The Weather Station

Schedule

Fri Mar 28 2025 at 08:00 pm

UTC-04:00

Location

The Sinclair | Cambridge, MA

Advertisement

Humanhood Tour
THE WEATHER STATION
FRI, 28 MAR 2025 at 08:00PM EDT
Ages: All Ages
Doors Open: 07:00PM
OnSale: Fri, 22 Nov 2024 at 10:00AM EST
Announcement: Wed, 20 Nov 2024 at 12:00PM EST
It takes only 10 seconds for Tamara Lindeman to pull us to the floor on Humanhood, the seventh and most arresting album she has ever made as The Weather Station. “I’ve gotten used to feeling like I’m crazy—or just lazy,” she sings at the start of “Neon Signs,” her voice at once a soft whisper to a confidant and a full-throated confession to a crowd. “Why can’t I get off this floor? Think straight anymore?” If you don’t know this feeling, consider yourself blessed, because it seems these days like our true modern malaise, that unbound sense of not knowing how or what it is we’re supposed to contribute to this fractious world, or if we even have the energy or will to try. That disoriented sense is the emotional throughline of Humanhood, written during one of the most difficult periods of Lindeman’s life and rendered with a rock band with improvisational chops just as she began to recover by reckoning with a complicated truth: Sometimes, life simply tries to dismantle us, and we must accept that in order to survive.

From the outside, 2022 likely appeared a banner year for Lindeman. Her 2021 album Ignorance—a deeply personal but widely resonant reflection on climate change, or how we’ve learned to live alongside our own existential undoing—was one of that year’s most celebrated records. 2022, then, was a time of touring, travel, and activism alongside the release of Ignorance’s more austere companion, the beautiful How Is It That I Should Look at the Stars. But at an ostensible new professional peak, she was also going through a mental health crisis she mostly kept hidden. As Lindeman has done for at least 15 years, she turned to songwriting, combining pain, confusion, and flickers of distant hope with ideas about advertising, capitalism, and how we’re meant to feel very specific ways into pages and pages of lyrics. In the past, Lindeman mostly wrote about her past, turning backwards to gain perspective. But for Humanhood, she worked with the present as she tried to endure it. Humanhood, then, radiates with new urgency—and emerges as a sort of tether, offered up here for any of us else feeling disconnected from the vertiginous reality of right now.

In the fall of 2023, Lindeman gathered six musicians at Canterbury Music Company, where she had recorded Ignorance and How Is It That I Should Look at the Stars, alongside co-producer Marcus Paquin. Several of these players—drummer Kieran Adams, keyboardist Ben Boye, percussionist Philippe Melanson, reed-and-wind specialist Karen Ng, and bassist Ben Whiteley—had worked together but never in this specific arrangement or context. Lindeman, after all, wanted to hear the sudden sparks made by these new encounters, to witness everyone react in real-time to the songs and sketches she supplied.

There were many songs left intentionally unfinished, so that the band could respond to what she was saying, singing, and playing rather than strict forms she had already put around it all. They could join her in the fog and fatigue, then, in the sense of being so disoriented that even being in something as ordinarily unsettling as a mere upside-down seemed aspirational. The playing perfectly captures that sense of vertigo, with hiccupping flutes and cantering drums that suddenly fumble for a way forward, with drifting drones and granulated piano and banjo that search busily for a melody they’ve lost. Other friends eventually added their own bits, like old-time updater Sam Amidon, ace guitarist James Elkington, and textural magus Joseph Shabason. They all drop into these fugues, shaping the hazy unease that is so endemic these days into tangible sound. In the final stage, mixer Joseph Lorge helped make sense of these musical webs through thoughtful listening and deliberation. Rendered as a front-to-back linear journey, the result unfolds as a near-continuous piece of music, with interstitial instrumentals fading into and out of the songs.

Much of Humanhood is a riveting and real document of what it means to be lost, to be hamstrung by confusion, unease, and grief for a period so long you begin to wonder if there is an end. It is rendered in linear fashion, so that we start alongside Lindeman on the floor and slowly try to peel ourselves from it. There’s the spellbinding “Body Moves,” which toggles between an organ-backed hymn and a piece of elastic pop, the endless syncopations moving like a misfiring heart. It’s a song about the way we lie to ourselves and insist everything is OK, even as we’re breaking down from the inside. An anthem of escape, “Window” finds Lindeman actually crawling out of one, trying to find a way to anything that hurts less, that actually feels sustaining. The slashing guitar and spiraling electronics conjure a panic attack, the brain demanding answers. “I can’t explain right now,” she sings in a sudden tumble during one of the album’s most gripping moments, “just that I’m leaving.” Away, forward, better—what other explanations need there be?

Traces of promise emerge slowly across Humanhood. Late in the record, above the near-gamelan rhythm and spiderwebbing guitar that frame the title track, Lindeman goes down to Toronto’s lakeshore and dives in, pulled into the current of reality by the grip of the cold and the sight of cottonwood and vine. Even amid urban landscapes, nature can redirect our focus, remind us that our problems are not limited to our experience. In the song, Lindeman describes a moment of understanding she is doing the best she can—that we all are, really. Sometimes it is enough just to keep one’s head above these choppy waters. There is a hidden and necessary bit of climate change commentary here, too, as Lindeman recognizes that we’re all dealing with ourselves as the world totters near a breaking point. None of it is easy or precedented. In that sense, Humanhood mirrors Ignorance, as we all try to navigate a world disrupted.

