SUSTO

Asheville Music Hall

31 Patton Ave, Asheville, NC 28801, USA

December 6th, 2025

09:00 PM EST

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Justin Osborne has been performing as ‘Susto’ since 2013, when he formed a collective of fellow musicians and artists in coastal Charleston, South Carolina. Now a bona fide emissary of alt rock and treasure to the indie crowd, a lifelong calling coupled with a cosmic push of serendipitous happenstance led to his latest venture: ‘Susto Stringband’. In 2022, some major shifts landed Osborne in Asheville, North Carolina, where at an open mic night, this newcomer to the mountain town was met with the warm embrace of local powerhouse americana vocalist Clint Roberts, clawhammer banjoist Helena Rose, and upright bassist Joey Brown (now Holler Choir). Lightning struck as an immediate connection and artistic chemistry captured a new sound and visualization that unfolds on Susto Stringband’s debut release from New West Records, simply titled "Susto Stringband: Volume 1." Nine of Osborne’s ballads, refrains and heart wrenching confessions, now drenched in the singular Appalachian sound of Holler Choir’s verdant harmonies and stringed arrangements, were recorded at renowned producer Mitch Easter’s (REM) Fidelitorium Recordings in Kernersville, N.C. Holler Choir's long time collaborator Ryan Stigmon manned production and mixing, with lauded engineer Jason Richmond recording the sessions and mastering the final product. Susto staples like “Friends, Lovers, Ex Lovers: Whatever” and “Acid Boys” are reworked with new textures in Holler Choir’s company, while Osborne’s reflects on life as a touring musician, separated from loved ones by time and distance. Drawn from the depths of his soul, new offering "Never Losing Me” is a promising letter of boundless love and care to his young daughter and son, to be understood by them in the future. A second new tune “Double Crown”, was co-written with his wife Caroline Osborne, describing the exhilaration of new love, while paying homage to Asheville’s famed dive-bar, The Double Crown. Osborne’s introspective musings on love, devastating loss, mortality and transcendence paint a sensual land and soundscape. Still, steeped in the emotive punch of the traditional string band sound, Susto Stringband presents an Arcadia like vision of pastoralism and harmony with nature, but with Osborne’s lyrics, there are landmines to dodge and mountains to climb. Loosely translated from Spanish, “susto” means “an intense fear understood as a condition of the soul." This defines Osborne’s creative output since the beginning. As an artist from the rural community of Puddin’ Swamp, South Carolina, inspired at an early age by gospel, bluegrass and folk, he’s come full circle with Susto Stringband.

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SUSTO

Much like stars across the night sky, our souls dot this plane of existence, flaring brighter over time. As one fades out, another flickers into focus -- and so the cycle continues into eternity and beyond.For SUSTO, the joy of birth, the closure of death, the warmth of true friendship, and the promise of the future rotate on the axis of the band's fourth full-length and debut for New West Records, Time In The Sun. Frontman Justin Osborne distills this ebb and flow into eleven tracks underpinned by lyrical eloquence, unpredictable dynamics, and a thoroughly alive rock 'n' roll spirit."We're all just products of the sunlight, revolving around a big ball of fire," observes Justin. "I was thinking of the meaning of life as I'm sure many of us were in 2020. I've come to believe life is all one big chance happening with no deeper meaning other than what we make of it. Every album is like a timestamp, and Time In The Sun was about trying to express this moment in my life. I was stuck in the middle of losing my father and also becoming a father myself. Through these songs, I'm expressing what it felt like and how it's changed me."Since 2013, Justin has quietly prepared to make such a statement. He went from penning tunes as a kid back in South Carolina to forming SUSTO on a pilgrimage to Havana, Cuba where he resumed writing music again after a creative respite. Following the self-titled SUSTO [2014] and & I'm Fine Today [2017], the band delivered the fan and critical favorite Ever Since I Lost My Mind during 2019. In addition to looks from Billboard, No Depression, and NPR, Paste raved, "the album is a resounding triumph," and Rolling Stone touted their "songs that range from hook-oriented roots pop to heavy grunge."Along the way, the collective opened up for everyone from The Lumineers and Band of Horses to The Head and The Heart in addition to gracing the bills of festivals such as Hangout, Stagecoach, Austin City Limits, and more. SUSTO also made their television debut on CBS This Morning: Saturday. In the middle of this whirlwind, Justin became a father in the summer of 2019 as he started compiling ideas. He officially entered the studio with producer and engineer Wolfgang Zimmerman [Band of Horses] at the top of 2020.After a February tour, the world shutdown and Justin retreated into his next body of work. A revolving cast of collaborators, friends, and members of the Charleston musical community rolled through and contributed to the recording. "It takes a village to make a record," he smiles.In the middle of recording, he endured the loss of his dad."My dad had been fighting cancer for almost six years," he sighs. "They gave him a year to live back in 2014, and he got a couple of good years. He hung on for as long as he could, and he eventually stopped. Fortunately, I got the chance to say goodbye and be there, because I wasn't touring. We moved in with my parents for those last couple of weeks until he went into hospice. Because I had begun writing when I found out I was going to be a dad, these events were the biggest inspirations for the record. I was thinking of my life and what I can impart. It felt like I was in between the beginning and end of life. Up until he passed away, I felt like it was an album about new life and becoming a parent. It shifted the narrative towards the cyclical nature of life, death, and new births."Reflecting one of many sides, the first single "Get Down" coasts along on a sunny guitar riff wrapped in rapturous organ as his voice rings out on the hook."I had a friend who was struggling with addiction, which I've struggled with," he explains. "Since he was having some really deep mood swings, our greater friend group was worried about him. I was talking to my wife. I felt helpless, because even though I was worried, I thought there was nothing I could do. I had to try and keep my own shit together because I'm always dealing with my own issues of depression and substance abuse. The song was inspired by that. The song felt like a positive way to encourage him and myself, and he ended up helping me finish the writing and recording of it. It's poetic that it's the first single."Then, there's "Good Right Now." Clean guitar brushes up against a luminous refrain with a rustic kick as he urges, "Sayin' 'ohhhh' to the sunshine.""After I found out my wife was pregnant, 'Good Right Now' was one of the first songs I wrote," he smiles. "We hadn't told anybody yet, but I was in my writing room overlooking an intersection in downtown Charleston and feeling good because I was going to be a dad. It was a beautiful experience."Hues of slide guitar color "Summertime" with dreamy ambiance as he conjures imagery of "swimming in lakes and memories of Cuba -- and those wonderful things that happen, but aren't in your life anymore."Conceived after delivering his father's eulogy, the haunting hum of the elegiac "God of Death" hits hard. Fittingly, "Double Rainbow'' closes with the affirmation, "Well, I hope that you've enjoyed your time in the sun." Folk-style storytelling unspools over a coastal beach-ready groove on "Life Is Suffering." As a hurricane descended upon Charleston, he twisted up a Biblical story (Abel kills Cain in this version) as he promises, "I was born to be a hurricane."In the end, SUSTO launches a new cycle in their journey, and it's bolder and brighter than ever."I was exorcising a lot of emotions," he leaves off. "I hope people connect to Time In The Sun enough that I can keep doing this again and again. I'm just excited to make another record and keep going. Maybe it will help someone work through their emotions. This was my dream at 12-years-old. It's still what I want to do."

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Asheville Music Hall

Live-music venue featuring bands, comedy, and open mikes, plus a restaurant.

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31 Patton Ave, Asheville, NC 28801, USA