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Please note that there are seats on the main floor for this show and you must purchase a floor seat to have access to that level. All remaining tickets are for standing in the balcony. Seating is still first come first serve for those with the proper ticket.Todd Snider with Tim Cook (of the Subdudes)
Troubadour, meaning an itinerant singer of songs, is a word that dates back centuries, and comes from the French verb “trouver,” which is to find. These musical wanderers would find and invent stories humorous and intellectual, romantic and earthy, performing them as they went from town to town. Troubadour is also the word that acclaimed musician-raconteur Todd Snider leans on to describe himself and his latest release, Live: Return of the Storyteller.
Snider is also mindful about not repeating himself when he's returning to a familiar venue, which can add a tightrope quality to his performances. “On this record, when I left Nashville, I didn't know what I was going to say,” he admits. “I just knew that it couldn't be the same shit that I've said. I was going to have to have some new stories to tell. That's how it's been for years. Then one night, I'll get up there and open my mouth
and something new comes out. And then I'll just kept telling it and refining it. It happens under pressure.”
The timing of Live: Return of the Storyteller's release has extra resonance in our post-pandemic era. Snider says, “I'm glad I recorded the tour last year, because that was the sound of the country getting to see live music again. It was unique and it won't happen again. Everyone just hugs at the start of a concert-you can tell that they're glad to see each other, and then they get more excited than they used to be about just being out and
seeing music. I'm sure that it will go back to normal, but it hasn't yet.”
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