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Hailey Whitters w/ Kassi Valazza
Sat, 23 Apr, 9:00 PM PDT
Doors open
8:00 PM PDT
Tractor
5213 Ballard Avenue NW, Seattle, WA 98107
TICKET SALES TERMINATED
Tickets are currently unavailable on TicketWeb
Description
Please view our most up-to-date COVID-19 guidelines before entering the show: http://www.tractortavern.com/tractor-covid-guidelines
Hailey Whitters was closing in on her first decade in Nashville, that mythologized milestone when artists are supposed to finally start reaping the fruits of their labor. But despite 10 years of hard work, the singer-songwriter still hadn't had her breakout moment and, fed up with pushing the boulder uphill, she took a step back to reassess.
"I hit my 'fuck it' point," says Hailey. I felt like I was watering myself down to try and fit in with what this town was doing, and I was looking for Nashville to define my happiness. When I quit doing that I was able to dig into why I am on this journey in the first place: to create music that I love on my own terms. And that's when I wrote 'Ten Year Town.'"
At that moment, the native of Shueyville, Iowa, matured into the artist she was supposed to be: a probing, fearless songwriter who is more concerned with the busted and broken way things are than the pretty and polished way things are painted to be.
"Everything is so glossy and so perfect in society," she says, "especially for women, who are getting fillers and changing our face shape. Every single thing is so tweaked to perfection that it's boring. I'm craving something that is raw, real and imperfect."
She addresses all of that in "Ten Year Town," the song that at long last identified Hailey as one of Nashville's elite songwriters and artists. Written with Grammy nominee Brandy Clark, the ballad takes a stark look at what happens when life doesn't work out as planned and how rejection can ultimately lead to empowerment. "I didn't come this far, to only go this far," sings Hailey.
Event Information
Age Limit
21+

Country
Hailey Whitters
Hailey Whitters
Country
A native of Shueyville, IA, Whitters moved to Nashville in 2007 and signed with Carnival Music in 2012. Since then she has shared stages with Josh Thompson, Randy Houser, Jo Dee Messina, Casey Donahew Band, & Chris Knight. She has also garnered critical acclaim in Nashville's music community. The Nashville Scene proclaimed, "Hailey Whitters summons the space-country aesthetics that Daniel Lanois brought to Emmylou Harris’ Wrecking Ball and Willie Nelson’s Teatro in the late ’90s". In addition, Music Row critic Robert K. Oermann cited Hailey as an answer to country radio's lack of female artists with his praise--"I like her drawling delivery, the working gal lyric, the soulful backing guitar work, and the girlfriend chit-chat touches. Very, very promising. Keep your ears on this newcomer".

