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Jail Weddings Tickets, Tour Dates and %{concertOrShowText}
Jail Weddings Tickets, Tour Dates and %{concertOrShowText}

Jail WeddingsVerified

1,507 Followers
Never miss another Jail Weddings concert. Get alerts about tour announcements, concert tickets, and shows near you with a free Bandsintown account.
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No upcoming shows
Send a request to Jail Weddings to play in your city
Request a Show

concerts and tour dates

Past

AUG
26
2020
Los Angeles, CA
Zebulon
I Was There
OCT
26
2019
Long Beach, CA
Alex's Bar
I Was There
OCT
22
2019
Los Angeles, CA
The Love Song Bar
I Was There
OCT
21
2019
Los Angeles, CA
The Love Song Bar
I Was There
OCT
01
2019
Albany, CA
Ivy Room
I Was There
SEP
28
2019
Seattle, WA
Lo-Fi
I Was There
SEP
24
2019
Los Angeles, CA
The Satellite
I Was There
JUL
24
2019
Costa Mesa, CA
The Wayfarer
I Was There
JUN
12
2019
Long Beach, CA
Alex's Bar
I Was There
JUN
11
2019
Los Angeles, CA
The Echo
I Was There
MAY
09
2019
San Francisco, CA
Thee Parkside
I Was There
MAY
03
2019
Long Beach, CA
Alex's Bar
I Was There
FEB
23
2018
Los Angeles, CA
The Hi Hat
I Was There
FEB
18
2018
Long Beach, CA
Alex's Bar
I Was There
OCT
23
2017
Fullerton, CA
The Continental Room
I Was There
SEP
26
2017
Los Angeles, CA
The Echo
I Was There
NOV
10
2016
Pioneertown, CA
Pappy & Harriet's
I Was There
DEC
12
2014
Los Angeles, CA
The Echo
I Was There
NOV
13
2014
Los Angeles, CA
Los Globos
I Was There
OCT
25
2014
Chemnitz, Germany
AJZ
I Was There
OCT
24
2014
Berlin, Germany
Schokoladen
I Was There
OCT
23
2014
Potsdam, Germany
Kuze
I Was There
OCT
22
2014
Wurzburg, Germany
Cairo
I Was There
OCT
19
2014
Bielefeld, Germany
AJZ
I Was There
OCT
18
2014
Kiel, Germany
Hansa 48
I Was There
OCT
17
2014
Leipzig, Germany
Baustelle/Schauspiel Leipzig
I Was There
OCT
16
2014
Praha, Czech Republic
007
I Was There
OCT
15
2014
Brno, Czech Republic
Vegalite
I Was There
OCT
13
2014
Offenbach, Germany
Hafen 2
I Was There
OCT
11
2014
Aalborg, Denmark
1000 Fryd
I Was There
OCT
10
2014
Hamburg, Germany
Størte
I Was There
OCT
09
2014
Cologne, Germany
Sonic Ballroom
I Was There
OCT
08
2014
Aachen, Germany
Az
I Was There
SEP
30
2014
Los Angeles, CA
La Cita
I Was There
SEP
21
2014
San Diego, CA
Til-Two Club
I Was There
SEP
20
2014
Mexicali, Mexico
Mexicali Rose
I Was There
JUN
26
2014
Nashville, TN
The End
I Was There
JUN
21
2014
Brooklyn, NY
Baby's All Right
I Was There
JUN
19
2014
Cleveland, OH
Grog Shop
I Was There
JUN
15
2014
Denver, CO
Hi-Dive
I Was There
JUN
04
2014
Los Angeles, CA
Los Globos
I Was There
MAY
23
2014
West Hollywood, CA
Troubadour
I Was There
APR
11
2014
Los Angeles, CA
Echoplex
I Was There
APR
09
2014
San Diego, CA
Soda Bar
I Was There
DEC
07
2013
Boise, ID
Neurolux Lounge
I Was There
DEC
06
2013
Spokane, WA
Mootsy's
I Was There
DEC
05
2013
Seattle, WA
Chop Suey
I Was There
DEC
04
2013
Portland, OR
east end
I Was There
DEC
03
2013
San Francisco, CA
Bottom Of The Hill
I Was There
SEP
27
2013
Costa Mesa, CA
Detroit Bar
I Was There
Show More Dates

