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John 5 w/ Jared James Nichols & Black Satelitte
Tue, 24 Aug, 7:30 PM CDT
Doors open
6:30 PM CDT
The Basement East
917 Woodland St, Nashville, TN 37206
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Tickets are currently unavailable on TicketWeb
Description
By purchasing tickets for this event, I confirm that at the time of the event I will have been fully vaccinated (14 days past final vaccination dose), OR will have received a negative Covid-19 test (PCR or antigen) within 48 hours prior to the event. Children under 12 years of age or fans not vaccinated will be required to present a COVID-19 test result in accordance with these guidelines. Security will check vax cards / test result documentation prior to entry into the venue. Mask wearing will be strongly encouraged.
Effective August 15, 2021 until future notice, all patrons, artists and staff entering both venues are required to present either proof of a full course of COVID-19 vaccination, with their final dose at least fourteen days prior to the show or proof of a negative COVID-19 test taken in the prior 48 hours. We will continually assess the information and recommendations provided by the CDC and update our policy as needed. More info: https://www.thebasementnashville.com/covid-policy/
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BACKPACKS are not allowed inside the venue
Most shows are standing room only
Handicap accommodations can be arranged
ALL ALL AGES and 18+ SHOWS ARE NO RE-ENTRY
Event Information
Age Limit
21+
Refund Policy
All sales are final. No refunds unless a show is canceled.

Blues-Rock
Jared James Nichols
Jared James Nichols
Blues-Rock
We’ve all heard it, read it, maybe even know someone who’s said it: Rock is dead. Argue all you
want over the finer details of this sadly misguided statement, but one thing is for sure – these
unfortunate souls have never laid ears or eyes on Jared James Nichols.
Armed with one guitar – his battered-and-bruised, heavily-customized Gibson Les Paul, a
k a “Old Glory” – a gritty, soul-stirring voice and an unshakable spirit, Nichols has come roaring
out of Waukesha, Wisconsin (the hometown, coincidentally – or perhaps not – of the actual Les
Paul) to resurrect and reaffirm the power and glory of good ol’ hot-wired, high-stakes
blues-drenched rock ‘n’ roll... and also whip up a few new sounds and sensations in the
process.
And while he may be just in the beginning stages of his career, Nichols has already
picked up plenty of rabid acolytes along the way, whether they’ve turned on and tuned in to his
electrifying riff-‘n’-roll from records like his 2015 debut, Old Glory & the Wild Revival or the
2018 follow up Black Magic, at one of his own incendiary solo gigs, or from catching him
onstage with giants like Slash, Billy Gibbons, Zakk Wylde and the late, great Leslie West, among
many others.
Now, after issuing the much-acclaimed 2020 single “Threw Me to the Wolves,” which
showed him stepping outside his core sound with a tightly-coiled slow-burner, Nichols is back
with his most heated and varied offering yet, the four-song Shadow Dancer EP. From the
anthemic and hooky lead single, “Skin N’ Bone” to the roiling and turbulent “Saint or Fool,” the
full-throttle aggro-chug of “Bad Roots” to the dark atmospherics and deep grooves of the title
track, Shadow Dancer sees Nichols digging deep to conjure a set of songs infused with his
characteristic passionate vocals and wild guitar pyrotechnics (throughout, Old Glory acts as a
second voice, singing and screaming, moaning and wailing right alongside him) while also
fearlessly pushing out on his blues-rock boundaries.
“I’m going to a lot of places I’ve never gone before,” Nichols acknowledges about the
new EP. “For the first time in my life I said, ‘I’m going to write with no filter – I don't care if it's
blues, if it’s rock, if it's this or if it’s that. Whatever's going to come out is going to come out.’
That was such a liberating feeling. It was so cool to spread my wings and say, ‘How far can I take
this before the train goes off the rails?’ ”
The answer, as is usually the case with Nichols, is pretty far. Anyone who has
experienced Jared in the flesh knows that the man – and his music – is a whirlwind of unbridled
emotion and energy. And indeed, for Shadow Dancer he and his trio brought the onstage JJN
experience straight into the studio, laying down the tracks, guitar solos included, live and loud
(how loud? “dude, it was so loud,” he affirms), and capturing, as he puts it, lightning in a bottle.
“Before this, I don’t know if I ever felt completely comfortable in the studio,” Nichols
admits. “I would say it took three years of touring, three years of totally road-dogging it and
sleeping in a damn van and playing shows every night to figure out what was at the core of what
I was trying to say not only onstage, but also as a songwriter and as an artist. And I think we
finally captured that on this record, mostly due to the fact that we didn't constrain ourselves to
anything – we just went in and played in the most organic, natural way we could. And it had to
be that way in order to capture the excitement and the energy and the overall feeling of this
music.”
