Bleachers at Greek Theatre

Schedule

Thu Sep 19 2024 at 07:00 pm

UTC-07:00

Location

The William Randolph Hearst Greek Theatre at UC Berkeley | Berkeley, CA

Live 105 presents Bleachers at the Greek Theatre at UC Berkeley on September 19th, 2024!
The Another Planet Entertainment presale begins Thursday, May 9th at 10am (password = heaven) via APEConcerts.com.
The general on sale begins Friday, May 10th at 10am!
LISTEN TO BLEACHERS:
https://open.spotify.com/artist/2eam0iDomRHGBypaDQLwWI?si=sAFdiOEoQA6tPCylGxb7Mw
WATCH BLEACHERS:
https://www.youtube.com/@bleachers
ABOUT BLEACHERS:
Few 21st century artists have had the cultural impact of Jack Antonoff. Through his work as a producer for artists like Lana Del Rey, Taylor Swift, The 1975 and Lorde, he’s won eight Grammys to date and filled album of the year lists with records like Norman Fucking Rockwell! and Folklore. For years critics have wondered how his work is so successful and what defines it when it doesn’t quite sound like anything else (Antonoff ignores what’s on trend, even when that’s his last project). His methodology, he reveals, is the same for his production work as it is for writing his music with Bleachers: “The great journey and struggle of creating your sound is to drill further and further into it, while the whole time shocking yourself and the people around you.”
The results are always intimate, confessional and unwaveringly tasteful. Formed as a secret in 2013, Antonoff sought to use Bleachers as a continuation of his life-long need to write and perform his songs with a band. The first three Bleachers albums—2014’s Strange Desire, 2017’s Gone Now and 2021’s Take the Sadness Out of Saturday Night—were written through the lens of the loss of his younger sister in 2001. “I do think things happen to people, especially if they’re writers, where it just becomes the starting point for their perspective,” he explains. “I don’t mind that, I like that. Because, the songs I wrote through that lens two years after she died, are very different from the songs I wrote five years later, let alone 10 years. The lens changes wildly.”
Fourth album, Bleachers, Bleachers first since signing to iconic indie label Dirty Hit, began as a set-piece on the idea of tribute living. “It’s not regressive. If anything, it’s the opposite,” says Antonoff. “If anything, this concept of tribute living makes you want to fly into the future so hard, because someone else couldn’t.” But his personal and professional life began to hit an apex of hope as he began writing this album in 2022: he met the love of his life and now wife, and Bleachers were playing to bigger crowds, still young enough to find it exciting and old enough to be a band that’s as worn-in and emotionally dedicated as a marriage. “It just felt like all of a sudden this world was opening up on both sides. Often things happen in your personal life, or things happen with the band, but to have them so extremely connected in this big new future felt pretty heavy and exactly what I’ve been banging on about on a lot of the past records,” he says. While this move away from seeing the world explicitly through the loss of his sister is something he on occasion feels guilty about, it is, in fact, the very meaning of tribute living.
From triumphant lead single “Modern Girl”, the album’s methodology is laid out in bright soulful technicolour: this is Antonoff’s distinctly New Jersey take on the bizarre sensory contradictions of modern life, on his position in culture—or at the very least opinions on that (“pop music hoarder”)—and on the things he cares about, namely the band and its individual members. In the mix, each instrument is heard for its idiosyncrasies and the personality of the player behind it; sonically it’s sad, it’s joyful, it’s music for driving on the highway to, for crying to and for dancing to at weddings.
There’s a rich depth to the band’s sound here, one that Antonoff notes is legitimised by their secret presence everywhere: they’re the band on the last six Taylor Swift albums, the last three Lana Del Rey albums and last two St. Vincent albums. “The band has become characters you’re hearing all over the world. That’s not really a story anyone’s ever told, but it’s a cool one when you think about it,” he says, adding that, “It’s a very rare thing for a band to really be a band. And it takes a really long time.” Bleachers is self-titled because for the first time the reference point for the band is the band itself. For Antonoff, this decision was akin to planting a flag of what the band is at its core.
