EventsOutdoorsBusinessesNewsGuidesSafety & Alerts

Footer

Live Here. Visit Here. Find It Here.

Explore

  • Events
  • Businesses
  • News
  • Guides
  • Outdoor

Community

  • Weather
  • Emergency & Alerts
  • Preparedness
  • Local Resources

Get Involved

  • Become an Insider
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Advertise

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Cookie Policy

© 2026 The Slope. All rights reserved.

Join The Slope Community

Create an account to get personalized recommendations and save your favorite places and events

Sign Up
    1. Events
    2. Community
    3. Jamestown Revival
    Jamestown Revival
    50 days awayCommunity

    Jamestown Revival

    When

    Wednesday, July 22, 2026
    8:30 PM - 12:30 AM
    Duration: 4 hours

    Where

    Belly Up Aspen
    450 S Galena St
    Aspen, CO 81611
    View on Google Maps

    Going

    Organized by

    Belly Up Aspen

    About This Event

    Jamestown Revival have made the quietest record of their career with Young Man, yet it may
    resonate the most. Recorded in their home state of Texas, it is their first project without electric
    guitars, with the emphasis instead on skillful songwriting, flawless harmony, and intricate
    fingerpicking. In addition, it’s the first time that bandmates Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance have
    created an album with a producer -- in this case, Robert Ellis, a fellow Texan and a recording
    artist in his own right.
    “I really think this is an album about coming of age and settling into an identity,” Clay says. “It’s
    about losing your identity and searching for it. It’s feeling like you found it and then realizing
    that’s not it. And it’s about our experiences over the last 15 years of making music – the
    successes and failures and all of those things mixed up together.”
    Sonically the album draws on inspirations such as Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and The Doobie
    Brothers (particularly “Black Water”), yet there’s also a dusty Western feel to Young Man,
    similar to a Guy Clark or Townes Van Zandt album where the detailed backdrop and acoustic
    arrangements convey the story as eloquently as the lyrics do.
    “This is our first excursion with fiddle and we didn’t hold back,” Chance says. “We wrote a lot
    of these songs about the questions and the perspectives now that we’re a lot older and have been
    doing this longer. It’s almost like having a conversation with ourselves at times. We wanted it to
    feel earthy and rootsy, so the fiddle was a big part of that identity.”
    A sense of spaciousness came naturally in past projects like 2014’s Utah, recorded in the
    Wasatch Mountains, and 2019’s San Isabel, recorded in a Colorado cabin. This time, the band
    opted for a studio for the first time, choosing Niles City Sound in Fort Worth, Texas. Studio
    co-founder Josh Block engineered Young Man to evoke the experience of musicians huddled
    together, singing and playing without headphones or click tracks. Chance and Clay are joined on
    the session by their longtime rhythm section of bassist Nick Bearden and drummer Ed Benrock.
    “The songs move, the tempos move, but we really wanted to capture the performances,” Clay
    explains. “We wanted the songs to push and pull as they needed to, and not to have to adhere to a
    grid. It feels like the songs straighten out too much when that happens, so it was cool to be in a
    studio with an engineer and producer who really supported that idea.”
    Chance continues, “All of the adventures we’ve had recording in different places have been fun,
    but the burden of bringing our own gear, setting it up, and then being our own producer is a lot to

    carry on our shoulders sometimes. With Robert, he always has an opinion and he could help us
    pick a direction. We could relinquish control and focus on capturing our best performance.”
    Young Man opens with “Coyote,” a plaintive ballad the duo wrote on their ranch near Huntsville,
    Texas, about an hour north of their hometown of Magnolia. With its lonesome tones and sly title
    character, it sets the tone for the album, pulling in listeners with blended voices and a narrative
    that befits a campfire setting. From there, songs like “Young Man,” “Moving Man,”
    “Northbound,” and especially “These Days” further explore their restless frame of mind, due in
    no small part to the pandemic.
    As Clay explains, “I think what we asked ourselves a lot throughout this process were questions
    like, ‘Damn, where did our fire go? Do we still have it?’ I didn’t pick up a guitar for six months
    after our tour got canceled when COVID hit. I just felt like music had turned on me. I felt like I
    was asking, ‘Am I a musician anymore?’” Chance agrees with that sentiment, adding, “It’s easier
    for us whenever we’re in motion. I don’t think you ever stop to question how fragile it actually
    is, and then it gets taken away. You lose the ability to identify with it.”
    Even as “One Step Forward” finds the duo seeking a silver lining, “Slow It Down” shows them
    embracing the situation – by strumming their guitars, driving down dirt roads, and catching
    crawfish. That homegrown approach carries over into “Way It Was,” even as the opening lines
    address the inevitable changes in life. Meanwhile, “Old Man Looking Back” is a co-write with
    Ellis, completed in Chance’s kitchen in the weeks leading up to the sessions for Young Man.
    However, it’s a different gathering that set Jamestown Revival on the course to make Young Man.
    After a year apart of not playing together, Chance and Clay invited their band to the ranch to
    hang out and to record a few songs in their hay barn. The results served as an unintended
    pre-production of sorts, sparking ideas that they eventually carried into the sessions with Ellis.
    They also wrote “Coyote” during that time, as well as the album’s closer, “Working on Love.”
    Asked about the message of that final song, Chance replies, “For me, it was about the idea of
    love – and not just intimate love but love in general – being a lifelong journey. It’s similar to how
    you’ve got to plow the fields and replant the seeds and water it and tend to it. It’s the same way
    you have to approach your patience for love in your life.”
    Chance and Clay envision Young Man as a collection of songs that should be played all the way
    through, like reading a book. “We had the most amazing time recording this album. We laughed
    nonstop,” Clay says. “When I listen to this album top to bottom, I’m really proud of what we did.
    I hope that this album transports people because it’s like a time capsule. It takes us right back to
    that studio and to that couple of weeks. It felt like we were doing what we were meant to do.”

    ABOUT JAMESTOWN REVIVAL
    Jamestown Revival deliver skillful songwriting, flawless harmony, and intricate fingerpicking on
    their newest album, Young Man. The project is their first without electric guitars and their first to
    be recorded in a studio. Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance forged a musical bond as teenagers
    growing up in Magnolia, Texas. They draw musical inspiration from groups like Crosby, Stills,
    Nash & Young and The Doobie Brothers, as well as songwriters such as Guy Clark and Townes
    Van Zandt. With themes like coming of age and settling into an identity, Young Man is
    envisioned as a collection of songs that should be played all the way through. Sonically, the
    album evokes the experience of musicians huddled together, singing and playing without
    headphones or click tracks. Chance and Clay are joined on the Young Man sessions by producer
    Robert Ellis and the band’s longtime rhythm section of bassist Nick Bearden and drummer Ed
    Benrock.

    Loading map...

    When

    Wednesday, July 22, 2026
    8:30 PM - 12:30 AM
    Duration: 4 hours

    Where

    Belly Up Aspen
    450 S Galena St
    Aspen, CO 81611
    View on Google Maps

    Going

    Organized by

    Belly Up Aspen