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Dainon Moody

Utah's only rock ’n’ roll writer, Dainon Moody is a freelance music journalist back after his exclusive three-year tour of Europe, Scandinavia and the Subcontinent. Now writing for Salt Lake Magazine. He's been at this for a minute.

Broncho Brings the Fire

By Music

Broncho played to its excited Salt Lake City fans at the Urban Lounge on Wednesday, June 18, easily the sweatiest concert of 2025 so far. Newsflash? Utah summer is in full effect.

After a short film replaced an opening band — one that felt not unlike a discovered cologne commercial hailing from another universe, then set on a terrifying loop — the Oklahoma-based indie rockers took the small stage and immediately got down to business. The job at hand: creating and maintaining a vibe. Amid a lot of smoke and a maximum dose of reverb, the four members — Ryan Lindsey (guitar, vocals), Ben King (guitar), Penny Pitchlynn (bass), and Nathan Price (drums) — were fully invested in giving the crowd an experience. No banter. No stories collected from their travels. They came to share what they’d created, song after song in the band’s growing catalog, only pausing for seconds in between each, performing favorites like “Class Historian,” “Think I Pass,” and “Funny.” It also bears mentioning that Lindsey, in the right kind of light, looked like a young Bob Dylan, and he was just as serious and intense as that fascinating curmudgeon usually is. 

Was their music shoegaze? Hypnotic dream pop? A gauzy throwback to yesteryear? A brighter nod to Beach House? And, well, do answers to those questions matter? Perhaps it’s better not to label what they are or what they’re doing. Just know that if you were there and among the stalwarts, the gently bobbing dancers, the lovers folding themselves into one another and choosing to stay impossibly close despite the heat, the atmosphere Broncho shared was strong. The vibe they brought with them held. And if you closed your eyes and gave in, everything about the show felt as it should. It 100 percent made sense.


Read more of our music coverage and get the latest on the arts and culture scene in and around Utah. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

Utah Arts Festival Headliner Leftover Salmon on Dreams, Touring and the State of Bluegrass

By Music

Colorado’s Leftover Salmon will play the 49th Annual Utah Arts Festival in Salt Lake City on Thursday, June 19, one of just four planned musical headliners scheduled to play throughout the weekend. Others include Robert Randolph, Souls of Mischief, and MV Caldera. We caught up with Drew Emmitt, one of the band’s original members, while he was at home in Crested Butte, CO. Our conversation included his 35 years in the band, hearing his songs covered in Japan, the power of the Grateful Dead, and the magic of Sam Bush.

Can you share what makes you love doing what you do?

Well, we have a great time. Every one of us loves getting on stage together and playing music. And, honestly, our fans have allowed us to do this for the past 35 years.

Did you ever dream you would be doing it basically all your life?

I don’t know if we thought of it that way, especially not Vince and me, the band’s two original members. We came up with this goofy name and threw it together as a fun band to play Crested Butte and Telluride. Playing in ski areas, not just bluegrass festivals, sounded fun. It was a way to get out and start playing more. We never expected anything beyond that. Nobody’s more surprised than us.

And you have a brand-new album that just came out, right?

Yeah, Let’s Party About It came out a few weeks ago.

We recorded it in November in Nashville, Tennessee. We wrote it together as a band, the first time we’ve ever done that. We rented an Airbnb out on the beach in Wrightsville, North Carolina. We met with our friend Aaron Raitiere, a great Nashville songwriter. He helped us formulate the tunes, conduct pre-production, and assist with writing. We did so much preparation that we were able to bang it out in four days. Everybody played a part, and that’s reflected on the record. It doesn’t feel like we pieced it together. I love that it has a very live feel to it.

Do you play differently when you play a festival than when you’re touring?

Every time we step on stage in front of a big crowd, it energizes us. At festivals, you always have that feeling when you’re playing; you’re wondering if these people have ever heard these songs before, and there are those who do, too. It’s an interesting couple of worlds to be tightrope walking across, but that makes it exciting. Some people know your tunes, and those who haven’t heard them before. Either way is exhilarating.

I’ve heard excellent bluegrass coming out of Japan, a place you wouldn’t quite expect to hear it, but the internet makes the world a smaller place.

I wrote a song called “Valley the Full Moon ” years ago. If you Google it, you’ll find a band in Japan playing and singing it word for word. It blew me away. It’s obvious they don’t speak English, but they learned how to play and sing it very well. It was a huge compliment.

Do you feel like you live more in the bluegrass world or the jam band world?

