Ralph Stanley, on the devastating “I Only Exist.” Margo Price, one of Waldon’s first friends in Nashville, rounds out the list of guests, singing with Waldon on “Traveling the Highway Home,” which Waldon selected from fellow Kentuckian Molly O’Day’s catalog.   “These songs are deep. They were here long before me, and they will be here long after I’m gone, after any of us are here. They will survive the test of time,” Waldon says. “It’s like they live in some kind of universe that just survives forever. These songs know the secrets to life.”     All ages, ticketed under 16 guests admitted with ticketed parent or guardian.

Dreamer Boy – SUMMER IN AMERICA TOUR 2024 w/ Harriette + Peak 11

Lost Lake Presents Dreamer Boy – SUMMER IN AMERICA TOUR 2024 with Harriette and Peak 11 on Friday, June 21st. It’s humid and you’re going to baseball practice. You’re “listening to Big Star, lying in your car.” You’re “cutting into the country-fried / Got a lawnchair, open into the fall air.” You’re a kid under the Texas sky: “Friends come through the side door / Mail is in a pile.”   That’s what Dreamer Boy’s new slowplay / Capitol Records album, Lonestar, feels like. For his third full-length, the indie star and singer-songwriter Zach Taylor took his time—two years of searching—and it shows. Moving from Nashville to Los Angeles, Taylor found his new direction during trips out West, back East, and out again, watching the miles of the country pass by. Driving through his childhood home of Texas and visiting his grandfather’s farm three times in a year instilled a sense of connectivity to the South he’d realized he lost touch with.    “I felt myself needing to hold that as a fixture in my heart as I was going out West again,” he says. “I felt the need to attach to my spirit the tone and feeling of those places”—Texas, Alabama, Tennessee—as he started his new chapter in Hollywood. As he began to build his new life in L.A., he became increasingly soul-bound to the rootsy Americana of his youth. “That identification started to well up within me as I began sifting through emotional material that might become this next album,” he continues. “You find those things about yourself that really make you you, especially when you’re putting back together the pieces of yourself after heartbreak.”   Lonestar itself is a journey: It begins with Taylor tackling change and heartbreak on the yearning opener “Summer in America,” which wrestles with uncertainty, using American landscapes as the inspiration and backdrop for a lost soul finding his way home from a party. Ultimately, he finds his way and the record ends in contentment on the exquisite “Harmony,” with new friendships and new beginnings.    Not only has Taylor taken “a leap into new waters,” as he puts it, but his musical growth extends into his creation of a character in the tread of figures he admires, David Bowie and Tyler, the Creator (“Artists who will embody something bigger than themselves for sake of making the music feel bigger,” he says): a rodeo clown who’s made his way from Texas to Hollywood. The rodeo clown persona allows Taylor to be both theatrical and earnest, to swing between zany and heartfelt, to embody the wide spectrum of emotions expressed on Lonestar in one fell swoop.    At its heart, the record is about finding yourself. “You start off running away,” Taylor says. “You’re literally like, ‘Get me out of my parents’ house, get me out into the world.’ But then you start to run back to some of those things.” It’s about building yourself as a person in the turbulence of a breakup, which involves looking back, feeling a little lost, a little heartbroken, a little nostalgic. But, ultimately, there’s clarity—you figure out what makes you really yourself, even if it might change.    “You’re left with the music,” Taylor says, “but you’re also left with the life of making it.” – 16+, under 16 admitted with ticketed guardian

Dana and Alden w/ Eli Torg

Lost Lake Presents Dana and Alden with Eli Torg on Friday, September 20th.Brothers Dana and Alden McWayne, along with a troupe of multi-instrumental artists, come together to create jazzy melodies with indie sounds inspired by their unconventional upbringing in Eugene, Oregon. Their debut album, Quiet Music for Young People, is an amalgamation of their childhood, melding memories of summer days spent working at an apple orchard, and rainy winter nights where they jammed at cozy jazz clubs. These retrospective moments are channeled through the lens of their wide- ranging influences, from Ahmad Jahmal to Big Thief to Bad Bunny.Alden, the younger of the two, is a drummer and recent graduate of Berklee College of Music, while Dana, the elder statesmen, is a saxophonist and organic farm inspector in Durham, NC. All ages, ticketed under 16 guests admitted with ticketed parent or guardian  

Aidan Canfield w/ Sailor Ross

Lost Lake Presents Aidan Canfield with Sailor Ross on Wednesday, July 31st. Canfield’s artistry infuses a unique combination of Rock and Country influences from the sounds that he grew up on – a little bit of Bob Seger and Bruce Springsteen, a little bit of Kenny Chesney meets Zach Bryan. His heartfelt lyrics and melodies have struck a chord of relatability he’s witnessed on the road on support dates with Riley Green and, most recently, the Cameron Sacky Band. When the pandemic hit in 2020, Aidan used the time to discover his passion for playing the guitar, and he started singing and writing songs. In two short years, he started growing a following on social media platforms and released his first single, “The Idea Of Me,” in April of 2022. Since then, Aidan has released six additional singles, an album and his music has nearly 5 million streams. Aidan’s heartfelt lyrics and melodies are what make his music relatable to his fans.   All ages, ticketed under 16 guests admitted with ticketed parent or guardian.  

Private Island + Pink Skies w/ Cherokee Social

Lost Lake Presents Private Island and Pink Skies with Cherokee Social on Saturday, May 18th.Private Island: An approachable band from Southern California.Pink Skies, the brainchild of Bay Area born artist/producer Arieh Berl, blendspsychedelic-pop with influences ranging from Mac DeMarco, Tame Impala, and Toro yMoi. Currently based in LA, Pink Skies’ musical exploration encompasses rock, pop,R&B, and chill-wave, crafting a modern yet classic sound that resonates with audiences.The band’s kaleidoscopic live shows have found them sharing the stage across thecountry with acts such as Neil Frances, Magic City Hippies, Del Water Gap, Tim Atlas,and many more while selling out headlining shows in Los Angeles and San Francisco.Arieh’s career as an in-demand producer boasts 400M+ streams on production creditfor collaborations with artists such as 6LACK, Khalid, Saint JHN, and others, earninghim a platinum record credit for his work with 6LACK. With a focus on experimentation,Pink Skies continues to seek new ways to create something special, both in his ownbody of work and as a producer for various musical projects.- 16+, under 16 admitted with ticketed guardian