Lensic 360

Neko Case

w/ John Grant

at El Rey Theater

Time: 8:00pm     Day: Friday     Doors: 7:00pm     Ages: 21+ Ages     Price: $47

TICKETS

$47–$52 

MEMBER PRE-SALE: Thurs, Apr 17, 10 am. Want pre-sale access? Become a Lensic member!

SPOTIFY PRE-SALE: Thurs, Apr 17, 12 pm

PUBLIC SALE: Fri, Apr 18, 10 am

Charity Fee -  $1 from every ticket will go to Peer Solutions and support their positive youth leadership and development program designed to prevent harm before it begins and engage lifetime ambassadors of positive change (www.peersolutions.org).


VENUE: EL REY THEATER

SEATING: Limited 

ALCOHOL: Yes 

OUTSIDE FOOD/DRINK: No

PARKING: Yes, downtown street parking, and paid parking lot across the street

ADA: Yes, please ask for accommodations prior to the show


NEKO CASE

Singer, songwriter, music producer, visual artist, and writer Neko Case is the consummate career artist — fearless and versatile, with a fierce work ethic and a constant drive to search deeper within herself for creative growth. “One of America's best and most ambitious singer-songwriters" (Rolling Stone) and “essentially peerless” (NPR), Case has long been revered as one of music’s most influential artists, whose authenticity, lyrical storytelling, and sly wit have endeared her to a legion of critics, musicians, and lifelong fans. In addition to numerous acclaimed and GRAMMY-nominated solo records, Case is a founding member of Canadian supergroup The New Pornographers. She is the author of The New York Times bestselling memoir 'The Harder I Fight the More I Love You' and the weekly Substack newsletter ‘Entering The Lung,’ and is currently composing the musical theater adaptation of the Academy Award-winning motion picture 'Thelma & Louise.'


JOHN GRANT

John Grant’s The Art of The Lie is his most cinematic and emotionally complex album yet—an opulent, politically charged record shaped in collaboration with producer Ivor Guest (Grace Jones, Brigitte Fontaine). Blending lush synthscapes with biting lyricism, Grant tackles themes of disinformation, queer identity, trauma, and American decline, all while weaving in personal reflections on parenthood and masculinity. With echoes of Vangelis, Laurie Anderson, and the Carpenters-meets-Carpenter, Grant filters darkness through humor and beauty, distilling human experience into vivid, heartrending sound.