LPR Presents:

Sep

26

Veronica Swift Veronica Swift

w/ Ridiculous Bitch

Fri September 26th, 2025

7:30PM

Littlefield

Minimum Age: 21+

Doors Open: 7:00PM

Show Time: 7:30PM

Event Ticket: $30

Day of Show: $35

Ticketing Policy

All ticket sales are final. No refunds or exchanges. Physical photo ID required for all shows with age restrictions – no exceptions.

When an event sells out, fans who missed out on tickets can join the Waitlist for a chance to purchase tickets from someone who can no longer attend. Joining the Waitlist does NOT guarantee entry to the event, please do NOT arrive at the venue unless you are contacted about tickets becoming available.

Joining the Waitlist:
• If you’re looking for a ticket to a sold out show, add your info the the corresponding Waitlist.
• If a ticket becomes available, you’ll be notified and your credit card will be charged.

Listing Your Ticket on the Waitlist
:
• If you already have a ticket, you can list it on the waitlist through the “My Tickets” page.
• Once we find a buyer for your ticket, you will be notified.

the artists the artists

Veronica Swift

Veronica Swift’s new eponymously titled album, her third for Mack Avenue Records, is a masterful coming-out story. On her previous albums, Confessions (2019) and This Bitter Earth (2021), she ascended to the upper echelon of early 21st century jazz singers because of her virtuosic brilliance, interpretive ingenuity, bracing songwriting, and keen arrangements. Simply put, Swift is not only one of the most dazzling singers to emerge in her generation, she’s one of the most versatile.

While her first two albums solidified her position in modern jazz, Veronica Swift shows that she’s more than a jazz singer, exploring French and Italian opera, European classical music, bossa nova, blues, industrial rock, funk, and vaudeville. She pulls the feat off without the results sounding callow or pastiche. Swift’s expansive artistic voice remains firmly intact regardless of genre.

Swift describes this personal artistic statement on her new album as “transgenre.” “I grew up immersed in the culture of jazz music, blessed to have had some of the greats as mentors, and I felt a deep familial duty to uphold that” she says, reflecting on her parents – jazz singer and educator, Stephanie Nakasian, and bebop pianist, Hod O’Brien.

“But as rooted in jazz as I’ve been, there’s a uniquely visceral power in rock and soul music that’s always fueled my creative passion, and rather than mask or confine that part of my identity, the people I admire most show themselves unabashedly and that’s the kind of tradition I want to be a part of.

Swift first gained major international attention in 2015 when she won second place in the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz International Vocals Competition. Four years later, Mack Avenue Records released her acclaimed album Confessions when she was only 25 years old. She demonstrated her flair for conceptual song cycles on her follow-up album, This Bitter Earth, which not only gave glimpses of her rock influences but thematically touched upon some of the harder truths of being a woman, particularly when it comes to domestic abuse.

Swift says that for her new album she’d been exploring her “transgenre” concept for about two-and-half years. During the Covid-19 pandemic, she strategized the unveiling of this more artistically naked version of herself to the public while being mindful of how conservative the mainstream jazz industry can be.

She forged and refined most of the material for Veronica Swift on the road. Much to her delight, audiences enthusiastically welcomed the new direction. “My live concerts have been the experiment by which I am seeing the readiness of the audience to embrace the full scope of who I am, and it’s encouraging to know I can continue to push myself creatively and invite people into the fold along the way.”

Ridiculous Bitch

Ridiculous B!tch, original brainchild of New York City-based production team Karen Xerri and Jimmie Marlowe was born from the isolation days of the pandemic, drawing on equal parts punk, NYC grunge and glamorous rock and roll’ (New Noise Magazine).

Both international touring veterans by their teenage years, the two eccentric entertainers and classically-trained multi-instrumentalists share an intense passion for groundbreaking and notoriously controversial acts which have shaped and shifted music history. The result culminating in a perfect blend of the familiar and avant-garde; a highly unique sound – accessible to the masses and cerebral enough to appeal to the rest of us while never taking itself too seriously.

NOW… a FULL, STELLAR 6-piece unit- Xerri & Marlowe ar joined by powerhouse musicians Dominick Martes, Jonny D, Lock Driver & Don W. Berger from Marlowe’s longtime former project, Ridiculous Bitch’s uniquely eclectic style has been infused by the idiosyncratic duo’s strongest influences including Betty Davis, Bowie, Patti Smith, Biffy Clyro and The Raconteurs. The newly formed act -with over a decade of rocking stages worldwide is a new force with an epic history which we’re not quite ready to divulge. The touring begins this year with new releases dropping this spring. Get ready for the fun and a harder outfit than we ever dreamed possible. And don’t worry…we’ll unleash the epic storyline soon enough.

The result of this new incarnation of Ridiculous Bitch is easily accessible and groundbreaking… rough and hard and as punk as it gets…while maintaining some melodic elements you won’t be able to shake off. Music that creates tension and inspires thought, tied together by an undeniable thread.

The music is uniquely this supergroup’s own. And it is unforgettable.

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