Savannah Gardner is an old soul with an exciting new sound, who is rewriting the outlaw country genre. Her freewheeling, sometimes gritty, sometimes hauntingly beautiful songs speak to a new generation determined to stand up and be their authentic selves.
Her special connection with her audience earned her a nomination for the UK AMA’s Live Act of the Year 2025, plus slots at coveted festivals like Glastonbury, Black Deer Festival, C2C London, and The Long Road. The band won many friends for their rip-roaring performance supporting Jenny Don’t & The Spurs at The Bear back in February.
Since arriving in London from her native California, Savannah has championed the growth of women in country and Americana music, leading the charge with her own brand of kickass Americana and promoting monthly ladies nights featuring some of the scene’s most outstanding female talent.
Her band, The Recovering Good Girls, bends the country music genre to their mighty will, blending soul, blues, and honky tonk into a sound that is both unique and deeply-rooted in tradition. Together, they continue to spread joy, love, and bad-assery across the UK.
Joining the double headline bill is the excellent Dom Glynn & His Sunday Best. Classic honky tonk… from Birmingham.
A singer-songwriter and fingerpicker extraordinaire, Dom moved to London in 2016 and, through persistent gigging as a solo act, has developed a reputation as an impressive live performer. He combines a style of songwriting influenced by Bob Dylan and Hank Williams Sr. with a guitar style inspired by Mississippi John Hurt and Doc Watson. He is joined by his band, His Sunday Best, for a night of true honky tonk revivalism.
“Not only is Savannah an artist you are all going to hear a lot more of, she is a truly lovely person. That is a winning combination”
“The voice is her ace. A sophisticated and mellifluous set of pipes that happily switch between Patsy Cline or Esther Phillips with personality”
Doors 7pm / Music 8.30pm / Tickets £16 / £10 for members
All seating/tables are first-come, first-served.