Sunny War

Doors 8pm, Show 8:30pm
$20 adv / $25 dos

When Sunny War (a.k.a. Sydney Ward) moved into her late father’s house in Chattanooga, she thought the place was haunted. “I spent the winter seeing things and hearing things,” she says. “The house is 100 years old, and I was in there by myself. I could hear people walking around and talking, but when I jumped out of bed with my machete, there was nobody there. I assumed it was my dad, and I started writing about the ghosts that I was living with.” One of those songs, simply titled “Ghosts,” anchors her latest album, Armageddon in a Summer Dress. A kind of slithering blues, driven by her spidery guitarwork and haunted by disembodied voices dopplering in and out as the song fades, it’s a wise-yet-confused meditation on what it means to live with your memories of the dead and the lost.

Sunny’s house wasn’t haunted, at least not the way she initially suspected. “Something broke and I had to fix it, so I called the gas company even though I didn’t have the money. The guy discovered major gas leaks all over the house. I thought I was losing my mind, but I was just hallucinating from the gas. After I got that fixed, I never saw or heard another ghost.” That’s not to say they weren’t there, just that she could no longer detect them and no longer had to sleep with a giant knife next to her bed. But Armageddon is rooted in the disorientation of those hallucinations. In songs that are deeply incisive and keenly imaginative, Sunny ponders the act of crossing boundaries—between worlds, between musical genres, summoning the ghosts of the people she lost, the people she once was, and the people she was not allowed to be. “Just how to hang on to the ones we let go,” she sings on “Ghosts.” “They’ll be down in the ground when you need them most and now somehow you believe in ghosts.”

Following the release of her 2022 breakthrough, Anarchist Gospel, Sunny spent less and less time at her not-haunted house and more and more time on the road, opening for Bonnie Raitt, Mitski, Iron & Wine, and Sarah Shook & the Disarmers, among others. When she was back in Chattanooga, she did her best to stay busy, lest she lapse back into the drinking that almost killed her. “If I’m home and not touring, either I’m going to play music all day or I’m going to get drunk. It’s really one or the other. I’m just obsessively trying to work on something so that I’m making healthier decisions that Day.”

Sunny spent long days recording elaborate demos, chasing ideas and assembling whole songs from the ground up. Some were odd experiments, a few turned into a long series of old-time guitar/banjo duets, and others became the songs on Armageddon in a Summer Dress. She wrote primarily instrumental tracks and played everything herself—guitar of course, but also bass, drum loops, keyboard, and anything else she thought the track needed—all with the notion that she’d add lyrics later. “I want to be a producer, so I try to make my own recordings as complete as possible, trying to get to the point where I feel confident enough to start recording other people. So I get obsessed with my demos. They have to be done just right so I can move on to something New.”

The intense demo process allowed her to tinker with new textures, and she found herself gravitating away from her trusty acoustic guitar for an electric. “Touring behind Anarchist Gospel made me want to make a bigger-sounding record and have a whole band rather than just playing solo acoustic or with a three piece. I wanted to try stuff out of my comfort zone and try to have more fun playing. I definitely wanted to make this album for a badass five-piece band.”

Songs like the runaway “One Way Train” and the lowdown “No One Calls Me Baby” reveal an artist further refining Sunny’s vibrant mix of punk and roots. “To me it’s the same kind of music. If you’re into punk for the lyrics and the message, there’s definitely a lot of old-time music that has that spirit. Folk used to be very anti-establishment. Pete Seeger, union songs, Woody Guthrie—that’s punk rock shit. It’s all about being an outsider.” In fact, she may be the only artist who could host punk stalwarts John Doe from X and Steve Ignorant from Crass to sing alongside Valerie June and Tré Burt, but to her credit, Sunny disregards any genre boundaries that might separate them. “They’re all just beatniks. That’s what I’m calling people now. They’re all different, but they’re just artists, poets. They all have that aesthetic, in their own way.”

Recruiting Steve to sing on the anarcho-punk anthem “Walking Contradiction” was a full-circle moment for Sunny, who counts Crass among her all-time favorite bands. She wrote the song especially for him: with its snaking blues melody, ominous organ chords, and Sunny’s guitar tagging the walls of city hall, the song is a smart, scowling depiction of late-capitalist America, where even the best of us are compromised by a fundamentally evil system. Their voices suggest a wild chemistry between them, possibly because Sunny’s been singing along with Steve for decades. “He’s my hero for life. When I started listening to Crass, it changed everything about how I thought about everything. I dropped out of school because of them, because I realized I needed to be playing gigs and writing songs.”

What kind of person would Sunny be had she had never heard Crass? Or Robert Johnson? Or any of her heroes? Those mirror-universe Sunnys are just some of the ghosts that haunts Armageddon in a Summer Dress: all of those different selves who would have led different lives. Would she have turned out like the woman in “Lay Your Body Down,” who misspends her life following rules and projecting her frustrations onto everyone around her? These songs tally up everything that’s lost as you grow up and grow old, all of those small occurrences that turn out to be pivotal, and then Sunny flips you the bird on closer “Debbie Downer” for thinking she’s being too dour—“a Negative Nancy, an infinite frowner.” As dire as these songs may be, they’re also righteous and therefore joyous in their exhortations to live on your own terms, to fight injustice wherever you see it, and to always reach for new ways to express yourself. “I’m still learning a lot about everything,” Sunny confesses. “I’m trying to learn how to be comfortable playing shows, and there’s still a lot I’m learning about guitar in general. I think I’ll be learning forever. Music is infinite. You can never stop having different combinations. You could never play everything that could be played on guitar, and you can never say everything you need to say, so you can just go on forever learning new things.”

