
All ages
Tickets: $15 advanced / $17 day of show
Doors: 7:00pm
Music: 8:00pm
Please note that all ticket sales will be available at will-call the night of the show. Please be prepared with your email ticket confirmation, your name, and some form of identification to show the door person.
*All ticket sales are final. No refunds or exchanges will be permitted*
The third full-length from Olivia Jean, Raving Ghost is an album populated by
mysterious characters in various states of danger: cursed lovers, doomed souls,
women deliriously haunted by unseen forces. Over the course of its 11 spellbinding
tracks, the Detroit-born singer/songwriter/multi- instrumentalist amplifies that
drama with her wildly melodic take on garage-rock, handling each riff with the
power and precision she’s previously shown as a member of the Black Belles (and
as an in- demand session/ touring musician who’s played with legends like Wanda
Jackson). A stunning evolution of the retro-surf sound of her past solo work, Raving
Ghost ultimately makes for the most magnificently heavy and mesmerizing output
yet from an endlessly fascinating artist.
Mainly recorded at the famed Valentine Recording Studios in L.A., Raving Ghost
finds Olivia Jean back in the producer’s chair and working with musicians like My
Morning Jacket keyboardist Bo Koster and drummers Carla Azar (T-Bone Burnett,
Nikki Lane) and Patrick Keeler (The Raconteurs, The Afghan Whigs). “Valentine is
like a time capsule that’s been perfectly preserved since the ’60s, so aesthetically
and sonically it was right up my alley,” says Olivia Jean, who recorded parts of
Raving Ghost at Third Man Recording Studio in her homebase of Nashville. “We had
so much at our disposal and experimented with different amps and sounds, and the
songs slowly transformed into something I never imagined. On my previous albums
I played most of the instruments myself, so it felt good to let go and trust the
process of working with these extremely creative musicians.” Engineered by Bill
Skibbe (The Kills, Blonde Redhead), the result is a feverish collision of goth- punk
and power-pop and classic garage, charged with an energy so intense that the
speakers to several of Valentine’s vintage amps ended up blowing out during the
recording sessions.
Mostly made up of songs written alone late at night, Raving Ghost opens on the
brooding rhythms and serpentine guitar lines of its title track, a powerful
introduction to the album’s lavishly detailed storytelling (“The scratch that crawls
across my neck is starting to give me the chills/I slip slowly into a trance and
suddenly a void’s been filled”). “A lot of these songs started with me coming up with
scenarios and characters and then free-writing to see what developed,” says Olivia
Jean. “‘Raving Ghost’ came to me very naturally, and steered the direction for the
entire album.” A prime showcase for her explosive guitar work, “Trouble” puts a
dizzyingly fun twist on losing all sense of control (“Let the madness begin/The claws
dig in”). And on “Spider,” Olivia Jean spins a shadowy portrait of obsession and
destruction, setting her seductive vocals against a hypnotic backdrop of brutal riffs
and sinister synth tones (courtesy of Jellyfish co-founder Roger Joseph Manning Jr.).
Naming the Go-Go’s, Siouxsie and the Banshees, and Babes in Toyland among her
inspirations for Raving Ghost, Olivia Jean also graced the album’s tracklist with such
unexpected moments as her frenetic cover of Enya’s “Orinoco Flow.” But growing
up on the outskirts of Detroit, the near- lifelong guitarist found her first musical love
in 1960’s instrumental surf bands and the outrageous art-pop of the B-52s. “I fell in
love with the guitar tones and earworm melodies, which is what drew me into the
world of surf music,” says Olivia Jean, who got her start playing guitar at a young
age. Olivia was enamored by Detroit’s thriving garage rock scene and was heavily
inspired by its unique rawness. Olivia began recording instrumental surf music as a
teenager, often skipping school to do so. “I’d lie and say I was sick so I could record all day long. I just couldn’t stop. I wasn’t writing for a band, and didn’t comprehend it could be my career. I just became hooked on writing and recording.” After years of self-recording, Olivia Jean put together a demo and handed out copies at a Dead Weather show - a move that soon led to the co-founding of the Black Belles and the band’s signing to Third Man Records. Following the release of their 2011 self- titled debut, Olivia Jean went on to deliver her first solo album (2014’s Bathtub Love
Killings), then returned in 2019 with her self-produced sophomore effort Night Owl.
With her past touring experience including opening for B-52s co- founder Cindy
Wilson, Olivia Jean constructed Raving Ghost’s formidable sound with her
captivating live show in mind. And as she gears up for her next tour (and for
appearances at major festivals like Shaky Knees), her number-one intention is to
infuse each performance with the unparalleled thrill she finds in creating music.
"Ever since I was a kid, writing songs and playing guitar has been an addiction that
nothing else can touch,” she says. “My guitar is an appendage. I could never put my
guitar down even if I tried.”
