feature

Thursday February 23
Thursday February 23
Friday February 24
Friday February 24
Saturday February 25
Saturday February 25
Saturday February 25
Sunday February 26
Monday February 27
Tuesday February 28
Wednesday February 29
Thursday March 1
Friday March 2
Friday March 2
Saturday March 3
Sunday March 4
Monday March 5

featured employee

A Mighty Raucous Evening with John Mark McMillan and Friends with Special Guests
Tuesday March 20 8:00PM
$10 advance/$13 day of

A Mighty Raucous Evening w/John Mark McMillan & Friends w/Special Guests The RoyalRoyal + Jude Moses



Buy tickets for John Mark McMillan





Links for John Mark McMillan: Official Site | Twitter | Myspace | Facebook | iTunes | YouTube

This show will be standing room only - with very limited seating.

 

"Raise your voice, chase away the ghosts." So begins the title track from John Mark McMillan's new release, Economy. A natural progression and a departure, McMillan's latest album has moved away from the themes of death and resurrection that clothed The Medicine to the interior psychology of a man trying to live in the uneasy valley between this world and the next, standing on the edge of the ocean of eternity, straining to see beyond the horizon line.

On Economy, that tension is electric. From the first drumbeat of album opener "Sheet of Night" to the post-rock cacophony that closes out "Seen a Darkness," there is a palpable weight that permeates the entire project. This is Gospel music run through the filter of the Southern night; this is electrified folk-the music of a man who cut his teeth on Dylan and Kerouac and Springsteen all the while haunted by the presence of the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost.

Economy is the sound of glory and shame, murder and race, darkness and daylight and all those spaces in between. And it shows up in the songs-in the delicate beauty of "Love You Swore," in the rowdy drawl of "Daylight," and the quiet solemnity of "Murdered Son."

For those following McMillan's steady rise as an artist, Economy will not disappoint. Having grown as a lyricist and musician-this body of work finds the North Carolina-based artist at his most mature. And sonically, the album is far greater than the sum of its parts, served by the production team of Jeremy Griffith and Joel Khouri, and performed by the musicians that have supported McMillan across the world. The team has created a perfect accompaniment to McMillan's searching, searing vision of a world that is "not as it should be."But it's not just a broken world that McMillan's singing about. With Economy, he's pointing out across the horizon, across the waters, to the hope of something
much more than the devil's "broken hearts and counterfeit currency."

"We have seen the night," John Mark sings, and then adds, "but we have seen the day."

 

 

Jude Moses official site

 

 

The Royal Royal official site

 

John Mark Economy Class Tour on Sale now www.thejohnmark.com from The Paradigm Collective on Vimeo.


The RoyalRoyal “Love Trailer” Official Video @iTunes Feb 14th from The Paradigm Collective on Vimeo.