Logjam Presents

Fruition

With Special Guest Andy Dunnigan

The Coffis Brothers

The Wilma

Missoula, MT
Add to Calendar 07/09/2026 20:00 07/10/2026 01:00 America/Boise Fruition

Logjam Presents is pleased to welcome Fruition for a live concert performance at The Wilma on Thursday, July 9, 2026. Tickets go on sale Friday, April 24, 2026 at 10:00AM and will be available to purchase in person at Logjam Presents Box Offices and online while supplies last. All tickets are general admission standing room only. All ages are welcome. Take a look at these tips to best… Continue Reading

Logjam Presents - Missoula, Montana false MM/DD/YYYY
7:00PM (door) 8:00PM (show)
$29 (Adv.) $35 (DOS)
All Ages
Tickets Lodging

Logjam Presents is pleased to welcome Fruition for a live concert performance at The Wilma on Thursday, July 9, 2026.

Tickets go on sale Friday, April 24, 2026 at 10:00AM and will be available to purchase in person at Logjam Presents Box Offices and online while supplies last. All tickets are general admission standing room only. All ages are welcome.

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.


Americana band Fruition returns to Missoula for a headlining show at The Wilma on July 9, 2026.

With more than 15 years together, Fruition has built a devoted grassroots following through collaborative songwriting and signature stacked harmonies. What began as a busking string band has grown into a genre-spanning sound that blends folk, rock, soul, and pop—while staying rooted in honest, homegrown storytelling.

It’s been a while since their last Missoula appearance, but past shows have been nothing short of unforgettable—known for intimate, high-energy performances that truly connect (photos).

Fans can expect a dynamic live set featuring favorites like “Labor of Love,” “The Meaning,” and “Mountain Annie,” along with newer material like their dual singles with John Craigie, “Where It’s From” and “Hard To Make Money.”

About Fruition

For nearly two decades, Fruition have built their genre-bending version of American roots music around harmony — not just the vocal interplay of the band’s three songwriters, but the deeper harmony created between five friends who’ve spent years on the road together. On their eighth album, Something More, those bonds grow into something more collaborative than ever before.
Produced by Grammy winner Tucker Martine, Something More finds Fruition stepping into an era defined as much by exploration as craft. Fueled by melody-driven songwriting, analog tones, and atmospheric textures, the album expands the band’s melting pot of rock, folk, pop, soul, and Americana into something more expansive and fully realized.
Much of the songwriting emerged from collaborative sessions between Jay Cobb Anderson, Kellen Asebroek, and Mimi Naja, adding a shared perspective to songs rooted in reflection, uncertainty, acceptance, and growth. “This record is us trusting each other more than we ever have — as humans and as musicians,” says Anderson. “It’s the sound of us leaning into each other.”
From the street corners of the Pacific Northwest to stages like Red Rocks Amphitheatre and Great American Music Hall, Fruition have grown their career night by night and song by song. Something More feels like the next chapter: a collection of lessons absorbed, trust deepened, and a band fully embracing what they’ve become.

With Special Guest Andy Dunnigan

The Coffis Brothers

The Coffis Brothers

With two songwriters, six albums, and more than a thousand shows under their belt, The Coffis Brothers have earned their reputation as modern-day torchbearers of all-American rock & roll. It’s a sound caught halfway between amplified Americana, acoustic folk, roadhouse R&B, and electrifying roots music, crafted by a pair of California-born siblings who’ve been sharing the stage since childhood, and the five piece band filled out by their childhood friend, Kyle Poppen on lead guitar, and the rhythm section of Aidan Collins (bass), and Cory Graves (drums).

That sound reaches a new peak with Kaw-fis Bruth-urs. The band’s third collaboration with Bay Area legend (and longtime Mother Hips frontman) Tim Bluhm, who serves as the album’s producer, Kaw-fis Bruth-urs finds Jamie and Kellen Coffis letting their guard down, enjoying the creative ride as much as the destination itself. For every signature-sounding song like “Cut Right Through” — a heartland rock anthem built for highway drives and long horizons, as sunny as the band’s Golden State homeland and as hook-driven as a Tom Petty classic — there’s another track that stretches the band’s sound into new territory. The result is The Coffis Brothers’ widest-ranging album yet, running the gamut from bluesy, blue-eyed soul (“Face the Music”) to jangling, harmony-heavy power pop (“Do You Want To”).  

“This is what we do, and we’re giving ourselves license to evolve and get better at it, too” says Jamie, who was raised in the Santa Cruz Mountains of northern California alongside his mother — a children’s musician — and his younger brother. Decades after Jamie and Kellen made their stage debut alongside their mom, singing three-part blood harmonies at a young age, their musical bond has only grown stronger, sharpened by hundreds of live shows as much as their shared DNA. “It’s the natural evolution of us performing together and spending so much of our lives together,” Kellen adds. “We didn’t set out to make anything in one particular direction — we just wanted to make a batch of really great songs.”