Search
Browse Dates
Loading...
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
Loading...
Go to previous month
Go to next month
Categories
Information

Knuckleheads
2715 Rochester Ave. Kansas City, MO 64120
(816) 483-1456
knuckleheadskc@gmail.com

HOURS
Wednesday, Thursday: 7pm–11pm
Friday: 7pm-12:00 am
Saturday - noon - 5pm/7pm-12am
Sunday: 12pm–6pm
Occasional Events on Sunday, Monday & Tuesday.
*Times May Vary

Promoter Login

Summer Dean & Jeremy Pinnell

Summer Dean & Jeremy Pinnell
Under 21 with Guardian

Summer Dean
Summer Dean puts on a hell-of-a show. Armed with three albums, constant tours, and a hot five-piece band behind her, Summer struts onto every stage with the confidence and vulnerability of a songstress that’s has cemented her place among the top rank Texas tunesmiths. Her live show takes the concert goer on a ride through heartache and hope as though her songs came from inside the chest of every person in the room. Whether with her full band or all by herself, listeners and watchers are bound to fall in love watching the authentic, funny, and honest storyteller perform her way into legendary status.

Her candor is palpable in every syllable and sound of the acclaimed singer-songwriter’s new record, The Biggest Life, a profound, vivid document of the songwriter’s might.

 “I’m very proud of myself and this record,” Dean says. “It’s the most real and vulnerable I’ve ever been with my writing.”

There is indeed a rawness and a reality to Dean’s songs which sets her apart as a songwriter of real substance. It’s no wonder Texas legends like Bruce Robison, wanted to produce her album based on the strength of Dean’s simple iphone-recorded demos, calling her work “bracing.”

 You can hear hard-earned humanity in “Big Ol Truck,” a wry ode to reality not always matching expectations, just as you can hear it in the woozy cantina swirl of “She’s in His Arms, But I’m in the Palm of His Hand,” and particularly in the album’s shattering closer, “Lonely Girl’s Lament,” Dean’s most formidable moment on record to date.

“It’s a human story she’s telling,” Robison says. “She’s showcasing life from her perspective. There are things in Summer’s songs that can resonate with people, even if they’ve never lived anything she’s talking about.”

 For her part, Dean says Robison’s stamp of approval was “incredibly validating.” “His credentials as a writer gave me the confidence I needed to make this kind of album — completely analog, unfiltered and organic,” she says.

Dean has been steadily gaining momentum since the release of her break-out 2021 LP Bad Romantic. Critics hailed Romantic, with Texas Monthly saying Dean showed “deft skill at disarming listeners with her vulnerability,” while the Boot said Dean “spins vibrant tales of her blue-collar life, turning life’s ordinary moments into extraordinary ones.”

Dean was also just named the Texas Country Music Awards Female Artist of the Year and 2023 Ameripolitan Honky Tonk Female of the Year. She’s performed with an array of country aces, including Colter Wall, Marty Stuart, Asleep at the Wheel, Hayes Carll, Mike and the Moonpies and Charley Crockett.

 Dean’s devotion to honesty in the making of The Biggest Life extended to its creation, with these 13 songs being recorded completely analog at the Bunker, Robison’s Lockhart studio, with a hand-picked band of collaborators. It’s a fitting approach for music that leaves nowhere to hide and spares no detail.

 Embracing an approach which made every studio take a high wire act suited Dean’s sensibility for this new material: “It made me let go of perfection,” she says. “I think when any artist does that, they do their best.”

 That’s precisely what Summer Dean gives you on The Biggest Life: A handmade album, teeming with unadorned, universal truths, written and performed by a consequential artist whose singular perspective on the world may just profoundly alter yours.

https://www.summerdeanmusic.com/


Jeremy Pinell

When Jeremy Pinnell released OH/KY in the summer of 2015 to stunned acclaim, it felt like an
entire career compressed into one knock-out album. Hailed as, a “Mind-blowingly good” (Greg
Vandy/KEXP) “ ”tutorial on classic country music” (Popmatters), Pinnell’s debut immediately
differentiated as authentic and unflinching. Dogged touring through Europe and the States and
celebrated radio sessions followed, cementing Pinnell’s position as a no-fuss master of his craft.
His 2017 album, Ties of Blood and Affection presented a canny lateral move. Instead of
doubling down on the stark themes and values of his debut, the sophomore album found Pinnell
finding comfort in his own skin, achieving the redemption only hinted at in his previous batch of
haunted songs.
If the third time’s a charm, Pinnell is all shine and sparkle on the forthcoming Goodbye LA.
Produced by Texan Jonathan Tyler, the tunes buff the wax and polish the chrome on Country
music’s deeper roots. Rooted in his steady acoustic guitar, Pinnell’s songs are shot through with

honest and classic elements. The rhythm section, all snap and shuffle, finds purpose in well-
worn paths. The pedal steel and Telecaster stingers arrive perfectly on cue, winking at JP’s

world-wise couplets . Here slippery organ insinuates gospel into the conversation. You can feel
the room breathe and get a sense of these musicians eyeballing each other as their
performances are committed to tape. And through it all comes this oaken identity, the
devastating centerpiece of his work. Honest and careworn, Jeremy’s voice can touch on wry,
jubilant, and debauched - all in a single line. At his best, Jeremy Pinnell chronicles the joy and
sorrow of being human, which is the best that anyone could do.

https://www.jeremypinnell.com/





Copyright © 2024 Knuckleheads, All Rights Reserved. -
Ticketing System by TicketsKC

Please read our Privacy Statement and Terms of Use.