$20 advance / $25 day of show
Buy Tickets
(((folkYEAH!))) Presents: Chris Cohen w/ Invisible Dog
Fri Jul | 26 2024
Doors: 8:00 PM /
Show: 9:00 PM
Moe's Alley
,
1535 Commercial Way,
Santa Cruz,
CA
(((folkYEAH!))) Presents: Chris Cohen with special guests Invisible Dog
Friday, July 26th
Doors: 8pm / Show: 9pm
$20 in advance / $25 day of the show
21+
CHRIS COHEN
Friday, July 26th
Doors: 8pm / Show: 9pm
$20 in advance / $25 day of the show
21+
CHRIS COHEN
Chris Cohen was always a quiet kid. In fact, this introversion was one reason he began playing music as a toddler—to communicate without speaking, to identify with others without the direct representation of words. It has worked, too, with Cohen’s terrific stint in the mighty Deerhoof and his own captivating art-rock act The Curtains preceding production and session work for the likes of Weyes Blood, Kurt Vile, Le Ren, and Marina Allen. Somewhere along that long way, Cohen started writing lyrics. He found that, though it didn’t come naturally, the process offered a new sense of self-discovery and reckoning, a way to see himself and the world from unexpected angles. His three twilit albums of casually complicated pop during the last decade radiated these epiphanies: handling family strife, navigating advancing age, and understanding social woes.
But Cohen has never had as much to sing so directly as he does on Paint a Room, his first album in five years and his debut for Hardly Art. If Cohen’s meanings have previously lurked inside the tessellated musical layers he built alone, they are newly clear and resonant here, animated and underscored for the first time by a band playing in real time. There is the endless miasma of state violence on the subversively melodious opener “Damage,” the existential exhaustion of modernity on the horn-traced jangle “Laughing”: this is Cohen communicating with friends not only through his deep understanding of groove, harmony, and hook but also with his listeners through songs that croon of our uneasy little era.
In the past, Cohen made records in spells of isolation, phases when, as he puts it, he would “try to make my world a lot smaller.” He would play any of a dozen or so instruments until he stumbled upon something interesting, then slowly build upward and outward upon the idea. The method was solitary and stepwise, an act of accretion and deletion.
INVISIBLE DOG
INVISIBLE DOG (musical oddjobber and library worker Adam Payne of RESIDUAL ECHOES) combines incidental/library music sampling with live instrumentation and electronics, establishing original compositions intended to mimic larger ensembles while retaining the one-person project concept.
INVISIBLE DOG
INVISIBLE DOG (musical oddjobber and library worker Adam Payne of RESIDUAL ECHOES) combines incidental/library music sampling with live instrumentation and electronics, establishing original compositions intended to mimic larger ensembles while retaining the one-person project concept.
Please Note: This event is 21 and over. Any Ticket holder unable to present valid identification indicating that they are at least 21 years of age will not be admitted to this event, and will not be eligible for a refund.