Live Music, Performance

Presented by Duke Arts Presents

Gabriel Kahane

Every Love Song is a Protest

Thursday, February 18 at 7:30pm
Tickets

Musician, writer, and storyteller Gabriel Kahane returns to Duke with Every Love Song is a Protest, a new solo song cycle exploring the relationship between love and political resistance. Drawing inspiration from figures including Sojourner Truth, Václav Havel, and Martin Luther King Jr., Kahane connects a brief history of nonviolent protest with new songs shaped by a belief in our shared humanity and interconnectedness.  

Praised by The New Yorker as “one of the finest, most searching songwriters of the day,” Kahane moves fluidly between folk, classical, theater, and contemporary music. His wide-ranging body of work includes collaborations with Caroline Shaw, Chris Thile, and Sufjan Stevens, as well as performances at venues including Carnegie Hall and Brooklyn Academy of Music. 

Artist Website | Facebook | Instagram

Your Season. Your Way.

Pick-4 Packages are available now! Choose 4 or more performances, get 20% off, and enjoy priority seating.

For online orders, seats are automatically chosen based on best availability. To choose specific seats or price levels, please call the Box Office at 919-684-4444.

Event Details

Motorco Music Hall
723 Rigsbee Avenue
Durham, NC 27701

Visit our Motorco Music Hall FAQ page for more information.

Venue Details

Limited late seating available


Ticket & Discount Information

Tickets available starting at $35. Student tickets always $10.


About the Artist

Gabriel Kahane portrait for Nonesuch Records, August 2025. Photo by Jason Quigley.

Composer, Singer-songwriter

Gabriel Kahane is a musician, writer, and storyteller.

Highlights of the 25/26 season include collaborations with Roomful of Teeth, Attacca Quartet, and Jeffrey Kahane; conducting debuts with Santa Fe Pro Music and the San Antonio Philharmonic; composer-in-residence posts with the University of Iowa and the Charlotte Symphony; the world premiere of a new set of songs at the 92nd Street Y; and the Carnegie Hall premiere of If love will not swing wide the gates, a clarinet concerto written for Anthony McGill.

An avid theater artist, Kahane opened last season at Playwrights Horizons with the off-Broadway debut of two solo pieces, Magnificent Bird and Book of Travelers, the latter of which chronicled the composer’s 8,980-mile railway journey in the aftermath of the 2016 presidential election. His album & stage spectacle, The Ambassador, was produced at the BAM Next Wave Festival in 2014, under the direction of Tony-winner John Tiffany. A musical, February House, written with the playwright Seth Bockley, received its New York premiere at the Public Theater in 2012. In 2018, Kahane made his Broadway debut with the score for Kenneth Lonergan’s play The Waverly Gallery, starring Elaine May, Lucas Hedges, and Michael Cera.

Kahane is known for tackling politically thorny subject matter in his work with subtlety and grace, perhaps most notably in his orchestral oratorio, emergency shelter intake form, which addresses economic inequality through the lens of homelessness and housing insecurity, and has been heard from London to New York to Chicago to San Francisco and beyond. He is also increasingly productive as a writer, with prose appearing in The Atlantic, The New Yorker, and The New York Times. Via the newsletter “Words and Music,” Kahane publishes bi-weekly essays on a variety of topics, all of which can be accessed at gabrielkahane.substack.com.

Gabriel’s wide-ranging discography includes five albums as a singer-songwriter, several orchestral projects, a disc of chamber music (with the string quartet Brooklyn Rider), as well as various other collaborative albums. He has worked with an array of artists spanning the aesthetic gamut, from Phoebe Bridgers, Paul Simon, Sylvan Esso, Chris Thile, and Sufjan Stevens, to the Danish String Quartet, Caroline Shaw, and Pekka Kuusisto, with whom he plays as the duo Council. The recipient of a 2021 Charles Ives Fellowship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, Kahane relocated to Portland, OR in the spring of 2020, where he lives with his family and serves as Creative Chair of the Oregon Symphony, a post he has held since 2019.

This event is part of We the People: A Duke & Durham Initiative

Ticket & Discount Information

Pick-4 Packages Available Now! Save 20% when you book four or more shows.
Single Tickets Available Tuesday, June 23 at 11 AM.

Please note: For online Pick-4 orders, seats are automatically chosen based on best availability. To choose specific seats or price levels, please call the Box Office at 919-684-4444.

General Admission: $35
Students*: $10 (Log in through Shibboleth to access Duke-exclusive discounts)
Duke Employees: 25% Off (Log in through Shibboleth to access Duke-exclusive discounts)

*All high school and college students are eligible for student tickets with valid ID shown at event.

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