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The Current 19th anniversary Celebration featuring Lucius, Ber, and Abraham Alexander
The Current 19th anniversary Celebration featuring Lucius, Ber, and Abraham AlexanderImage provided by promoter.

The Current 19th Anniversary Celebration featuring Lucius, Ber, and Abraham Alexander - SOLD OUT

Friday, January 26
7:30 pm

First Avenue

701 1st Ave N, Minneapolis, MN 55403

Join The Current at our 19th Anniversary Celebration! This event will feature music from Lucius, Ber, and Abraham Alexander at First Avenue. 

Friday, January 26, 2024 | Ages: 18+

Doors: 6:30 p.m. | Performance: 7:30 p.m. 

 

Enter for a chance to win passes to this show.

The Current is pleased to offer a ticket giveaway to this concert. Enter by midnight (CST) on Tuesday, December 19 for a chance to win a pair of passes to this concert. TEN (10) winners will receive two guest list spots to The Current 19th Anniversary Celebration on Friday, January 26.

This entry is now closed. Congratulations to the lucky winners!

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Lucius

Two women in fashionable clothes pose for studio portrait.
Jess Wolfe and Holly Laessig of Lucius.
Photo courtesy the artists

Every Lucius song begins with what Holly Laessig calls “coffee talks,” in which she and Jess Wolfe share what’s on their minds—and in the spring of 2020, they had a lot to discuss. Since 2007, Laessig and Wolfe have written this way, learning each other’s stories by heart before weaving them into the lyrics and chord progressions of their inventive indie-pop anthems. Onstage, they’re two identically-dressed and coiffed halves of the same whole, the mirror image of each other at the microphone; off-stage, they step into their respective lives—separate, but close—as chosen family. They’ve shared countless joys as they’ve seen the world while touring behind their 2013 debut album, Wildewoman, and its follow-up, 2016’s Good Grief, but they’ve weathered profound losses and lows together, too. And when one of them experiences a seismic shift that shakes their world, the other is there to listen, and reflect, in order to help write through it. 

“Holly and I are actual witnesses to each other's lives,” says Wolfe. “Not only are we able to talk about these things and offer perspective, but she has this unique view into my life, and I into hers. We have been together almost constantly for the last 16 years.” 

Second Nature, Lucius’ third album, is the closest thing yet to the musical versions of these intimate conversations. “We’ve gotten so used to helping each other write about very personal things,” says Laessig. “It’s funny, because Second Nature makes perfect sense as a title: it’s become second nature to write for each other. A lot of what we wrote about on the record were things we hadn’t talked about before: there wasn’t a readiness to face some of those things.” 

The period between Good Grief and Second Nature is the most transformative—and tumultuous—one Lucius has faced to date. In the fall of 2016, Laessig and Wolfe, along with their bandmates, multi-instrumentalists Peter Lalish and Dan Molad, were dangerously close to burning out after three years of relentless touring behind Wildewoman and Good Grief. On top of that, Wolfe and Molad, who had married months before Wildewoman’s release in 2013, had hit a rough patch in their relationship. It was then when Roger Waters invited Laessig and Wolfe to join him on an international tour as his supporting vocalists. The benefits were clear in that urgent moment: if they said yes, this detour would give them an opportunity to explore new sounds in a musical world outside their own. It would also give Lucius the rest it desperately needed in order to survive. 

“It was time to keep Lucius intact, but step away for a minute, just to get some perspective and a breath of fresh air,” says Wolfe. “We made a deal with the guys, and let them know this was only a short-term thing—something we felt that could help the band, but also give us some new-found inspiration. That turned into three years. Roger is someone who creates every moment in his mind-blowing show to be something meaningful. To take that and be able to see our own project with new eyes – well, that’s the whole purpose of learning from the people around you, your heroes. It’s to gather all of these wisdoms and put them to use for your own art.” 

Their experience with Waters surpassed their wildest dreams, but they were eager to return to Los Angeles—and to Lucius, even though they were unsure as to what, exactly, they were returning to. Molad and Wolfe separated in 2018, but they remained devoted to their creative partnership, even as their marriage dissolved and ultimately ended in divorce. In spite of what was happening at home, Lucius kept working: they recorded and released Nudes, an acoustic album that reimagined previously released material and covers, and Laessig and Wolfe continued to collaborate with the world’s favorite rock and pop stars. They remained busy, but the need to write—and to put all they’d learned, and endured, into their own music—felt stronger than ever. 