About Jail Weddings

Jail Weddings' epic second full length is quite aptly titled. Meltdown: the flailing emotional implosion often borne of a triumvirate of frayed nerves, volatile substances and excessive external pressure is clearly evidenced in the words and music herein. But, there's also a newfound sense of musical genres and histories mixing together like molten wax where the band's signature Shangri-La's, Bad Seeds, noir-hued pop merges with hazy psychedelia, bombastic rock and even essences of bizarre Eastern European folk. It's the sound of a band that's always been at the brink of self-destruction actually growing and thriving on its own chaotic impulses. It's now six years into something that wasn’t expected to last six months -- this “thing” called Jail Weddings. While the songs have always been timeless and top notch, they're also a band whose initial popularity often hinged on the fact that it could all fall apart at any given moment -- with frequent dagger eyes or fistfights both onstage and off -- where it was always clear to the audience that the high-drama of the songs often spilled into the band members' own precarious lives. They are a group that audiences could live through vicariously, a band capable of not just inspiring listeners' ugly catharsis, but often enacting its own in public. One of few that could claim they are not just a band, but a lifestyle all their own. It was late 2012 when we had last checked in with frontman Gabriel Hart, who explained that last year’s Four Future Standards EP (described by VICE Magazine as “music to have knife sex to”) was also the gradual bridge to their more grandiose work-in-progress second full-length. Hart ensured that anyone who thought they were any sort of “party band” would be gravely mistaken upon hearing what they had been stirring up in their charred cauldron. Little did he know it would take well over 365 days to finish what he had started, where the stakes were raised, bank accounts drained, sanity/sobriety and sleep compromised, and their longtime rhythm section and one of their back-up singers lost…where towards the end it would cause him and his eight-headed collective to treat it with all the intensity a band would as if it was the last record they would ever record, even though their present locomotive momentum will prove at least that part otherwise. And what better process to make a record, Meltdown – A Declaration of Unpopular Emotion which Hart describes as a somewhat conceptual “dissection of the personal Apocalypse.” A record whose liner notes cite such patron saints as disparate as philosopher Carl Jung and enfant terrible Francis Farmer as touchstones? But, this is only for the uninitiated to understand – as within the first listen of Meltdown one will soon realize this record is indeed a vast, universal tantrum, where the best path of protest is often to create one's own atmosphere, to secede from pain through a self-imposed baptism of fire. And, the end inspiration proves once again one must look no further than Jail Weddings' own twisted, snake-eating-its-tail world they’ve created. Meltdown begins somewhat similarly to their 2010 debut Love Is Lawless -- Hart’s lone baritone accompanied by minimal instrumentation slowly building the anticipation that something is about to leave a crater in its wake. But, instead of the Broadway schmaltz approach of their previous effort’s intro, the song explodes as if they are going into battle, marching drums and ominous war siren back-ups announce that they are going into this nervous breakdown unabashed. And before we get a chance to catch our breath, they blow right into the electric 12-string guitar of “May Today Be Merciful” where Hart sets the real tone of the record as if Echo and The Bunnymen were lost in some bad trip section of L.A.’s Paisley Underground scene. Elsewhere, "Why Is it so Hard To Be Good?" lumbers to a start with thunderous early-Swans sounding drums leading a dark lament of our collective penchant to do wrong. Throughout the album there's chiming power-pop ("Dead Celebrity Party"), somber balladry ("Summer Fades", "Obsession"), dramatic pageantry that would make Born To Run era Springsteen blush ("Angel of Sleep") and so many other twists and turns that the album's dramatic title will make perfect sense. Sessions for Meltdown commenced once again at their home base of The Station House in Echo Park with engineer and co-producer Mark Rains (Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Waylon Jennings, etc). The line-up on Meltdown proves to be their most enduring, sturdiest and studied yet – familiar faces from their last effort being Hart’s right hand man Christopher Rager on guitar (and co-producing), last O.G. member Hannah Blumenfeld on strings (the group has since turned her into an octopus string quartet in the studio – recently earning her full-string duties on the new Ghostface Killer record), secret weapon Marty Sataman on piano/synths, vocalists Jada Wagensomer, Marianne Stewart and Kristina B holding steady as three-part harmony dream team, with Wagensomer occasionally moving front and center as Hart’s female counterpart, where they duet on “Why Is It So Hard To Be Good?” and “…Keeping The Faith,” also seeing her solo spotlight on “A Promise” and “…Never Going To Find Me.” The new fierce rhythm section that came swinging to rescue the group from mid-recording uncertainty includes Morgan Hart Delaney on bass (and blood, as Hart’s own cousin) and Hart’s long co-conspirator Dave Clifford (The VSS, Pleasure Forever, Red Sparowes, Hart’s own Starvations/Fortune’s Flesh) on drums. Meltdown -- A Declaration of Unpopular Emotion will be available on LP and download via Neurotic Yell Records on August 27th, 2013. Currently at work on 3rd full-length album, "Blood Moon Blue."
Show More
Genres:
R&b/soul, Melodramatic Popular Song, Soul, Pop, Rnb-soul
Band Members:
Gabriel Hart - vocals saxophone, Dave Clifford - drums, Kristina Benson - keyboards vocals, Jail Weddings is…, Seth Miller - bass guitar, Mary Animaux - vocals, Anthony Cozzi- guitar, Julie Carpenter - strings
Hometown:
Los Angeles, California

