Logjam Presents

Caamp (Night 1)

Blind Pilot

KettleHouse Amphitheater

Missoula, MT
Add to Calendar 08/17/2026 19:30 08/18/2026 01:00 America/Boise Caamp (Night 1)

Logjam Presents is pleased to welcome Caamp for a live concert performance at the KettleHouse Amphitheater on Monday, August 17, 2026. Tickets go on sale Friday, February 20, 2026 at 10:00 AM and will be available to purchase in person at Logjam Presents Box Offices and online while supplies last.  General admission lawn, reserved stadium seating,… Continue Reading

Logjam Presents - Missoula, Montana false MM/DD/YYYY
6:00PM (door) 7:30PM (show)
$64 - $166 (Adv.)
All Ages
Tickets Box Seating Groove Shuttle / Parking Crazy Creek Chair Rental Lodging

Logjam Presents is pleased to welcome Caamp for a live concert performance at the KettleHouse Amphitheater on Monday, August 17, 2026.

Tickets go on sale Friday, February 20, 2026 at 10:00 AM and will be available to purchase in person at Logjam Presents Box Offices and online while supplies last.  General admission lawn, reserved stadium seating, reserved premium stadium seating, general admission standing pit and premium box seating tickets are available. Shuttle Tickets and Parking Passes can be purchased here. Crazy Creek Chair Rentals for this event are available for advance purchase here. All ages are welcome.

Available Ticket Types:

General Admission Lawn: General Admission Lawn tickets allow access to the upper lawn section of the amphitheater located above the reserved stadium seating section.

Reserved Stadium Seating: Reserved Stadium Seating tickets allow access to the seating section located behind the main pit of the amphitheater.

Reserved Premium Stadium Seating: Reserved Premium Stadium Seating tickets allow access to the rows closest to the stage of the seated section located just behind the main pit of the amphitheater.

General Admission Pit (Standing): General Admission Pit tickets allow access to the standing room only section located directly in front of the stage.

Premium Box Seating: Experience the best seats in the house with reserved box seating in a prime location, offering unmatched audio quality, crowd-free viewing, and convenient counter space for food/drinks. Premium Boxes are sold in bundles of two tickets with a separate entrance for expedited venue entry and a dedicated server for drinks and concessions throughout the show.

Take a look at these tips to best prepare yourself for a smooth ticket buying experience.

Additional ticketing and venue information can be found here.

All concerts are held rain or shine. Be prepared for extremes such as sunshine, heat, wind or rain. All tickets are non-refundable. In the event of cancellation due to extreme weather, tickets will not be refunded.

*Caamp will donate $1.00 from every ticket sold to the Columbus Foundation, a 501(c)(3) organization, in support of the Great Heights Movement. Established by Caamp in 2022, The Great Heights Movement supports charitable programs primarily in the Columbus, Ohio area, as well as other communities the band encounters both nationally and internationally. The Great Heights Movement is administered by The Columbus Foundation. Caamp is committed to responding to needs centered around music education, social justice and sustainability. For more information, see ColumbusFoundation.org and GreatHeightsMovement.org. No Portion of the ticket purchase is tax deductible.

About Caamp

“Nothing stays the same forever,” says Caamp’s Taylor Meier, “and there’s something beautiful about that. Time passes, seasons turn, people grow. Change is what makes life special.”

Copper Changes Color, Caamp’s fifth and most adventurous album to date, is indeed a reflection on growth and evolution, but it’s also a celebration of the dreams and bonds that endure. Recorded in Texas, Oregon, and New York with co-production from Beatriz Artola (Fleet Foxes, Sharon Van Etten) and Tucker Martine (My Morning Jacket, R.E.M.), the collection finds the breakout Midwestern band pushing their sound to new heights, infusing their infectious brand of modern folk music with an electrifying dose of indie rock energy. The songs are raw and vulnerable, alternating between buoyant, breezy anthems and dreamy, pensive meditations, and the performances are honest and intuitive to match, fueled by the undeniable chemistry between Meier and bandmates Evan Westfall, Matt Vinson, Joseph Kavalec, and Nicholas Falk. Put it all together and you’ve got a rich, rousing record built on love and trust in the face of doubt and uncertainty, a joyful, cathartic work about not just accepting change, but learning to embrace it. The album debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Americana/Folk Albums chart and features fan favorite “Mistakes” which earned the band their fifth #1 at AAA Radio in 2025.

