Blind Pilot

Lush West Coast indie folk/pop

Blind Pilot

Blind Pilot

Supporting Talent: The Sways

The Sways

Fri Oct 24

Show at 7:30PM

at La Rosa

$8.63-$204.00

Indie

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Blind Pilot

Friday, October 24th

16+

This show is standing room only.

Veranda Bar opens at 6pm (21+)
Venue doors open at 6:45pm
Show starts at 7:30pm

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The first Blind Pilot album in eight years, In the Shadow of the Holy Mountain emerged from a period of artistic crisis and the radical transformation of their creative ecosystem. โ€œI went through a few years where I wasnโ€™t able to writeโ€”I tried therapy, I read books on writerโ€™s block, I went on writing trips, but nothing was helping,โ€ says Israel Nebeker, frontman for the Oregon-bred band. After stepping back and reimagining his songwriting approach, Nebeker challenged himself to write an entire album in a month, then brought those songs to his bandmates with a newfound sense of receptivity.โ€œI told myself that whatever songs came through in that month would be for the love of the band and music we make together,โ€ says Nebeker. โ€œInstead of being controlling in the studio, I wanted to let the songs live and breathe with the band as an entity. By the time we finished, it was the most joy weโ€™d ever hadin making an album together.โ€

Produced by JoshKaufman (The Hold Steady, David Wax Museum), In the Shadow of the Holy Mountain brings a potent new energy tothe elegantly composed folk/indie-rock of past LPs like 2016โ€™s And Then Like Lions. In a profound step forward for the bandโ€”whose lineup also includes drummer/co-founder Ryan Dobrowski, bassist Luke Ydstie, and multi-instrumentalist Kati Clabornโ€”Blind Pilotโ€™s fourth full-length unfolds with an exquisite fluidity, fully harnessing the undeniable chemistry.โ€œIn the past weโ€™ve always been very serious and intentional about the process, but Josh often encouraged us to throw away our preconceived notions of what the songs were supposed to be,โ€ says Nebeker. โ€œSo much of the album came from all of us playing live together, listening to each other and trusting our instincts, and really getting to the core of the song,โ€Dobrowski adds. The result: the most revelatory expression yet of Blind Pilotโ€™s palpable reverence for music as a connective force.

While Blind Pilot intends to tour principally as a quartet in support of the record, the album includes contributions from longtime trumpeter/keyboardist Dave Jorgensen and vibraphonist Ian Krist. In bringing the album to life, the band worked with a rich palette of instrumentation, handling each track with equal parts extraordinary care and unbridled spontaneity. For both Dobrowski and Nebekerโ€”who formed an early iteration of the band as college students in the mid-aughtsโ€”those moments of ineffably closeness serve as the lifeblood of BlindPilot. โ€œFor me making this album felt like celebrating being together and still feeling that deep connection thatโ€™s been a through line for our entire adult lives,โ€ Dobrowski says. โ€œOne of my very favorite things about music is the way it not only connects us as bandmates, but allows us to connect to an audienceโ€”and then within that audience, people end up connecting with each other. Itโ€™s this powerful thing thatโ€™s unlike anything else, and in a way itโ€™s kind of like magic.โ€