An ECA Special Engagement: The Wallflowers

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With Special Guests Chairs for Giants

For the past 30 years, The Wallflowers have stood as one of rock’s most dynamic and purposeful bands—a unit dedicated to and continually honing a sound that meshes timeless songwriting and storytelling with a hard-hitting and decidedly modern musical attack. That signature style has been present through the decades, baked into the grooves of smash hits like 1996’s Bringing Down the Horse as well as more recent and exploratory fare like 2012’s Glad All Over.  

Even so, in recent years, Jakob Dylan—The Wallflowers’ founding singer, songwriter and guitarist—has repeatedly stepped outside of his band, first with a pair of more acoustic and rootsy records: 2008’s Seeing Things and 2010’s Women + Country, and then with the 2018 film Echo in the Canyon and the accompanying soundtrack, which saw him collaborate with a host of artists classic and contemporary, from Neil Young and Eric Clapton to Beck and Fiona Apple. 

And while it’s been nine long years since we’ve heard from the group with whom he first made his mark, the Wallflowers are silent no more. Dylan always knew they’d return.

“The Wallflowers is much of my life’s work,” he says simply. 

Plus, he adds with a laugh, “It’s pretty hard to get a good band name, so if you have one, keep it.” 

Good band name aside, that life’s work continues with Exit Wounds, the brand-new Wallflowers studio offering. The collection marks the first new Wallflowers material since Glad All Over. And while the wait has been long, the much-anticipated record finds the band’s signature sound—lean, potent and eminently entrancing—intact, even as Dylan surrounds himself with a fresh cast of musicians. 

 



Admission
$55-$95