Sam Robbins and Seth Glier - Live at Jammin Java

Schedule

Sun, 13 Apr, 2025 at 07:00 pm

UTC-04:00

Location

Jammin' Java | Vienna, VA

Advertisement
Come join nationally touring singer songwriters Sam Robbins and Seth Glier for this special, one-time-only in the round style show. Sam and Seth will be sharing songs and stories and collaborating!
About the artists:
Sam Robbins
Sam Robbins is often described as an "old soul singer songwriter." A New England based, nationally touring musician whose music evokes classic singer songwriters like James Taylor and Jackson Browne, Sam adds a modern, upbeat edge to the storyteller troubadour persona. An avid performer, he has gained recognition from extensive national touring, from sharing the stage with artists like Jason Mraz and Liz Longley, and as a main stage performer at national festivals like the Kerrville, Falcon Ridge and Wheatland Festivals.
Touring with a new acclaimed album, “So Much I Still Don’t See”, named one of Atwood Magazine’s 2025 “Artists to Watch”, leading songwriting workshops and exciting performances across the country, Sam Robbins has gained a reputation as one of the brightest rising stars in the national folk music community.
Sam Robbins’ third album So Much I Still Don’t See is a testament to a singer songwriter’s journey through his 20’s, through his formative years of 45,000 miles per year touring and the beginning of a troubadour’s career. Most of all, it is the culmination of firsthand experiences gathered through hard travel and big adventures.
For the listener, these big adventures are heard through a soft, introspective soundscape. Produced by singer songwriter Seth Glier, the album is built sparingly around solo acoustic guitar and vocals, tracked live, just as they are performed live on stage. Recorded in an old church in Springfield, MA, the sounds of So Much I Still Don’t See center around the humility that comes with traveling and experiencing a world much larger than yourself – looking inward and reveling in the quiet of the inner mind while facing an expansive landscape of life on the road. The storytelling in the songs is draped with touches of upright bass, keyboards, organ, and electric guitar, but the core of the album is one man and his worn out Martin guitar, bought new just a few years ago a week after moving to Nashville.
The sonic landscape of So Much I Still Don’t See was largely inspired by the recordings of James Taylor, Jim Croce, Harry Chapin and singer songwriters of the like. Growing up in New Hampshire, Robbins would frequently drive up to the white mountains for weekend hiking trips with his father, accompanied in the old truck by a 70’s singer songwriter CD box set. This music seeped into Robbins’ soul and coupled with experiencing the mountain landscape of his childhood, this “old soul singer songwriter” was shaped by these recordings and the direct, soft and exacting songwriting voices that they exemplified.
The storytelling in So Much I Still Don’t See is built through small moments, as seen in such lyrics as “stuck in line behind Gladys at the grocery store/smiling as she shows me a new doll for her granddaughter”, the opening line from the title track, and “I’m standing in the sunlight in a public park in Tennessee/ and I know the soft earth below has always made room for me”, from the opening track, “Piles of Sand”, and “the Hooters parking lots are all shining so bright”, from the upbeat, Chet Atkins inspired “The Real Thing”.
After a brief stint on NBC’s The Voice in 2018, Robbins graduated from Berklee College of Music in 2019 and quickly made his move down to Nashville. After a tumultuous five years in Music City, So Much I Still Don’t See is the first recording made after moving back to the Boston area in early 2024. After trying his hand at co-writing country songs five days a week, Robbins found his way to a home on the road, now performing over 200 shows per year in listening rooms and festivals across the country.
Growing prowess on acoustic guitar through the years of touring has earned Robbins a large fanbase of fingerstyle guitar fans, and So Much I Still Don’t See is his first album that includes an original instrumental track, “Rosie”, named after his wife’s middle name. The song, a transitional moment midway through the album, was written in a painter’s style – following a melodic line through to it’s end, and changing chord colors around the line as it flows.
This foray into instrumental writing comes as Robbins is increasingly being recognized as a strong voice in US fingerstyle guitar playing, not just as an accompanist to his vocal.
This touring and subsequent songwriting growth has led to several awards and festival performances, making Robbins a 2021 Kerrville Folk Festival New Folk contest winner, a 2022 Falcon Ridge Folk Festival “Most Wanted to Return” artist, and later a solo mainstage performer at each festival in 2023 and 2024. Robbins has expanded his touring to festivals nationwide, including the Wheatland Festival in Michigan, the Fox Valley Folk Music and Storytelling Festival in Chicago and has earned a title as “One of the most promising new songwriters of his generation” — Mike Davies, Fateau Magazine, UK