Matching that lived-in feeling across the album, there’s a comfiness and a taking stock with regards to Antonoff’s personal life. On the gentle 80s-inflected love song “Tiny Moves”, Antonoff articulates that feeling of watching someone you adore when every little move they make is “earth-shattering” to you. “I barely remember writing it. I more remember trancing around the room celebrating that it existed,” he says of its creation. “Me Before You” is another “line in the sand” that he couldn’t have written before this record. Of his previous emotional unavailability as explored in this simplistic and touching track, he says, “I listen to my podcasts. I don’t like anyone in my bed. We all know how that goes. Maybe those are just weird systems of armour that we just wear when we’re not ready or we don’t have the outlet.”
Elsewhere, with soft and pleasingly one-tone vocals on indie synth-pop “Jesus Is Dead”, he names what he needs in life. It was inspired by a time he was sick with Covid and enjoying languishing with his partner, watching Phantom Thread. He considered that all that truly mattered to him could be written on a piece of paper: his family, friends, wife, band, audience and the drive to do some good along the way with the non-profit he runs with his family, the Ally Coalition, which supports organisations in championing LGBTQ youth. ““Jesus is dead” is almost like this protective shield, ‘this is where ‘I’m at’. If that’s not enough for someone, then they need not be in this audience or in this conversation.”
Long-time collaborator Del Rey joins him on “Alma Mater”; a sprawling, uncategorizable mood of a song written in some downtime messing around when they were working on her music. They were making each other laugh, singing lines to each other (“‘She’s my alma mater / fuck Balenciaga”) and the result is a pensive but spritely and dynamic surprise. “This song is a weird little magic gem where I’m not really sure why all the pieces are coming together, but they are in this really special way to me,” he notes.
Rousing anthem “Self Respect” is a different prospect altogether, emerging from Antonoff’s exhaustion at feeling he has to be perfect in his personal life. It pins together different events from across time and space: the profundity of his sister’s death, the strange biblical nature of Kobe Bryant’s death, the idiocy of Kendall Jenner in that Pepsi commercial. “Why did Kobe Bryant die? Why did my sister die? Why did Kendall Jenner make that commercial? The way the human brain thinks, not every question is perfectly sewed together. I’m not only thinking about deep things. I’m not only thinking about silly things. It’s all happening at once,” he says. But, as explored in Joan Didion’s infamous essay, self respect evokes confronting feelings in an individual, despite all its mundanity and overuse. “Ironically, most people’s definition of self-respect is an outward one,” he says. “It’s such a widely commented on concept that it becomes almost impossible to have your own idea of it, which is so horrible because the whole point is that it’s this personal thing. But as wellness, self-respect, -love, -care, all these things become popular, the natural thing to happen is for them to become debased.”
As Bleachers dances with all these big collective ideas and small, interior ones, it maintains a proud New Jersey sensibility. Born, raised and now based in the Garden State, Antonoff (who is by necessity a devotee of Bruce Springsteen) says that its sound, “to literally articulate it, is: so sad, so hopeful, so aspirational, so broken all at once.” It’s gang vocals, twinkling glockenspiels, brief sax solos and the soundtrack to driving into the sunset heartbroken but at the centre of your own universe. He chooses to lyrically embed his grief and sarcasm within the broad, embraceable sonics, reporting from his geographical home because his personhood and place are inexplicably entwined for him. Even without being a pre-existing Bleachers fan who understands all the references and in-jokes knitted into the fabric of Bleachers, there’s something reassuringly touchable and concrete about its sentiment: exist in crazy times but remember what counts.
What Antonoff anticipates now, having successfully shocked himself with Bleachers, is the opportunity to play the first shows of this album run, and shape the feeling of this era for both band and fans from within that live experience. “If you go watch Beyoncé, you’re praying at the altar of Beyoncé. That’s not who I am,” Antonoff concludes. “I always gravitated more towards artists like Paul Simon or Bruce Springsteen; just people who looked like me and felt like me, but had this weird thing they could do that could bring people together. Some people like to be witnessed. I don’t like to be witnessed. I like to be a part of something.”