No upcoming shows
Send a request to Jail Weddings to play in your city
Request a Show

concerts and tour dates

Past

AUG
26
2020
Los Angeles, CA
Zebulon
I Was There
OCT
26
2019
Long Beach, CA
Alex's Bar
I Was There
OCT
22
2019
Los Angeles, CA
The Love Song Bar
I Was There
OCT
21
2019
Los Angeles, CA
The Love Song Bar
I Was There
OCT
01
2019
Albany, CA
Ivy Room
I Was There
SEP
28
2019
Seattle, WA
Lo-Fi
I Was There
SEP
24
2019
Los Angeles, CA
The Satellite
I Was There
JUL
24
2019
Costa Mesa, CA
The Wayfarer
I Was There
JUN
12
2019
Long Beach, CA
Alex's Bar
I Was There
JUN
11
2019
Los Angeles, CA
The Echo
I Was There
MAY
09
2019
San Francisco, CA
Thee Parkside
I Was There
MAY
03
2019
Long Beach, CA
Alex's Bar
I Was There
FEB
23
2018
Los Angeles, CA
The Hi Hat
I Was There
FEB
18
2018
Long Beach, CA
Alex's Bar
I Was There
OCT
23
2017
Fullerton, CA
The Continental Room
I Was There
SEP
26
2017
Los Angeles, CA
The Echo
I Was There
NOV
10
2016
Pioneertown, CA
Pappy & Harriet's
I Was There
DEC
12
2014
Los Angeles, CA
The Echo
I Was There
NOV
13
2014
Los Angeles, CA
Los Globos
I Was There
OCT
25
2014
Chemnitz, Germany
AJZ
I Was There
OCT
24
2014
Berlin, Germany
Schokoladen
I Was There
OCT
23
2014
Potsdam, Germany
Kuze
I Was There
OCT
22
2014
Wurzburg, Germany
Cairo
I Was There
OCT
19
2014
Bielefeld, Germany
AJZ
I Was There
OCT
18
2014
Kiel, Germany
Hansa 48
I Was There
OCT
17
2014
Leipzig, Germany
Baustelle/Schauspiel Leipzig
I Was There
OCT
16
2014
Praha, Czech Republic
007
I Was There
OCT
15
2014
Brno, Czech Republic
Vegalite
I Was There
OCT
13
2014
Offenbach, Germany
Hafen 2
I Was There
OCT
11
2014
Aalborg, Denmark
1000 Fryd
I Was There
OCT
10
2014
Hamburg, Germany
Størte
I Was There
OCT
09
2014
Cologne, Germany
Sonic Ballroom
I Was There
OCT
08
2014
Aachen, Germany
Az
I Was There
SEP
30
2014
Los Angeles, CA
La Cita
I Was There
SEP
21
2014
San Diego, CA
Til-Two Club
I Was There
SEP
20
2014
Mexicali, Mexico
Mexicali Rose
I Was There
JUN
26
2014
Nashville, TN
The End
I Was There
JUN
21
2014
Brooklyn, NY
Baby's All Right
I Was There
JUN
19
2014
Cleveland, OH
Grog Shop
I Was There
JUN
15
2014
Denver, CO
Hi-Dive
I Was There
JUN
04
2014
Los Angeles, CA
Los Globos
I Was There
MAY
23
2014
West Hollywood, CA
Troubadour
I Was There
APR
11
2014
Los Angeles, CA
Echoplex
I Was There
APR
09
2014
San Diego, CA
Soda Bar
I Was There
DEC
07
2013
Boise, ID
Neurolux Lounge
I Was There
DEC
06
2013
Spokane, WA
Mootsy's
I Was There
DEC
05
2013
Seattle, WA
Chop Suey
I Was There
DEC
04
2013
Portland, OR
east end
I Was There
DEC
03
2013
San Francisco, CA
Bottom Of The Hill
I Was There
SEP
27
2013
Costa Mesa, CA
Detroit Bar
I Was There
Show More Dates

