Watch: Lake Street Dive Performs from "Free Yourself Up" at Paste Studio NYC

Browse by:
Year
Browse by:
Publish date (field_publish_date)
Submitted by nonesuch on
Article Type
Publish date
Excerpt

Lake Street Dive stopped by the Paste Studio at The Manhattan Center in NYC yesterday to perform three songs from their forthcoming album, Free Yourself Up: "Good Kisser," "I Can Change," and "Shame, Shame, Shame." Watch the performance here.

Copy

Lake Street Dive stopped by the Paste Studio at The Manhattan Center in New York City yesterday to perform three songs from their forthcoming album, Free Yourself Up: "Good Kisser," "I Can Change," and "Shame, Shame, Shame." You can watch the performance below.

Free Yourself Up, due May 4 on Nonesuch Records, is available to pre-order now at iTunes and in the Nonesuch Store, where "Good Kisser" and "I Can Change" are available for instant download; Nonesuch Store pre-orders also include an exclusive print autographed by the band.

featuredimage
Lake Street Dive: "Paste" Studio Session, April 2018
  • Thursday, April 19, 2018
    Watch: Lake Street Dive Performs from "Free Yourself Up" at Paste Studio NYC
    Paste

    Lake Street Dive stopped by the Paste Studio at The Manhattan Center in New York City yesterday to perform three songs from their forthcoming album, Free Yourself Up: "Good Kisser," "I Can Change," and "Shame, Shame, Shame." You can watch the performance below.

    Free Yourself Up, due May 4 on Nonesuch Records, is available to pre-order now at iTunes and in the Nonesuch Store, where "Good Kisser" and "I Can Change" are available for instant download; Nonesuch Store pre-orders also include an exclusive print autographed by the band.

    Journal Articles:Artist NewsVideo

Enjoy This Post?

Get weekly updates right in your inbox.
terms

X By submitting my information, I agree to receive personalized updates and marketing messages about Nonesuch based on my information, interests, activities, website visits and device data and in accordance with the Privacy Policy. I understand that I can opt-out at any time by emailing privacypolicy@wmg.com.

Thank you!
x

Welcome to Nonesuch's mailing list!

Customize your notifications for tour dates near your hometown, birthday wishes, or special discounts in our online store!
terms

By submitting my information, I agree to receive personalized updates and marketing messages about Nonesuch based on my information, interests, activities, website visits and device data and in accordance with the Privacy Policy. I understand that I can opt-out at any time by emailing privacypolicy@wmg.com.

Related Posts

  • Wednesday, January 8, 2025
    Wednesday, January 8, 2025

    David Longstreth’s Song of the Earth, a song cycle for orchestra and voices, is due April 4. Performed by Longstreth with his band Dirty Projectors—Felicia Douglass, Maia Friedman, Olga Bell—and the Berlin-based chamber orchestra s t a r g a z e, conducted by André de Ridder, the album also features Phil Elverum (Mount Eerie), Steve Lacy, Patrick Shiroishi, Anastasia Coope, Tim Bernardes, Ayoni, Portraits of Tracy, and the author David Wallace-Wells. Longstreth says that while Song of the Earth—his biggest-yet foray into the field of concert music—"is not a ‘climate change opera,’” he wanted to “find something beyond sadness: beauty spiked with damage. Acknowledgement flecked with hope, irony, humor, rage.”

    Journal Topics: Album ReleaseArtist NewsVideo
  • Tuesday, January 7, 2025
    Tuesday, January 7, 2025

    Composer Steve Reich talks about creating his 1970–71 piece Drumming—which the Village Voice hailed as “the most important work of the whole minimalist music movement"—in a new video from his publisher Boosey & Hawkes. Steve Reich and Musicians gave the world premiere performance of Drumming at the Museum of Modern Art in NYC in December 1971. Their 1987 Nonesuch recording is included in the forthcoming Steve Reich Collected Works, a twenty-seven disc box set, due March 14.

    Journal Topics: Artist NewsVideo