Abe Parker
Doors Open: 07:00PM
Judah and the Lion’s Revival comes at a moment of rejuvenation and evolution for the band,
both personally and professionally, with a world looking to get back to normal. Judah Akers and
Brian Macdonald return with the band’s fourth album that aims to channel the energy and spirit
presented at the beginning of the group’s journey.
Revival is a collection of songs that speaks to the band’s return to innocence and hope through
reclamation. They look inwards on life’s changes as a group that still finds energy in innocence
after touring for 8 years and reaching heights on the Billboard charts and earning awards like
iHeart Music’s Best New Alternative Rock Artist of the Year in 2018.
“It’s learning to let go of things that are out of our control,” Judah said, reflecting on working with
his therapist through anxiety and depression. “Finding purity in life again. For all of us, we’re
gifted innocence when we’re born, and at some point in our lives, be it through choices or
tragedy, innocence is robbed. Second innocence is where we’re not given it, but we choose to
take it.”
In their last release, Pep Talks, Judah processed the loss of stability with his family. In the
leadup to Revival, he was able to process his grief and anxieties alone in his home. The band
toured nonstop for eight years, giving the project everything they had. Being primarily on the
road prior to 2020 created a misunderstanding of where they were individually and their
connection to feeling at home.
“Being home and not getting to mask my emotions with being on tour and being around crowds
was big,” Judah said. “It’s an easy distraction because you can avoid dealing with it emotionally.
You can get on stage and perform, and everything’s fine.”
Brian also had a journey in finding peace and putting in work to feel complete in a different
emotional environment. His wife attended a graduate program in Sweden, thousands of miles
from the home they made. As the world slowed to a halt, he had to find comfort in Visby Island’s
cold, lonely, and grey terrain.
“The big thing for me was re-learning what ‘home’ means,” Brian said. “Leaving my home and
trying to make a new one and realizing that home wasn’t a physical place for me.”
When they came back together, their fulfillment alone proved to change not just themselves but
how they fit together. Founding member Nate Zuercher informed them he was leaving the
group, changing dynamics for a group of friends making music together for over a decade. Brian
picked up the banjo, trying his best to fill the void Nate left but making his playing be his own
and offering a new style.
The loss of a key member helped Brian and Judah grow further in reinvigorating their
partnership. It brought new energy to their songwriting and collaboration. In the Fall of 2021,
Judah & Brian invited their longtime friends and touring musicians with them to record at Echo
Mountain in Asheville, North Carolina.
“It was one of the most fun times we had in the studio,” Brian said. “There was a lot of freedom
to it, and it felt like a retreat. We were all in it.”