Florist live with Allegra Krieger in the 9th Ward, Buffalo, NY

Schedule

Sun Nov 24 2024 at 09:00 pm

UTC-04:00

Location

The 9th Ward | Buffalo, NY

Advertisement
DSP Shows presents Florist live in the 9th Ward with Allegra Krieger
7pm Doors, 8pm Show
Tickets: On sale 9/13 @10am: $16 advance / $20 day of show: General Admission Standing available at TixR.com or in person at the Babeville Box Office (M-F 11a-5p – 3% credit card fee, no fee for cash).
“It’s a portrait of who we are as collaborators, as really long term friends and as extended family as well,” leader Emily Sprague says of her band’s new self-titled album. Florist is also the strongest album of the band’s decade-long career, an immersive work that conveys the magic of the earth and of family, and the whole of the band’s heart. It arrives just after the cap of a winding journey.
In 2017, shortly after the release of the band’s sophomore record, If Blue Could Be Happiness, Sprague sequestered herself in Los Angeles, thousands of miles away from friends and family, and from the physical void and spiritual crisis left in the wake of her mother’s death. There, she took up surfing and released Emily Alone, which was essentially a solo album released under the Florist moniker. Only after months of self reflection and therapy did Sprague realize that life in a silo is no way to live. That a life directed by fear is not much of a life.
“The trauma response to losing my best friend, my mom, was to feel really afraid to get close to anybody ever again,” she says. “It’s sort of cheesy, but I realized that life is better when you share it. The answer isn’t to isolate yourself and be alone.” So she began writing Emily Alone’s companion, the other side of the binary, a record that rings distinctly of Sprague’s tender and poetic spirit, filled with nature and wonder and tears, but without all the loneliness and seclusion. She also adopted a dog, who, she says, “completely changed my life.” “My mind just started exploding with all these thoughts about what it means to live with others, and live with love and care collaboration.”
Then, for all of June of 2019, amid a hot and rainy summer, Sprague (guitar, synth, vocals), Jonnie Baker (guitar, synth, sampling, bass, saxophone, vocals), Rick Spataro (bass, piano, synth, vocals) and Felix Walworth (percussion, synth, guitar, vocals) convened in a rented house in the Hudson Valley, to live and work together. It was the first time the quartet recorded that way, and for that long.
“In the past we’d meet up for a couple of days, or one day here and there,” Spague recalls. “Living together for a month is a really big part of why the arrangements are the way they are, and also why the instrumentals are such a huge part of the record.”
They set up their gear on the screened-in front porch, which looked out onto a canopy of trees, allowing the sounds of nature to play a leading role through out. Then, they experimented. The production and recording of the album directly reflects the organic ways in which the band worked that month, with whispering voices, crickets, rain and birds accenting the aleatoric quality of the instrumentation, each player drawing from the communal energy of the woods and their interpersonal bonds.
Poignant, guitar-centric meditation “Red Bird Pt. 2 (Morning)” carries on Sprague’s concern with love, loss and the natural world. “She’s in the birdsong/She won’t be gone,” she sings of her late mother, proffering a merciful sense of resolve. “Feathers” finds her facing her fears over threads of bowed guitar while “Dandelion” meditates on the beauty of our finite existence, pairing synth and fingerpicking with the spirit of Emily Dickinson. “Sci Fi Silence” occupies a liminal space between soul baring confession and contemplative new age, a swirl of analog synth that culminates in a full-band meditation. “You’re not what I have, but what I love,” the band sings over and again until the words grow into a kind of mantra, a thing that at once pierces and heals.
The quartet played through muggy days and breezy nights, and often impromptu. “In between working on songs specifically, somebody would be sitting on the porch playing a little instrumental piece, and somebody else would be in the kitchen making dinner and stop, and go to the porch and pick up a random instrument,” Sprague explains.
These creative bursts became the album’s ambient instrumental bridges, like “Variation” and “Jonnie on the Porch,” gentle moments that portray their life together in that particular moment. The bells heard throughout the album are from a collection housed in the rental, the animals were their neighbors.
The result is 19 tracks that feel like the culmination of a decade-long journey, their fourth full-length album, but the first deserving of a self-titled designation. “We called it Florist because this is not just my songs with a backing band,” Sprague explains. “It’s a practice. It’s a collaboration. It’s our one life. These are my best friends and the music is the way that it is because of that.” After making the record they always knew they could, together, as one, Sprague could no longer live on the west coast without her band and blood. So, she returned home. Last year, she moved back to The Catskills to be closer to her father and her creative collaborators. She misses surfing, but finds peace in the area’s natural landscapes, and through a strengthening sense of physical reconnection. “A goal is to share the band’s connectedness and relationship, but also how we’re all connected,” she says. With Florist, Emily is no longer alone.
Allegra Krieger opens the show! Allegra Krieger was born a selkie in the Atlantic Ocean in 1845. Taking a more conventional corporeal form, she moved to New York City, where she maintains a residence on the sixth floor of a hotel in east midtown. She writes songs, bad checks, love letters, and poorly formatted emails and trusts that terrible things can have extraordinary outcomes.
QVC has been playing on the small rectangular TV in her room at a low volume for thirteen years straight. She drinks a lukewarm beer on blue cotton sheets and watches two women hawk a tropical blouson sleeve top for three easy payments of 15.99 on the distant screen before drifting into a fitful sleep. How remarkably human!
Her new album, 'Art of the Unseen Infinity Machine,' will be out on September 13th via Double Double Whammy.
Advertisement

