Josh Ritter

American singer, songwriter, musician, and author known for his distinctive Americana style and narrative lyrics. In 2006, he was named one of the "100 Greatest Living Songwriters"

Performs Thursday - Saturday at 8pm, Sunday at 5pm, No opener! No Promo Code, Pharaohs Call Box Office for the Best Seats.

Event Showtimes:

Ages: All Ages


The Egyptian Theatre has no third-party ticket sales affiliates. We cannot guarantee third-party tickets will be valid. The Egyptian has no taxes or services fees on any ticket.

 

If public seats are sold out, please call the box office to join the Pharaohs or our waitlist.

Thursday pricing: $33/House & Balcony, $39/Preferred, $49/Cabaret

Friday & Sunday pricing: $35/House & Balcony, $43/Preferred, $53/Cabaret

Saturday pricing: $39/House & Balcony, $49/Preferred, $59/Cabaret

Tickets increase $5 half hour before show time.

 

All sales final, no refunds!  Exchanges may be made for the same show, different date only.  Plus any price difference and $5 per ticket exchange fee.  24 hours notice must be given to the box office prior to original ticket date.

Artist page: https://www.joshritter.com/

Wiki page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josh_Ritter

Renowned singer, songwriter, musician, artist and best-selling author Josh Ritter released his eleventh studio album, 'Spectral Lines', last year.

One of today’s most thoughtful and prolific voices, Ritter has been praised by NPR Music on his 2019’s widely acclaimed 'Fever Breaks' album: “He remains a hydrant of ideas while embodying an endless capacity for empathy and indignation, often within a single song.”

In addition to his work as a musician, Ritter is also a national best-selling author, having released two novels to date: 2021’s The Great Glorious Goddamn of It All and 2011’s Bright’s Passage. Released to critical attention, Stephen King wrote in The New York Times Book Review that Bright’s Passage “shines with a compressed lyricism that recalls Ray Bradbury in his prime…This is the work of a gifted novelist.”

These are special Works In Progress + Songs You Know solo shows. Here's a note from Ritter about it:

"I’ve realized that a necessary part of working on records is finding the material that hangs together. I write A LOT of songs, and not all of them play nicely with the others. The most useful (and fun) way to find a song’s heart is to periodically play some shows where I’m able to get it all out there and see how I feel about them. I’m really looking forward to these shows for the chance to get all these songs, and some that are old friends, out on the table for a good time."