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Timbre Concerts Presents
Small Black: 10 Years of Limits of Desire, Geographer
Wed, 15 November
Doors open
7:00 PM PST
The Fox Cabaret
2321 Main Street, Vancouver, BC V5T 3C9
TICKET SALES TERMINATED
Tickets are currently unavailable on TicketWeb
Description
Timbre Concerts presents Small Black: 10 Years of Limits of Desire With Guests Geographer.
Artist Presale: Tue Jun 13 @ 10am - Thu Jun 15 @ 10pm
Timbre Presale: Thu Jun 15 @ 10am - 10pm
Public Onsale: Fri Jun 16 @ 10am
For more info on Timbre Concerts and their upcoming concerts visit www.timbreconcerts.com.
By purchasing tickets to this event, you agree to abide by the health and safety measures in effect at the time of the event, which may include, but not be limited to, wearing masks, providing proof of vaccination status and/or providing proof of negative COVID-19 test.
Event Information
Age Limit
19+

Pop
Small Black
Small Black
Pop
Small Black celebrates ten years of their beloved record, Limits of Desire, with a deluxe 2xLP reissue that brings this iconic album back into print with the full original Limits LP, five unreleased b-sides from the era, and the companion Real People EP. The band is also headed out on tour in the US in October to play the record in full, along with other favorites from the catalog.
After starting off in their Long Island attic, Small Black left the Brooklyn warehouse scene & toured the world extensively. Written, recorded, and mixed by Small Black at their home studio in Brooklyn over the whole of 2012, Limits of Desire is a more widescreen shot of the intimate synth-pop of Small Black’s first few releases. “We went on a real vision quest for this LP, making double-digit versions of some tracks, a few you’ll hear on the reissue,” adds singer Josh Kolenik.
Limits of Desire has become the quintessential Small Black LP over the decade since its release, accruing 100m+ streams and fueling hundreds of concert dates across the world. The iconic cover art of a couple on a ladder above an alligator, taken by artist Scarlet Hooft Graafland, has become the source material for many fan tattoos. Bolstered by the success of singles “No Stranger” and “Breathless”, Limits of Desire laid the road map for celestial, sophisticated pop: for Small Black, for their contemporaries, and for many bands that followed.
The additional material for the reissue is highlighted by “Collections”, a song the band has been sitting on for the full decade since Limits of Desire came out. Inspired by the same suburban sadness that runs through the band’s later releases, “Collections” sends both a wink and a sigh to the collecting mania of the 1990s, pre-Ebay. “It seemed every one of my friends and family was finding satisfaction in ‘finishing the set,’” says Kolenik. “All of us collected in the same fences and lawns of a community that had only really been there for a few generations.”
Limits of Desire - 10th Anniversary Deluxe Reissue comes out on Jagjaguwar on August 11th. Small Black hits the road on 10/13 in Pittsburgh, playing the Limits of Desire LP in full, ending in Portland on 11/18.
Small Black is Ryan Heyner, Josh Kolenik, Juan Pieczanski, Jeff Curtin.

Electronic Pop
Geographer
Geographer
Electronic Pop
If you’ve ever wondered what the weight of the world actually feels like, look no further than A Mirror Brightly, the latest from Geographer. In the time since his previous album, the gorgeously rueful Down and Out in the Garden of Earthly Delights, Mike Deni, the atmospheric-pop act’s frontman, has assumed the role of thinking man’s anthropologist. Here, he’s picking through the wreckage around us in a world increasingly ensnared in everything from religion to social media. And he’s got some things to say about it.
“I focused on my experience moving through the world: feeling like an outcast, being denied love in its many forms, and struggling to find meaning in an existence that looked increasingly like a void the more I peered into the glass,” Deni says. Although A Mirror Brightly (out February 23, 2024, Nettwerk Records) is indeed deeply personal, it’s not simply autobiographical like his previous releases. “This record takes that existential shock but explores it through humanity as a whole, rather than just me as an individual.”
The title, Deni explains, “refers to the lights of the phone shining in our eyes, blinding us to ourselves, obscuring the truth.” As much as A Mirror Brightly isn’t afraid to ask all the questions, it can be luminescent, too. “It also refers to the beauty of this life. That is the glimmer of hope on the record. It leaves the option open that one day we might turn the light back away from our faces to illuminate the darkness that surrounds us.”