
Date & Time
Fri, Jun 5, 7:00 PM
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To reduce staff contact with guest belongings, we have implemented the following bag policy: we will allow clear plastic, vinyl or PVC tote bags no larger than 12" x 6" x 12" and/or small clutch bags ( 6" x 9").
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Getting an opportunity to make an impact by playing music is a dream for many bands. But getting a second chance, according to Yellowcard frontman Ryan Key, is a blessing. Yellowcard returned to the spotlight in 2011 after a three-year hiatus with the energized When You’re Through Thinking, Say Yes. The album was a renaissance of sorts for the Jacksonville natives, as its 10 tracks played out like the band never spent any time apart. A logical progression from 2007’sPaper Walls, the group managed to capture elements of its entire discography with the album, which was welcomed by patient fans and praised by critics alike. Say Yes inspired a winding nine months of touring that took the band to over 30 different countries, a world tour that served as a reconnection with old, diehard fans and an instant way to reach new, younger listeners. “The tours we got to do last year, the bands we got to tour with, were incredible,” Key says. “We wanted to stay current and matter to younger fans, because making new fans is important to us, and at the same time, we didn’t want to turn our back on our old fans because they’re essential to our existence. We couldn’t make new fans without our old ones? When you’re at a Yellowcard show if you’re not a fan, you look at someone who is and think, ‘Why am I not a fan of that? Why am I not enjoying this like that person is? I want that.’ That’s amazing for us.” The extensive touring schedule in support of Say Yes was more inspiring than exhausting. The band that put out the acclaimed Ocean Avenue (2003) nearly a decade ago, and fan favorites Lights and Sounds (2006) and Paper Walls (2007) after that, was still feeling energized and ready to move. “We got back from tour and we were still so excited about doing this,” Key says. “We wanted to keep the ball rolling.” So Key, violinist Sean Mackin, guitarist Ryan Mendez, new bassist Josh Portman and drummer Longineu Parsons decided to head back into the studio with almost no time off to record a new album. “We’re better at balancing the band and our personal lives than we have ever been before, and part of that comes with being 30 years old and not 20,” Key says of the band’s desire to keep its momentum going. “We all want to work together more than we ever have, and that’s what drove us back together after being away from each other for three years.” The decision to get back into the studio so soon brought along some pressure at first, but Key says that was all self-induced. “After a while, we decided, ‘This is what we do. We know exactly what we’re doing, let’s sit down and write some music.’” The resulting album, titled Southern Air, will be Yellowcard’s sixth studio effort and second for Hopeless Records. And according to Key, it was the easiest writing and recording experience of the band’s decade-plus long career. He describes a “brotherhood” that he shared with Mendez, Mackin. LP, and long-time producer Neal Avron during the meat of the recording sessions. “There was this bond, this camaraderie, a positive energy in the room,” Key recalls in a hushed tone. “We all got so excited about every part of every song, working with each other on everything.” More passionate than ever before, Yellowcard churned out a holistic effort as the self-induced pressure evaporated from the songwriting. The album’s title provides a loose concept for the album, centering around the experience Key had while Yellowcard was on its hiatus. Moving back to Athens, Georgia, to spend more time with his family than he had since his high school years gave Key some perspective into what his priorities are. “I think this record, in a lot of ways, examines how much better that time made my life, how much of a positive influence that had on me,” Key says, “and how much I know now that I need that in my life, that southern air.” The rocking title track certainly hits home on that concept, with Key rounding out the album by singing, “This southern air is in my lungs, it’s in every word I’ve sung / It seems the only truth I know, this will always be home.” Musically, Yellowcard’s pounding pop-punk sound is abundant (“Awakening,” “Rivertown Blues”), while of course highlighting the trademark violin, especially in first released song “Always Summer.” Southern Air has every essential element of past Yellowcard albums, but at the same time still feels fresh and new. It could very well be the band’s best work, and it’s because of an intangible feeling you get when you listen to it. “It’s hard to answer that question, which I think is our best,” Key says. “But I really think there’s something special about this record. And I don’t necessarily mean how many copies it’s going to sell or anything like that, I just think there’s something special here and I hope people see that too.” Not bad for a band trying to make the best out of a second chance.
15 years after their debut album, New Found Glory have sold millions of albums, logged hundreds of thousands of road miles, and influenced an entire generation of bands whose sounds range from emo to pop-punk to hardcore and beyond. Yet despite the fame, despite the platinum records, and despite the fact that their fan base includes bands who’ve gone platinum multiple times over in their own genres, New Found Glory remain the same five friends who started making music because there was nothing better to do in the Florida suburbs that spawned them.<br><p><br></p><p>Emerging as part of the second wave of pop punk in the late 1990s, music critics consider them a key pioneer of the genre. Labelled the "godfathers of punk", Allmusic credits them for "practically serving alongside the work of Blink-182 as the blueprint to the entire genre for the early 2000s." Also renowned for their energetic live performances, the band has garnered a cult following since their inception.</p>
The Plain White T's are an American rock band from Lombard, Illinois, formed in 1997 by high schoolfriends Tom Higgenson, Dave Tirio, and Ken Fletcher, and joined a short time later by Steve Mast. The group had a mostly underground following in Chicago basements, clubs, and bars in its early years. The band had a number-one hit song with "Hey There Delilah", which achieved platinum status in 2007 and earned two Grammy nominations.The songs "1, 2, 3, 4" and "Rhythm of Love" were also certified platinum in 2009 and 2011 respectively. The Plain White T's was formed in Lombard in early 1997. The group began as a trio, with Higgenson as singer and guitarist, Fletcher on bass guitar and Tirio on drums.The group played mostly local punk shows in Chicago's suburbs, eventually having gigs at the Metro in Chicago's Wrigleyvilleneighborhood. As the band began to establish itself in the local scene, a fourth member, Steve Mast, was recruited. He played lead guitar and sang backing vocals. Higgenson broke several vertebrae in a car crash in 1999 while driving the band's van. He was in a back brace for three months and had to learn to walk again. Higgenson changed his songwriting process, choosing songs that were more meaningful to him, and the band began taking its music career more seriously.
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To reduce staff contact with guest belongings, we have implemented the following bag policy: we will allow clear plastic, vinyl or PVC tote bags no larger than 12" x 6" x 12" and/or small clutch bags ( 6" x 9").
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