WIARDA & MYLES FROM HOME.
Doors 7:00pm
Show 8:00pm-10:15pm
Tickets: advance available online below
19+/No Minors
WIARDA has been making music together since the autumn of 2020. They've been playing DIY festivals and park shows for the past couple years, and are ready to move it inside and get under some lights!
From three-note songs on the piano, flawed attempts at the Internet , to a remaining insatiable appetite for harmony , Natalie [Wiarda] is thrilled to have moved out of solo performances to a five piece, melodic pop rock band.
It began with Max, her fearless percussionist and Harry, a drunker-than-boxed-wine bass prodigy. The spring of 2021 brought Phil, too sexy for his own good on guitar and Kaila, the original harmony minion.
Unto us WIARDA is born.
Influences include Spektor, Marshall, Morisette & MUNA. WIARDA is a fusion of anthem rhythm, confessional lyrics and church chords.
Seeped in trauma bonding and lessons not yet learned ,WIARDA will make you feel something.
These are songs to score your break up, your road trip, your long shower. Also we might make you dance. While you rehearse your authenticity and check your math, WIARDA will be there.
Seeped in trauma bonding, lessons not yet learned and sarcastic honesty, WIARDA will make you feel something.
It’s cheaper than therapy and they’re easy on the eyes!
Co-headliner: Myles from Home.
Myles from Home is a singer-songwriter who sings, plays guitar and harmonica and enjoys spending time outdoors naked. His friends call him Beach Santa. He splits his time between measuring neutrons from nuclear fusion experiments and singing songs about love. His passion for science comes through in his lyrics and he’s joined by a rhythm section that keeps it funky. Folk Rock goes on a successful first date with Jazz Funk.
“Myles just has one of those voices. It’s an offspring from the “classic” era of rock when amps were stacked on amps and the louder you sang, the harder you rocked. Though the Linden, Manitoba native channels his inner rock god, as heard from the songs in his [recordings], he does so quietly amongst folk-rock instrumentation.” -Gray Owl Point