Date: Sunday, June 22, 2025 7:00 PM to 10:30 PM Visit Website > with Couch June 22, 2025 • 7:00 pmDOORS 5:30pm • All Ages Get Tickets > TIER 1: $76, Tier 1 is the designated area of the field closest to the stage. TIER 2: $56, Tier 2 is directly behind Tier 1 (the rest of the field). TOWN OF TAOS DISCOUNT: $41, Taos residents, stay tuned for details on local discount tickets! 12 YEARS OLD AND UNDER: Free and no ticket required. For online ticketing sales & support, contact [email protected] or call 1-877-466-3404.For in-person sales, visit the Lensic box office. VENUE INFO Kit Carson Park SEATING: The park is grass. Please bring your own chairs. ALCOHOL: Yes, on-site alcohol sales unless otherwise noted. OUTSIDE FOOD/DRINK: No PARKING: Street parking near venue ADA INFO: There is limited ADA parking located on Civic Plaza Drive next to the ADA entrance. Patrons then walk 100 yards on a cement sidewalk to the ADA viewing area, located house right, which has seats provided. THINGS TO BRING: Folding chairs/camp chairs (please be mindful of space) Sunscreen Raincoat Empty water bottles (no glass please); there will be filling stations on-site Small purses (subject to search) PROHIBITED ITEMS: No blankets, tarps, or shade structures No cameras (phones are okay) No outside food or drink No pets; working service animals only, must be in a vest No large bags or backpacks No wagons or carts No weapons of any kind including knives, blades, guns Lake Street Dive Lake Street Dive have pushed the possibilities of pop music as a unifying force, not only throughtheir eclectic sound—a boldly original cross-pollination of soul, folk, jazz, classic pop, andmore—the five-piece’s all-embracing ethos has also made them a beloved live band known forbuilding a potent connection among every crowd. In the making of their new album Good Together,vocalist Rachael Price, bassist/background vocalist Bridget Kearney, drummer/background vocalistMike Calabrese, keyboardist/vocalist Akie Bermiss, and guitarist/background vocalist JamesCornelison reinforced the deep sense of purpose behind their output, often turning their attentionto the many factors driving us apart today (e.g., unchecked technological growth, culturally imposedisolation, the cult of relentless self-optimization). Born from a mindset they refer to as “joyfulrebellion,” Good Together arrives as a body of work both gloriously defiant and primed to inspireunbridled dancing and ecstatic singing-along. “There’s a lot to be angry about in the world right now, a lot of pain and rage and divisiveness, but itisn’t sustainable to constantly live in that anger—you need something else to keep you going,” saysCalabrese. “Joy is a great way to sustain yourself, and we wanted to encourage everyone to stay awareof that. In a way this album is our way of saying, ‘Take your joy very seriously.’” In keeping with that spirit of communal uplift, Lake Street Dive’s eighth full-length marks the firsttime they’ve ever worked together in the earliest and most vulnerable stages of songwriting. Back inearly 2023, the band’s members met up at Calabrese’s home studio in Vermont and spent nearly aweek generating new songs, catalyzing the process with the help of a 20-sided die (a holdover fromthe many Zoom-based Dungeons & Dragons matches held by Bermiss and Kearney duringlockdown). “The captain of a particular song would roll the die, and the result would decide thechords, the meter, and the tempo for that song,” Kearney explains. “We’d take those elements andjam for a while, go our separate ways and come up with lyrics and melodies, then come backtogether and workshop everything. It ended up taking us to new places we never would’ve gotten tootherwise, in terms of things like harmony and tempo and groove.” Along with expanding theirmusical palette and expressive range, that highly collaborative approach helped the band reach a newlevel of intimacy. “In the past we’d written pieces of songs and shared them with each other andbuilt them up from there, but we always had the space to listen and reflect in total privacy,” saysPrice. “At first it was terrifying to write together in the same room, but as soon as we got started itfelt so fun. We very quickly realized, ‘Oh, we need to do this again and again.’” The follow-up to Obviously—a 2021 LP acclaimed by the likes of Rolling Stone, who noted that “[a]t amoment when pop strives for lo-fi, solitary-world intimacy, the jazz-pop-whatever band refuse tothink small”—Good Together finds Lake Street Dive working again with Grammy-winning producerMike Elizondo (Fiona Apple, Sheryl Crow, Gary Clark Jr.) and recording at his Phantom Studios inTennessee. With its sonic landscape encompassing everything from R&B to funk to Brazilian pop,the album