This was so good last year we're doing it again! This show is explosive rock and roll action at it's best! Come celebrate the patio opening!
Run Westy Run was one of the great Twin Cities bands of the '80s, but decades later, in retrospect, they tend to get lost in the glare of an effervescent Minnesota music scene that at the time had no shortage of bright lights: The Replacements, Husker Du, Soul Asylum, The Jayhawks, Prince, Flyte Tyme, plus countless other sparkling contenders, many now lost to the sands of time.Run Westy Run was formed in 1984 by 3 brothers from St. Louis Park, MN - Kirk, Kyle, and Kraig Johnson - along with Terry Fisher and Bob Joslyn, and were named after a 1966 children's book of the same name. The “Westies”, as they soon became known, started out as an intensely chaotic, Stooge-y hard rock band, but later evolved into a hard-to-define amalgam of indie, rock, roots, punk, and funk, driven by a ferocious, lusty energy that infected any audience they came into contact with at one legendary live show after another. The Westies have released 3 studio LPs along with a handful of singles and EPs over the years – and there are at least a few albums worth of material that got lost along the way – but their enduring legacy is a well-earned reputation as one of finest live bands to ever come out of the Land of 10000 Bands.
Things quietly ramped down for the Westies in the late '90s as various band members pursued other projects (So-So, The O'Jeez, Iffy, Golden Smog, and The Jayhawks, to name a few) but the band never officially called it quits. After a 15 year hiatus, Run Westy Run returned to the action in late 2013 with a gala holiday show at First Avenue. They finally issued a live album in 2014 that captured some of their live magic and released a digital EP in late 2017 that shows them evolving in new, exciting directions.
Still rocking local stages on a semi-regular basis while continually working on new material, the current lineup of RWR consists of founding members Kraig & Kirk Johnson and Terry Fisher, supplemented by a crackerjack rhythm section of drummer-about-town/producer Peter Anderson, and bassist Paul McFarland. In January 2021, the band recorded a new album's worth of tracks at Flowers Studio in Minneapolis with plans for a late 2021/early 2022 release. Well into their fourth decade of uncompromising creativity, anyone who has experienced the Westies lately can attest that they're still as vital as ever, maybe even more so.
The Scarlet Goodbye, labelled “the most unlikely mash-up in Minnesota Music History'', is the creative combination of Daniel Murphy and Jeff Arundel. Murphy, pivotal in the launch of both Soul Asylum and thesuper-group Golden Smog, had stepped away from thegame in 2012, after 30 years of recording and touring. A chance meeting with mellow Singer-Songwriter Jeff Arundel led the duo, whose careers spanned the same time frame but had essentially no other resemblance, to start writing and recording.With the first collaboration “Paris”, they realized that they were onto something, as Murphy shoved Arundel into a swagger, and Arundel tip-toed Murphy onto revealing some vulnerabilities. Meeting in an attic studio during the Pandemic, Murphy and Arundel fashioned a collection of songs that producer John Fields, who was brought in to mix the record, calls “both timeless and unique, part Rolling Stones and part Townes Van Zandt ''.Over 2022, The Scarlet Goodbye has released three singles and a video to critical acclaim, and has performed onstages large and small, bracing for a March release of their full-length record “Hope’s Eternal”, onIngrooves/Universal, via Nashville’s The Label Group.
IF WEATHER TURNS TO SHIT, THE SHOW MOVES INSIDE.