$12 advanced, $15 day of show
General Admission (Standing) - Doors open at 7PM
“What can we do to get people off their fucking phones?” exclaims founder and frontman Luke Faillaci, explaining the mission behind Fai Laci, the band he founded and fronts. “And how can we give them something real and make them have a great time? That’s the most important thing we can do: Just communicate with our followers and let them know they fucking rule!” The Boston quintet — which also includes guitarists Anthony Cervone and Michael “Goldie” Goldblatt, bassist Cal Hamandi, and drummer Zack Putnam — have already amassed a grassroots fanbase thanks to their energetic, wildly cathartic live shows around the Northeast. They’ve seen a community coalesce around their inspired rock songs, with a quarter-million monthly followers and millions of streams despite, until recently, having no label, no publicist, and no manager. They’re proof that good tunes can still find their audience, and they’re working hard to bring others into the fold. “We’ve always been making music for ourselves, and we’re going to hold ourselves to that, because we know other people will want to hear it, too.”
Fai Laci are a band with a mission, and Elephant in the Room is the ideal vehicle to achieve it. Produced by Dan Auerbach and recorded at his Easy Eye Sound Studios in Nashville, the album blends the urgency of punk and the stomp of glam with the theatricality of classic rock, all bound together by the band’s sharp swagger and Faillaci’s boundless charisma. Especially for a debut, it’s confident and surprisingly diverse, full of brazen rockers and bruised-heart ballads. The band expertly traverses the psychedelic time and tempo changes of “Cure Upon the Hill” with the same grace and nuance that they bring to “Beautifully Boring,” a dreamily bittersweet anthem about navigating your young adulthood with your sense of self intact. In between, they deliver bangers like the decadent “Sarasota” and the jittery new wave “Headlights”, each a showcase for their inventive guitars and nimble rhythm section. “We never set out to make a certain kind of sound,” says Faillaci. “It takes us wherever it takes us. We got more into the rock side of things on the album, but we also wanted to have some really beautiful songs on it. We wanted to have something for everybody.”
Autumn Drive opens
Born as a recording project in Summer 2023, Autumn Drive has blossomed into a up-and-coming indie group to watch, touring across greater New England and beyond.
With roots in South Coast Massachusetts, Autumn Drive emerged as a local favorite among the iconic bar scene on Cape Cod and the Islands. Since, the group has taken to Boston and college communities across the state, selling out venues and playing MojoFest, the largest college music festival in the Massachusetts with 5,000 attendees.
Most recently, Autumn Drive comes off their first East Coast tour in late 2025, supporting their newest EP “Going Undone” with nearly 100,000 streams. The group was named a finalist for 2025 Levitate Music Festival’s Songwriter of the Year national contest, making their large-scale festival debut this past July.With two EPs under their belt, Autumn Drive looks to their third “Going Undone” released November 2025 with supporting Winter and Spring tours underway.