Miss Tess

8:00pm Doors, 8:30pm Show
$15 adv / $20 DOS

Miss Tess is one of those singular artists who deserve all the superlatives and accolades one could hoist upon a rare talent such as hers. This unassuming chanteuse is, as they say in the business, a true “triple threat” – a superb songwriter and adept multi-instrumentalist with an extraordinary voice that can sing the birds from the trees. Her music takes root and draws from an era when country music, contrary to popular belief, was downright sophisticated, and filled with instrumentalists who were every bit as hip musically as their jazz counterparts – stretching back to a time when Western swing bands and jazz bands played a lot of the same material – albeit with a different accent, informed by their physical location. Location has a lot to do with the new Miss Tess album, the product of an on-going love affair with the culturally rich region of South Louisiana known as Acadiana, or more specifically, the magical little city of Lafayette. Each song on this new album has a special connection to the area, and Tess is eager to share this music with the world, with a release date of Feb 7, 2025. She is now touring in support of the album.

Michael Daves Presents Breakfast Special

Doors 7:30pm, Show 8pm
$30

Bluegrass guitarist & singer Michael Daves presents a reunion show of the legendary progressive bluegrass outfit Breakfast Special featuring Kenny Kosek, Andy Statman, and Tony Trischka who co-founded the band in 1973. Daves and bassist Jared Engel round out the ensemble to play original material from BS’s self-titled 1976 Rounder Records release plus rip-roaring bluegrass standards.

The three original Breakfast Special members went on to have highly influential solo careers. Tony Trischka, who NPR calls “the great banjo liberationist” is considered the father of progressive bluegrass music. Andy Statman has become a hero not just in bluegrass music but also in traditional Jewish music, fusing those forms with experimental jazz and improvisation. The New York Times calls him “One of the most important Jewish creative artists of the postwar era.” Kenny Kosek has developed a reputation as one of America’s finest fiddlers through work with artists as diverse as Jerry Garcia, Laurie Anderson, John Denver, and James Taylor.

Heralded as “a leading light of the New York bluegrass scene” by the New York Times, Georgia-born guitarist/singer Michael Daves has garnered attention for his work with Trischka, Steve Martin, Jacob Jolliff, Bruce Molsky, and Chris Thile, with whom he shares a Grammy nomination for their 2011 album Sleep With One Eye Open. Daves’ unruly interpretations of American roots music standards have won him a place of almost fanatical admiration as a “renegade traditionalist.” This concert is part of a bi-monthly series Daves presents with different special guests including:

April 26: with Bruce Molsky
Aug 9: with Tatiana Hargreaves
Oct 11: with Andy Falco
Dec 13: guest TBA

Photo credit Manish Gosalia

Andy Friedman & the Bark Peelers

Doors 8pm, Show 8:30pm
$25 adv / $30 doors

Bleecker Trading Presents Andy Friedman & the Bark Peelers! Andy Friedman has been hailed as a “hot live act” (NPR), an “artistic visionary” (Gothamist) and a “gifted storyteller” (The New Yorker).  He returns to the musical arena with his band, The Bark Peelers, after a fourteen-year hiatus.

A key figure in the early-2000s “Brooklyn Country” scene, Andy Friedman didn’t pick up a guitar until age 30. Less than a year later, he recorded his debut album Taken Man (2006), featuring Old Crow Medicine Show’s Ketch Secor. The title track landed on the New York Post’s “207 Best Songs” list alongside Bruce Springsteen and Amy Winehouse. Scott Avett of The Avett Brothers called “Probably Shouldn’t Call,” a ballad from the album, a favorite in Vanity Fair. His 2008 follow-up, Weary Things, was named one of the year’s most overlooked albums by the Associated Press.

Since 2021, Topps has released three 100-card sets of Friedman’s paintings. His 2025 set, Shoebox Treasures, sold-out in minutes. The first 50 ticket holders will receive a limited-edition custom designed physical ticket hand-numbered to 50 issued by Bleecker Trading and the artist. A post-show ticket and card signing presented by Bleecker Trading will follow.

The Bark Peelers are Shaye Troha (backing vocals), Danny Kwaitowski (guitars), Andy Statzkiew (bass), Charles Burst (drums), Tianna Kennedy (cello), and Bill Duke (banjo, electric shovel slide)

YiYi

Doors 7:30pm, Show 8pm
$20 dos / $25 adv

YiYi, a Ukrainian folk band composed of Caroline Kuhn, Katie Pawluk, and Zoya Shepko, breathes new life into traditional Ukrainian songs through unconventional arrangements and a diverse mix of instruments, including the violin, banjo, hutsul drum, cello and accordion. Their performances are characterized by three-part polyphony, creating rich sonic tapestries that transport audiences from lively party vibes to poignant moments of heartbreak. Joining them for this evening is Sedi Donka, an international band playing traditional Eastern European, Balkan & Gypsy dance music.

