moe.
Recent News
View More Recent NewsSALT LAKE CITY SHOW CANCELED
Unfortunately, the 7/5 Salt Lake City moe. show has been canceled due to a personal situation. Refunds will be made at point of purchase. We apologize for any inconvenience, and please note, our appearance at High Sierra is still on as scheduled. Read more...
Posted on 06/18/13 at 5:39pm
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BROOKLYN SHOW ADDED, DEDICATED TO LONGTIME FAN // Posted on 06/16/13 at 6:52am
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COLORADO SINGLE DAY TICKETS // Posted on 06/14/13 at 9:58am
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SUMMERCAMP USB CUSTOMERS // Posted on 06/13/13 at 2:30pm
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HAZE VIDEO CONTEST WINNER // Posted on 06/10/13 at 12:22pm
Bio
CLICK HERE TO PRE-ORDER THE NEW ALBUM, WHAT HAPPENED TO THE LA LAs
After twenty years together and nine studio albums, one might think moe. had pretty much done it all. Yet the famously independent-minded jam band is reaching for new ground on its latest project, What Happened To The LA LAs.
To begin with, moe. has signed with Sugar Hill Records, the band’s first label sojourn in nearly a decade. The group also chose to work with an outside producer for the first time since 1998's Tin Cans & Car Tires, with John Travis (Kid Rock, Social Distortion, No Doubt) getting the call.
“For most of our career we’ve done everything on our own in a very cottage industry, home-y kind of way,” notes Chuck Garvey, who contributes guitar and vocals to moe. Other members of the band are Vinnie Amico (drums), Rob Derhak (bass, vocals), Jim Loughlin (percussion, Malletkat) and Al Schnier (guitar, vocals, keyboards, mandolin).
Continues Garvey, “With most of our recordings, we’ve gotten the equipment together, we’ve paid for everything ourselves, we’ve produced it ourselves and we’ve had complete control over it. For this album we actually made the leap of putting ourselves in someone else’s hands to help us come out with something different.”
What Happened To The LA LAs features 10 tracks of compact melodies, each textured by moe.’s signature rock riffs and flourishes, and backed by a roller coaster ride of pulsing drums. It’s that pure moe. sound which the band’s ardent fans -- affectionately dubbed moe.rons -- have come to love over the band’s decades of industrious touring.

