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Noah Reid Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts

Noah Reid

Paramount Theatre
713 Congress Ave

Jan 26, 2024

7:00 PM CST
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Noah Reid Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts

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Live Photos

Noah Reid at Indianapolis, IN in The Vogue 2024
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What fans are saying

Noelle
January 28th 2024
Noah is a fantastic performer! He’s a talented musical storyteller and a wonderful musician and singer. I only regret that he wasn’t able to come out to chat with his fans after the show which would’ve made the evening better than perfect. 100% I would see him again.
Houston, TX@
House of Blues Houston
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About the venue

The Paramount and State Theatres are the artistic heartbeat of downtown Austin, hosting over 550 events every year. From one of the nation’s largest comedy festivals in ...
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Noah Reid Biography

On his third album Adjustments, singer-songwriter Noah Reid documents the kind of
minor schisms and major upheavals that leave our lives forever altered. Endlessly
revealing the nuance and character of his voice, the Toronto-bred artist imbues his
incisive storytelling with a potent expression of unease and frustration and ineffable
wonder—an emotional complexity perfectly echoed in the album’s elegantly
orchestrated yet unpredictable form of alt-rock. At a time when turmoil feels strangely
commonplace, Adjustments ultimately allows for a moment of quiet transcendence
within the chaos, wholly transforming the very texture of our experience.
“I wrote this album during a transitional period where a lot of tectonic shifts were taking
place in my life,” says Reid, also an accomplished actor known for his role as Patrick on
the award-winning series Schitt’s Creek. “I was getting married, Schitt’s Creek was
coming to an end, the pandemic was beginning—some of the changes were more
internal and others were more at the societal level, but they all involved a shift in my
thinking about the world around me.”
Recorded live at Toronto’s Union Sound Company and produced by Juno Award
nominee Matthew Barber (who also helmed Reid’s 2016 debut album Songs from a
Broken Chair and its 2020 follow-up Gemini), Adjustments came to life over a series of
sessions with musicians like guitarist Christine Bougie (Bahamas, Amy Millan), drummer
Joshua Van Tassel (Great Lake Swimmers, Amelia Curran), and trumpet player Bryden
Baird (Feist, Ron Sexsmith). On the album-opening lead single “Everyday,” Reid offers a
sublime introduction to the expansive sonic world of Adjustments, sharply contrasting
the song’s heavy-hearted mood with bright guitar tones and effervescent melodies. “I
wrote that song in the early days of the pandemic, when I’d look out the window at this
park that’s usually full of kids and families but now was totally desolate,” says Reid. “It
came from a feeling of being forced into a sort of loneliness, and not really knowing
what to do about that.” With its ethereal textures and swooning steel guitar, the pianodriven
“Left Behind” speaks to the bittersweet freedom of living life at your own
unhurried pace. Meanwhile, on “Rivers Underground,” Reid presents a gorgeously
tender meditation on love and luck and risk, amplifying the track’s intensity with a
luminous string arrangement courtesy of Drew Jurecka (a Grammy-nominated
composer who’s worked with Buffy Sainte-Marie and The Weather Station). “My wife
Clare and I have talked at various points about how easy it would’ve been for us not to
find our way to each other,” says Reid. “Writing that song, I was thinking about how
Toronto’s built on all these underground creeks and rivers, and how that’s a good
metaphor for the strangeness of human connection—these waters trying to find their
way out to the lake, flowing together or ending up apart.”
One of the most galvanizing moments on Adjustments, “Statue’s in the Stone” begins as
a weary lament for the state of the human heart (“We treat it like it’s all infinite/And we
throw it all away”), then unfolds into a soul-stirring anthem lit up in lush harmonies and
incandescent horns. “We live in a very judgmental time, where social media really
highlights this urge to tear each other down,” says Reid. “But I think if we looked inside
ourselves with any kind of honesty, we’d realize that what we need is within us, and
we’d be able to lead with a little more love and kindness.” Several songs later,
Adjustments closes out with the thrilling catharsis of “Everything’s Fine”: an eight-minute
epic that reaches an ecstatic frenzy at its gloriously sprawling, guitar-drenched bridge.
“Over the past few years it seems like we’re simultaneously being told everything’s fine
and absolutely nothing is fine, and it can be so hard to tell what’s real,” says Reid. “That
song came from the confusion of that, and in the studio we decided to just to let the
band rip and completely burn the house down.”
A longtime musician who began composing melodies on piano as a child and later
developed his song craft while studying at the National Theatre School of Canada, Reid
infuses all of Adjustments with the clarifying directness of a close conversation—yet
unfailingly demonstrates a poet’s ability to draw immense meaning from the most
granular details. As a result, the album abounds with warmly delivered wisdom—an
element that’s illuminating for both audience and artist alike. “Sometimes a line will jump
out of my mouth when I’m out on a walk or driving or alone in my house playing piano or
guitar, and I’ll just to try to follow that line wherever it takes me,” says Reid in discussing
his creative process. “I often don’t really understand what I’m saying as I’m saying it, but
then I’ll listen back later on and go, ‘Oh, okay—that was useful.’ This record has
definitely done that for me, and I hope it will keep on talking to me over time.”
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