About Jail Weddings

Jail Weddings' epic second full length is quite aptly titled. Meltdown: the flailing emotional implosion often borne of a triumvirate of frayed nerves, volatile substances and excessive external pressure is clearly evidenced in the words and music herein. But, there's also a newfound sense of musical genres and histories mixing together like molten wax where the band's signature Shangri-La's, Bad Seeds, noir-hued pop merges with hazy psychedelia, bombastic rock and even essences of bizarre Eastern European folk. It's the sound of a band that's always been at the brink of self-destruction actually growing and thriving on its own chaotic impulses. It's now six years into something that wasn’t expected to last six months -- this “thing” called Jail Weddings. While the songs have always been timeless and top notch, they're also a band whose initial popularity often hinged on the fact that it could all fall apart at any given moment -- with frequent dagger eyes or fistfights both onstage and off -- where it was always clear to the audience that the high-drama of the songs often spilled into the band members' own precarious lives. They are a group that audiences could live through vicariously, a band capable of not just inspiring listeners' ugly catharsis, but often enacting its own in public. One of few that could claim they are not just a band, but a lifestyle all their own. It was late 2012 when we had last checked in with frontman Gabriel Hart, who explained that last year’s Four Future Standards EP (described by VICE Magazine as “music to have knife sex to”) was also the gradual bridge to their more grandiose work-in-progress second full-length. Hart ensured that anyone who thought they were any sort of “party band” would be gravely mistaken upon hearing what they had been stirring up in their charred cauldron. Little did he know it would take well over 365 days to finish what he had started, where the stakes were raised, bank accounts drained, sanity/sobriety and sleep compromised, and their longtime rhythm section and one of their back-up singers lost…where towards the end it would cause him and his eight-headed collective to treat it with all the intensity a band would as if it was the last record they would ever record, even though their present locomotive momentum will prove at least that part otherwise. And what better process to make a record, Meltdown – A Declaration of Unpopular Emotion which Hart describes as a somewhat conceptual “dissection of the personal Apocalypse.” A record whose liner notes cite such patron saints as disparate as philosopher Carl Jung and enfant terrible Francis Farmer as touchstones? But, this is only for the uninitiated to understand – as within the first listen of Meltdown one will soon realize this record is indeed a vast, universal tantrum, where the best path of protest is often to create one's own atmosphere, to secede from pain through a self-imposed baptism of fire. And, the end inspiration proves once again one must look no further than Jail Weddings' own twisted, snake-eating-its-tail world they’ve created. Meltdown begins somewhat similarly to their 2010 debut Love Is Lawless -- Hart’s lone baritone accompanied by minimal instrumentation slowly building the anticipation that something is about to leave a crater in its wake. But, instead of the Broadway schmaltz approach of their previous effort’s intro, the song explodes as if they are going into battle, marching drums and ominous war siren back-ups announce that they are going into this nervous breakdown unabashed. And before we get a chance to catch our breath, they blow right into the electric 12-string guitar of “May Today Be Merciful” where Hart sets the real tone of the record as if Echo and The Bunnymen were lost in some bad trip section of L.A.’s Paisley Underground scene. Elsewhere, "Why Is it so Hard To Be Good?" lumbers to a start with thunderous early-Swans sounding drums leading a dark lament of our collective penchant to do wrong. Throughout the album there's chiming power-pop ("Dead Celebrity Party"), somber balladry ("Summer Fades", "Obsession"), dramatic pageantry that would make Born To Run era Springsteen blush ("Angel of Sleep") and so many other twists and turns that the album's dramatic title will make perfect sense. Sessions for Meltdown commenced once again at their home base of The Station House in Echo Park with engineer and co-producer Mark Rains (Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Waylon Jennings, etc). The line-up on Meltdown proves to be their most enduring, sturdiest and studied yet – familiar faces from their last effort being Hart’s right hand man Christopher Rager on guitar (and co-producing), last O.G. member Hannah Blumenfeld on strings (the group has since turned her into an octopus string quartet in the studio – recently earning her full-string duties on the new Ghostface Killer record), secret weapon Marty Sataman on piano/synths, vocalists Jada Wagensomer, Marianne Stewart and Kristina B holding steady as three-part harmony dream team, with Wagensomer occasionally moving front and center as Hart’s female counterpart, where they duet on “Why Is It So Hard To Be Good?” and “…Keeping The Faith,” also seeing her solo spotlight on “A Promise” and “…Never Going To Find Me.” The new fierce rhythm section that came swinging to rescue the group from mid-recording uncertainty includes Morgan Hart Delaney on bass (and blood, as Hart’s own cousin) and Hart’s long co-conspirator Dave Clifford (The VSS, Pleasure Forever, Red Sparowes, Hart’s own Starvations/Fortune’s Flesh) on drums. Meltdown -- A Declaration of Unpopular Emotion will be available on LP and download via Neurotic Yell Records on August 27th, 2013. Currently at work on 3rd full-length album, "Blood Moon Blue."
Show More
Genres:
R&b/soul, Melodramatic Popular Song, Soul, Pop, Rnb-soul
Band Members:
Gabriel Hart - vocals saxophone, Dave Clifford - drums, Kristina Benson - keyboards vocals, Jail Weddings is…, Seth Miller - bass guitar, Mary Animaux - vocals, Anthony Cozzi- guitar, Julie Carpenter - strings
Hometown:
Los Angeles, California

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