All ages
Tickets: $15 advanced / $17 day of show
Doors: 7:00pm
Music: 8:00pm
Please note that all ticket sales will be available at will-call the night of the show. Please be prepared with your email ticket confirmation, your name, and some form of identification to show the door person.
*All ticket sales are final. No refunds or exchanges will be permitted*
The third full-length from Olivia Jean, Raving Ghost is an album populated by
mysterious characters in various states of danger: cursed lovers, doomed souls,
women deliriously haunted by unseen forces. Over the course of its 11 spellbinding
tracks, the Detroit-born singer/songwriter/multi- instrumentalist amplifies that
drama with her wildly melodic take on garage-rock, handling each riff with the
power and precision she’s previously shown as a member of the Black Belles (and
as an in- demand session/ touring musician who’s played with legends like Wanda
Jackson). A stunning evolution of the retro-surf sound of her past solo work, Raving
Ghost ultimately makes for the most magnificently heavy and mesmerizing output
yet from an endlessly fascinating artist.
Mainly recorded at the famed Valentine Recording Studios in L.A., Raving Ghost
finds Olivia Jean back in the producer’s chair and working with musicians like My
Morning Jacket keyboardist Bo Koster and drummers Carla Azar (T-Bone Burnett,
Nikki Lane) and Patrick Keeler (The Raconteurs, The Afghan Whigs). “Valentine is
like a time capsule that’s been perfectly preserved since the ’60s, so aesthetically
and sonically it was right up my alley,” says Olivia Jean, who recorded parts of
Raving Ghost at Third Man Recording Studio in her homebase of Nashville. “We had
so much at our disposal and experimented with different amps and sounds, and the
songs slowly transformed into something I never imagined. On my previous albums
I played most of the instruments myself, so it felt good to let go and trust the
process of working with these extremely creative musicians.” Engineered by Bill
Skibbe (The Kills, Blonde Redhead), the result is a feverish collision of goth- punk
and power-pop and classic garage, charged with an energy so intense that the
speakers to several of Valentine’s vintage amps ended up blowing out during the
recording sessions.
Mostly made up of songs written alone late at night, Raving Ghost opens on the
brooding rhythms and serpentine guitar lines of its title track, a powerful
introduction to the album’s lavishly detailed storytelling (“The scratch that crawls
across my neck is starting to give me the chills/I slip slowly into a trance and
suddenly a void’s been filled”). “A lot of these songs started with me coming up with
scenarios and characters and then free-writing to see what developed,” says Olivia
Jean. “‘Raving Ghost’ came to me very naturally, and steered the direction for the
entire album.” A prime showcase for her explosive guitar work, “Trouble” puts a
dizzyingly fun twist on losing all sense of control (“Let the madness begin/The claws
dig in”). And on “Spider,” Olivia Jean spins a shadowy portrait of obsession and
destruction, setting her seductive vocals against a hypnotic backdrop of brutal riffs
and sinister synth tones (courtesy of Jellyfish co-founder Roger Joseph Manning Jr.).
Naming the Go-Go’s, Siouxsie and the Banshees, and Babes in Toyland among her
inspirations for Raving Ghost, Olivia Jean also graced the album’s tracklist with such
unexpected moments as her frenetic cover of Enya’s “Orinoco Flow.” But growing
up on the outskirts of Detroit, the near- lifelong guitarist found her first musical love
in 1960’s instrumental surf bands and the outrageous art-pop of the B-52s. “I fell in
love with the guitar tones and earworm melodies, which is what drew me into the
world of surf music,” says Olivia Jean, who got her start playing guitar at a young
age. Olivia was enamored by Detroit’s thriving garage rock scene and was heavily
inspired by its unique rawness. Olivia began recording instrumental surf music as a
teenager, often skipping school to do so. “I’d lie and say I was sick so I could record all day long. I just couldn’t stop. I wasn’t writing for a band, and didn’t comprehend it could be my career. I just became hooked on writing and recording.” After years of self-recording, Olivia Jean put together a demo and handed out copies at a Dead Weather show - a move that soon led to the co-founding of the Black Belles and the band’s signing to Third Man Records. Following the release of their 2011 self- titled debut, Olivia Jean went on to deliver her first solo album (2014’s Bathtub Love
Killings), then returned in 2019 with her self-produced sophomore effort Night Owl.
With her past touring experience including opening for B-52s co- founder Cindy
Wilson, Olivia Jean constructed Raving Ghost’s formidable sound with her
captivating live show in mind. And as she gears up for her next tour (and for
appearances at major festivals like Shaky Knees), her number-one intention is to
infuse each performance with the unparalleled thrill she finds in creating music.
"Ever since I was a kid, writing songs and playing guitar has been an addiction that
nothing else can touch,” she says. “My guitar is an appendage. I could never put my
guitar down even if I tried.”