An Evening with Hand Habits

Saturday, August 23, 2025 at 8:00 PM to 11:00 PM

2220 Arts + Archives, Los Angeles

2220 Arts presents an evening with Hand Habits, celebrating the release of their new album, *Blue Reminder*, on Fat Possum Records. The album's photos were captured in the 2220 theater earlier this year, and the concert will be an intimate restaging of those moments in the context of the excellent songs from the new LP. ∆ Recorded in Los Angeles alongside co-producer Joseph Lorge, *Blue Reminder* finds Meg Duffy once again collaborating with an impressive coterie of musicians, including Alan Wyffels, Gregory Uhlmann (Duffy’s collaborator in Duffy x Uhlmann), Blake Mills, Tim Carr, Daniel Aged, and Joshua Johnson and Anna Butters of SML. Having spent a big part of the last decade on the road, both as a solo artist and as a touring member of Perfume Genius, Duffy’s affinity for playing live in a room with other musicians was the impetus for the record, which was largely tracked live. “I recommend playing music with people who are probably better than you are,” jokes Duffy. “All of these musicians are such incredible listeners. They all made me play so much closer to the heart. You know, I learn a lot every time I make a record – about where my comfort zones can be pushed and, maybe more importantly, about trusting the process, trusting other people." The twelve songs on *Blue Reminder* walk a kind of emotional tightrope between hope and a kind of quiet anxiety, the record itself batting around the question of what one does when happiness actually comes knocking. At the core of these songs the genuine joy of love and self-actualization are always balanced against the potential fear of losing those things once you’ve found them. ‘I know the love we lose / Informs who we become,’ Duffy sings on “More Today,” a song whose sentiment seems to infuse the entire record. In tracks like “Way it Goes” and “Wheel of Change” past loves and emotional collapse clear the way for what comes next, while true romantic love — prickly and complicated and deeply illuminating — looms large.