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Concert Review: The Head and the Heart Blend Nostalgia & Growth

The Head and The Heart at Brooklyn Bowl Nashville

The Head and The Heart at Brooklyn Bowl Nashville

Charity Rose Thielen of The Head and The Heart playing fiddle and Matt Gervais singing at Brooklyn Bowl Nashville April 2026

Brooklyn Bowl Nashville has hosted its share of large touring acts over the years. But few shows there have felt quite as intentionally personal as The Head and the Heart’s April 29 stop benefiting Jam For Good. Marking the opening night of the band’s tour celebrating the 15th anniversary their 2011 self-titled debut, the evening balanced reflection, community, and connection.

About the benefit concert:

The night opened with members of the non-profit Jam For Good sharing what the benefit was all about. Jam for Good partners with local hospitals to support pediatric cancer programs. Nashville artist and cancer survivor Ava Paige followed with a brief acoustic set centered around her own experience undergoing treatment at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt, giving a country-twanged voice to the cause.

Ava Paige performing at the Jam For Good benefit concert at Brooklyn Bowl Nashville April 2026

Nashville’s chrysalis opens the night:

Nashville-based opener chrysalis brought an introspective tone to the stage. Blending folk instrumentation with emotionally direct songwriting, the set carried a strong sense of vulnerability without feeling restrained.

chrysalis opening for The Head and The Heart at Brooklyn Bowl Nashville

The Head and the Heart Share A Collaborative Anniversary Performance

By the time The Head and the Heart took the stage, there was a distinct air of anticipation. This was more than a casual crowd waiting to see a band with some songs they knew. It was a room full of fans and you could sense it.

While the word “nostalgic” can sometimes be used judgmentally, The Head and The Heart have appropriately leaned into it for this tour. Framed by a living room-inspired setup complete with lamps, couches, and scattered personal touches around the stage, the setting felt like you were being pulled inside the collective memories of the band. But the night was also not mired in the past. Fifteen years after the release of their self-titled album, the songs now carry the perspective of a band that has evolved both personally and creatively since those early days.

A collaborative spirit shaped much of the night. The band explained that part of the goal for this run was to give everyone space to be heard. Different members stepped forward throughout the set to share stories tied to the songs. The memories often bounced naturally between them rather than settling into rehearsed monologues.

Some of the evening’s strongest moments came through those stories. “Down in the Valley” arrived alongside memories of the band’s earliest Seattle days, including long walks home, demo recordings sent across the country, and the gradual realization that the songs were beginning to connect. Later, “Lost in My Mind” was reframed less as a song about escape and more as a reflection on growing comfortable with who you are over time. One of the band’s best-known tracks was given a different emotional weight fifteen years later.

Despite the reflective tone surrounding much of the anniversary material, the performance itself rarely stayed restrained for long. Matt Gervais repeatedly pushed beyond the front of the stage during larger crowd moments, reaching out to the audience during singalongs and bringing a restless physical energy that contrasted against the calm living room atmosphere surrounding the band. The group consistently played off one another through layered harmonies and shifting vocal leads. The performance felt real, not over-rehearsed. Near the end of the night, singer/guitarist Jonathan Russell even commented on how special an early tour date is because of the raw energy rather than being honed with polish.

Besides the memorable storytelling, the balance between quieter reflection and full-room singalongs became a defining strength of the night. Songs like “Rivers and Roads,” “Honey Come Home,” and “Down in the Valley” still carried the communal power they’ve built over the last fifteen years. In a venue the size of Brooklyn Bowl, those moments felt personal, connected.

Rather than treating the anniversary as a simple look backward, The Head and the Heart approached the evening as an acknowledgment that both the band and audience have changed alongside these songs. Although the tour centered around the band’s 2011 debut, the set eventually expanded well beyond the self-titled material. Songs from across their catalog connected the band’s early folk foundations to the broader sound they’ve developed over the years.

The performance felt less like a retrospective and more like an ongoing conversation. It was loaded with nostalgia but sent fans home with new perspectives. And in that mix, lasting memories and deeper connections were made.


The Head and the Heart At Brooklyn Bowl Nashville:

chrysalis at Brooklyn Bowl Nashville:

Ava Paige at Brooklyn Bowl Nashville:


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