Both. We wanted to play festivals and tour, and we figured out how to do both simultaneously when, before, you could only do one or the other. You could only be a bluegrass band or a rock band.

Growing up, I played a lot of lead guitar. When I was a teenager, I started playing the mandolin. When this band started, I had been playing bluegrass for a while, and I put down my electric guitar. But when we started 35 years ago, I picked up the electric guitar again, and I’ve been able to play both, which is a dream.

Are you a better mandolin player than Sam Bush?

Oh, hell no. He’s the master. He’ll always be my main mandolin inspiration. I’m OK with the fact I can’t quite do what Sam does because nobody else can. Nobody sounds like him. There are a lot of great mandolin players out there, and I can name many of them, but there’s nobody like Sam. He’s the one. I have other favorites, but Sam’s definitely the king.

Have you been influenced by the Grateful Dead at all?

We cover a little bit of the Grateful Dead. It’s common for bands to do, but we definitely have been influenced a lot by them. Jerry Garcia was in a jug band before the Grateful Dead, an old-timey band called The Warlocks. He was obviously a banjo player, and he played pedal steel. They had David Grisman and Vassar Clements on the recordings. They covered some Peter Rowan songs. And, of course, Old & The Way greatly influenced the bluegrass world. For many years, it was the highest-selling bluegrass album in history.

The Grateful Dead had great songs. With Robert Hunter’s help, they could take those tunes and jam them out, which has been the blueprint for many bands. But when I think about the Grateful Dead, it’s much more than jamming. They were defined by great, great songwriting.

After three and a half decades, what’s left to do in your career?

I don’t feel we’ve done it all by a long shot. Personally, I have a long way to go to get better. As a musician, I’m constantly practicing and working on being a better songwriter and singer. There is no goal other than to keep growing, experimenting with new music, and seeing where it all leads. And we would love to tour more places around the world. We’ve been to Europe a couple of times and want to go back, and we’d love to play in Japan and Australia. We want to get out, see more of the world, and play to crowds that haven’t heard us yet.

And what, pray tell, is your favorite place to play in the world?

I always have to say Red Rocks [Amphitheatre] is the best. We played there a few weeks ago, and it was magical, as always. As far as places we’ve played, nothing beats it. Nothing is that cool.

See the full Utah Arts Festival Music lineup here.

  • WHO: Leftover Salmon
  • WHAT: Utah Arts Festival
  • WHEN: Thursday, June 19, 9:30 p.m.
  • WHERE: Library Square, Salt Lake City (200 East 400 South) 
  • Tickets and info: uaf.org


Read more of our music coverage and find all our Kilby Block Party reviews. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

Interview: Patterson Hood of Drive-by Truckers

By Music

A habit we appreciate: when touring bands make a point of visiting, both regularly and frequently. It’ll be a familiar sight when Patterson Hood and the rest of the Drive-By Truckers play Red Butte Garden in Salt Lake City on Tuesday, June 17, 2025. After all, it’ll be their third or fourth time to do so, long enough to pick out their favorite spots. Their connection to these parts dates back to 2000, when the Zephyr Club thrived.

“And it’s probably cliche to say because every touring band loves the place, but we like eating at Red Iguana,” Patterson says from his home in Oregon. “We all love it, and there’s a good reason for that.”

Patterson hails from rock royalty: his dad is David Hood, longtime bassist of the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section (aka The Swampers) and a member of the Alabama Hall of Fame. David has played on his son’s solo records and even recorded a still-unreleased album with him and members of the North Mississippi All-Stars. It included Jim Dickinson, one of his dad’s peers, who’s played with the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, and Elvis Costello.

Drive-by Truckers - Patterson Hood - Red Butte
Patterson Hood of the Drive-by Truckers. Photo Credit – Jason Thrasher

Talking about his dad is a real source of pride for Patterson, as he acknowledges he’s played on some of the most incredible albums ever recorded. His dad also has excellent taste.

“My dad’s record collection influenced me more than anything else musically,” Patterson says. “I’d tell my mom I was headed downstairs to do homework when he was still at work, and instead, I’d put on headphones and raid his records, just spend endless hours doing so.”

The Drive-By Truckers are bringing familiar faces with them this go-round (Deer Tick) and some that are decidedly less so (Thelma and the Sleaze). That’s code for gently nudging you to show up on time.

According to Patterson, you won’t want to miss any of the three.

“Thelma and the Sleaze are an all-women, three-piece punk rock band that rock balls,” Patterson says. “Really good, really fun.”

