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David Huckfelt

Saturday, January 18 @ 7:30 pm

Date & Time

Jan 18, 7:30 pm
Doors open: 6:30 pm

Ages

All Ages

with opening act Luray!

David Huckfelt, formerly of The Pines, returns to the Mineral Point Opera House on Saturday, January 18, 2025 at 7:30 PM with opening act Luray! Doors will open at 6:30 PM. Tickets range from $18 to $23 plus Eventbrite fees and will increase by $5 on the day of the show.

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA: When the world’s on fire and the seeds of division are sown throughout the land, music and storytelling have forever held a sacred space for healing and renewal. Room Enough, Time Enough, the second full-length solo record from Minneapolis singer-lyricist & folk activist David Huckfelt (formerly of The Pines) is a record about restoring balance: space and attention, peace and equality, redeeming the marginalized, and remembering the forgotten.

In March of this year, just as his new album neared completion, David Huckfelt and his partner welcomed their first child into the world. While the songs and record were written with protecting and nurturing this new life in mind, they had no idea how difficult and dangerous their new world was about to become. “Having our son arrive just as the country entering the throes of the Covid pandemic was a crushing exercise in vulnerability; even now in early fall, no one in our family has been able to meet Billy yet and the risks around every turn are just menacing. Then, just as we were getting the hang of quarantine and isolation, George Floyd was murdered less than a mile away from where we live.”

At home in Minneapolis, Huckfelt and his partner found themselves isolated with a newborn in what would become the epicenter of the greatest global rebuke of police violence and institutional racism in modern history. As crisis compounded upon crisis, Huckfelt’s new record became for him a lifeline and an anchor between vulnerability and revolution, between a sleeping infant and a city on fire.

Throughout his career, Huckfelt has proven himself to be a loyal ally and vocal advocate for marginalized voices within the Native American community, which he describes as “an undeserved mercy built of friendships and collaborations that I long to repay”. A former theology student, he credits these close relationships, guidance, and especially Indigenous songs, poetry & music with presenting and protecting a spiritual worldview and Earth-first ethic older than America or Christianity. With the goal of finding common ground always in the forefront, the songs on Room Enough, Time Enough spring forth from that activist, understory narrative: the record is a musical gesture of grace and partnership, accomplished with a host of friends, contemporaries, strangers, artists, outlaws, and cowboy she assembled for these once-in-a-lifetime sessions at Dust + Stone studio in Tucson, AZ.

The lineup for Room Enough, Time Enough includes Ojibwe ambassador of Native Americana music Keith Secola, Tucson’s own living songwriting legend Billy Sedlmayr, Giant Sandfounder and head purveyor of the southwestern electric-fuzz border sound Howe Gelb; former Bob Dylan drummer Winston Watson, award winning South Dakota Indigenous singer Jackie Bird, Arizona Blues Hall of Fame harmonica player Tom Walbank, and Calexico contributors Connor Gallaheron pedal steel and Jon Villaon trumpet. Other Midwestern musical luminaries appear such as Iowa folk legend Greg Brown, Dave Simonett & Ryan Young (Trampled by Turtles), Pieta Brown, Jeremy Ylvisaker (Andrew Bird), J.T. Bates (Big Red Machine, Taylor Swift), Erik Koskinen, Michael Rossetto and more, adding the finishing touches to this seamless mix of original, Indigenous & public domain songs . Together with the unmatched vocal chants of John Trudell’s constant collaborator & Warm Springs Nation Native singer Quiltman, these stories found their people and vice versa in a perfect storm of generosity, fierceness and compassion.

David Huckfelt is a singer / lyricist / activist and founding front man of Minneapolis indie-folk cult favorites The Pines. An Iowa native and former theology student, Huckfelt attended the prestigious Iowa Writers Workshop undergrad program before turning his attention to songwriting and performing. With musical roots in the same fertile Midwestern soil that produced legendary folk singers like John Prine and Greg Brown, Huckfelt has shared stages with artists from Prine, Mavis Staples & Emmylou Harris to Bon Iver, Calexico and Trampled By Turtles. His work with The Pines received record of the year accolades from Mojo & Q Magazine, and garnered praise from David Fricke (Rolling Stone) as one of the finest songwriters of his generation. In 2018Huckfelt received the prestigious Artist-In-Residence award at Isle Royale National Park on Lake Superior, where in sixteen days he wrote the fourteen songs that would become his breakout solo debut “Stranger Angels”. In 2012 he met American Indian Movement leader & poet John Trudellon the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, and their subsequent collaboration resulted in the song “Time Dreams”, hailed by Democracy Now! and the last recording Trudell made before passing. Since then, Huckfelt has partnered with an impressive array of Native American artists and activists including Keith Secola, Quiltman, Winona LaDuke and novelist Louise Erdrich in the fight for social justice and protection for Mother Earth. In thousands of shows across the United States, Canada & overseas, Huckfelt’s grassroots following has grown from small-town opera houses, Midwestern barn concerts, and progressive benefit events to national tours and festival stages like Hardly Strictly Bluegrass, Edmonton and Calgary Folk Fests, and the legendary First Avenue club in his beloved Minneapolis home.


Luray is indie folk, featuring strange and lovely banjo and ambient sounds. Based in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, Luray is the musical project of Shannon Carey. Luray’s sophomore album ‘Dig’  came out on 6131 Records, and was produced by Shannon’s brother Sean Carey (of S.Carey & Bon Iver).

“Dig,” a ghostly waltz, is where introspection can carry her: from banjo picking to distant roaring electric guitars to glimmering thumb-piano plinks, from isolation to sweet intransigence.-The New York Times.