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Evangeline Young, Dustin Lowman
*Please note this is an upstairs venue
Doors 7:30 PM // Music 8pm
$15 Adv // $20 at the door
BYOB
About the artists:
Evangeline Young is a Brooklyn based indie singer-songwriter and actor originally from West Chester, PA (Go Birds). Growing up in a family of folk singers, Evangeline’s been singing and playing guitar since she was a kid. Her music moves between the bare, acoustic sounds of the folk songs she was raised on, and the harder edges of her indie-rock influences. Combined with lyrics that feature a kind of conversational poetry, her songs are aimed at personal revelation with a few laughs along the way. In 2022, Evangeline opened for Glen Hansard (The Swell Season) at the Beacon Theatre in New York City and The Anthem in Washington D.C. She is preparing to release her first full length solo record entitled It Wasn’t All That Bad.

Dustin Lowman writes antisensical songs: lyric-driven tunes that deconstruct the nonsense of living. He is a self-taught singer, guitarist, harmonica player, and lyricist who patterns his style on troubadour types — Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Aimee Mann, Adrianne Lenker, Cass McCombs. Based in Brooklyn, Dustin performs regularly at venues in the borough, and has also appeared at the Poetry Foundation in Chicago, IL; The Bitter End in Manhattan, NY; and the Levitt Pavilion in Westport, CT.
Dustin has opened for Marcellus Hall (of Railroad Jerk), Will Dailey, and Ira Wolf, among others. He also hosts “His Back Pages,” a recurring Bob-Dylan-deep-cut-themed series at Cafe Wha? in Manhattan’s West Village. Of Dustin’s musical prospects, Livingston Taylor averred: “Dustin is on the path of a terrific musical career. His musical voice is waiting to be heard by those hungry for the next real thing.”
Originally from Westport, CT, Dustin began writing creatively in kindergarten. Sympathetic tales about Frankenstein and NFL-bound dragons (yes, really) in grade school gave way to confessional poetry and songs in high school. Now, Dustin’s songs straddle comedy and tragedy: A song entitled “Bankrupt & Crucified” may be his most optimistic, and “Rather Be Right” compares the merits of starting a religion and falling in love.