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Greenfield Lake Amphitheater

Description

Live music venue set in an intimate, tree-filled amphitheater with spacious seating.

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Events

July 2025
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07/19/2025, 07:00 PM EDT
Flipturn

For flipturn, success didn't arrive overnight. It grew steadily with every show, from college house shows at the University of Florida to sold-out venues across the entire country, earning the band an international reputation as an indie rock powerhouse. By the time flipturn released their debut album, Shadowglow, in 2022, they'd become genuine road warriors while still in their mid-20s, growing their audience with festival appearances (including acclaimed sets at Bonnaroo, Lollapalooza, and Governor's Ball) and shows alongside Two Door Cinema Club, The Revivalists, Mt. Joy, and Rainbow Kitten Surprise. Shadowglow was the culmination of years of hard work for bandmates Dillon Basse, Tristan Duncan, Mitch Fountain, Madeline Jarman, and Devon VonBalson. The album rapidly expanded their fanbase, along with shows at bucket-list venues like Brooklyn Steel in New York City, the 9:30 Club in Washington D.C., and Red Rocks Amphitheatre in Colorado. Even so, that didn't make it any easier to be gone from home for two straight years. "We grinded the hell out of Shadowglow, and the pace was nonstop," says frontman Basse. "The album's success allowed us to get in front of a lot more people and play a lot more shows…but we weren't necessarily thinking about the mental repercussions of being gone so often." Somewhere along the way, flipturn began gathering inspiration for a new album — one that measured the distance between endurance and exhaustion, between dreams and reality, between outward appearances and internal struggles. To do so, they left town once again, writing songs in a cabin tucked away in the North Carolina mountains before recording them in the South Texas borderlands. The result is Burnout Days, the most collaborative and cathartic release of flipturn's career. "We wanted to create an immersive world," says guitarist and synthesizer player Mitch Fountain. "We were really intentional with the sounds we wanted for each song, and we paid attention to every single detail." Those details spring to vivid life with tracks like "Juno," whose opening riff — a stuttering keyboard sound that wouldn't sound out of place on a house record — was created when Fountain accidentally knocked his JU-06A synth off its stand. "It smacked the floor and created a really unique patch — one that Mitch couldn't even figure out how to recreate at first — which inspired the entire song," remembers drummer Devon VonBalson. Caught halfway between 21st century indie rock and New Wave-inspired nostalgia, "Juno" helps introduce Burnout Days' mix of ethereal, airy atmosphere and raw, rhythmic moments. It's a sound that's always in motion, never remaining in one place for too long — just like flipturn itself. If Shadowglow highlighted flipturn's strength as songwriters, then Burnout Days expands the spotlight to showcase the five musicians as sonic architects, too. Working with producer Chad Copelin (Colony House, Sasha Alex Sloan, Wilderado), they took inspiration from the world around them: the lush nature surrounding their home in Jacksonville; the pecan trees and desert landscape of Sonic Ranch outside El Paso, Texas, where they recorded the majority of Burnout Days; and even their own live show, purposely crafting moments on the album that would come alive onstage. "There was one day in the studio where we looped the opening riff of the same song 100 times, just to get it perfect," VonBalson remembers. "Going into this album, we wanted to make sure we were creating a unique atmosphere. It was really fun approaching these songs from a production-minded standpoint, while still keeping the feel of a band." That meticulousness and maturity is present through the record. "We’ve been writing more songs that have grit and bite," explains Jarman, who began playing bass after watching a Silversun Pickups concert during her final year of middle school. "We're not afraid to be vulnerable. We still love making fun, upbeat tracks that you can dance to, but we think it's just as important to write songs that lead to introspection and the complex emotions we may experience as young adults." Appropriately, "Rodeo Clown" is an alt-pop anthem about the weight of everyday expectations and the lure of escapism, punctuated with MDMA references, gauzy synths, and a groove built for dance floors. During "Sunlight" — which Basse began writing after watching his little sister take their mother (a Celtic folksinger who introduced her children to live music at a young age) to rehab — the bandmates build their way toward a grungy finish, matching the vulnerability of Basse's lyrics with an angsty swirl of distorted guitars and crashing cymbals. "Tides" even uses the waterfront imagery of Jacksonville — particularly the band's communal home on the St. John's River, where manatees, dolphins, and alligators have been known to swim past the dock — as a metaphor for the changing tides in one's own life. "We've been touring and working together for years, learning to balance our work life with our personal lives," Jarman adds. "Being at home reminds us how to stay grounded and slow down. More than anything we've ever written before, this record is partially inspired by nature in our home state of Florida: cicadas, rivers, sunlight, dragonflies, and butterflies." Those years on the road together — the countless hours spent in vans, green rooms, and onstage, navigating the twists and turns of not just the music industry, but of day-to-day life in one's mid-20s, as well — made the creation process easier, with all five members contributing to Burnout Days equally. They combined their influences into a unique sound that defied genre, using indie rock as a launchpad for something deeper, darker, and more diverse. They wrote songs about the challenges faced by their generation: self-esteem, addiction, codependency, and the need to push forward at all costs. And together, they found the beauty that exists even in times of burnout. "Everyone can feel like this; it's not just musicians," Basse says. "Burnouts can happen whenever you're so passionate about something that you throw yourself into it one hundred percent. That can happen whenever you push yourself too hard, and this record is about being OK with it, and finding ways to cope with it. We love what we do. These songs are stories about the side effects.