“People caught wind of us as supporting vocalists, and a lot of artists started inquiring if we’d sing on their records,” says Laessig, who, alongside Wolfe, recorded with Sheryl Crow, Harry Styles, Ozzy Osborne, John Legend, The War on Drugs, and Brandi Carlile, to name a few, before the close of 2019. “It was flattering and honorable to sing with so many people we've admired, but after a while, there was an urgency to get back to focusing on the record we needed to make for ourselves. Just as we were doing that, the pandemic hit.” 

Co-produced by Carlile, their longtime friend, collaborator, and champion, and Dave Cobb, whose production credits have earned handfuls of Grammys and industry-wide accolades, Second Nature is a new chapter for Lucius in more ways than one. They left Los Angeles and decamped to Nashville in March of 2020, where they crashed with Crow (and wrote their first song for the album, “The Man I’ll Never Find,” on the piano in her living room). They opened themselves up to co-writing, which they’d never done before, and incorporated voices besides their own (both Carlile and Crow contributed backing vocals). Laessig and Wolfe also met separate, but substantial, inflection points while bringing Second Nature into being. Laessig became pregnant with and welcomed her first child. Wolfe and Molad, who had not seen each other since finalizing their divorce, reunited in the studio. There, they commenced with their new normal as bandmates, and proceeded to navigate these songs that were directly inspired by what they’d just lived through. 

When the time came to tap into these painful conclusions and hopeful new beginnings, Laessig and Wolfe found themselves gravitating less toward the folkier inclinations of Wildewoman or the experimental urges of Good Grief to express themselves, and more towards the four-on-the-floor inclinations of dance-pop. Carlile encouraged them to push their immense vocal power to its max in order to create “grandiose” moments: “She’d say, ‘You’ve got this in you, you can push this further, let’s go for it, let’s make a thing out of this moment.’ That happened all over the record,” Laessig remembers. Cobb, mostly known for his exceptional work across country and folk, eagerly embraced the chance to direct them to the dance floor. 

“Dave at one point said, ‘I wanna make a disco record!’” Laessig recalls. “The fact that was coming from him, it wasn’t something you expected, and it was exciting because it was like “Oh, we’re all gonna do this thing that we’ve never done. That sounds really enticing and fresh.’ After being in lockdown for so long, it felt like we wanted to dance. I don’t think anyone wanted to mope around too much at the end of this.’” 

Second Nature fuses funk and disco (which pulses through the title track and “Next to Normal”) with ‘80s new wave (“Heartbursts;” “LSD”) and millennial club catharsis (“Dance Around It”); it draws a throughline from Abba’s unabashed dance floor devotion to Kate Bush’s cerebral art-pop and the vibrant vulnerability of Robyn, all without sacrificing an ounce of Lucius’ own style and ingenuity. And though many of the melodies are synth-laden and steeped in endorphins, the lyrics are very much anchored in the uncertainty, fear, and difficult epiphanies Laessig and Wolfe faced as they wrote through their experiences—direct lines of dialogue seemingly pulled from their coffee talks. 

“Promises” pairs a sunny acoustic guitar line and sing-along chorus with the play-by-play of a break-up (“Promises, empty like the bed you sleep in/Broken like the spell you’re keepin’”), while “The Man I’ll Never Find” stuns with its poignant apologies (“I thought that it would be you/I wanted it to be you/And I’m sorry I was always looking for the man that I’ll never find”) as much as it does its grand, symphonic arrangement. When Molad first heard the latter, so clearly inspired by the heartbreak they shared, he told Wolfe it was the best song they’d ever written. 

Many of the truths of Second Nature are hard to confront, but Lucius learned that there’s so much more to gain from facing the impossible than shying away from it—especially when you’ve got someone standing by your side through it all. 

