Tickets are not available.
Event Details
Friday, January 14, 2021
Doors: 7:00 PM
Show: 8:00 PM
21+
$16 Advance | $18 Day of Show
- - - - - -
Please note this performance is requiring all fans to provide proof of vaccination OR negative COVID-19 test within 72 hours of the event for entry.
All attendees must be vaccinated against COVID-19 and provide proof of vaccination [either the original, or a digital / printed copy of the vaccination card] OR have received a negative COVID-19 diagnostic test within 72-hours before entry to the facility and provide printed proof of a negative result prior to entering the venue.
- - - - - -
EL TEN ELEVEN
Struggles are sloshed away by tidal waves of
champagne. Resolutions are boldly proclaimed or whispered in one’s own heart. A
ball drops, and we expect a whole new life to spring out. But nothing is
transformed or transposed, because miracles don’t happen during the hung time
between this year and the next. It’s just another New Year’s Eve.
Few days hold as much promise—and subsequent
disappointment—as New Year’s Eve. The spiritual hangover that lingers every
January 1 inspired the new works from El Ten Eleven. After a year that changed
nearly-everything most-likely-forever, the instrumental duo felt compelled to
soundtrack the emotional heave-ho of New Year’s Eve with an album of the same
name.
Resolution 1: Radiate positivity.
“New
Year’s Eve is a reference to guarded optimism about what will be happening
next year. At the time, it seemed like our national divisiveness might be
waning and the end of the pandemic was
near. But of course that’s not how it turned out,” bassist Kristian Dunn said
of the album’s inspiration. “That’s what New Year’s Eves are. You think it’s
gonna be a fun night, but usually it’s disappointing at the end.”
Over the course of 20 years and 11 albums, El
Ten Eleven has continued to redefine the potential of bass guitar and drums.
With an arsenal of pedals, labyrinthine arrangements, and a deft use of
looping, Kristian Dunn (bass) and Tim Fogarty (drums) create two-man
symphonies. With New Year’s Eve, the
duo melds electrifying disco grooves with their tried-and-true experimental rock
atmospherics.
The album’s eponymous opening track plots the
emotional topography of high hopes and sinking disappointment. Beginning with
woozy bass drones powered by an Electro-Harmonix Superego Synth Engine (Dunn’s
new “secret weapon”), the track eventually swells with Fogarty’s shape-shifting
rhythms and lush textures. Followed by the scruffy groove of “Meta Metta” and
triumphant crescendo of “Isn’t Everything Enough,” it’s impossible not to feel
hope, or something like it.
Resolution 2: Embrace authenticity.
Throughout its six tracks, New Year’s Eve romps through infectious grooves, Rototom blasts,
electrifying breakdowns, and meditative reprieves. Along with the pedal-fueled
trickery and musical prowess fans have come to expect from El Ten Eleven, New Year’s Eve channels Dunn’s lifelong
love of disco. Channeling memories of a childhood spent spinning Niles Rogers
and Chic while his peers blared heavy metal, Dunn imbued his own emotions onto
the delightful excess of disco.
“I’m a huge fan of disco music, and I mean
that completely sincerely,” Dunn says. “I’m a bass player, so the bass is often
the driving lead instrument of disco music, so that appealed to me--that’s just
in my blood. This love was always in me, and it was time for it to come out.
The album is kinda funky and kinda dancey, but with my sad boy Kristian Dunn
crap on top.”
As much as the two-year recording process of New Year’s Eve demanded experimentation,
it also required the band to go back to basics. Reuniting with their longtime
producer Sonny DiPerri (DIIV, Portugal. The Man), Dunn and Fogarty were
encouraged to simplify their approach to composition and embrace their musical
instincts.
Resolution 3: Stop overthinking.
The album’s cover, a digitally manipulated
photo of the duo’s reflection glimmering in fresh rainfall (i.e. a reflection
of a reflection), serves as a metaphor for the band’s creative process, a
lengthy process of rehearsal, reflection, and revision. Along with nodding to
the reflection inherent on New Year’s Eve, the photograph also pays homage to
Dunn’s newfound meditation practice, which has allowed him to break free from
overanalyzing his life and work.
“It’s so hard in life to be in the moment and
not go crazy about thinking about the past,” Dunn says. “A reflection of a
reflection is so typical of me reflecting on my own reflections. That photo is
a representation of that. Metaphorically, I think I’m cool, but then I’m
thinking about the fact that I’m thinking about that. It never ends.”
The album’s closing track, “A Reflection Of A
Reflection,” serves as a musical counterpart to this thought-loop. Repetitious
to the point of hypnotic, the song’s groove mirrors the enthralling nature of
contemplation. Shuffling percussion punctuates a revving bass line, never
yielding to the thicket of harmonics and distortion, ultimately leaving the
listener with cymbal pops and unquiet minds.
Resolution 4: Move on. Let go. Et cetera.
A followup to 2020’s grief-stricken Tautology trilogy, New Year’s Eve marks a joyous new chapter for El Ten Eleven.
Instead of trying to double-down on the concept album blueprint, Dunn made a
concerted decision to move out of his head and into a more intuitive world.
“With Tautology
I had all of these ideas that just kept coming, and I had to figure out how
to make them all fit together across three records,” Dunn says of the
triple-album’s process. “With New Year’s
Eve, I felt more free. I didn’t have to force anything to fit together—it
just fell into place.”
Emotional resonance has always trumped musical
intrigue for El Ten Eleven. With New
Year’s Eve, they’ve created a record that reminds listeners that hope isn’t
reserved for just one holiday. Hope is what fuels 20 years and 11 records. Hope
is what carries a drum-and-bass duo across stages around the world. Hope is a
brazen belief in change, and that lives in every day and everyone.
- - - - - - - -
6 TICKET LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. YOUR NAME, CREDIT CARD, ADDRESS, AND EMAIL ADDRESS WILL BE VERIFIED. SEE TICKETS AND CRESCENT BALLROOM RESERVE THE RIGHT TO CANCEL ANY ORDERS IN EXCESS OF THE STATED TICKET LIMIT.
ANY TICKETS SUSPECTED OF BEING PURCHASED FOR THE SOLE PURPOSE OF RESELLING CAN BE CANCELLED AT THE DISCRETION OF CRESCENT BALLROOM / SEE TICKETS.
- - - - - -
Support acts are subject to change. No refunds.
Event Location
Crescent Ballroom
308 N. 2nd Ave, Phoenix, AZ, 85003
Talent
El Ten Eleven
Sego