LOW TICKET WARNING!

An Evening with Jason Wade of Lifehouse

Saturday, November 23, 2024
Doors: 7pm | Show: 8pm
$30 - $45 advance | $35 - $50 day of show

VENUE INFO – PLEASE READ!

  • This is a ticketed event. Everyone must have a ticket for entry.
  • Join us before the show for dinner & drinks in The Lounge, our full-service restaurant & bar on the upstairs level which opens at 6pm. View menu & make a reservation.
  • Mezzanine ticket holders are seated on the balcony overlooking the main stage, with access to a private bar, restrooms, and dining area where you can order from The Lounge menu.
  • If you require accessible seating and none is available online, please contact us at boxoffice@worldcafelive.org or 215-222-1400 prior to the show so we can best accommodate your needs.
  • Join the WCL Fan Club for priority entry, food & merch discounts, exclusive offers, and more. Mega & Ultimate Fan levels include 24-hour presale access and no ticket fees.
  • World Cafe Live is a nonprofit independent venue where artistry meets social impact. Every purchase helps support our music education & community programs.
  • See FAQ for more information.
With the release ofLifehouse: Greatest Hits on Universal Music Enterprises, a chronological collection of the bandʼs 18 hit singles and best songs, this year marks a time for the band to look back on a remarkably successful career. Founded in 1999 by singer/ songwriter/guitarist Jason Wade in suburban Los Angeles while still in his teens as Blyss, Lifehouse has forged a path that most bands only dream about, topping the charts, having hit songs all over the radio, sharing the stage at arenas with the likes of the Rolling Stones, Pearl Jam and Matchbox Twenty. Since bursting on to the scene in 2000 with their hit debut,No Name Face– which sported the chart-topping Modern Rock-turned Hot 100 #2 hit, “Hanging by a Moment” – Lifehouse has released seven albums that have cumulatively sold more than 15 million around the world, spawning a string of multi-format airplay hits like “You and Me”, “First Time”, “Whatever It Takes” and “Halfway Gone”, the latter four co-written by Wade with collaborator Jude Cole. Having taken some time out after the release of 2015ʼsOut of the Wasteland, Lifehouseʼs three members have dedicated themselves to individual pursuits. Recently signed to Sony/ATV Music Publishing, Wade has devoted himself to writing, releasing 40 songs that have never previously been available- one a week on the Internet. Bassist Bryce Soderberg now fronts his own band Komox (named after his Canadian hometown), while drummer Rick Woolstenhulme moved with his wife to Arizona to pursue online session work from his recording studio. “Radio has changed dramatically in the last few years, so itʼs a nice change to be off that treadmill,” admits Wade, the son of missionaries who traveled to various countries, including Hong Kong before returning to the Pacific Northwest and then the West Valley of L.A., where he turned to songwriting to cope with a “traumatic” adolescence. “We feel a profound gratitude to be able to get to this point,” echoes Soderberg, who joined the band in 2004 in time to play on 2005ʼsLifehouse album. “That we can celebrate our accomplishments with a new tour and Greatest Hits record makes this an amazing time for us.” Lifehouse will embark on a six-week-long summer tour with Switchfoot that will see them give a much-anticipated homecoming concert at the Greek Theater in Los Angeles in September. It will mark a welcome return to the city where they started out almost 18 years ago, releasing 1,000 copies of an indie EP, Diffʼs Lucky Day, including demos they recorded with money from DreamWorks Records, where they signed after being discovered by producer Ron Aniello and their longtime manager and co-producer Jude Cole. Their major label debut,No Name Face, was recorded largely in Anielloʼs home recording studio in Woodland Hills, CA, which was an instant success thanks to the albumʼs very first track, “Hanging by the Moment.” “That was the last song I wrote for the album,” remembers Wade. “I picked up the guitar, tuned it to drop D, began playing this riff and wrote it in, like, 10 minutes. It was a real out-of-body experience channeling it. It came out of nowhere – the words, the bridge, the melody, everything. Itʼs almost as if it were already written.” That was the start of an amazing run for Lifehouse. “Hanging by a Moment,” which went on to become Top 40ʼs Most Played Song that year, was followed by an array of hits, including “You and Me” (#1 at both Adult Top 40 and AC, Top 50 Hot 100) from 2005ʼs self-titled release, which debuted in the Billboard Top 10. “I was writing a love song for a friendʼs film, and I just got engaged to my wife,” recalls Jason about “You and Me.” “Jude came up with the chord structure. I proposed to my Braeden at Disneyland with a boom box playing an early version of the song six years before we released it.” Freed from the tyranny of the Top 40 rat race, Jason Wade admits, “Thereʼs less pressure on us now. To be able to tour and perform songs weʼve recorded is a blessing. Itʼs bound to renew our commitment to making new music as a band.” Another incentive for the group is being able to once again control their own master recordings. “Everything thatʼs happened to us– the ups and the downs – has led to this moment,” adds Bryce. The first words sung by Jason Wade onNo Name Facefrom “Hanging by a Moment” still ring true. “Iʼm desperate for changing/Starving for truth/Iʼm closer to where I started/Chasing after you.” “Itʼs both the end and the beginning,” nods Bryce. “Weʼre right where weʼre supposed to be, and the skyʼs the limit.” “We still enjoy playing and giving back to the fans whoʼve been with us for almost two decades,” says Jason. For someone who began as a songwriter – with no dreams of fame and fortune – Wade has come full circle. “The music we make will be what we want to make, without worrying about what anybody else thinks… except our audience.”