opens on the radiant synth of its title track: an exultant duet between Bermiss and Pricethat arose from a happy accident. “‘Good Together’ came from a dice roll where I was captain, butwhen I went to go work on the production I cut it up wrong and ended up with a very weird timesignature,” Bermiss recalls. “It somehow worked anyway, and Bridget came up with the narrative oftwo people from dubious backgrounds and trying to start over together.” One of several tracksfeaturing the horn section from Brooklyn-based jazz band Huntertones, the result is a left-of-centerlove song celebrating the thrill of defying expectation and following your heart’s desire. Next, on “Dance with a Stranger,” Lake Street Dive once again prove their undeniable gift forcrafting feel-good songs with an illuminating message. “I went on a solo writing retreat in Kingston,New York, and ended up attending a square dance at a VFW hall,” says Kearney in discussing thesong’s origins. “It was a group of people from all generations and all walks of life, all there dancingtogether, which made me think, ‘What if we could write a song that helped to create that kind ofconnection at our shows?’” Lit up in lush grooves, glistening textures, and exuberant gang vocalscalling out instruction (“Left, right, front, side/Find somebody new and then/Take them by thehand and/Say you understand”), “Dance with a Stranger” ultimately achieves the singular feat ofinducing a carefree euphoria while gently fostering empathy. Although much of Good Together emerged from Lake Street Dive’s incisive observation of the outsideworld, many songs mine inspiration from the intricacies of their own lives. To that end, “WalkingUphill” took shape as Price thumbed through her journal from seven years earlier, then transformeda series of underlined passages into a gripping meditation on the work of self-repair. “It’s about theidea of toil turning into something beautiful, so we wanted it to sound intense and gritty but withsome catharsis at the end,” notes Price, whose vocals shift into exquisitely raw abandon in the track’sfinal moments. Originated by Calabrese, the luminous and summery “Seats at the Bar” puts asweetly playful twist on the classic love song, unfolding in tropicália-esque rhythms and the breezybut elegant percussion of guest musician Abe Rounds (Andrew Bird, Blake Mills, Emily King).“When my wife and I first met she was in the wine industry, and sometimes I’d visit restaurants withher and we’d end up staying for dinner and sitting at the bar,” says Calabrese. “It was fun to write alove song about bucking trends in our own little way—sort of like, ‘Enjoy your fancy table with yourfancy tablecloth; we’ll be over here eating french fries and having a good time together.’” And on“Twenty-Five,” Price delivers a stark and lovely ballad steeped in tender reminiscence of a long-agoromance, her voice accompanied only by Bermiss’ gorgeously understated performance on piano.“It’s about a great love that was never meant to last, but you still end up carrying it with you for therest of your life,” says Kearney. “I thought that was a beautiful sentiment, but it also ties into thetheme of the album and the whole question of, ‘How can we as a species continue to love oneanother, in spite of all the challenges we face?’” All throughout Good Together, Lake Street Dive reveal the immense expanse of their musicality andexpressive imagination. On “Better Not Tell You,” for instance, the band presents a’70s-funk-inspired dance track Bermiss originally penned from the perspective of the three witchesin Macbeth, while “Far Gone” serves up a bouncy piece of psych-rock exploring what Price sums upas “this existential crisis where we’re all realizing we’re addicted to technology before we even got achance to take a step back from it.” Closing out the album with the dreamlike grandeur of “Set Sail(Prometheus & Eros)”—a Bermiss-Price duet featuring a spellbinding string arrangement from RobMoose (The National, St. Vincent, Bon Iver)—Lake Street Dive also endlessly tap into the palpablecamaraderie that’s fueled the band since they formed in Boston back in 2004. Lake Street Dive continue to fully embody the effusive sense of togetherness and mutual careembraced throughout Good Together. “At this point our tastes in music differ more than they everhave, but we’re still able to bring all those influences together with a real love and respect for thediversity within the band,” says Price. “I think the main thing that’s kept us going over the years isthat very strong foundation of friendship—everyone has a voice, everyone gets heard, and we’re allreally careful about looking out for each other’s happiness.” Learn More: https://tickets.lensic360.org/tickets/443598 Learn More >