“When we were putting the finishing touches on this record, I started noticing copper everywhere I went,” Meier recalls. “The older it was, the more imperfect the finish had become, but that patina was what gave it character. That’s the way I feel about our band ten years in.”

Founded by childhood friends Meier and Westfall in Athens, OH, Caamp rocketed to early acclaim on the strength of their self-titled 2016 debut, which generated hundreds of millions of streams across platforms and garnered the band their first gold single. Three years later, the group topped the Billboard Heatseekers chart with their sophomore effort, By and By, which hit #1 at AAA radio, earned the band festival slots everywhere from Outside Lands to Newport Folk, and led to TV performances on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Kimmel Live!, and CBS Saturday Morning. Caamp’s Lavender Days (2022) landed on NPR’s list of the year’s best roots albums, topped the Americana Albums chart, and earned the band their second and third #1 singles at AAA radio. In 2025, the band released “And It’s Gone,” written by Meier and featured as the theme song for the Apple TV+ series Stick, starring Owen Wilson.

“It’s so fun to just strike your guitar and let it echo through a room that size,” says Westfall. “There’s something primal about it, and while we never really consciously discussed it, I think you can hear our sound growing to match the rooms we’re playing.”

Though the band’s momentum seemed unstoppable in the wake of Lavender Days (to date, they’ve amassed over 2.5 billion streams worldwide), Caamp’s 2025 U.S. headline tour reaffirmed their place as one of the most captivating live bands in modern music. The 33 show run sold over 200,000 tickets and included sold-out nights at Fiddler’s Green Amphitheatre, The Salt Shed (two nights), The Anthem (two nights), The Greek Theatre, and Radio City Music Hall (two nights).

“I’ve experienced so many different versions of myself these past few years,” Meier reflects. “I’ve been focusing on healing and recovery while still processing a lot of grief and loss, and it made me take stock of my head and my heart and my friends and my family and figure out what really matters.”

As Meier found himself embarking on new phases during this period — he turned thirty, began splitting his time between central Ohio and the Lower East Side of Manhattan, and fell in love with early-2000s indie bands like The Strokes — he also found himself recommitted and more grateful than ever for the steadfast connection he shared with his bandmates.

“There’s just so much trust,” says Meier. “We trust each other, we trust the songs, we trust the process. It allows us to work freely and push ourselves to places we haven’t been.”

When it came time to record, the band headed first to El Paso’s famed Sonic Ranch Studio, where they tracked nearly 20 songs in just a week with Artola and drummer/longtime collaborator Josh Block (Leon Bridges, White Denim). After a break, the group headed to Portland’s Flora Recording to collaborate with Martine on another batch of tunes before finishing up with a final session at Manhattan’s Sear Sound.

“There was no rush,” says Vinson. “We knew we could take our time and enjoy just getting together in a room and seeing what happened when we took our sound to some uncharted places. There’s a live performance at the core of each of these tracks, and I think that’s what ties this whole collection together.”

That live energy is obvious from the outset on Copper Changes Color, which opens with the driving “Millions.” Punchy and magnetic, the track shifts partway through from sunny garage rock to muscular Americana, setting the stage perfectly for a record that boldly walks the line between genres while proudly wearing its heart on its sleeve. The lush “One True Way” (feat. Madi Diaz) questions whether anyone ever truly knows what they’re doing, while the mesmerizing “Fairview Feeling” makes peace with our imperfections, and the effervescent “Mistakes” lays its cards on the table, with Meier singing, “Can I get to know you, honey / And all of your lovely mistakes / I’ve got more than a few to show you.”