In early 2023, Robbins was gifted Marcus Aurelius’s “Meditations”, a collection of the Roman Emperor’s diaries in the early 100’s AD. The ideas from this book, centered around the concepts of stoicism, seeped into the songs of So Much I Still Don’t See Much of the album reflects on the inner peace found through stoic philosophy that was discovered in reading this book throughout the past year on the road.
The light, upbeat Buddy Holly sound of “All So Important” works hand in hand with the lyrics, which are a meditation on this philosophy, and the sense that we are all just grains of sand in a larger universe. Verse lyrics such as “A bronze bust of a Roman ruler, emperor of everywhere the sun could shine/ thought his name would live on forever/but now you can only read it if you squint your eyes” are followed by a simple repetition of the sarcastic chorus, “it’s all so, all so important”.
Another influence on the songwriting of So Much I Still Don’t See is Robbins’ work with the group Music Therapy Retreats. This is the first recording made after starting his work with the organization, which pairs songwriters with veterans to help write their often unheard and inspiring stories into songs. This life changing and life-affirming experience has drawn out deeper emotions and deeper stories in Robbins’ own writing and music, inspired by the open hearts and stories of the veterans he is lucky to work with.
The final moment of So Much I Still Don’t See is a quiet, serene moment with Halley Neal, nationally touring singer songwriter and Robbins’ fiancé. The two have led separate careers after meeting at Berklee College of Music, coming together when the moment is right. As the tenth and final track, the soft, one-take, one-mic cover of The Beatles’ “I Will” was recorded on the last day of recording on a cheap nylon string guitar found in the corner of the studio. The short and sweet love song is a simple finish on the introspective and warm album, spotlighting the true spirit of So Much I Still Don’t See – calmness and simplicity, always looking forward to the future.
Seth Glier:
The earth speaks to us in a myriad of ways — through ice cores, through uplift and erosion, through tree rings — languages we have the potential to restore our literacy in. Reconnecting with these quiet messages has set Seth Glier, an avid mushroom forager and a Grammy-nominated artist from Western Massachusetts, on a path of channeling nature’s longing for communion with humanity into song. His new album Everything is a collection of eight songs inviting us to imagine a future in which humans and the planet are re-aligned into mutual restoration.
Each song presents a practical climate solution with concrete optimism.“What if this is the beginning, not the beginning of the end,” the album opens with bristling energy and hope on “Rise,” an anthem about rewilding. “Finally Home” is a celebration of regenerative farming with driving doo wop vocal harmony. “Mammoth,” written from the perspective of a wooly mammoth being brought back to life from frozen DNA, invites us to consider the blip of human history against billions of years of evolution. The album’s guest stars Crys Matthews, Hayley Reardon, and Windborne elevate the record with surprise from the stark choir arrangement of “Birches” recorded a capella in an old church to “My Body Remembers,” a flowing meditation on the transmission of healing, EMDR & The Language of Trees. The album’s title track was inspired by an experience Seth had while foraging. “When I picked up the chantarelle mushroom and brought it towards my nose I first smelled sweet apricot and then my spine straightened suddenly. The feeling was like déjà vu. It was a first time, yet somewhere inside of me I had done this once before. I was reconnecting to a knowledge I had already known.” The album is an acknowledgement of the sacred connections that exist between all living things and is an active questioning of what might be possible collectively. Everything is a reminder that the future is something we always have an influence over.
Seth’s gifts are an innate curiosity and a fierce desire to connect with other people. His musical acumen provides him with a vehicle for both. He was worked as a cultural diplomat for the US State Department and collaborated with musicians in Ukraine, Mongolia, China, and Mexico. Seth has shared the bill with a diverse list of artists ranging from the likes of Ronnie Spector, James Taylor, Ani DiFranco, & Glen Campbell. As a producer, music director, or studio musician he has collaborated with Sophie B. Hawkins, Tom Rush, Antje Duvekot, Richard Shindell, Doctora Qingona, Dar Williams, Nick Carter, & Cyndi Lauper. Seth is a five-time Independent Music Award winner and received a Grammy nomination for his album The Next Right Thing. With a commitment to using songwriting as a tool for positive change, he has written with the students in Parkland, FL for the “Parkland Project,” cowritten with soldiers at Walter Reed, and is an advocate for autism awareness citing his autistic brother Jamie as his greatest non-musical-musical influence.
Advertisement

Where is it happening?

