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Madeleine Peyroux
Tue, 8 May, 8:00 PM PDT
Doors open
6:00 PM PDT
The Coach House
33157 Camino Capistrano, Suite C, San Juan Capistrano, CA 92675
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Tickets are currently unavailable on TicketWeb
Description
Madeleine Peyroux's extraordinary journey is one of music industry’s most compelling.
Eight albums and 22 years since her debut Dreamland, Peyroux continues to challenge the confines of jazz, venturing into the fertile fields of contemporary music with unfading curiosity.
Peyroux’s new album, Anthem, finds the singer-songwriter collaborating with writers/musicians Patrick Warren (Bonnie Raitt, JD Souther, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Lana Del Rey, The Red Hot Chilli Peppers), Brian MacLeod (Sara Bareilles, Leonard Cohen, Tina Turner, Ziggy Marley) and David Baerwald (Joni Mitchell, David and David, Sheryl Crow), who are also the basic rhythm section players on the album. Together, they cast a sober, poetic, and at times philosophical eye on the current state of the world.
Produced and co-written by Larry Klein, the album came to life during the pivotal 2016 US elections, with the writers absorbing a “constant stream of news” over many months. The “consciously not too preachy” songs, fuse Peyroux’s, at times political outlook, with glimpses into her personal world. Honed and patiently refined with fellow writers they mix the public with the personal, striking that perfect equilibrium of dark humour and compassion.
Anthem is an album born out of the team being “together in one room, musing over world events and letting personal experiences spark ideas”. David Baerwald’s sadness over the passing of poet John Ashbery, ignited thoughts of much admired figures lost over the years and paved the path for All My Heroes. Baerwald’s loss gave rise to feelings of awe at these figures’ trailblazing ability to guide and “light fires in the shadows”, but also brought to light their very human vulnerability.
Inspiration for the evocative Lullaby, written by Baerwald, Klein, MacLeod, Peyroux and Warren, came from “the image of a solitary woman in the midst of a vast open sea singing to her child, or possibly herself, as she faces the chasm of the world.” With engaging empathy, the song paints a haunting picture of the displaced person’s desperation, as she is tormented by memories of “a time before the war”, in a boat paddling towards the unknown.
Anthem weaves the colourful stories of people confronting life's challenges in a multitude of ways. With pathos and a hint of irony it laments over financial tribulations in Down On Me, speaks of disappointment and unfulfilled dreams in the bluesy Ghosts of Tomorrow and delivers a scathingly poignant social commentary in The Brand New Deal. Coming ten years after Bare Bones, the singer-songwriter’s previous album of original songs, Anthem finds Peyroux wiser with finer articulation powers. Inspired by her idol Leonard Cohen’s ability to “suffer for the work, but still present the listener with just a friendly thought”, Peyroux sends a spiritual but clear message of hope, optimism and resilience in the face of a turbulent reality.
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All Ages
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Jazz
Madeleine Peyroux
Madeleine Peyroux
Jazz
“There is magic in live music that cannot be diminished” says Madeleine Peyroux,
“there is nothing more perfect than pure music, how it resonates in every corner of a room through every person - that’s what music is and that's what I'm here for.”
For over three decades, jazz virtuoso Peyroux has travelled the world and graced the grandest concert halls to do just that - “share the magic of music with audiences, connect with people and uplift their spirits.” From entertaining passersby as a busker on the streets of Paris, to captivating thousands on sold out world tours - singular Peyroux has channeled the power of music to bring people together, dialogue with audiences and build a community.
“I am part of this great Jazz story, a long tradition of music greats” she explains, “from Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday to Allen Toussaint and countless others, the incredible innovators who built a beautiful legacy and created a new musical language - Jazz is one of the greatest things that America has brought to the world; and I am here to continue the story.”
Georgia born Peyroux was raised in “a house filled with music.” Her mother sang and played the ukulele - an instrument she gifted little Madeleine that will remain with her for life. Peyroux recalls them playing together, loving music from a very early age and instinctively recognizing music’s power to comfort and sooth.
Peyroux was spotted by Atlantic’s A&R man Yves Beauvais, and in 1996 her debut album Dreamland was born. The striking vocalist gained instant recognition as a classic talent with an unmistakable staying power, and her smokey-crooning voice was likened to Billie Holliday and Ella Fitzgerald.
Dreamland delivered sweeping renditions of Fats Waller’s I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter, Bessie Smith’s Lovesick Blues, Billie Holiday’s Gettin' Some Fun Out of Life, Patsy Cline’s Walking After Midnight, and Piaf’s romantic La Vie En Rose, all delivered by some of the finest musicians around including Cyrus Chestnut, Greg Cohen, Vernon Reid, James Carter and Leon Parker to name but a few.
But it was Careless Love (Rounder), released eight years later that propelled her to jazz superstardom. Produced by multiple Grammy winner Larry Klein (Joni Mitchell, Herbie Hancock, Melody Gardot) it signaled the start of a long-lasting Klein-Peyroux collaboration that would craft several classic, universally acclaimed albums.
Careless Love, which was certified gold in the US, included songs by Bob Dylan, Hank Williams and Elliott Smith as well as Peyroux’s iconic, desert-Island-disc-worthy rendition of Dance Me To The End of Love by Leonard Cohen.
