Elevation 27
This Wild Life
Fri, Mar 14
Doors: 6:30PM
Show: 7:30PM
$26.00 - $40.00 Buy Tickets
All Ages
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Additional Info

Legacy Concerts proudly presents This Wild Life at Elevation 27!
Friday, March 14, 2024 at 7:30 PM, Doors at 6:30 PM


Tickets
GA: $26 Advanced, $30 Day Of Show
Elevated Seating & Reserved Dining: $40
All Ages


General Admission Tickets are standing room only.
Elevated Seating Tickets are first come first seated.
Reserved Seating Tickets at Dining Tables and Booths include admission to the show. You may be seated with other guests. All Table and Booth Tickets are asked to comply with a minimum food purchase of $10.00 per guest.

Click Here For Venue FAQ's & Safety Protocols

Don’t fall victim to scalpers!

Tickets for all events at Elevation 27 are sold exclusively through Ticketmaster or in person at the Elevation 27 box office during show hours.

We are not responsible for tickets purchased anywhere other than through these two channels. Please be careful when searching for tickets online, as many of the first results are often third-party scalpers and should be avoided (i.e. Tickets-Center, Ticketsales, VividSeats, Stubhub, SeatGeek, etc). We cannot verify tickets purchased through third parties in advance for you and our box office staff will not be able to resolve any issues involving them, such as lost or invalid tickets. 

Artists

This Wild Life

This Wild Life have only been around since 2010 but they've already had multiple lives. The duo of Kevin Jordan and Anthony Del Grosso met as outcast drummers in their hometown of Long Beach, California, and eventually formed a well-received punk act. They started to notice that their fans seemed to gravitate toward the duo's acoustic material, which inspired them to form This Wild Life six years ago. Their 2014 Epitaph Records debut album Clouded saw them transitioning from stage dives to sing-alongs, and their follow up album 2016’s Low Tides showed the duo taking their songwriting to the next level by fleshing out tracks with expanded arrangements and inventive instrumentation.

The duo have lived with their records for the last four years and decided what they love and what they don’t about them. Early on in the writing process for Petaluma they made a mutual decision to make a record that felt brighter, more uptempo, and something they would personally want to listen to every single damn day. They limited the arrangements to only instruments that can physically be played. You would think having these limits in place would’ve confined them, but the opposite occurred. It opened the door to some of their most honest and explorative songwriting to date.

Suggestion from the band about Petaluma, “Listen to it loud with the windows down, on Sunday mornings when you’re cleaning up around the apartment, or throw on some headphones and find some comfort in its escape.”