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91.3 KBCS Presents: Laura Veirs w/ Brenda Xu *partially seated*
Thu, 7 Mar, 8:00 PM PST
Doors open
7:00 PM PST
Tractor
5213 Ballard Avenue NW, Seattle, WA 98107
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Tickets are currently unavailable on TicketWeb
Description
*This show is partially seated. Seating is limited and available first come, first served.*
A prolific songwriter for nearly twenty years, Laura Veirs proves the depth of her musical skill on her tenth solo album, The Lookout. Here is a batch of inimitable, churning, exquisite folk-pop songs; a concept album about the fragility of precious things. Produced by Grammy-nominated Tucker Martine, Veirs’ longtime collaborator, The Lookout is a soundtrack for turbulent times, full of allusions to protectors: the camper stoking a watch fire, a mother tending her children, a sailor in a crows nest and a lightning rod channeling energy.
Event Information
Age Limit
21+

Pop
Laura Veirs
Laura Veirs
Pop
Laura Veirs returns with Temple Songs, her first album in four years—and the first she has written, recorded, arranged, produced, and performed entirely on her own. “I didn’t know if I would write songs again,” says Veirs, who spent the intervening years building a backyard studio, getting married, blending a family with four teenagers, deepening her visual art practice (painting), and expanding her music teaching. “Turns out that period was a gathering phase. When I made the commitment to recording the album myself, the muse caught me again and it came together very quickly.”
Written and recorded in three months in the fall of 2025 in Veirs’ backyard “Temple of Bloom” studio, Temple Songs marks a new level of artistic independence. While 2022’s Found Light (co-produced by Veirs and Shahzad Ismaily) was a declaration of autonomy, Temple Songs goes further: every creative decision—what to record, how to record it, and how it should sound—was Veirs’ alone. Made with just two mics and a laptop in a 10’ x 14' room, the album feels unmistakably “Veirs-ian,” yet strikingly new.
Veirs embraced the Japanese concept of wabi-sabi throughout the process, choosing not to pitch-correct vocals or edit out rough edges. “I wanted to make something that sounds as organic and human as possible,” she says. Mixing by Philip Weinrobe (Adrienne Lenker) adds sympathetic finishing touches to Veirs’ 14th solo album.
Because the Temple of Bloom wasn’t built for recording, the studio itself became a collaborator. Veirs paused takes for rain on the skylight—or let it stay. She waited out neighbors’ conversations, raced to finish a sensitive vocal before a stump grinder roared to life, and included the presence of resident bluejays, passing crows, and other neighborhood sounds. These ambient intrusions lend the album an intimate, lived-in authenticity.
Influences range from Mac DeMarco’s commitment to trusting his personal taste to the anarchists and feminists of the late 1800s and their rallying cry, “no gods, no masters.” “It was hard to get the white man off my shoulder,” Veirs says. “I wrestled with a lot of doubt. But there were many happy accidents and eventually I found a flow—seeing the studio again, for the first time since my 20s, as a private place for exploration.”
Clocking in at a concise 30 minutes, Temple Songs' 11 tracks capture a songwriter in peak form. The album is intimate, dreamy, brave and quietly defiant, built around Veirs’ intricate fingerstyle nylon-string guitar, vulnerable vocals, and bold electric guitar embellishments. “Arc Still Bends” reflects feelings of contemporary futility, offset by a hopeful chorus. “River’s Song,” an ode to one of Veirs’ children, showcases her gift for simplicity and emotional precision. “Pulse” veers into art-experimental territory, culminating in a cacophonous duet between electric guitar and sax. “No Masters” is a sparse, punk rock call for collective self-determination, while “Sunlight and Doom” incorporates elemental fragments from
the ancient Greek lyricist Sappho.
Veirs played guitars, bass, drums, tambourine, percussion, and sings vocals; the only outside contribution is saxophone by a secret special guest. She used no click tracks and no electronic instruments, working by feel and intuition while watching bamboo sway outside her studio window. At 52, three decades into her career, Veirs reconnects with herself through a radically new process—one that feels both fresh and profoundly earned. She also designed the album’s calligraphy and paper-collage back cover art, extending the project’s handmade ethos.
“I needed to make this to connect more deeply with my taste, aesthetics, and confidence,” says Veirs. Longtime fans will recognize the core of Laura Veirs here—unfiltered and renewed—and new listeners will discover an artist fully inhabiting her creative powers.

Alternative Folk
Brenda Xu
Brenda Xu
Alternative Folk
Indie dream-folk artist, Brenda Xu (pronounced “shoo”) has been building a steady following since her arrival on the Seattle music scene a few years ago. The momentum she created with the release of her last album “For The Winter” in 2014 has led to several successful tours and song placements on MTV & Nickelodeon. Her new album, Overflow was added to KEXP‘s rotation recently, and has been receiving airplay and press coverage in countries all over the world. Compared to artists such as Daughter, Bon Iver, and Aimee Mann, her sound has been described as “treading the delicate line between washed-out ambient tones and carefully crafted acoustic arrangements.” As a DIY artist, she has successfully funded two Kickstarter campaigns to release her albums and music videos. She is touring extensively in the U.S. and Europe this year to reach a growing audience in new regions.