The captivating mix of blues, refined vintage jazz, songs and charming French chanson proved irresistible - the singular songbird has struck a resounding chord with the public and industry alike - one reviewer wrote “I've never enjoyed a Leonard Cohen song as much as Peyroux's account of Dance Me to the End of Love, Bob Dylan's You're Going to Make Me Lonesome When You Go is casually touching, and Hank Williams' Weary Blues understatedly haunting.”
Larry Klein was back at the producer helm for The Blue Room. An arresting reexamination of Ray Charles’s landmark classic, Modern Sounds In Country And Western Music, it branched out to include Randy Newman's Guilty, Warren Zevon's Desperadoes Under The Eaves and John Hartford’s Gentle On My Mind among others.
This was followed by the self-produced Secular Hymns (2016), recorded at a rural English church (St Mary’s Church, Great Milton, Oxfordshire) in a single day. Elegant covers of Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Townes Van Zandt and Willie Dixon among others, were delivered by an intimate trio made of guitarist Jon Herington, bassist Barak Mori and Peyroux. The trio’s sound blended with the old building’s generously warm acoustics to deliver an enchanting timeless quality.
Klein not only produced Peyroux’s 2018 album Anthem, along with Peyroux he set the music to the mesmerizing Liberté - Paul Éluard's ode to freedom penned during the German occupation of France. The album’s title track was a Leonard Cohen creation with lyrics resonating with reflective and increasingly outspoken Peyroux.
Her ninth album Let’s Walk is arguably the vocalist’s most outspoken, comprising social and political themes - the gospel inspired title track Let's Walk speaks of civil rights, Please Come On Inside addresses homelessness and mental illness, Nothing Personal attacks sexual abuse, and Et Puis concerns privilege as Peyroux points to the well-to-do French parents bestowing their young with apartments. The album was co-produced by guitarist Jon Herington - part of the trio that released and toured Secular Hymns in 2016.
“I decided early on in my songwriting collaboration with Madeleine for Let's Walk, that I would do my best to be in ‘response’ mode as much as possible” noted Herington, “I resisted any urges to control the process, and tried to be available to help in whatever ways the moment suggested and allowed. The great consequence of letting Madeleine ‘lead’ in this way is that the world now has the most heartfelt and personal collection of songs she has ever recorded.”
Two years later, the trio finds itself preparing for the 2026 We Are America tour, marking the tenth anniversary of Secular Hymns’ release. “When we first began working with the trio” said Herington “the expected limitations of a radically smaller, quieter group were quickly shattered – this ‘reduced’ format revealed a special, quiet chemistry among the three of us, magically allowed a kind of liberating genre-bending, immediately enriched us with a much wider repertoire, and forced a new depth of intimacy and vulnerability to surface in our live performances, I’m thrilled to be doing it again.”
The past three decades saw Peyroux fearlessly explore new ground - in 2006 she recorded a live session at the legendary Abbey Road studios, a decade later she chose a rural English church as the setting for her Secular Hymns album, she collaborated with a strikingly diverse mix of musicians from K D Lang and Bill Wyman to Vince Mendoza and Walter Becker. In 2024 she released a project orchestrated by composer, arranger and conductor, Sean O’Loughlin - a ‘best of' program of Peyroux classics and fan favourites, with symphony orchestra, including Leonard Cohen’s Dance Me to the End of Love, Peyroux originals Don’t Wait Too Long, We Might As Well Dance, Warren Zevon’s Desperadoes Under the Eaves, Elliott Smith’s Between the Bars and more. Standing in front of the orchestra was a challenge she met with typical positivity - “challenge is what we need as human beings” she explains, “we need to be challenged in order to live a fulfilling life.”

Alternative Rock
Carsie Blanton
Carsie Blanton
Alternative Rock
New Orleans based singer-songwriter Carsie Blanton has always been a little unorthodox. Raised on a commune in rural Virginia, Carsie never went to high school but was "unschooled” at home, until she left for Oregon at the age of sixteen. She grew up listening to artists like Leonard Cohen and John Prine, and began taking piano lessons at age six. As Lilith Fair-era singer-songwriters like Sheryl Crow and Ani DiFranco emerged during her pre-teens, Carsie ditched the keys for a guitar and began writing songs. Before long, her voracious musical appetite led her to a lifelong love of jazz, Motown, and great songwriters from Irving Berlin to Tom Waits. Carsie's latest release, So Ferocious, is a playful indie-pop record for smart, ferocious libertines. Blanton shows off her love for her adopted hometown of New Orleans with brass bands and barroom piano, but blends in electronic instrumentation and environmental soundscapes to create an album that is both raw and playfully burlesque. In addition to her music, Carsie has gained popularity for her blog (which tackles questions of love and sexuality) and her music videos (which celebrate female empowerment, dance, and the city of New Orleans). Always happy to defy genre, Carsie is also a socialist, a feminist, and an amateur game inventor (look out for her latest creative endeavor, “Bango”: a card game that facilitates talking about sex). Carsie has toured extensively throughout North America and Europe, as a headliner and as support for Paul Simon, The Wood Brothers, The Weepies, Shawn Colvin and many more.