DHP presents
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
plus Will Johnson
Poetic. Honest. A Grammy winner with flair.
Six-time Grammy Award-winning singer/songwriter Jason Isbell is one of the most respected and celebrated artists of his generation. The North Alabama native possesses an incredible penchant for identifying and articulating some of the deepest, yet simplest, human emotions, and turning them into beautiful poetry through song. Isbell sings of the everyday human condition with thoughtful, heartfelt, and sometimes brutal honesty.
After releasing multiple critically-acclaimed albums, appearing in an Academy Award-nominated film, Killers of the Flower Moon (2023), and touring the world with his band, the 400 Unit, Isbell began 2025 with a change of pace. A solo record. Simply Isbell and his voice and an acoustic guitar, an all-mahogany 1940 Martin 0-17.
Recorded at Electric Lady Studios in NYC, Foxes in the Snow further demonstrates his pure talent as a songwriter and musician. As Stereogum so aptly put it, “the barebones intimacy recenters the artist behind the persona and serves as a reminder that this guy can write a damn song.”
Need to know
Venue: Sage One (all seated)
Price: £58.30 to £86.40
Stage Times: Announced nearer showtime.
Age: Under 14s must be accompanied by an adult.
About the support act
Singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Will Johnson has long navigated beloved bands (Centro-matic, Monsters of Folk, the 400 Unit), singular collaborations (Molina & Johnson, New Multitudes, Overseas) and the many open roads a career musician travels. With his 10th solo album, however, the prolific journeyman tapped a creative well at home — in one room alone with his thoughts. In the Texas farmhouse where he lives, nestled among the hills of Hays County, Johnson dreamt up and chronicled a perfectly imperfect world.
Diamond City, out April 4 on Keeled Scales, surveys mythical places whose spirit dwells among barren Midwestern landscapes and stark Southern outlands, reflecting the hollows of Johnson’s childhood in southern Missouri and the spartan Texas expanse where he now lives. Like many towns that line America’s midsection, Diamond City’s fancy name belies its reality. As with albums such as John Prine’s John Prine or Bruce Springsteen’s Nebraska, Diamond City’s vast fortune is found in its gritty folk tales — of hovering ghosts, open wounds, tender hearts, little jokes, and the everyday people and scenery that compose a cracked iconography. Like Muhlenberg County, Kentucky or Mahwah, New Jersey, Diamond City is a place that people may leave but never truly escape.
Photo credit: Jackie Lee Young