Alternative Country
Kassi Valazza
Kassi Valazza
Alternative Country
"Sometimes it takes four or five tries to realize something just isn't working," says Kassi Valazza. "I wrote this after my thirteenth try." She's referring to the song "Roll On" specifically, but the stagnating pull of repeating patterns — and the brutalizing work of breaking them — inform every song on her new album From Newman Street. "In songwriting and in life, you can't keep expecting the same thing to work every time."
Valazza grew up between Prescott and Phoenix, Arizona. She penned her first song at age ten but in those early efforts to perform, found herself halted by stage fright of a clinical level. "I've gone to therapy for it," she says, half-laughing. She didn't stop writing music but she let less paralyzing means of expression lead the way, eventually enrolling in arts school for painting, an illustrative instinct that inevitably reveals itself in her vivid songwriting. It wasn't until she relocated to the Pacific Northwest as an adult that Valazza picked back up the proverbial — and actual — guitar.
"Zach Bryson was kind of like the honky tonk ambassador of Portland when I got there," Valazza says. "He was so welcoming and encouraging." She discovered an inspiring, supportive artistic community, a less rigid relationship with musical output, and then — vocal nodules. "It was actually kind of the best thing that could have happened, because I learned about the crossover of physical and mental that takes place in performance." Recovery entailed recognizing the reflexive functions of the voice in response to anxiety; as is the case throughout the human body, stress reactions can be damaging. "Because I suddenly understood what was happening with my voice, I could handle it, wield it. I felt more confident." Valazza recorded an album with Bryson in an old-house-turned-studio. It was an informal, friendly endeavor, though not at all small. "I think probably thirty people contributed," she says. "I listen back to that album and I think 'this was me learning how to do this.' I can hear that moment in time."
Valazza's debut Dear Dead Days fused the Southwest's rustic romance with the Pacific Northwest's rocky realism and garnered Valazza a cult following. She landed a deal with Fluff & Gravy, a label known for launching earthy, emerging treasures like Anna Tivel and Margo Cilker, and toured with folk favorites including Melissa Carper and Riddy Arman. Her sophomore album Kassi Valazza Knows Nothing followed, a glimmering set of sonic talismans among Ann Powers' Favorite Songs of 2023 for NPR and Bandcamp's Best Country Music of 2023, with praise from KEXP, Uncut, MOJO, and Brooklyn Vegan to boot.
By the time Valazza was ready to record her third album, she had spent a decade in Portland — and that, she realized, was enough. "As someone with anxiety, I always want to know what's going to happen," she says. "But knowing can be limiting. Getting comfortable with the uncomfortable, that's growth. That's what this album's about, really."
On "Weight of the Wheel," a weepy slide guitar underscores Valazza's listless lament: All things look the same / From the pillow on my bed / I'm stressed out I'm far away / There's dizzy dancing in my head. The song sounds like urgency, grief, surrender, and embrace — all at once. It's feeling like some kind of fight to outgrow / The way I fear slowing down before I'm old. By 2022, that dizzy demise of cyclical living had set Valazza still — in a basement apartment there in Portland. "You're going to be a different person after every album," she says. "And you have to keep moving forward."
Sights set on Nashville, Valazza landed in New Orleans. "It wasn't the plan. I spent three months there between tours, and it just kind of happened." The bright newness of The Big Easy illuminated fresh inspirations and unexpected love. But it also cast a stark light on Valazza's sense of self; in a new place, you can see more clearly what you want to be, as well as what you haven't been. "I discovered the less likeable parts of myself in that time," Valazza says. Album standout "Your Heart's a Tin Box" encapsulates precisely this, with a cynical-yet-sunny likeness to Joni Mitchell and lyrical acuity: I moved down to New Orleans / Thinking love would reappear / But people tell you everything / but what you wanna hear / You relied on fixated company / Now you're drowning in your ego's gluttony. The patterns of her Portland life had stalled Valazza. It wasn't the city's fault so much as the natural consequence of complacency, the stagnance that comes with too much of the same. Valazza knew she was due for a personal evolution, and when faced with those innate, bristling pangs of change, could soothe herself with that certainty.
The track sequence on From Newman Street is audibly intentional — from a deep lull and dull itch, to a barbed clash with cognitive dissonance, to humble submission, and an ultimate, open-armed acceptance of new life. Poetically enough, half the songs on the upcoming album were written in Portland, the other half in New Orleans. Valazza returned to her former hometown to record with Matt Thomson at Echo Echo Studios, and titled the release From Newman Street in tribute to an apartment she lived in deeply and left with heavy heart. The album is as much a fond farewell as it is a fervent step forward.
Valazza made the official move to New Orleans in February of 2024. "Coming from placid, wintry Portland straight into Mardi Gras — I would not recommend it." She recalls the time with humor, grace, and sensitivity for her past self, qualities that shine through the album. "I've always been a believer that music is only good if it's really raw, really honest — probably coming from a place of hurt," Valazza admits. "But I'm trying to embrace chaos these days, and bring a little more light into my life."

Blues
Tractor COVID Policy
Tractor COVID Policy
Blues
In response to a surge in the number of cases of COVID-19, we have changed our entry guidelines for upcoming shows. Please view our website for the most updated information. https://bit.ly/TractorCOVIDGuidelines
Highlights:
*Masks required while inside until 3/12/22. After that date, we still highly encourage you to wear a mask. Please be respectful of those that do!

Alternative
Tickets Available at Door
Tickets Available at Door
Alternative
So you missed out on advanced tickets? No sweat. We have some available at the door! Get here early to make sure you get in!!