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(((folkYEAH!))) Presents - Drugdealer w/ Color Green
Wed, 14 Aug, 8:00 PM PDT
Doors open
7:00 PM PDT
Moe's Alley
1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz, CA 95065
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Tickets are currently unavailable on TicketWeb
Description
(((folkYEAH!))) presents Drugdealer with special guests Color Green!
Wednesday, August 14th
Doors: 7pm / Show: 8pm
$35
21+
*Tickets on sale Friday, May 24th at 10am PT*
DRUGDEALER
The third and most seasoned Drugdealer album, Hiding in Plain Sight, almost didn't happen at all. Frustrated and insecure with his own singing voice prior to the pandemic, Drugdealer founder and primary songwriter Michael Collins was nearly ready to throw in the towel. With hits like "Suddenly" and "The Real World" (from the band's 2016 debut, The End Of Comedy) and "Honey" (from their first album for Mexican Summer, 2019’s Raw Honey), Collins had plenty to be happy about. But due to a frequent impulse to hand over the microphone to friends and collaborators like Weyes Blood, Jackson MacIntosh, and his trusty musical companion Sasha Winn, Collins became increasingly unsure of himself as a singer. Then, amidst the windswept art colony of Marfa, Texas, a chance encounter with the visionary artist and composer Annette Peacock changed his outlook.
While attending Mexican Summer's annual Marfa Myths festival, Collins ran into Peacock backstage. "I was so inspired by [Annette]. But similarly to all these other vocalists I'd worked with, I didn't feel like I had it in me." he recalls. "I told her my plight, then I played her a song, and she told me I wasn't singing high enough for my speaking voice. When I returned to LA, I started coming up with new progressions, which I'd modulate up three half steps. It forced me to find a new way to sing."
COLOR GREEN
For the California-based quartet Color Green, playing music together is all about stepping into the unknown. "When we play live, I don't really know what's going to happen," says Noah Kohll, one of the band's two guitarists and four vocalists. "You really have no idea what you're going to get with this band, which keeps things fresh for us and maybe makes the live experience special." In a very short time, they have developed a word-of-mouth reputation as a dynamic and unpredictable live act, grounding their cosmic jams in earthy melodies and drawing from '60s SoCal folk-r0ck, '70s classic rock, '80s underground rock, '90s psychedelic dance-rock, and any other sound that catches their ears.
Event Information
Age Limit
21+

Psychedelic
Drugdealer
Drugdealer
Psychedelic
A veteran of the L.A. psychedelic scene, Michael Collins turns the trippiness down to a slow boil for his Drugdealer project. Built around his smooth keyboard playing and plangent soft rock melodies, the band re-creates the laid-back sound and vibe of Laurel Canyon of the '70s, while also sounding as technically pure as a studio full of session players. Two albums recorded in the late 2010s (The End of Comedy and Raw Honey) combined Collins' songwriting and producing skills with his knack for rounding up interesting collaborators like Weyes Blood and Ariel Pink. Tim Presley and Kate Bollinger were among the guests on the project's third LP, 2022's Hiding in Plain Sight.
Collins first became known while playing under the name Run DMT, a lo-fi psychedelic project started in 2009 that released a couple of albums before being sued by an EDM band of the same name. After changing the project's name to Salvia Plath, Collins took a folkier, more layered approach on the 2013 album The Bardo Story. With Drugdealer, he changed directions again, looking to the singer/songwriters of the early '70s and soft rock pioneers like Harry Nilsson and Steely Dan for inspiration. The band's 2016 album, The End of Comedy, was pieced together from sessions that spanned a nearly-four-year period and released by Weird World in September. On it, Collins invited many guests to contribute including Ariel Pink, Natalie Mering (aka Weyes Blood), Danny James, members of Mild High Club, and Jackson MacIntosh of Sheer Agony. Collins assembled a live band to play shows over the next few years as he painstakingly wrote and recorded another album. Working with a core group of musicians (guitarist Benjamin Schwab, vocalist Sasha Winn, drummer Josh Da Costa, and bassist/co-producer Shags Chamberlain) in a variety of studio settings, Raw Honey came together slowly but surely as Collins doubled down on the soft rock sound and feel of the debut. Guest vocalists this time were Mering again, country crooner Dougie Poole, and fellow L.A. pop revivalist Harley Hill-Richmond (of Harley and the Hummingbirds), while MacIntosh and brothers Brian and Michael D'Addario of the Lemon Twigs also helped out. The record was released by Mexican Summer in April of 2019. The same label issued Drugdealer's equally collaborative third long-player, October 2022's Hiding in Plain Sight. Recorded at no less than nine locations, its many contributors included featured singers Tim Presley, Kate Bollinger, and Sean Nicholas Savage, while players like MacIntosh, CMON's Josh Da Costa, and Video Age also joined in on select tracks. Drugdealer next surfaced in 2025 with a single titled "Real Thing" that was co-produced by French musician Max Baby and featured Weyes Blood on lead vocals.