“It is a record that begs you not to sit in the difficult moments, but to dance through them,” says Wolfe. “It touches upon all these stages of grief, and some of that is breakthrough. Being able to have the full spectrum of the experience that we have had, or that I’ve had in my divorce, or that we had in lockdown, having our careers come to a halt, so to speak—I think you can really hear and feel the spectrum of emotion, and hopefully find the joy in the darkness. It does exist. That’s why we made Second Nature and why we wanted it to sound the way it did: our focus was on dancing our way through the darkness.” 

 

Ber

A woman sits in a grassy field at night
Minnesota pop-rock singer Ber
courtesy Wasserman Music

Discovering she was a songwriter came as a revelation for rising artist Ber. Turns out she's really good at it: Her aching 2021 single "Meant to Be" went viral literally overnight, and she's only just getting started. More recently, Ber's song "Superspreader" is steadily accelerating thanks to pointed lyrics rooted in heartbreak and frustration, and a subtly irresistible hook. 

Ber has a knack for writing about universal topics from fresh angles, expressing herself in a way that resonates with listeners -- a lot of listeners. Since she posted "Meant to Be" on TikTok in September 2021, the song has amassed nearly a million views, while surging past 50 million Spotify streams. 

"I felt so seen as a human," says Ber, who co-wrote the song on an August afternoon with her friend Charlie Oriain in his backyard in England. "It was so personal to me and to have so many people be like, 'Hey, you've just put into words something huge for me that I've never been able to define,' was the most emotionally validating experience I've had so far." 

"Meant to Be" was the centerpiece of Ber's first EP, 2022's And I'm Still Thinking About That, a collection of six songs that show a singer and songwriter stepping confidently into her considerable talent. Though the EP, and the singles that preceded it, comprise her first real music project, she's not lacking for experience. In fact, singing came naturally to Ber (full name: Berit Dybing), who had been immersed in musical theater since she was a little girl growing up in Minnesota. After a gap year in Norway, she found herself studying Vocal Performance at Leeds Conservatoire in the UK where she began focusing on her solo career as a singer-songwriter. 

"Things changed immediately," Ber says. She met a crew of co-writers and producers, including Brandon "Hot Dennis" Hill, who contributed to the songs on And I'm Still Thinking About That. Then the pandemic hit, her visa expired and she moved back to Minnesota to live in her uncle's basement in Minneapolis. 

"I wrote so many songs and worked a lot of part-time jobs and saved up and, honestly, grinded really hard in Minneapolis and tried to get to know people here," she says. 

Despite the growing number of songs she was writing, often on Zoom with friends in the UK, Ber hadn't initially planned to be a performer. "I thought I was going to just write for people," Ber says. "Then eventually I had all these songs that felt like something I could put out and have an artist project of my own." 

More recently, Ber has been writing with Cacie Dalager and Bradley Hale of the Minneapolis indie-rock duo Now Now (they co-produced "Superspreader" with Hot Dennis), which has added a new dimension to her music. Not only was Ber thrilled to co-write in person again, she relished the chance to see first-hand how other writers work. 

"It felt like four steps forward for me," Ber says. "I find myself learning something new every time I talk to them and hang out with them." 

While Ber tends to prefer collaborative songwriting -- "I'm an overthinker, obviously, and when I do stuff by myself I often feel trapped," she says -- she makes no secret about the source of her subject matter: she's writing autobiographical songs straight from the heart. 

"It's all real," she says. "It's my way of processing my emotions, and being able to bring that into songs -- I've found that the style of writing I love is really conversational. I could just be standing in front of you saying these things out loud." 

Abraham Alexander 

Portrait of a man adjusting his scarf and collar
Abraham Alexander was born in Greece to parents of Nigerian descent, then moved to Texas at age 11. His music career began in and around the Ft. Worth area.
Elle Caerbert

Born in Greece to parents of Nigerian descent, Abraham Alexander moved to Texas with his family at age 11, determined to escape the racial tensions they faced in Athens. And while his lyrics speak to pain and trauma and life-changing loss, Alexander instills his music with a joyful passion and irrepressible spirit, ultimately giving way to songs that radiate undeniable hope. 

In the making of his debut EP, Alexander traveled from Fort Worth to London, shaping his songs with elements of soul, hip-hop, and blues. He is currently working on his follow-up album with Grammy-nominated producer and songwriter, Brad Cook (Bon Iver, Waxahatchee). 

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