Levyosn’s Dream Record Release Show

Doors 8pm, Show 8:30pm
$20 adv / $25 dos

Join us for the NYC release of Levyosn’s Dream, the second album by Yiddish song ensemble, Levyosn!

Levyosn (“leviathan”) is a Boston-based Yiddish/klezmer ensemble, featuring Adah Hetko (vocals), Lysander Jaffe (violin/vocals), Raffi Boden (cello), and Lexi Ugelow (keyboard/vocals). Levyosn is celebrating the release of their second album, Levyosn’s Dream, featuring new Yiddish songs and klezmer compositions, innovative arrangements of archival folk songs, and a cappella vocal pieces. Levyosn’s Dream will be released by Borscht Beat Records in 2026.

Larkin Grimm / Rowan Katz / Khomsa

Doors 7pm, Show 7:30pm
$20 adv / $25 dos

Join us for a very special evening of folk music, improvisation, and original compositions by Larkin Grimm, Rowan Katz (Bay Area), and Khomsa (Huda Asfour & Raffi Boden’s oud and cello duo).

Khomsa ﺔﺳﻣﺧ – a call for protection from the evil eye, a hand reaching out across all perceived divides; A new project between Huda Asfour (‘oud) and Raffi Boden (cello), Khomsa is an improvisation journey rooted in curiosity beyond stereotypes, in the commonality of songs & culture, in the intersection between folk musics… In this chapter of genocide & fascism, Khomsa reminds us of the threads that connect us all. Raffi Boden comes from the world of Yiddish music, where he has crafted a new approach to klezmer on the cello. His interests lie in radical yiddish song, improvisation, chamber music, and folk musics from Romanian, Greek and balkan to American old time. Huda Asfour is a Palestinian wanderer who grew up surrounded by North African and Arabic sounds and folk repertoires from Tunis all the way to Iraq. For more visit https://www.hudaasfour.com/

Rowan Katz is a multifaceted vocalist, folklorist, theater artist, composer. educator, and writer exploring diasporism, grief, rematriation, abolition, mysticism, and living tradition through their work in the Bay Area and abroad. Their recent credits include The Weight of Thread: A Jewish Ritual for Palestine at Dance Mission Theater (SF), JetLag Festival (NY), SFJazz at SFMOMA, THEYFRIEND at Brava Theater (SF), As Above So Below at Marin MOCA, Kol: A Retreat for Jewish Music Across the Diaspora (featuring Melanie DeMore and Yoni Battat), as well as various collaborations and bills including Phoebe Vlassis, Kitka, and HBO’s Scavenger’s Reign. Rowan also regularly performs with their chamber ensemble, Ardea. Website: https://www.rowankatz.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rowankatz/

Larkin Grimm is a musician, painter, sculptor, and educator, born in a commune in Memphis and raised in the Blue Ridge foothills of Georgia. Her work spans experimental and traditional folk, outsider art, performance, and a variety of visual mediums. Her intense, ecstatic voice with swirling multi-tracked patterns has made her one of the most singular figures in American independent music — dramatic, Appalachian and Balkan influenced, and consistently moving in its unique power. Bandcamp:https://larkingrimm.bandcamp.com/

Max Johnson Sextet

Doors 7pm, Show 7:30pm
$20 adv / $25 dos

Anna Webber (tenor saxophone, flute), Yuma Uesaka (soprano saxophone, clarinet), Nate Wooley (trumpet), Lester St. Louis (cello), Max Johnson (double bass), and Jeff Davis (drumset, vibraphone)

Composer, bassist, and improviser Max Johnson presents his brand new sextet in the premiere of “Without Fear,” a new concert-length work performed alongside Anna Webber (tenor saxophone, flute), Yuma Uesaka (soprano saxophone, clarinet), Nate Wooley (trumpet), Lester St. Louis (cello), and Jeff Davis (drumset, vibraphone). The piece is a sprawling, style-blurring composition that explores the many musical worlds Johnson has inhabited over the past fifteen years, weaving together elements of jazz, chamber music, folk music, free improvisation, and progressive rock.

The work draws from Johnson’s experience as an in-demand performer and prolific composer, having performed internationally and recorded with artists such as Anthony Braxton, Geri Allen, the Daedalus Quartet, David Grisman, Tyshawn Sorey, Mary Halvorson, Mivos Quartet, and several alumni of Frank Zappa’s bands. Conceived as a musical ecosystem where diverse influences coexist and interact, “Without Fear” highlights the individual voices and abilities of the ensemble while bringing Johnson’s expansive musical vision into a single personal work.

As a lover of comic books, the piece is inspired by the Green Lantern, whose power ring can create anything imaginable through sheer force of will, so long as its bearer remains without fear. Like the ring itself, the work imagines a creative space where the many musical languages Johnson inhabits can live together within a single composition.