  • WHO: Drive-By Truckers w/ Deer Tick, Thelma and the Sleaze
  • WHEN: Tuesday, June 17, 2025 (Doors: 5:30, Show: 6:30)
  • WHERE: Red Butte Garden
  • TICKETS AND INFO: TICKETS


Read more of our music coverage and get the latest on the arts and culture scene in and around Utah. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

Amblin’ Band Set to Channel The Ramblin’ Man

By Music

When Triggers & Slips’ frontman Morgan Snow was growing up, he and his older brothers spent their days and nights camping and fishing, hunting and barbecuing. No matter what the activity was, their soundtrack was always predetermined: all Waylon Jennings, all the time.

Snow’s band, Triggers & Slips, will perform a tribute night of Waylon Jennings’ music at The State Room on Sunday, June 15, 2025, at 8 p.m.

That music became ingrained in him as he grew older and became a musician in his late 20s. When his band of 15 years started prepping for their Waylon Jennings tribute show months ago—gathering dutifully to rehearse a couple times a week—they already knew 10 of his songs by heart. By the time they play Sunday, they’ll have doubled that number, landing on ways of channeling all the grit, attitude, and character of the late Grammy-winning country music singer, songwriter, and guitarist, and finding ways of making his songs their own.

Their mission in paying tribute to Jennings is two-fold: helping those who love his music remember how incredible it was while allowing those who’ve never heard his songs to understand how iconic that music ultimately still is.

“The sad reality is, if you turn on the radio, you’re unlikely to hear any Waylon,” Snow says. “The opportunity for people to hear a single song is next to none. You have to seek him out or know what to be listening for,” Snow says.

The concert was initially set to happen at The Garage on Beck, now defunct after 17 years. It’s where Snow was in January when he decided this long-considered tribute finally needed to happen. The light bulb moment that set it in motion was simple enough: he discovered Waylon “Hoss” Jennings’ 88th birthday would happen on Father’s Day, June 15. It’s the same day he needed to make this happen.

Tributes aren’t new territory for Snow. He was attached to nights of music celebrating Justin Townes Earle and Bob Dylan earlier this year and even did a countrified take on the Alice in Chains catalog in 2019, spending over six months practicing to get it right.

But Sunday’s show will likely feel more personal than those others. One reason: when he started writing music, his songs came out sounding like Waylon songs. That was hardly planned for, but it wasn’t a huge surprise, either: Waylon is, after all, one of his biggest musical influences. Sometimes the late singer even pays visits to his subconscious.

Snow wrote a song called “Old Friends” in 2012, the result of a dream he had where he found himself on Waylon’s tour bus. They were joined by Snow’s recently deceased buddy, too, who was killed in Iraq. It made sense, as that friend had taught him guitar when he lived in Myrtle Beach. The bus was either going to Heaven or Hell or both. Snow says the song had a Waylon vibe; the recording sounded like how he believes he would have done it.

“It’s authentic what they were doing then. There’s never going to be another Willy [Nelson] or Waylon. That era is done. It’s not possible to recreate it,” Snow says. “But we can still be inspired by them. They can remind me to keep finding ways of continuing to be me and allowing that to find its way into the songwriting.”

  • WHAT: Waylon Jennings Tribute Show
  • WHO: Triggers & Slips, w/ special guests J-Rad Cooley, Dylan Schorer, Kate LeDeuce, Jerry Cochran, Rick Gerber, Michelle Moonshine, Megan Blue + others
  • WHEN: Sunday, June 15, 2025 at 8 p.m.
  • WHERE: The State Room


Read more of our music coverage and get the latest on the arts and culture scene in and around Utah. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

Review: Ryan Bingham at Red Butte

By Music

When Ryan Bingham and The Texas Gentlemen paid Salt Lake City’s Red Butte Garden a visit on Sunday (June 8, 2025), part of Bingham’s 17-date All Night Long Tour, his wide-eyed fans did everyone on stage a solid by selling the night out. They also wore a lot of cowboy hats and/or boots because, well, both tend to match a country music show nicely.

It’s safe to assume that many of the assembled audience had first discovered Ryan Bingham from the popular Kevin Costner vehicle Yellowstone (AKA Cowboy Falcon Crest). Bingham, who is also an actor, played Walker, a hang-dog ranchhand and itinerant barroom troubadour, who became one of the series’ most popular secondary characters.  

