SOLD OUT

6PM SHOWTIME

ALL AGES

OUTDOORS, SEATING IS SOCIALLY DISTANCED!

We appreciate you purchasing a ticket and wanting to come and support live music. Moreover, we appreciate your patience as we navigate these weird times. Due to the very limited capacity, we are suggesting a food and beverage minimum of (2) drinks or a plate of food purchased by each guest. This is not required; however, this what allows icehouse to stay afloat and continue to host shows. While we appreciate the purchase of the base cover charge, that money simply covers the cost to put the show on and pay the artists. We still need to cover the cost of our great staff and keep our lights on. We hope the community will continue to value what Icehouse uniquely provides, and show us some love so we can make it to the other side of this together!c Please click the link below to pre-purchase a food and beverage credit to be used the night of show and during any subsequent visit. If you are not able to purchase this in advance, we still look forward to seeing you at the show and hope you consider this when attending show. Thank you for your consideration.

Enter via the patio

Wear your YOUR MASKS!


Detroit:

Detroit 1.jpg

In 1993, flush from the success of founding, developing and quitting the second most popular R&B act in Minneapolis, Jeff Ham (drums, vocals) and Mark Erickson (bass, vocals) devoted themselves to quick-hit, hilarious interpretations of a wide variety of popular music. Calling themselves Detroit, they recruited old friends Grant Eull (guitar, vocals) and Jeremy Ylvisaker (keyboards, vocals) to flesh out this vision of music that answers to no one.

The quartet was so successful at fleshing out this vision,in fact, that it soon became clear they had stumbled into a new genre of music entirely: Fleshrock. Riding the Fleshrock stallion as far as it could take them, they issued four-ish albums (including a double CD), did lots of 90s-style van touring, won awards and critics polls and the hearts of a very devoted following throughout the Upper Midwest due to a spectacular show that always threatened to veer into uncontrolled mayhem with rented 30-ft inflatable apes, human-sized aquariums, death-defying pyrotechnics and barely contained intra-band violence. And songs. And guitars.

Eventually, this all came crashing down but that's a story for another time, for Detroit has been reborn and it brings the good tidings of Fleshrock, the Rock made Flesh and the Flesh made Rock.