Bandsintown
get app
Sign Up
Log In
Sign Up
Log In

Industry
ArtistsEvent Pros
HelpPrivacyTerms
Remo Drive Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts

Remo Drive

The Rave / Eagles Club
2401 W Wisconsin Ave

Aug 2, 2024

8:00 PM CDT
Get Reminder
Remo Drive Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts
Get Tickets
etix
About this concert
hj drinks tour HOBO JOHNSON & THE LOVEMAKERS with Remo Drive and So Much Light Friday, August 2, 2024 at 8pm (doors scheduled to open at 7PM) The Rave/Eagles Club 2401 W. Wisconsin Ave Milwaukee WI 53233 https://www.therave.com 414-342-7283 All Ages Advance tickets start at $30.00 All information subject to change. Please visit www.therave.com/hobo for any changes that may have been made since this listing was created. Hobo Johnson www.hobojohnson.com www.facebook.com/hobojohnson94Corolla www.instagram.com/hoboJohnson
Show More
Event Lineup
Hobo Johnson
298K Followers
Follow
Remo Drive
62.5K Followers
Follow
So Much Light
4.15K Followers
Follow
Follow

Bandsintown Merch

Circle Hat
$25.0 USD
Live Collage Sweatshirt
$45.0 USD
Rainbow T-Shirt
$30.0 USD
Circle Beanie
$20.0 USD

Live Photos

Remo Drive at Chicago, IL in Lincoln Hall 2022
View All Photos

What fans are saying

Revver
March 28th 2024
The Vera project was a super cool and intimate venue ran by volunteers learning how to operate and run a show. Everyone was super kind and helpful. I had never heard of wilt before the show but can definitely say I’m a fan now, and Remo Drive sounded absolutely amazing live! Been a fan for many years and wasn’t let down at all by their performance!
Seattle, WA@
The Vera Project
Easily follow all your favorite artists by syncing your music
Sync Music
musicSyncBanner

Share Event

About the venue

The Historic Eagles Club is one of America’s largest (180,000 square feet) and busiest music clubs. Built in 1926 and listed on the National Register of Historic Building...
read more
Follow Venue

Remo Drive Biography

Remo Drive, the longstanding project of brothers Erik and Stephen Paulson, want you to feel something. Following a six year run of pristine emo-influenced rock ‘n’ roll records comes Mercy, the band’s fourth album and third for Epitaph. It’s the band’s most lyric-focused offering to date, a record about reinvention, trusting yourself, and wearing your heart on your sleeve even when it’s painful or vulnerable.

Mercy has its origins in a move. Specifically: Erik moved to the sleepy upstate city of Albany, New York during the pandemic, Stephen stayed back in the duo’s native Minnesota. In his new environment, Erik wrote constantly. He’d play alone in his room, allowing himself to use his music to think existentially about life. About the complexities of being in a relationship, the complexities of making art and having it be received by a wide audience, the complexities of being in a new environment and finding your footing (as he sings in “New In Town,” “Apparently everyone’s going to Susie’s/I’m not exactly sure who that is”). Mercy, thus, is in some ways a record about getting in touch with your mental health, deprogramming what you thought you knew about yourself and using music to unlock inner honesty. It lends to some of the band’s strongest lyrical work in their career, from the impressionistic introspection of “White Dress,” to the pointed naturalism on “All You’ll Ever Catch.”
Read More
Alternative
Dance Punk
Indie
Rock
Punk
Follow artist