Jammin' Java, 227 Maple Ave E,Vienna, Virginia, United States

Event Location & Nearby Stays:

Sam Robbins

Host or Publisher Sam Robbins

It's more fun with friends. Share with friends

Discover More Events in Vienna

The Fixx
Wed, 16 Apr, 2025 at 12:00 am The Fixx

The Barns at Wolf Trap

TRIPS-ADVENTURES
Fireside Chat & Social with Saema Somalya!
Wed, 16 Apr, 2025 at 06:00 pm Fireside Chat & Social with Saema Somalya!

The Tower Club Tysons Corner

Interviewing and Preparation
Wed, 16 Apr, 2025 at 06:00 pm Interviewing and Preparation

The Women's Center

WORKSHOPS
Brad Tursi
Wed, 16 Apr, 2025 at 07:00 pm Brad Tursi

The Barns At Wolf Trap National Park for the Performing Arts

PERFORMANCES ENTERTAINMENT
Fri, 28 Mar, 2025 at 07:00 pm American Aquarium @ Jammin Java in Vienna

Jammin Java

IT CONCERTS
An Evening with Skip Castro
Sat, 29 Mar, 2025 at 10:00 am An Evening with Skip Castro

Jammin' Java

MUSIC IT
Inspired Expressions: Friday Night Christ-Centered Worship Experience
Fri, 04 Apr, 2025 Inspired Expressions: Friday Night Christ-Centered Worship Experience

Capital Church

LIVE-MUSIC OPEN-MIC
Bayt Vienna Indoor Bazaar
Sat, 05 Apr, 2025 at 11:00 am Bayt Vienna Indoor Bazaar

Vienna Community Center

MUSIC LIVE-MUSIC
Boogie Wonderland - A 1970's Dance Party with DJ D
Sat, 05 Apr, 2025 at 07:00 pm Boogie Wonderland - A 1970's Dance Party with DJ D

227 Maple Ave E, Vienna, VA, United States, Virginia 22180

ENTERTAINMENT PARTIES
Vienna Academy of Music and Arts Spring Piano Festival
Sun, 06 Apr, 2025 at 12:00 pm Vienna Academy of Music and Arts Spring Piano Festival

Center for Education at Wolf Trap

FESTIVALS MUSIC
Herstory
Sun, 06 Apr, 2025 at 04:00 pm Herstory

Church of the Holy Comforter

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Eid Bash @ O-Lounge
Sun, 06 Apr, 2025 at 07:00 pm Eid Bash @ O-Lounge

The O-Lounge

EID-DAY MUSIC
Sam Robbins and Seth Glier - Live at Jammin Java
Sun, 13 Apr, 2025 at 07:00 pm Sam Robbins and Seth Glier - Live at Jammin Java

Jammin' Java

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
The Del McCoury Band
Sun, 20 Oct, 2024 The Del McCoury Band

The Barns at Wolf Trap

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Alessio Bax and Lucille Chung - Two Pianos at The Barns at Wolf Trap
Thu, 17 Apr, 2025 at 08:00 pm Alessio Bax and Lucille Chung - Two Pianos at The Barns at Wolf Trap

The Barns at Wolf Trap

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Fri, 18 Apr, 2025 at 07:00 pm Laurel @ Jammin Java in Vienna

Jammin Java

IT CONCERTS
The Cathedral Brass - "O Sing, My Soul" with The Fairfax Choral Society
Sun, 01 Jun, 2025 at 04:00 pm The Cathedral Brass - "O Sing, My Soul" with The Fairfax Choral Society

Vienna Presbyterian Church

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Ringo Starr and His All Starr Band
Mon, 16 Jun, 2025 at 07:00 pm Ringo Starr and His All Starr Band

Wolf Trap National Park for the Performing Arts

ENTERTAINMENT MUSIC
Ringo Starr and His All Starr Band at Filene Center at Wolf Trap
Tue, 17 Jun, 2025 at 08:00 pm Ringo Starr and His All Starr Band at Filene Center at Wolf Trap

Filene Center at Wolf Trap

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Ringo Starr & His All Starr Band
Wed, 18 Jun, 2025 at 12:00 am Ringo Starr & His All Starr Band

Filene Center at The Wolf Trap

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT

What's Happening Next in Vienna?

Discover Vienna Events