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Deep Grooves, Sly Smiles with Lake Street Dive
Lake Street Dive formed at the New England Conservatory, blending retro soul, pop hooks, and jazz smarts, with Rachael Price's warm lead at the center.
Conservatory roots, street smarts
A key chapter is the 2021 exit of founding guitarist and trumpeter Mike Olson, which pushed the group toward a keys-forward sound with Akie Bermiss as a full-time voice.Songs that stick and small surprises
Expect a balanced set that favors groove and harmony, with likely slots for Good Kisser, You Go Down Smooth, Hypotheticals, and Bad Self Portraits. Crowds skew cross-generational, from jazz-school grads comparing voicings to parents with teens mouthing every chorus, and there is more head-nod dance than mosh energy. They first found broad notice through sidewalk gigs and a viral I Want You Back cover, and early singles were tracked live to capture their bar-band tightness. A small quirk on recent runs has been a stripped-down encore around one mic, letting Rachael Price and the band stack harmonies without the big mix. Heads up: the songs and staging I mention are educated guesses, not a confirmed plan.Lake Street Dive Fans in the Wild
The scene leans colorful and relaxed, with thrifted jackets, patterned shirts, and comfortable sneakers over anything flashy.
Sing it back, softly
You will hear friends testing three-part harmonies in line and debating which era they prefer, Bad Self Portraits bar-band swagger or the shinier Side Pony years.Style, souvenirs, and small rituals
During Good Kisser, the call-and-response hook turns into a room-wide echo that fits neatly over the beat. Claps often land on the off-beat for Hypotheticals, a small sign that this crowd listens for groove as much as words. Merch tables skew toward lyric tees, soft hoodies, and vinyl, with posters nodding to 60s soul colors and 70s fonts. You will also spot enamel pins, tote bags, and a few homemade signs quoting a favorite bridge or harmony tag. Post-show talk centers on arrangements, blend, and that one bass run that drew a cheer, not volume or pyrotechnics.How Lake Street Dive Builds the Pocket
Rachael Price leads with a clear, unforced tone that floats above the band, and her phrasing can stretch a beat without breaking the groove.
Engine room with a smile
Bridget Kearney shapes lines that sing as much as they anchor, so bass often feels like a second melody guiding your ear. Mike Calabrese favors a dry snare, quick kick, and light cymbals, keeping the pocket crisp and letting claps from the floor fit in.Color, lift, and live tweaks
Akie Bermiss threads Rhodes, organ, and clav colors, while the guitar stays clean and percussive, adding slide or short fills instead of long solos. They often bump tempos slightly live to lift energy, then drop into half-time for a chorus or bridge so the hook lands wider. A common tweak is tagging Good Kisser with a stacked harmony vamp, giving the crowd a part and stretching the release. Another move is a brief bass feature inside You Go Down Smooth before the final hits lock tight. In some rooms, Bridget Kearney switches to a short-scale electric with flatwounds to tame low-end boom while keeping that woody attack, and lights follow the music with warm, section-based cues.If You Like Lake Street Dive: Kindred Roads
If you dig the pocket and polish of Lake Street Dive, the minimalist funk and bass-forward wit of Vulfpeck lives in a nearby lane. Lawrence attracts many of the same fans who want horn-friendly, Motown-leaning pop with big hooks and cheerful crowd energy.