On the 25th anniversary of Kurt Cobain’s passing, Geoffrey Louis Koch took a pilgrimage to Viretta Park in Seattle — wrote him a letter on the plane, read it aloud at Kurt’s bench, and finally said what young him needed to say.
Read MoreGeoffrey Louis Koch announces Monday night Facebook Livestream shows through April 2020 — two hours, 8 to 10pm CST, new songs, new covers, and the unexpected joy of quarantine interaction.
Read MoreMarch 2020 in Nashville — furloughed from the restaurant, vinyl on repeat, Hannibal Lecter impressions optional. Geoffrey Louis Koch starts playing Facebook Live shows and extends an open invitation to your city, school, or living room when the dust settles.
Read MoreTen years since Geoffrey Louis Koch stood at the Golden Gate Bridge with the hottest cup of coffee in human history and played a house show in Oakland that night. A meditation on brave recklessness, watching something burn out, and the long foggy sprint home.
Read MoreSix years in Nashville in a flash — Geoffrey Louis Koch traces the highlights through photos and quick stories. Promo stickers above urinals, ice-covered Knoxville, panic attacks at the Field of Dreams, matching outfits with Gregory Alan Isakov, and looking like a snack at the Mercy Lounge.
Read MoreGeoffrey Louis Koch closes out 2016 — Election Night as tsunami, a bruising personal year, studio demos, packed rooms and desolate ones, and a Christmas Eve candlelit service that opened the faucet.
Read MoreHoliday dispatches from the Nashville studio — demos in progress, a Les Paul Epiphone overdue for a set up, a sold out November show, Dalmatian print equipment bags, and guided meditations on YouTube totally slaying Geoffrey Louis Koch.
Read MoreGeoffrey Louis Koch hits Boulder and Denver — a sold out No Name Bar show, Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats at Red Rocks, Caroline Rose, Shovels and Rope, Molly Brown’s house, and a warm conversation with Nathaniel Rateliff at the after party.
Read MoreBoulderBeat tells all of Boulder to come to the show, Denver delivers a generous listening room crowd at Fort Greene, Jacob Russo brings great songs, and Geoffrey Louis Koch closes his set with Gregory Alan Isakov’s “Master And A Hound.” Red Rocks Sunday. Colorado is delivering.
Read MoreGeoffrey Louis Koch lands in Denver, sets up camp at Huckleberry Roasters on Pecos Street, inherits his dad’s flair for the dramatic, and lets the thoughts line up like jazz. Songs tomorrow night at Fort Greene with Jacob Russo. Free. Hot. Come on.
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