Essential to capturing that vibe was drummer Dennis Holm, who Nichols has played with
since 2011. “We’ve toured the world together and seen a lot over the last decade,” he says,
“and it’s an incredible feeling to be able to get to this point with a true rock ‘n’ roll brother.
Dennis and I have a musical connection you just can't fake. It's the feel of a thousand shows in a
thousand different venues. I feel like we finally translated that feeling and groove to record.”
Equally important to the process was producer Eddie Spear, who, Nichols says, “is a
one-in-a-million, rare-breed talent who pushed me out of my comfort zone. Eddie helped me
find myself musically, and on a deeper level he pushed me to commit to fully be an artist.
Working with him has been my ultimate career game-changer.”
While Shadow Dancer is infused with plenty of awe-inspiring six-string shred moments
(this is a Jared James Nichols album, after all), these songs also reveal new sides to the JJN
experience. For “Skin N’ Bone,” on which Nichols takes a hard look at what divides us as people
but also, more importantly, what should unite us, “the lyrics and the message actually came
first,” he says. “It was this idea of opening our eyes and trying to come together as fellow men
and women instead of breaking apart.”
An important and timely message, to be sure, “but then I express it through this
energetic trio thing,” he says. “Because that’s the only way I can really say it, you know? I may
not be great at sitting down and having a conversation with you about life topics, but I can play
you a song like ‘Skin N’ Bone’ that shows you how I'm feeling.”
Nichols continues, “It was really cool to be able to express myself in that way, and then
support it with sound and with guitar and with all the bombastic craziness that I can put on
there. Something came out of that approach that I feel gives these songs a different level of
depth.”
The same could be said for “Saint or Fool,” which focuses in on “that constant fight
between good and evil,” Nichols explains. “We all know that there’s a dark side to life, and it's
very easy to get sucked into that. So the message is kind of haunting, and then I wrap it up in
this structure that gives it a really uneasy vibe. There’s this weird chromatic walkdown riff, a
really hypnotic verse, just a lot of different melodic ideas I’d never tried before. And vocally it
takes you somewhere pretty intense. It isn't the prettiest song, and it kind of stands out for
that.”
“Intense” is a word that could also apply to the EP’s title track, which rides in on an
evocative, watery guitar line and hushed vocal before exploding with an anguished,
hard-rocking and heavy-riffing chorus. The track presents a heavier, grungier side of Nichols, but
it’s all part of his musical DNA. “I love the blues, but I also grew up on ‘90s hard rock – Alice in
Chains, Pearl Jam, Silverchair, Stone Temple Pilots,” he says. “And so I wanted to bring in those
different colors.”
And if you’re truly looking for those different colors, look no further than “Bad Roots,”
which marries a Tom Petty-esque classic-rock chord progression to a full-on heavy metal
rhythmic assault, and tops it off with a hushed, semi-chanted vocal that Nichols describes as
“emotionally cool.” Regarding the relentless, muscular groove that powers the track, he says,
“Anyone that knows that I don't use a guitar pick will understand that I was just gritting my
teeth playing that one. Because it’s constant downstrokes with my thumb against the strings.”
He laughs. “It was painful, dude!”
But you know what they say – no pain, no gain. “And I love trying to push the limits of
what I think is possible with my songwriting and with this music,” Nichols says. To be sure, it’s
something he’s been doing since his earliest days on the scene. “I used to be, like, a 12-bar guy,”
he recalls about his early approach to the blues. But whether it be his unique, pick-less
approach to guitar playing, or his desire to create his own one-of-a-kind instrument – which, in
a nice full-circle moment, has since been recreated by Epiphone as the Jared James Nichols Old
Glory Les Paul Custom (what’s more, Nichols was just named Gibson’s newest Global
Ambassador, an honor previously bestowed on Slash) – he has ever since carved out his own
singular path in the music world, and in the process has brought the blues screaming into the
21st century.
“I try and interpret this music in my own way,” Nichols says. “For me, it’s not about
trying to be traditional or act as if I’m from a certain era – it’s about breathing fresh air into this
music that I love.
Shadow Dancer, he continues, “feels like 2021 blues – it’s all my emotions, all my
feelings, all my angst and energy bottled up in one record. It’s my version of the blues.”
Nichols concludes, “People say to me ‘rock is dead,’ ‘the guitar is dead,’ all this stuff. And
all I can say back is, ‘Dude, put on this record.’ Because this record is right now. This is the way I
feel in 2021. This is the way I play guitar. This is the way I write songs. This is the way I play rock
‘n’ roll. And there’s still so much left to say.”

Metal
Black Satelitte
Black Satelitte
Metal