Where is it happening?

The William Randolph Hearst Greek Theatre at UC Berkeley, Berkeley, United States
Another Planet Entertainment

Host or Publisher Another Planet Entertainment

It's more fun with friends. Share with friends

Discover More Events in Berkeley

Live From Taiwan: Feng E at Freight & Salvage
Wed Sep 18 2024 at 08:00 pm Live From Taiwan: Feng E at Freight & Salvage

Freight & Salvage

ENTERTAINMENT MUSIC
An Evening With Vulfpeck (9\/18\/24) Late Show
Wed Sep 18 2024 at 10:30 pm An Evening With Vulfpeck (9/18/24) Late Show

2036 University Avenue, Berkeley, CA, United States, California 94704

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
2024 Lecture Series: Modular
Thu Sep 19 2024 at 06:00 pm 2024 Lecture Series: Modular

AIA East Bay

Bee in the Lotus: 8-Week Tantrik Immersion
Thu Sep 19 2024 at 06:30 pm Bee in the Lotus: 8-Week Tantrik Immersion

The Green Yogi

HEALTH-WELLNESS WORKSHOPS
An Evening With Vulfpeck (9\/19\/24) Late Show
Thu Sep 19 2024 at 10:30 pm An Evening With Vulfpeck (9/19/24) Late Show

2036 University Avenue, Berkeley, CA, United States, California 94704

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Bertie Kibreah | Debate on the Dais: Shrine Performance and Discursive Devotion in Bangladesh
Fri Sep 20 2024 at 05:00 pm Bertie Kibreah | Debate on the Dais: Shrine Performance and Discursive Devotion in Bangladesh

10 Stephens Hall, Berkeley, CA, United States, California 94720

ART FESTIVALS
Berkeley CA NextGen PEMF Presentation
Fri Sep 20 2024 at 06:00 pm Berkeley CA NextGen PEMF Presentation

DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Berkeley Marina

HEALTH-WELLNESS
An Evening With Vulfpeck (9\/20\/24) Early Show
Fri Sep 20 2024 at 07:00 pm An Evening With Vulfpeck (9/20/24) Early Show

2036 University Avenue, Berkeley, CA, United States, California 94704

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Sound Therapy New Moon Meditation -BERKELEY
Sat Jun 17 2023 at 06:00 pm Sound Therapy New Moon Meditation -BERKELEY

Berkeley

HEALTH-WELLNESS MEDITATION
Faeries of the Moonlight - Free Musical Theatre in the Park
Sat Aug 19 2023 at 04:00 pm Faeries of the Moonlight - Free Musical Theatre in the Park

John Hinkel Park

ART THEATRE
Snapshot Quest Photo Scavenger Hunt Game
Fri Oct 06 2023 at 12:00 am Snapshot Quest Photo Scavenger Hunt Game

Your neighborhood

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Free Your Voice w\/ Phoenix Song
Sat Mar 02 2024 at 02:00 pm Free Your Voice w/ Phoenix Song

The Green Yogi

WORKSHOPS MEDITATION
The Sound Circle
Wed Apr 24 2024 at 07:00 pm The Sound Circle

The Green Yogi

HEALTH-WELLNESS MEDITATION
Open Mic ~ Music ~ Poetry ~ Hip Hop ~ Jazz ~ Vendors Needed Wanted
Wed Jun 26 2024 at 05:00 pm Open Mic ~ Music ~ Poetry ~ Hip Hop ~ Jazz ~ Vendors Needed Wanted

Berkeley

ENTERTAINMENT OPEN-MIC
Jazz Harpist  Motoshi KOSAKO Live Concert @ NORIA Winery
Fri Jun 28 2024 at 07:00 pm Jazz Harpist Motoshi KOSAKO Live Concert @ NORIA Winery

725 Gilman Street unit a, Berkeley, CA, USA

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Motoshi Kosako Harp Concert @Noria Winery
Fri Jun 28 2024 at 07:00 pm Motoshi Kosako Harp Concert @Noria Winery

725 Gilman St, Berkeley, CA 94710-1312, United States

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
\ud83d\udc9cNested Micro - A Closed Container Micro Dance - No Admittance After 7:15 PM\ud83d\udc9c
Fri Jun 28 2024 at 07:00 pm 💜Nested Micro - A Closed Container Micro Dance - No Admittance After 7:15 PM💜

Berkeley Yoga Center

WORKSHOPS PARTIES
Mark Geary: In The Time of Locusts
Fri Jun 28 2024 at 08:00 pm Mark Geary: In The Time of Locusts

The Back Room

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Della Mae at Freight & Salvage
Fri Jun 28 2024 at 08:00 pm Della Mae at Freight & Salvage

Freight & Salvage

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Opening Celebration - at Yogakula
Sat Jun 29 2024 at 09:30 am Opening Celebration - at Yogakula

1666 Shattuck Ave.

HEALTH-WELLNESS MUSIC

What's Happening Next in Berkeley?

Discover Berkeley Events