Opting to play two complete sets of music instead of bothering with an opener, fans got even more than what they bargained for, and that’s always a good-to-great thing. Bingham casually made his way through older favorites (“Jingle and Go,” “Bluebird,” “The Weary Kind”) as well as songs so new they’ve yet to be recorded (and his “Americana” deserves to be played on the radio already). Looking a little like Matthew McConaughey’s kid brother and owning up to a similarly easy Texas grin, Bingham and the rest of his players were in great spirits, which had a ripple effect on all attending.

Is it OK to end a review with a request? (It’s got to be because I’m about to do it.) The locals deserve a whole night of music from The Texas Gentlemen whenever their next time rolls around. They’re a more than capable backing band—not unlike the Heartbreakers sans their late Tom Petty superstar—and pointing a spotlight in their direction would more than prove that. And whatever tour manager takes me up on that suggestion will find that out for themselves. Music gods, make it so.


Read more of our music coverage and get the latest on the arts and culture scene in and around Utah. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

7 June Shows To Add To Your Radar

By Music

Sunday, June 8

Who: Ryan Bingham and The Texas Gentlemen
Where: Red Butte Garden Amphitheatre
When: 7:30 p.m.
What: Any chance you’ve seen 2009’s Crazy Heart with Jeff Bridges (aka everybody’s favorite)? It was my gateway drug to Ryan Bigham’s genius. He wrote the movie’s theme (“The Weary Kind”), and that song alone has all the power in the world to get stuck in your head for days (weeks?) in a row. It led to album buying and Bingham liking/loving. As for The Texas Gentlemen, that’s another story entirely, and they’re worth their own time in the spotlight. Consider this night a twofer, folks. Extra bangs for all of your precious bucks.

Tickets 

Tuesday and Wednesday, June 10-11

Who: They Might Be Giants
Where: The Depot
When: 8 p.m.
What: If you snagged a ticket to either of their two Salt Lake City shows, count those lucky stars 1-2-3, my friends. It’ll be a hot time in ye olde time machine. From the band’s site: “We are doing favorites and new stuff, along with very different old stuff. With 85+ songs now in active repertoire, the shows change radically from night to night, and there is a different album in the spotlight every night. This tour is a full-on celebration of all things They Might Be Giants. 8-piece band. 3 horns. 2 sets. It’s ‘An Evening with’ so it starts early, with no opener. Doors at 7, we are on stage at 8.”

Tickets: SOLD OUT!!

Thursday, June 12

Who: Bloc Party
Where: Union Event Center
When: 6:30 p.m.
What: What goes around, comes around, and when it comes to solid muzak, that’s a welcome thing, maybe the most welcome. It wasn’t many years ago that Bloc Party was playing small but powerful shows at In The Venue downtown. The fact they’ve graduated to a much larger space to match their enormous sound is cause for celebration, not to mention getting the chance to revisit some of their greatest hits (and songs like “Helicopter,” “Banquet,” and “This Modern Love” are so worth the revisit).

Tickets

Sunday, June 22

Who: Gillian Welch & David Rawlings
Where: Capitol Theatre
When: 7:30 p.m.
What: One of the greatest parts about seeing Gillian Welch and David Rawlings perform is how little they tend to focus on the unnecessary. There is no light show. There (usually) isn’t a warm-up band. Whether you’ve seen the duo live or watched any footage surrounding their current tour, it’s all about their harmonies. Those are what’s on display. The duo is so good together that it’s hard to tell where one voice starts and the other stops. It makes for a magnificent sound, one of the best in the music world. If you pick just one show to head to this month, I gently urge you in this direction. Fingers crossed that Gillian does a little clogging, too.

Tickets

Monday, June 23

Who: Weird Al Yankovic
Where: The Maverik Center
When: 7:30 p.m.
What: He’s retired from making albums (or so he says), but Weird Al is still bringing all his weirdness out on tour, where it belongs. This night promises to be Bigger and Weirder than anything he’s done previously. Reminds me of a time I pressed a friend of mine who lives in Vegas, asking who was the best act he’d ever seen on the Strip (and he’d seen plenty). Without hesitating, he shared that Weird Al was his number one. It’s a lot of parodies, sure, but it’s also frequent costume changes, dancing, production, etc. The songs are goofy, but that spectacle’s extra shiny. His Utah date has been mostly sold out for a minute, but it’ll be worth it if you can land a seat at this one. Especially if he dons his “Fat” suit.

