Tiny Moving Parts
with
Tue, Jun 21
Doors: 6:30 pm
Show: 7:30 pmAll Ages
$25.00
Additional Info
Elevation 27 proudly presents Tiny Moving Parts with This Wild Life and In Her Own Words!
Tuesday June 21, 2022 at 7:30 PM, Doors at 6:30 PM
Tickets
GA: $20 Advanced, $25 Day Of Show
All Ages
General Admission Tickets are standing room only.
Please note: If our parking lot is full, please park in the Walmart parking lot closest to Advance Auto. Parking elsewhere is subject to being towed.
Safety Policies:
Tuesday June 21, 2022 at 7:30 PM, Doors at 6:30 PM
Tickets
GA: $20 Advanced, $25 Day Of Show
All Ages
General Admission Tickets are standing room only.
Please note: If our parking lot is full, please park in the Walmart parking lot closest to Advance Auto. Parking elsewhere is subject to being towed.
Safety Policies:
- Bags or purses larger than 8 in. x 8 in. will not be allowed into the venue. Bags do not need to be clear. Please, no backpacks, duffle bags, or camelbacks.
- All persons, bags, parcels, clothing and other items will be subject to screening/security checks.
- Weapons, objects that appear like weapons, drugs, and outside food or drink of any kind are strictly prohibited.
- Elevation 27 reserves the right not to allow any bag, parcel or other items as we consider appropriate.
- No professional photography gear is permitted unless otherwise specified. Cell phone cameras are allowed.
Artists
Tiny Moving Parts
“Don’t cry because it’s over. Smile because it happened.” That well-known quote, often attributed to Dr Seuss, could also be the mantra that Tiny Moving Parts live by. It’s certainly a philosophy that the trio – who hail from the incredibly small town of Benson, Minnesota and were formed in 2008 by brothers Matt and Billy Chevalier (bass and drums, respectively) and their cousin Dylan (vocals/guitar) – applied while making their fourth full-length record, Swell. For while it’s an album that’s full of absence – lost love, lost friends, lost time – it looks for the positives. Instead of dwelling on those empty spaces, Swell instead recalls what was once in their place.