April 12, 2026
Soul Asylum
The Kent Stage, Kent OH
Opener: Corey Glover
By Rob McCune
A significant force in the alt-rock/grunge wave of the early-1990s, Soul Asylum was on a “Runaway Train” (to coin the band’s biggest hit) to stardom. Now, nearly 40 years since the band formed (or changed its name from Loud Fast Rules) in 1983, that train seems nowhere near derailing.
The crew has shifted over the years, but still driving the train is frontman Dave Pirner, who has stoked the coals and refined the Soul Asylum sound over 13 albums, including five records before the band’s breakout 1992 “Grave Dancers Union,” and seven since.
Their latest is 2024’s “Slowly but Shirley;” before that was 2020’s “Hurry Up and Wait” – two titles that echo the dichotomy of fast, ripping guitar anthems and slow, soulful sonnets that represent the ranging appeal of this enduring asylum.
On an “Acoustic Tour” that kicked off this spring in middle America, Soul Asylum left only their drummer, Michael Bland, behind. Pirner is joined on stage by Ryan Smith on lead guitar and Jeremy Tappero on bass.
And despite valid assumptions about what an “acoustic” show is, nothing is unplugged here, and the guys certainly aren’t sitting down or holding back.
Opener Corey Glover, lead singer of the funk rock group Living Colour, delivered what might be expected from acoustic set with Michael Ciro on an unplugged guitar and a couple of chairs and mics center stage. But nothing was typical about their performance. Ciro’s masterful guitar riffs and Glover’s powerfully soulful voice ignited the audience on tracks including covers of Bill Withers’ “Use Me” and fully unique renditions of Beatle George Harrison’s “Here Comes the Sun” and Prince’s “The Cross.”
Soul Asylum’s set at The Kent Stage in Kent, Ohio, featured tracks from seven albums, dominated by “Grave Dancers,” and a couple of covers. The trio came out rocking on “Somebody to Shove,” and slowed things down a bit on bittersweet harmonics like “To My Own Devices.” Crowd-pleasers “Misery” (about halfway through the set) and “Runaway Train” (saved for the encore) got the crowd on its feet, too.
A couple of times, including during Glover’s set, the artists referenced and paid tribute to protesters in Minnesota, where Soul Asylum is from.
Pirner brought the tragic killing of two protesters by ICE agents home with a cover of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young’s “Ohio,” a song about Kent State University student protesters being shot in 1970, just down the road from the venue. He also made it personal, talking about the First Avenue nightclub frequented by Soul Asylum that (though now closed) is a block away from where Minnesotan Alex Pretti was killed. “Stand Up and Be Strong,” a song off of the band’s 2006 record “The Silver Lining,” was played in tribute to Pretti and Renee Good, also shot and killed this year in Minneapolis.
Lifting the mood, Pirner practiced his on-stage banter, which he says hasn’t been a strong suit, with jokes like (paraphrasing here): “I met a drug dealer outside the theater earlier. He sold me a pair of shoes. … I’m not sure what he laced them with, but I’ve been tripping all day.”
For “Get On Out,” the last encore, Soul Asylum’s three amigos swung and slung their respective axes and finished with a synchronized strum.
It was a finish that bears a message for fans who still have a chance to experience this tour: “Get On Out.”
Follow Rob McCune on Instagram (@Every_Thing_After_Photo) and listen to the “Every.Thing.After Podcast” on Spotify.