Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats @ Ball Arena

Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats put on a rockin’ show Ball Arena on December, 15 2023. Warming up the stage were Mt. Joy and Jamie Wyatt. Making for the perfect lineup for their 19th annual holiday show!


Jamie Wyatt

Jamie Wyatt first began turning heads with her breakout 2017 debut, Felony Blues. This chronicled her now much-publicized battle with addiction and transformative journey through the criminal justice system. Wyatt’s 2020 follow-up, Neon Cross, tackled even more profoundly personal revelations. Both records arrived to universal acclaim. NPR praised Wyatt’s “remarkable voice” and Rolling Stone lauding her “lush, layered, and complex” performances.

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Photos by Tessa Brancato. All images © 2023 Copyright Tessa Brancato. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.


Mt. Joy

Mt. Joy is an American five-piece indie rock band based in Los Angeles with roots in Philadelphia. They consist of members Matt Quinn (vocals, guitar), Sam Cooper (guitar), Sotiris Eliopoulos (drums), Jackie Miclau (keyboards), and Michael Byrnes (bass). The band debuted in 2016 with their single “Astrovan”, recorded in Los Angeles by Quinn, Cooper, and Byrnes. This was followed up in 2017 by the trio of singles “Sheep”, “Cardinal”, and “Silver Lining”, with “Silver Lining” eventually charting at the top spot of the Billboard Triple A charts. 

On March 2, 2018, they released their debut eponymous studio album. Between the next two years, Mt. Joy performed at festivals and on tour as support acts, as well as headlining a North American and European tour. After a tour with The Lumineers was cut short due to COVID-19, Mt. Joy released their second studio album, Rearrange Us on June 5, 2020. Their third studio album, Orange Blood, was released on June 17, 2022.

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Photos by Tessa Brancato. All images © 2023 Copyright Tessa Brancato. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.


Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats

It took Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats less than five years to become one of the most recognizable new forces in contemporary rock ’n’ roll. Since 2015, Rateliff has led his denim-clad, horn-flanked Night Sweats, supplying the zeal of a whiskey-chugging Pentecostal preacher to songs about this world’s shared woes. They’ve had hits, sure, but their combustible mix of soul and rock quickly cemented them as the rare generational band who balanced ecstatic live shows with engrossing and rich records. To wit, is there any other modern act capable of revving up stadium crowds for The Rolling Stones while also appearing on Saturday Night Live and CMT Crossroads and at NPR’s Tiny Desk in short order?

When Rateliff returned from his pandemic-truncated solo tour in March 2020, he struggled with the same question that vexed so many of us then—what now? Fortunately, he returned to his Colorado homestead and penned a set of songs that synthesized his introspection with his anthemic inclinations. The result is The Future, the third Night Sweats album but the first to capture this octet’s true depth and breadth. An instant classic of 11 songs, the album presents something more sustainable, interesting, and indeed open—a songwriter and band growing into bigger questions and sounds, into a future that allows them to remain recognizable but be so much more compelling than some denim-clad caricature.

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Photos by Tessa Brancato. All images © 2023 Copyright Tessa Brancato. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.


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SUM OTHA COOL POSTS 4 U

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