And then during “Lonely,” as submerged and forlorn as Humanhood ever sounds, Lindeman paradoxically starts to trace a way toward healing: admitting the old hurt, looking for new connection, and, most of all, walking down to the Tranzac's Southern Cross Lounge to hear friends play music. “A simple recipe—this medicine, really—that can let anything in,” she sings, her feather-light voice drifting now toward resolve. She’s doing that in real time.

The clearest vow of motion, though, comes with the finale and longest song here, “Sewing.” For Lindeman, the hardest part of this whole ordeal might have been accepting that deeply personal suffering happens, that it is entirely human to feel as if you’re detached from yourself, from your world, from your humanhood. Most of us have been there, maybe all of us. So during “Sewing,” as piano slowly rises over the drums’ gentle trot, we hear her stitch together her life—bad days to good, shattering pain to little triumphs. It all constitutes existence. “All I can do is sew it into this undulating thing, whatever it is I’m making with you,” she sings, voice so faint it’s as if she were whispering to the air itself. “A life—I’ll sew in tonight, too.”

The band lifts into a rhythmless, roaring crescendo, then goes silent. That was supposed to be the end, but Lindeman kept singing. They drifted back in with her. “I’m taking pictures of the sky again,” she offers. “I don’t know why. I guess I wanted to.” She closes there with a hint of volition, however slight it may sound—up off the floor and ahead into life, no matter what shape that strange quilt may yet take.


$.25 from each ticket purchased will go to The Shout Syndicate, a Boston-based, volunteer-run fundraising effort who raises money to help fund youth-led arts programs at proven non-profit creative youth development organizations in Greater Boston. Housed at The Boston Foundation, The Shout Syndicate works in partnership with the Mayor's Office of Arts & Culture's creative plan, Boston Creates. https://www.theshoutsyndicate.com/
Advertisement

Where is it happening?

The Sinclair, 52 Church St,Cambridge,MA,United States

Event Location & Nearby Stays:

Bowery Boston

Host or Publisher Bowery Boston

It's more fun with friends. Share with friends

Discover More Events in Cambridge

We Are The Change
Sat Mar 29 2025 at 04:00 pm We Are The Change

First Church in Cambridge, Congregational, U.C.C.

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Brave the Caves: Cheese Cave Tour
Sat Mar 29 2025 at 07:30 pm Brave the Caves: Cheese Cave Tour

Formaggio Kitchen - Cambridge

WORKSHOPS PARTIES
Sina Bathaie
Tue Apr 01 2025 at 07:30 pm Sina Bathaie

Middle East - Downstairs

Sina Bathaie in Cambridge
Tue Apr 01 2025 at 07:30 pm Sina Bathaie in Cambridge

Middle East Downstairs

CONCERTS MUSIC
Unleash Your Diva: Dance Sassy, Wednesdays, 8:15p, Dance Complex, MA
Wed Jan 04 2023 at 08:30 pm Unleash Your Diva: Dance Sassy, Wednesdays, 8:15p, Dance Complex, MA

The Dance Complex

WORKSHOPS ENTERTAINMENT
Yoga for People Who Move
Thu Feb 01 2024 at 10:00 am Yoga for People Who Move

The Foundry

HEALTH-WELLNESS WORKSHOPS
MC Kabir Sen with Krush Factory Monthly Residency
Sat Aug 03 2024 at 09:00 pm MC Kabir Sen with Krush Factory Monthly Residency

Lizard Lounge

ENTERTAINMENT MUSIC
Candlelight: Holiday Special featuring \u201cThe Nutcracker\u201d and More
Sun Sep 01 2024 Candlelight: Holiday Special featuring “The Nutcracker” and More

First Church in Cambridge

CANDLELIGHT-CONCERTS ENTERTAINMENT
Mat Kerekes (18+)
Sun Oct 13 2024 Mat Kerekes (18+)

Sonia Live Music Venue

MUSIC LIVE-MUSIC
Mannywellz
Sat Oct 19 2024 Mannywellz

Sonia Live Music Venue

MUSIC LIVE-MUSIC
The Backfires
Sat Oct 19 2024 The Backfires

Sonia Live Music Venue

MUSIC LIVE-MUSIC
X-Cops (18+)
Sun Oct 20 2024 X-Cops (18+)

Sonia Live Music Venue

MUSIC LIVE-MUSIC
BLUES N' TWOS
Wed Oct 23 2024 at 07:00 pm BLUES N' TWOS

Lily P's Fried Chicken and Oysters

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
R&B Jam
Wed Oct 23 2024 at 08:30 pm R&B Jam

The Cantab Lounge

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Thu Oct 24 2024 at 07:00 pm Old-Time Almost Friday Night

Lily P's Fried Chicken and Oysters

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
MIT Balinese Gamelan
Sat Nov 23 2024 at 02:00 pm MIT Balinese Gamelan

Kresge Auditorium

ENTERTAINMENT WORKSHOPS
Keke Palmer at First Parish Church
Sat Nov 23 2024 at 07:00 pm Keke Palmer at First Parish Church

First Parish Church

ART THEATRE
Local Flavor Vol. 1- featuring Monument Hill and Sly Fang
Sat Nov 23 2024 at 07:30 pm Local Flavor Vol. 1- featuring Monument Hill and Sly Fang

The Cantab Lounge

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
Radius Ensemble: Roam
Sat Nov 23 2024 at 08:00 pm Radius Ensemble: Roam

Longy School of Music of Bard College

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
MIT Chamber Chorus
Sat Nov 23 2024 at 08:00 pm MIT Chamber Chorus

MIT Chapel

MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT

What's Happening Next in Cambridge?

Discover Cambridge Events