Logjam Presents

Pepper

Twenty Years of Kona Town with Off In The Woods

The Wilma

Missoula, MT
Add to Calendar 07/15/2023 20:00 07/16/2023 01:00 America/Boise Pepper

Logjam Presents is pleased to welcome Pepper for a live in concert performance at the Wilma on Saturday, July 15, 2023. Tickets go on sale Friday, April 28, 2023 at 10:00AM at The Top Hat, online, or by phone at 1 (800) 514-3849. All tickets are general admission and a limited amount of seating will be… Continue Reading

Logjam Presents - Missoula, Montana false MM/DD/YYYY
7:00PM (door) 8:00PM (show)
$25 (Adv.) $28 (DOS) + applicable fees
All Ages
Tickets Event Info

Logjam Presents is pleased to welcome Pepper for a live in concert performance at the Wilma on Saturday, July 15, 2023.

Tickets go on sale Friday, April 28, 2023 at 10:00AM at The Top Hat, online, or by phone at 1 (800) 514-3849. All tickets are general admission and a limited amount of seating will be available on a first-come, first-served basis. All ages are welcome.

Additional ticketing and venue information can be found here.

About Pepper

Two decades. They’ve gone by in a blur, filled with soundchecks, encores, album releases, and sold-out shows stretching from the California coastline to the UK mainland. Along the way, Pepper has sharpened its own “Kona dub-rock” sound — a blend of reggae, alternative rock, island rhythms, and punky spirit — while also building a community of fans and likeminded bands.

That communal spirit runs throughout the band’s eighth studio album, Local Motion. After sharing shows for years with their heroes and peers, Pepper’s three members — vocalist/guitarist Kaleo Wassman, vocalist/bassist Bret Bollinger, and drummer Yesod Williams — are no longer merely artists; they’re ambassadors of a scene, bringing people together under an umbrella of positive-minded music and collaboration. Appropriately, they share the spotlight with some of their longtime friends on Local Motion, whose songs feature appearances by Stick Figure, E.N Young and Micah Brown of Iration. A celebration of artistic synergy, brotherhood, and modern reggae music, Local Motion is Pepper’s most collaborative record to date, shining a light not only upon the three bandmates themselves, but also upon the wide community they’ve helped build.

“We’re part of a community of bands who have the same mindset,” says Wassman. “They’re our peers. They’re our friends. We all exist on the same plane, and that’s why we called this album Local Motion, because this is our local scene. It’s where we fit in.”

Before Pepper began building a community in its adopted hometown of Southern California, the group held its very first rehearsal in 1997 in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii. All three members were natives of the Big Island, and together, they made a sound that nodded to their tropical roots while also moving forward into new territory. After earning a local fanbase in Hawaii, they moved to the mainland, where Pepper quickly became a popular live act. Pepper’s diverse music allowed the group to tour the country with a wide variety of bands, including reggae icons (The Wailers), punk bands (Pennywise), reggae-rockers (311, Slightly Stoopid), and hip-hop legends (Snoop Dogg). Meanwhile, the band’s admiration for DIY-minded groups like NOFX inspired Pepper to launch its own label, LAW Records, which gave the trio complete control over its own music. It also allowed the band to sign other acts, which expanded Pepper’s circle even further. 

For an album that features nearly a dozen guests, Local Motion was appropriately recorded with several producers, including Stick Figure, the English Beat’s Wayne Lothian, E.N Young, Henry Fong, Jinco, the Dirty Heads’ Dave Foral, and Jungle Josh. Working with a range of collaborators gave Pepper a chance to experiment with new sounds. The result is an album that pays tribute to the band’s past while also pushing forward — and, perhaps, hinting at what might be in store for the next 20 years. There’s the brass-filled bounce of “Carnaval,” the sexed-up swagger of “Sugar (808 remix),” and the summery grooves of “Warning,” all wrapped into a tracklist whose songs celebrate the bright side of a life well-lived.

“When we moved to California, we were playing small clubs,” remembers Bollinger, who now plays outdoor amphitheaters, indoor theaters, festivals, and other high-capacity venues with his bandmates. “We felt like we were one of the only bands carrying the flag for this genre in America. These days, it’s different. We’re seeing some real movement within the reggae scene. This sound has become an established part of American music, and we’re grateful for the other bands who are flying the flag, too. Everything is connecting. The energy is right. Incorporating those bands into our new record was the perfect alignment of where we need to be.”

“In a world of social chaos,” adds Yes Williams, “we wanted a ‘return to community,’ that community being the reggae-rock community. We continue to flourish and grow due to the synergy of likeminded bands and fans. Without each other, we are nothing, from where the music comes from to where it goes. This record is filtered through the community, a true Local Motion that we are lucky enough to be a part of.”

Twenty Years of Kona Town with Off In The Woods

Twenty Years of Kona Town with Off In The Woods Image

About Off In The Woods

Off in the Woods is a 7 piece Montana band. We play all original music along the stylings of Soul, Funk, Reggae and open tuned acoustic songs. We have a full horn section, drums, bass, guitar, hammond organ and aux-percussion/synth. The five original members all grew up in Polson, MT on the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Reservation. We have been playing together since the 6th grade but have been touring as Off in the Woods for 13+ years. We play up and down the State of Montana with a few shows in Idaho and Washington.

In our time together we have worked our way up from free gigs at dive bars to playing historic theaters and festivals. We have played with many National and International touring bands such as George Clinton and Parliament Funkadelic, Clinton Fearon and the Boogie Brown Band, Don Carlos and the Congos, Rusted Root, The English Beats, John Browns body, The Polyrythmics and Pato Banton.