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Sep 21
Sep 21
Goldenvoice presents

Indigo Girls and Amos Lee

Date: Saturday, September 21, 2024
Sections T, U, V - Floor (Rows 1-9): $131.50
Sections T, U, V - Floor (Rows 10-14)
Sections J, K, L, M, N, O - Preferred: $105.50
Section H: $95.50
Sections G, I: $85.50
Sections D, E, F: $65.50
Sections A, B, C
Sections W1, W2 - ADA: $55.50

Ticket limit is 6.
There is a transfer delay on all tickets.
Any purchase over the limit is subject to cancellation without notification.

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Indigo Girls and Amos Lee

Released in 1989, Indigo Girls' eponymous major label debut sold over two million copies under the power of singles “Closer to Fine” and “Kid Fears” and turned Indigo Girls into one of the most successful folk duos in history. Over a thirty-five-year career that began in clubs around their native Atlanta, Georgia, the multi-Grammy-winning duo of Emily Saliers and Amy Ray has recorded sixteen studio albums, sold over 15 million records, and built a dedicated, enduring following across the globe. Rolling Stone describes them as the “ideal duet partners.” Committed and uncompromising activists, they work on issues like immigration reform (El Refugio), LGBTQ advocacy, education (Imagination Library), death penalty reform, and Native American rights. They are co-founders of Honor the Earth, a non-profit dedicated to the survival of sustainable Native communities, Indigenous environmental justice, and green energy solutions. 


With one foot in the real world and the other in a charmed dimension of his own making, Amos Lee creates rare music that’s emotionally raw yet touched with a certain magical quality. On his eighth album, Dreamland, the Philadelphia-born singer/songwriter intimately documents his real-world struggles (alienation, anxiety, loneliness, despair), an outpouring born from deliberate and often painful self-examination. “For most of my life, I’ve walked into rooms thinking, ‘I don’t belong here,’” says Lee. “I’ve come to the realization that I’m too comfortable as an isolated person, and I want to reach out more. This record came from questioning my connections to other people, to myself, to my past, and to the future.”

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