“I remember walking around when I first moved to New York and having all this dialogue in my head,” he explains, “but the streets were even more chaotic, which slowed things down and allowed me to open up to the possibility of writing something really vulnerable. I found that the city scratches a different itch for me, and I spent a lot of time there just walking around, writing and rewriting verses and trying to go deeper than I ever have on this record.”

Deep as Meier takes things, he and the band never lose sight of life’s simple pleasures. The addictive “Porchswing” revels in the joys of a steady, reliable love; the Britpop-tinged “Shade” pledges to always be there to pick up a partner’s slack; the exhilarating “Waiting Up (For You)” basks in the glow of a connection that transcends distance; and the tongue-in-cheek “Ohio’s Ugly” savors the feeling of sharing a place you love with someone you care about.

“It’s a song about falling in love with a girl and wanting to pull her back to Ohio,” Meier explains. “People don’t understand why we’re still here, but anybody from the Midwest will tell you there’s a magic to it. I travel all over the world now, but nothing beats coming home.”

Ultimately, Copper Changes Color is all about that push and pull between old and new, between the thrill of the unknown and the comforts of the familiar. “No one knows how long this lasts / Try and make it sweet,” Meier sings on poignant album closer “Drive.” Change isn’t just inevitable, it’s essential. Enjoy the patina.

Blind Pilot

About Blind Pilot

The first Blind Pilot album in eight years, In the Shadow of the Holy Mountain emerged from a period of artistic crisis and the radical transformation of their creative ecosystem. “I went through a few years where I wasn’t able to write—I tried therapy, I read books on writer’s block, I went on writing trips, but nothing was helping,” says Israel Nebeker, frontman for the Oregon-bred band. After stepping back and reimagining his songwriting approach, Nebeker challenged himself to write an entire album in a month, then brought those songs to his bandmates with a newfound sense of receptivity. “I told myself that whatever songs came through in that month would be for the love of the band and music we make together,” says Nebeker. “Instead of being controlling in the studio, I wanted to let the songs live and breathe with the band as an entity. By the time we finished, it was the most joy we’d ever had in making an album together.”

Produced by Josh Kaufman (The Hold Steady, David Wax Museum), In the Shadow of the Holy Mountain brings a potent new energy to the elegantly composed folk/indie-rock of past LPs like 2016’s And Then Like Lions. In a profound step forward for the band—whose lineup also includes drummer/co-founder Ryan Dobrowski, bassist Luke Ydstie, and multi-instrumentalist Kati Claborn—Blind Pilot’s fourth full-length unfolds with an exquisite fluidity, fully harnessing the undeniable chemistry. “In the past we’ve always been very serious and intentional about the process, but Josh often encouraged us to throw away our preconceived notions of what the songs were supposed to be,” says Nebeker. “So much of the album came from all of us playing live together, listening to each other and trusting our instincts, and really getting to the core of the song,” Dobrowski adds. The result: the most revelatory expression yet of Blind Pilot’s palpable reverence for music as a connective force.

While Blind Pilot intends to tour principally as a quartet in support of the record, the album includes contributions from longtime trumpeter/keyboardist Dave Jorgensen and vibraphonist Ian Krist. In bringing the album to life, the band worked with a rich palette of instrumentation, handling each track with equal parts extraordinary care and unbridled spontaneity. For both Dobrowski and Nebeker—who formed an early iteration of the band as college students in the mid-aughts—those moments of ineffably closeness serve as the lifeblood of Blind Pilot. “For me making this album felt like celebrating being together and still feeling that deep connection that’s been a throughline for our entire adult lives,” Dobrowski says. “One of my very favorite things about music is the way it not only connects us as bandmates, but allows us to connect to an audience—and then within that audience, people end up connecting with each other. It’s this powerful thing that’s unlike anything else, and in a way it’s kind of like magic.”