Alternative
Color Green
Color Green
Alternative
For the California-based quartet Color Green, playing music together is all about stepping into the unknown. "When we play live, I don't really know what's going to happen," says Noah Kohll, one of the band's two guitarists and four vocalists. "You really have no idea what you're going to get with this band, which keeps things fresh for us and maybe makes the live experience special." In a very short time, they have developed a word-of-mouth reputation as a dynamic and unpredictable live act, grounding their cosmic jams in earthy melodies and drawing from '60s SoCal folk-r0ck, '70s classic rock, '80s underground rock, '90s psychedelic dance-rock, and any other sound that catches their ears.
Adaptable onstage and off, Color Green has shared stages with a range of groups that reflect both the sophistication and the wild malleability of their sound, including Fuzz, Kikagaku Moyo, Circles Around the Sun, Hiss Golden Messenger, and the Brian Jonestown Massacre. Yet, because they see boundless possibilities from one note to the next, they anchor their music in the urgent present rather than the distant past. Color Green can be a million different bands without losing their essential hue.
They capture that wild, mercurial quality on Fool's Parade, a meditation on loss, grief, confusion, frustration, and the clarity to which they all lead. The album has the dynamic of a tight live set, full of ebbs and flows, highs and lows, quiet moments like the devastating "5:08" and reckless jams like the epic "Kick the Bucket." "Four Leaf Clover" bustles and shimmies like the kaleidoscopic dance rock of the Stone Roses, while closer "Hazel Eyes" recalls the elaborate orchestrations of Brian Wilson and the whimsical melodies of Buddy Holly. "We shaped it to showcase our range," says guitarist Corey Madden. "All the songs were written together as a band. It's the four of us in a room, and it features all of our voices. It's one step toward what this band truly is. We spent a lot of time getting our shit together as a band, and now it's set in stone for me."
Color Green started out as a very different, much more limited kind of group. "Me and Corey worked together in New York scooping coffee beans for a living and putting them into bags," says Kohll. "I was living in a basement sublet, and he would come over to write and jam and record." From those casual sessions came a self-titled EP in 2021, full of spectral jams and offerings up to Jerry Garcia, their spiritual guide. The next year they followed it up with a self-titled full-length via Aquarium Drunkard, with various friends helping to round out the songs. "These things happen in an interesting way," says Kohll. "There's been a lot of weird synchronization with this band. It's all very organic. After we put out our first album, we thought, Oh, this needs to be a live band,
too."
After running through a few different rhythm sections, they met drummer Corey Rose and bassist Kyla Perlmutter, who not only are kickass players but opened up all new possibilities within Color Green. "Our first practice together, everyone was like, This is so loud," says Rose. "That became a really important part of the band, and we try to capture that dynamic when we record." Perlmutter adds, "We all really value each other's input. It doesn't feel like there's an unfair hierarchy in this band. We respect each other's tastes and recognize that we're all very, very much in love with music in our own ways."
After sharpening their attack on the road — playing DIY shows in small towns while opening for some of their heroes — the expanded Color Green began writing songs for what they considered a debut album. "One of us will come in with a riff or an idea, and the others will take it up and let it morph into something completely different," says Perlmutter. "What we come up with together, I don't think any of us could do by ourselves. The music we make is always surprising me." The album's title track, with its snaking guitar lines and parallax instrumental interplay, started out as an eastern jam when Rose came in with a very loose idea: "I wanted to write something in 6/8 time," she says. "It was super awkward at first, but 40 minutes later, it sounded like Fairport Convention. It took everybody to get there."
Says Madden, "I like when stuff happens and it opens up the door to something else in my brain. We might spend a lot of time working on something and get nothing out of it, but then in the back of my head I'm thinking, if you take this and add it to that… Sometimes it takes hours to figure out two seconds of a song, but it's always worth it."
The aching heart of Fool's Parade is "5:08," a moving expression of grief — not moving through it, necessarily, but simply living with it, moment to moment. "What's it like, on the other side?" they all sing together, as though consoling one another. "Oh, the longing for the space to peer thru." Inspired by the death of Madden's father, it is rooted in a Spiritualized show. "I was going through some gnarly personal stuff," says Madden, "and it was all hitting me at once, all these emotions. I talked my way through some crazy shit, and by the end of the show I had '508' hashed out in my brain. It's about losing people very close to you and wanting to communicate with them and not really knowing how."
"It's the quietest song on the record," says Rose, "but it's also the heaviest. We all cried while recording it. Everybody's singing on it, and everybody's crying on it. Sometimes we're like, Let's not play that song tonight. It all depends on how we're feeling."