Tickets   

Thursday, June 26

Who: James McMurtry 
Where: Commonwealth Room
When: 8 p.m.
What: McMurtry is one of the more familiar faces in these parts, and we welcome him any time he cares to pass/amble through. He’s a storyteller on all levels, one of the most verbose singer-songwriters still creating tales worth telling. It’s a feat in itself that he can remember so many verses and lyrics. McMurtry shares his writing secret: “You follow the words where they lead. If you can get a character, maybe you can get a story. If you can set it to a verse-chorus structure, maybe you can get a song. A song can come from anywhere, but the main inspiration is fear. Specifically, fear of irrelevance. If you don’t have songs, you don’t have a record. If you don’t have a record, you don’t have a tour. You gotta keep putting out work.”   

Tickets

Saturday, June 28

Who: Modest Mouse
Where: Ogden Amphitheater
When: 7 p.m.
What: Part of the Ogden Twilight series, this is one of the more sold-out shows on this list (it seems to be trending, that), and for a few very good reasons. Modest Mouse is still one of the hardest-working bands there is; they’re playing more than half the dates in the month of June alone. Also, they remain one of the best bands to see live. Period. Isaac Brock doesn’t know how to give less than 1500 percent, and that has a glorious ripple effect on his audiences. Did I snag a ticket before they all went away? No, I did not. And I’ll have to think long and hard about the errors in my ways.

For bonus points, pay these shows visits too: The Detroit Cobras (6/11, Urban Lounge), Trevor Hall w/ Fruit Bats (6/13, Granary Live), Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass (Capitol Theatre, 6/14), Waylon Jennings Tribute Show (6/15, State Room), Drive-By Truckers w/ Deer Tick (6/17, Red Butte), Polyrhythmics (6/28, Commonwealth)


Read more of our music coverage and get the latest on the arts and culture scene in and around Utah. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

Red Butte Gets Trampled by Turtles

By Music

Trampled By Turtles paid Salt Lake City’s Red Butte Garden a visit on Thursday, May 29, 2025, and it felt a lot like perfection. As just the second band to play Red Butte’s stacked Outdoor Concert Series this season, the bluegrass folkers from Duluth, Minnesota, landed here on one of the best weather days in eons. Spring’s getting stretched out this year, so it was cool, never cold. It was warm at times, but never too hot. Goldilocks weather. Add some banjo, hands blurring fast as they play the mandolin, voices made to harmonize together, and that’s a good recipe for happiness. The band was feeling it too; frontman Dave Simonett remarked halfway through, “This is the best time I’ve ever had in Salt Lake City … and I’ve been here lots of times.”

The sold-out crowd got to enjoy a more than generous 24-song set that included favorites like “You Never Let Me Down,” “Right Back Where We Started,” “Whiskey,” and “Wait So Long.” And while their discography is riddled with plenty of originals, even their choice of covers last night deserves mentioning. Their twangy take on “Wild Horses” was fittingly apropos — and it invited the swaying, the singing along, the old-school familiarity. When a bluegrass band decides to take on “Fake Plastic Trees” by Radiohead, though, that’s something else. We noticed. We pulled out our phones to capture a bit of it. We paid close attention as they paid tribute. They made it their own but did right by Thom Yorke and the rest of the boys simultaneously.

Same time next year, guys? We’ll save you a spot. After last night, you’re in. 

Full photo coverage and gallery by Natalie Simpson, Beehive Photography. Instagram @BeehivePhotoVideo


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Read more of our music coverage and get the latest on the arts and culture scene in and around Utah. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

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Kilby Block Party 2025: Day Four Recap

By Kilby Block Party

Sunday marked the fourth and final day of the Kilby Block Party festival (May 18, 2025). While it was the coldest (at times) and definitely the wettest day of the rest — there were soaked attendees and large puddles to navigate around and/or splash through as constant proof — the diehards showed up early. It was not unlike rubbing shoulders with a crowd of sturdy and determined birdwatchers — wide-eyed, smiling, staring, slack jawed — only this one came with a more varied soundtrack, no binoculars required.

The sun started peeking out as The Pains of Being Pure At Heart played, and the shot of warmth was added cause for celebration. Their breezy set was a preview for the rest of the day, too, as it delved heavily into indie music territory with sets by Real Estate, Tennis (taking its final lap and on their last tour ever), Jay Som, Suki Waterhouse, Nation of Language, among a few scattered others. It felt like the dial of time got turned back a decade or two, as elements of the ‘80s and ‘90s were on full and vibrant display in most behind the microphones. In most (if not all) ways, the masterminds behind Kilby gave attendees/customers what they most wanted to hear and experience. If there were any complaints, they were drowned out by those doing all the cheering.


