Infinity Music Hall & Bistro
back to calendar ›

Iris DeMent

Hartford

DETAILS

Sat, August 16, 2025
Hartford, CT
Doors: 7 PM
Show: 8 PM

Ticket INFO


Member Presale: 4/23/25 10 AM
Public Onsale: 4/25/25 12 PM

buy tickets ›

GENRE

Country / Folk
Iris DeMent

Iris DeMent

Connect with this artist:

www.irisdement.com/

Artist Bio

On her transcendent new record, Workin' On A World, Iris DeMent faces the modern
 world — as it is right now — with its climate catastrophe, pandemic illness, and
 epidemic of violence and social injustice — and not only asks us how we can keep
 working towards a better world, but implores us to love each other, despite our very
 different ways of seeing. Her songs are her way of healing our broken inner and outer
 spaces. 

With an inimitable voice as John Prine described, "like you've heard, but not really,"  and
 unforgettable melodies rooted in hymns, gospel, and old country music, she's simply
 one of the finest singer-songwriters in America as well as one of our fiercest advocates
 for human rights. Her debut record Infamous Angel, which just celebrated its 30th
 anniversary, was recently named one of the “greatest country albums of all time” by
 Rolling Stone, and the two albums that followed, My Life and The Way I Should, were
 both nominated for GRAMMYs. From there, DeMent released three records on her own
 label, Flariella Records, the most recent of which, The Trackless Woods (2015), was
 hailed as “a quietly powerful triumph” by The Guardian. DeMent’s songs have also been
 featured in film (True Grit) and television (The Leftovers) and recorded by numerous
 artists. Fittingly, she received the Americana Music Trailblazer Award in 2017.
 Workin' On A World, her seventh album, started with the worry that woke DeMent up
 after the 2016 elections: how can we survive this? “Every day some new trauma was
 being added to the old ones that kept repeating themselves, and like everybody else, I
 was just trying to bear up under it all,” she recalls. She returned to a truth she had
 known since childhood: music is medicine. “My mom always had a way of finding the
 song that would prove equal to whatever situation we were facing. Throughout my life,
 songs have been lending me a hand. Writing songs, singing songs, putting them on
 records, has been a way for me to extend that hand to others.” 

With grace, courage, and soul, Iris shares 13 anthems — love songs, really — to and
 for our broken inner and outer worlds. DeMent sets the stage for the album with the title
 track in which she moves from a sense of despair towards a place of promise. “Now I’m
 workin’ on a world I may never see / Joinin’ forces with the warriors of love / Who came
 before and will follow you and me.”

She summons various social justice warriors, both past and present, to deliver
 messages of optimism. “How Long” references Martin Luther King, while “Warriors of
 Love” includes John Lewis and Rachel Corrie. “Goin’ Down To Sing in Texas” is an ode
 not only to gun control, but also to the brave folks who speak out against tyranny and
 endure the consequences in an unjust world. “I kept hearing a lot of talk about the arc of
 history that Dr. King so famously said bends towards justice,” she recalls. “I was having
 my doubts. But, then it dawned on me, he never said the arc would magically bend
 itself. Songs, over the course of history, have proven to be pretty good arc benders.”
 Bending inward, DeMent reaches agilely under the slippery surface of politics. She
 grapples with loss on the deeply honest “I Won’t Ask You Why,” while encouraging
 compassion over hate in the awe-inspiring “Say A Good Word.”  Album closer
“Waycross, Georgia,” encompasses the end of the journey, thanking those along the
 way. As she approaches subjects of aging, loss, suicide, and service, an arc of
 compassion elevated to something far beyond words is transmitted.  The delicate
 fierceness encompassed in the riveting power of her voice has somehow only grown
 over time.

Stalled partway through by the pandemic, the record took six years to make with the
 help of three friends and co-producers: Richard Bennett, Pieta Brown, and Jim Rooney.
 It was Pieta Brown who gave the record its final push. “Pieta asked me what had come
 of the recordings I’d done with Jim and Richard in 2019 and 2020. I told her I’d pretty
 much given up on trying to make a record. She asked would I mind if she had a listen.
 So, I had everything we’d done sent over to her, and not long after that I got a text,
 bouncing with exclamation marks: ‘You have a record and it’s called Workin’ On A
 World!’” With Bennett back in the studio with them, Brown and DeMent recorded several
 more songs and put the final touches on the record in Nashville in April of 2022.

The result is a hopeful album — shimmering with brilliant flashes of poignant humor and
 uplifting tenderness — that speaks the truth, “in the way that truth is always hopeful,”
 she explains.  Reflecting on the lyrics of the song “The Sacred Now” (“see these walls/
 let’s bring ‘em on down / it’s not a dream; it’s the sacred now”), DeMent is reminded of
 Jesus saying the Kingdom of God is within you and the Buddhist activist monk Thich
 Nhat Hanh saying the rose is in the compost; the compost is in the rose. On Workin’ On
 A World, Iris DeMent demonstrates that songs are the healing and the healing arises
 through song


buy tickets for this show ›