TICKETS RELEASE FRIDAY MARCH 28 at 10am!Friday, June 13th, 2025
6pm Doors / 7pm Show
21+
General Admission $43 Advance // $45 Day Of Show
Cream of the Crop! VIP Experience $115
Cream of the Crop! VIP Experience
*
One (1) General Admission ticket
*
Pre-show 2-3 song acoustic performance with Jay, Mimi, and Kellen
*
Interactive Q&A and storytelling session with the band
*
Exclusive VIP print, signed by the band
*
Fruition VIP tote bag
*
Commemorative VIP Laminate
*
Group photo with the band
*
Merchandise shopping prior to doors opening to the public
*
Early entry into the venue
FRUITION
Three songwriters. Five bandmates. More than 15 years together,
building a grassroots audience with a combination of stacked vocal
harmonies and collaborative, song-driven Americana. Fruition is proof
that there's strength in numbers.
How To Make Mistakes, the band's first studio album in four years,
showcases a reinvigorated group at the peak of its powers. This is
American roots music at its broadest and boldest — a melting pot of
rock, soul, folk, and pop. What began as a busking string band has
evolved into something more eclectic, rooted not only in the unique
delivery of three different singers, but also the cohesion of five
friends who prefer their music to be homegrown and honest… mistakes
and all.
"This is the first studio album that we've recorded entirely live,"
says Jay Cobb Anderson, who shares frontperson duties with fellow
multi-instrumentalists Mimi Naja and Kellen Asebroek. "We recorded 17
songs in 7 days, with everybody playing together in real time, and we
didn't overdub anything. The songs sound honest and real. They sound
like us."
Co-produced by the bandmates themselves, How To Make Mistakes restores
the momentum that Fruition nearly lost in 2020, back when Covid-19
forced them off the road and into quarantine. At the time, they'd been
playing some of the biggest shows of their lives, crisscrossing the
country in support of their most recent release, Broken At The Break
Of Day. The album's lead single, "Dawn," had even become a hit on
Americana radio. Years of relentless work had taken a toll on
Fruition's mental health, though, and cracks were starting to show in
the band's foundation. "We were so deep into the tour hustle that a
lot of our cohesive vision might've gotten lost," Naja admits. "Like
anybody in any work force, we'd all learned to put our heads down and
keep moving forward, even if that wasn't the best thing for us."
When they reunited one year later for a long-overdue band practice,
they took stock of everything that had changed during those 12 months
apart. Some members had started families. Others had gotten sober. All
of them had made the conscious decision to return to music. Fruition
funneled that growth and maturity back into their new songs, which
doubled as rallying cries for a band eager to chase down success once
again. "We all had the time to ask ourselves some big questions like
'Do we want to keep doing this?'" Naja adds. "The fact that we
reunited in such a reinforced way after all that time apart… I think
it says a lot about who this band truly is."
And who, exactly, is Fruition? On songs like "Lonely Work," they're a
folk-rock band powered by pedal steel and lovely, loping tempos. On
"Scars," they're a group caught halfway between the earthy textures of
Americana and the spacey sweep of something far more ethereal. On "Get
Lost," they're a group of adventure seekers looking to leave the big
city behind, stacking their electric guitars into harmonized solos
along the way. Fruition's acoustic roots are evident throughout How To
Make Mistakes, too, from "Can You Tell Me" — a rough 'n' rowdy folk
song laced with resonator guitar, mandolin, and upright bass — to
the campfire ballad "Never Change." How To Make Mistakes embraces the
full spread of the band's past and present, mixing unplugged
instruments with electrified arrangements, creating a sound suitable
for arenas one minute and front-porch picking parties the next. It's
the widest net Fruition has ever cast, and it's also the truest
representation of the band's wide, all-encompassing sound.
"When I think about this record, the word that comes to mind is
'trust,'" says Asebroek. "We trust each other. We trust the strength
of our songs. We've come to really know ourselves as individuals and
as partners, and instead of trying to prove something to the outside
world, we're trying to show the world that we are who we are, and we
love ourselves."
When Fruition formed in Portland in 2008, the band's three songwriters
earned their first fans by busking together on Oregon's street
corners. Those informal gigs were raw and real, filled with all the
honest imperfections of a live performance. Hundreds of shows later,
How To Make Mistakes revisits that flaws-and-all approach, using it as
the foundation for the most definitive album of the band's career.
Tracked live at eTown Hall's recording studio in Colorado and
engineered/mixed by the band's own drummer, Tyler Thompson, it's an
album that embraces not only the in-the-moment immediacy of a live
band, but also the love, longing, loss, and sheer life lived during
the band's 15+ years together.
"If you listen closely," Anderson points out, "you can hear tempos
fluctuate. Maybe you'll have somebody finger-picking slightly out of
time. But that's part of the whole idea of learning to embrace your
true identity. We're a band that would rather lean into a mistake than
use studio tricks to erase it. With How To Make Mistakes, we wanted to
say, 'This is us, with all of our flaws and all of our strengths.'"
All of their strengths, indeed. Collaborative, consistent, and
musically cohesive, How To Make Mistakes is the sound of a band
rededicating itself to the long haul.
FERGUSON
FERGUSON is a self-proclaimed high school dropout from a one stoplight
town outside of Nashville, he embarked on a solo career after he
formed and dissolved his high school band Kingston Springs, when they
were on the verge of success, with shows at Austin City Limits Music
Festival, Lollapalooza, Bonnaroo lineup and a major label deal on the
table.
Headstrong with a solo vision, FERGUSON's self-released his debut
album State Of Gold, which he claims he recorded in his moms basement
(some of it after he accidentally locked himself inside.) Against the
odds, it became a breakthrough indie hit, with BILLBOARD comparing him
to the "The Beatles and Brian Wilson" and SOUND OPINIONS praised his
"Wonderful rootsy psychedelia meets country, that transports you to
another world of the best psychedelic rock."
Ferguson is hard at work on a follow up album which will be released
in 2025.
You may also like the following events from Trout Lake Hall
[https://allevents.in/org/trout-lake-hall/20839130] :
* Next Monday, 9th June, 12:00 am, FREE! BINGO Night in Trout Lake
[https://allevents.in/trout-lake/free-bingo-night/200028119841140]
* Next Friday, 13th June, 12:00 am, FREE! Tomato Care with Rachel
Suits in Trout Lake
[https://allevents.in/trout-lake/free-tomato-care-with-rachel-suits/200028005653218]
* Next Sunday, 15th June, 01:00 am, Small Paul / Laith in Trout Lake
[https://allevents.in/trout-lake/small-paul-laith/200028063318407]
Also check out other Music events in Trout Lake
[https://allevents.in/trout-lake-wa/music] , Entertainment events in
Trout Lake [https://allevents.in/trout-lake-wa/entertainment] , Health
& Wellness events in Trout Lake
[https://allevents.in/trout-lake-wa/health-wellness] .
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10/07/2025 Last update