Where is it happening?

The 9th Ward, 341 Delaware Ave, Buffalo, NY 14202-1871, United States,Buffalo, New York

Event Location & Nearby Stays:

Babeville

Host or Publisher Babeville

It's more fun with friends. Share with friends

Discover More Events in Buffalo

The Disco Biscuits Tickets
Sun Nov 24 2024 at 08:00 pm The Disco Biscuits Tickets

Town Ballroom

ENTERTAINMENT PARTIES
Peter McPoland - November 24 at Rec Room
Sun Nov 24 2024 at 08:00 pm Peter McPoland - November 24 at Rec Room

Rec Room Buffalo

The Story So Far
Sun Nov 24 2024 at 08:00 pm The Story So Far

Buffalo Riverworks

CALENDAR
Florist, Allegra Krieger in Buffalo
Sun Nov 24 2024 at 08:00 pm Florist, Allegra Krieger in Buffalo

The 9th Ward

Rotary BNMC's Blood Drive
Mon Nov 25 2024 at 02:00 pm Rotary BNMC's Blood Drive

589 Ellicott St, Buffalo, NY 14203-1312, United States

NONPROFIT
Cuccidati 'Bake & Take' Baking Class
Mon Nov 25 2024 at 06:00 pm Cuccidati 'Bake & Take' Baking Class

27 Chandler Street, Buffalo, NY, United States, New York 14207

WORKSHOPS HOLIDAY
Cutting Board Make & Take
Tue Nov 26 2024 at 01:00 pm Cutting Board Make & Take

Rockler Woodworking and Hardware - Buffalo

WORKSHOPS CHRISTMAS
Real Friends
Tue Nov 26 2024 at 06:00 pm Real Friends

Town Ballroom

CALENDAR
Sound Therapy Meditation  Workshop- BUFFALO, NY
Tue Mar 21 2023 at 04:00 pm Sound Therapy Meditation Workshop- BUFFALO, NY

Buffalo

MEDITATION MUSIC
Fright Lights Laser Music Experience
Sat Oct 21 2023 at 08:30 pm Fright Lights Laser Music Experience

Whitworth Ferguson Planetarium

ENTERTAINMENT MUSIC
We Call It Ballet: Sleeping Beauty in a Dazzling Light Show
Mon Aug 12 2024 We Call It Ballet: Sleeping Beauty in a Dazzling Light Show

Forbes Theater

ART CONCERTS
The Rock Orchestra
Sun Sep 01 2024 The Rock Orchestra

Shea's Performing Arts Center

ENTERTAINMENT MUSIC
The Story So Far with Superheaven and Koyo
Mon Sep 09 2024 The Story So Far with Superheaven and Koyo

Buffalo RiverWorks

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Underoath with Static Dress
Tue Sep 10 2024 Underoath with Static Dress

Buffalo RiverWorks

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
The Allman Betts Band
Tue Sep 10 2024 The Allman Betts Band

Kleinhans Music Hall

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Pentatonix
Fri Sep 13 2024 Pentatonix

KeyBank Center

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Joe Bonamassa
Fri Sep 13 2024 Joe Bonamassa

Shea's Performing Arts Center

ENTERTAINMENT PERFORMANCES
Trans-Siberian Orchestra
Sat Sep 14 2024 Trans-Siberian Orchestra

KeyBank Center

ENTERTAINMENT MUSIC
Marauda
Tue Sep 17 2024 Marauda

Town Ballroom

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Return to Wholeness: A Breath, Music & Energy Workshop
Thu Sep 19 2024 at 12:00 pm Return to Wholeness: A Breath, Music & Energy Workshop

Buffalo

WORKSHOPS VIRTUAL

What's Happening Next in Buffalo?

Discover Buffalo Events