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07/27/2025, 06:00 PM EDT
Wilderado

Formed in the California mountains, but originally hailing from Tulsa, OK, Wilderado have been steadily building a passionate fan base and defining who they are since 2015. When they first came together, Maxim Rainer (lead vocals, guitar), Tyler Wimpee (guitar, vocals) and Justin Kila (drums) spent a summer in Latigo Canyon, a secluded part of Malibu, with longtime Sufjan Stevens collaborator James McAlister, immersing themselves in writing and recording. Those songs went on to form early EP releases with tastemaker indie labels IAMSOUND and National Anthem, which garnered more than 100 million streams, but more crucially provided the backbone to years of touring.           Following initial recording sessions at their one-time home and creative space named “The Misty Shrub” (the title of the first EP) in Latigo Canyon (the title of the second EP), the band returned Tulsa to base themselves from their hometown. Since then, they’ve crisscrossed the USA a half dozen times playing with artists as diverse as Lindsey Buckingham and Christine McVie, Mt. Joy, and Rainbow Kitten Surprise, and have performed on the main stage at such festivals as Lollapalooza, Bottlerock and Austin City Limits.           Some time off from the road in 2020 meant that the band were able to focus on completing their debut eponymous LP. Working with producers and friends James McAlister (The National, Sufjan Stevens, Taylor Swift), Chad Copelin (Broncho, LANY) and Angelo Petraglia (Kings of Leon) the record is slated for release on October 15th 2021 via Bright Antenna.           Maxim explains, “Making new music is the most fun part of being in a band. It gives you a future, it gives you something to look forward to, it gives you something to work on, something that hasn’t already been decided. There’s always a sense of hopefulness in new music. Once you've finished something, then you've done your job which is to give the world something it didn’t have before. That’s a special feeling, something I'm really proud of.”           The new single, “Head Right,” is the first taste of what’s to come and shows the ambition and intent of a band on the up. A moment that shows confidence and a rambunctious slice of rock n’ roll that builds on what Wilderado does best: the confluence of soaring melodies and lush three-part harmonies. The staple Wilderado sound. Something they have spent the past five years refining and perfecting - now is their time.

August 2025
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08/03/2025, 05:00 PM EDT
Drive By Truckers

Drive-By Truckers released their third 'studio' album Southern Rock Opera on September 11, 2001. They self-released it on their own tiny Soul Dump label, pressing 5000 copies with a tiny budget they raised by crowdsourcing (as it's come to be known), raising the money online from fans turned investors. They ended up selling 10,000 copies independently without any sort of distribution, mostly sold at shows during the massive tour that they booked themselves. A tour that began with 75 shows in 90 days and that stretched well into the following year.   The success of the Southern Rock Opera Tour and the album that inspired it led to the band getting proper management and being picked up by High Road Touring, who have been their agents ever since. The band signed their very first record deal with Lost Highway Records, who reissued the album in the summer of 2002 as the tour stretched to the end of the year. A trajectory that saw the band moving from small dive bars and sleeping on floors, to playing bigger rooms and theaters, and touring on a bus.   Southern Rock Opera became the first of a string of albums that has seen the critically acclaimed band morph and continue to thrive for nearly a quarter of a century. The band is well known for its high energy and cathartic shows, as well as for a prolific string of albums that combine astute politics, southern storytelling, and an eclectic approach to rock and roll that has been played at thousands of shows on three continents.   Always restless and never a band keen on repeating itself, people have asked the band for years about the possibility of another Southern Rock Opera Tour to no avail. Guitarist Mike Cooley, never one to mince words, has long responded that it should only be done when it could be performed "On Ice!" Meanwhile, the album has continued to sell, eventually recouping its original record deal, and often appearing on lists of the best albums of the 2000s.   To commemorate the reissue, DBT will embark on Southern Rock Opera Revisited 2024 Tour, playing almost all of the album in its entirety, alongside a few songs that feel like part of the work's continued relevance to the band. Although the band still holds onto the dream of SRO On Ice one day happening, it’s no coincidence that 2024 is also an election year. Another year full of some of the same contentious issues that inspired much of the original album's content, which was set in the post-civil rights deep South, in the era of George Wallace and the like. The band plans to play the album, not as a relic of another time and place, but as a continued conversation about where we came from, and where we are headed in this crazy time in history that we currently reside in. As the band says in one of its songs, "It ain't about the past.”

Contacts

1941 Amphitheatre Dr, Wilmington, NC 28401, USA