Your Living Room Is The Perfect Intimate Music Venue
Also called “parlor concerts,” casual musical gatherings in the living room are a growing–or more accurately a re-emerging–trend in acoustic music. We’ve been doing them for about five years and we can truly say now that the home is one of our very favorite places to play.
At a house concert friends can interact with musicians and each other in a way that no other venue allows. Our acoustic instruments sound best when you can hear them naturally, and we love for a concert to take shape as a conversation, not just a presentation. Some trend more toward worship together, and others are storytelling and songwriter spotlights. Some become very improvisational where new songs are invented on the spot. Every house concert is distinct for your guests–whether close friends, a bible study or other church gathering, or an open-invite event.
If you’re interested in hosting an unforgettable gathering for 10-40 of your people, let us help!
Every host has a different vision, so if you’re dreaming something up, the best thing to do is get in touch. We can iron out the details quickly so you can start working on your invitations!
Words From Hosts
“The audience was small enough to enable us to make comments and ask questions in between songs, prompting responses and stories from Tim and Laurie, which all made for a meaningful and fun interactive dimension to the concert.“
“Phenomenal performances, excellent musicianship! But the best part is getting to engage new friends at a deeper level.”
“You and Laurie demonstrated a partnership in terms of your performance that I rarely see. Sure, it helps that you are husband and wife…but there’s a connection that transcends marriage…In that alone, the evening was a message to us that relationship is key to all aspects of our lives.”
“You blessed our friends richly with your incredible musical gifts, winsome spirits and passion to glorify God. The aroma of Christ was intoxicating that night.”
“I was struck by the fact that you weren’t amplified, you didn’t have tracks, and you played multiple instruments. That seems like such a technical dissection, but I guess the point is the ease with which your music flowed out to us. You and Laurie will never know how much your presence meant that evening.”
“The combination of togetherness, music, and friendship made a perfect night.”
“We still talk about the concert and you guys.”







