Ryan Davis & The Roadhouse Band at Parish, Huddersfield, 26 August | Event in Huddersfield | AllEvents

Ryan Davis & The Roadhouse Band at Parish, Huddersfield

Parish

Highlights

Tue, 26 Aug, 2025 at 07:30 pm

3 hours

Parish

Date & Location

Tue, 26 Aug, 2025 at 07:30 pm to 10:30 pm (BST)

Parish

The Old Courthouse, Huddersfield, United Kingdom

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About the event

Ryan Davis & The Roadhouse Band at Parish, Huddersfield
Parish Events presents...
Ryan Davis & The Roadhouse Band
+ support
Parish, Huddersfield
Tuesday 26th August 2025
Doorrs 7.30pm // £13.50 adv // 14+ (under 18's must be accompanied by a parent / guardian)

Tickets on-sale now via - https://www.seetickets.com/event/ryan-davis-the-roadhouse-band/parish/3431233

“If you don’t know it yet, it’s my privilege to tell you that Ryan Davis is one of the greatest songwriters of his generation. Bold
instinct immediately insists that I lose the qualifications: he’s the greatest of his generation, he’s one of the greatest ever.
Whatever. Posterity—if there is a posterity—will sort it out. Happily, New Threats from the Soul has beaten the Doomsday
Clock to the wire, and we appear to have a little while left to revel in it, receive its revelations, and be revealed by it.

“Do I know what I’m doing,” A.R. Ammons muses in his Tape for the Turn of the Year, “or am I waiting for it to be done?” That
fundamental question seems to me to be the bedrock upon which New Threats is built. It attempts mightily to reckon with the
perplexities of human efficacy and agency, of acting versus being acted upon, in an absurd and debased world. The “I” of
Ryan’s songs is both schlemiel and schlimazel: the spiller of the soup who promptly slips in it. Is this Job the clown? It is not:
“I was hardly known to god much less those who had sought to make their home in a bullseye.” The subject is a cipher, and
his alienation is total. Or nearly: he has, or has had in some antagonistic past, a love life, although this too is compromised by
cravenness and error and ineptitude. Is there no possibility of self-improvement or self-understanding outside of its inversion,
self-dissolution? Sentiment hardening and crumbling into sediment? This probably sounds hopelessly plodding and severe. It is not—not remotely.

It’s a shit-ton of fun. “Why not dance in the sands of yourself?” Ryan sings, while giving you plenty to move to. The songs are all earwigs; the arrangements genuinely
thrilling, enlivening efforts by the crackerjacks that comprise the sprawling Roadhouse Band. Each trip through the record
reveals more of the depth and breadth and tangle of its tapestry. On my twenty-something-th spin I discover wonderful new

threads—a brief, breathtaking piano arpeggio by Anthony Fossaluzza; some hard-panned synth rumble that my three-year-
old insists is a thunderstorm but that I say is a space rocket. These strike me as having held themselves in reserve till I’ve earned the wonder of encountering them. Is there a better definition of revelation?

The lyrics work similarly, of course, and will go on revealing themselves for, well, forever. Ryan manages near-rhymes that a
hundred years’ worth of monkeys laboring at Chat GPT-enabled typewriters couldn’t achieve: “bromeliad” and “necrophiliac”;
“urinal” and “de Chirico.” Kinky Friedman lamented that people thought his funny songs were sad and his sad songs were
funny, when they were both simultaneously. Like the Kinkster, Ryan can make you laugh through a lump in your throat: e.g.
(although it’s so hard to pick just one example): “I learned that time was not my friend nor my foe / more like one of the guys
from work.” In his formidable crew of harmony singers there are three of the most gifted lyricists to currently walk among us
—Catherine Irwin, Will Oldham, Lou Turner—which testifies, I think, to the profound heft of his writing. (These folks don’t
often sign up to sing pap.)

New Threats from the Soul is a masterclass in reducing the sublime to the prosaic, immensity to infinitesimality, and vice
versa (the trick can only work both ways). Everything in our universe is essentially flotsam or jetsam, rubbish heaps of
fragments and shards, a “pile of voodoo dolls and iron scrap in the backyard for the meek to inherit.” We, especially, are
jerry-rigs of inconsistencies and incoherencies, dead dreams and necrophagous hopes, “mismeasurements between the
place where [we are] and the place where [we] could have been,” although somehow not—miracle of miracles—bereft of
simple joys. The record functions in parallel with Kafka’s winking dictum that there is an infinite amount of hope in the
universe, just not for us. At least, I would venture for coldest comfort, not as we have constituted ourselves. When Ryan has
the penny slot yell “‘What even am I, by god?’” toward the high stakes room, the soul chills and thrills at being so seen. New
Threats suggests that maybe, just maybe, something like redemption is possible, but only once we’re entirely emptied out
and hawked in toto down at Walden Pawn.”


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Ticket Info

Tickets for Ryan Davis & The Roadhouse Band at Parish, Huddersfield can be booked here.

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Parish, The Old Courthouse,Huddersfield, United Kingdom
Ryan Davis & The Roadhouse Band at Parish, Huddersfield, 26 August | Event in Huddersfield | AllEvents
Ryan Davis & The Roadhouse Band at Parish, Huddersfield
Tue, 26 Aug, 2025 at 07:30 pm