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Photography by Natalie Simpson | Beehive Photo

The most anticipated band of the day easily belonged to TV On The Radio, currently enjoying a welcome resurgence in popularity. As they gave an electric performance (complete with stunning visuals and political messages, reminding us that all the music they played was anti-fascist in nature), the sunset even played its own part. It dropped out of the sky for good shortly before “Staring at the Sun” paved the way for Justice as the final band of the night.

TV on the Radio. Photo by Natalie Simpson | Beehive Photo

A festival rarely gets it so right, but Kilby regularly did so. What started as a little festival competing with the more prominent ones is becoming a growing replacement. It is a thinking man’s fest that challenges itself to think outside the box and “festival better” than others. A favorite part personally was getting to ride the train to and from the festival every day, and leaving parking woes behind. Ticket prices included public transportation for all days; if it’s not something other festivals are doing throughout the country already, it’s a great idea to absorb. 

Justice. Photo by Natalie Simpson | Beehive Photo


Read our all our daily recaps:

Read more of our music coverage and find all our Kilby Block Party reviews. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

Review: Sharon Van Etten at Metro Music Hall

By Music

Sharon Van Etten heralded a busy week of music in Salt Lake City when she played Metro Music Hall on Tuesday (May 13, 2025), supporting their latest, 2025’s Sharon Van Etten & The Attachment Theory. Without leaning on any opener, the band started out quietly and powerfully with “Live Forever,” and kept an attentive crowd nothing less than captivated from that point on. On one hand, it immediately felt like a band that’s risen to the full extent of its superpowers. On that other hand, it was just ethereal. Powerful. Emotional. If a resident (or touring) witch cast a spell on the lot of us on Tuesday, we were all the better for it.

Photography by Natalie Simpson, Beehive Photo and Video

This album is the first the band’s ever written together, and the concert felt like an extension of that. Throughout the evening, Van Etten did her share of checking in with all on stage, pulling attention and giving the rest their due whenever it felt right to do so. While new songs were primarily on display — they tackled all but “Indo” off their 10-track album — Van Etten still dabbled into crowd favorites territory, with a nod to the late, great David Lynch (“Tarifa”), a sped-up version of “Every Time The Sun Comes Up,” and, of course, “Seventeen”. That last tune found Van Etten bending down and sing-screaming directly into a fan’s face on the front row, which was likely a far better souvenir to take home than anything at the merch booth.

It’s worth noting that the new album feels especially good and already fits whatever your most comfortable tee feels like. If you’ve not scooped up or streamed it yet, you’re doing yourself a grave disservice. This review comes with the best kind of homework: go listen to all of it. Dance along. Sing. You may even accidentally fall in love.


Read more of our music coverage and get the latest on the arts and culture scene in and around Utah. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

Amos Lee + Utah Symphony = Magic

By Music

ICYMI, Amos Lee and his band performed with the Utah Symphony last Saturday (May 10, 2025) at Abravanel Hall in Salt Lake City. In short, it was lovely. It’d be easier to say “no notes,” but that would defeat the purpose of this review. Instead, I’ll say it was like hearing some of your favorite songs with a lush movie score along for the ride as added emphasis.

While it isn’t uncommon for some of the more easy-to-love voices and singers in our midst to have their songs rearranged for classically-trained musicians — and it’s practically a rite of passage for some — it wasn’t just the ticket buyers who benefited; it was a home run for all involved. It was a way of giving the audience above and beyond what it could have ever expected. Lee’s band was constantly thrilled by what the orchestra behind them did with their pieces, and it regularly showed in their expressions.

Lee paused frequently to share how thrilled he was to be the glue holding all the swirling pieces together. In the generous 20-song set that included songs like “Street Corner Preacher,” “Keep It Loose, Keep It Tight,” “Sweet Pea,” and “Arms of a Woman,” Lee showed his impressive range throughout. He was a singular talent surrounded by rich talent (his band), which was backed by even more talent (Andrew Lipke was conducting the orchestra and, by the looks of it, having a lot of fun doing so). Maybe it’ll never be repeated, and that would be a shame. But if there is another night like this one, even if it’s a few years down the road, let’s hope the sequel has as much magic as they created this time around.

Read more of our music coverage and get the latest on the arts and culture scene in and around Utah. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

Salt Lake Magazine - Amos Lee - Photo by Ian Mower
Amos Lee – Photo by Ian Mower – Courtesy Utah Symphony