Jimmy Eat World Crashes The National This Tuesday

by | Nov 18, 2019 | MUSIC

Veterans of the early-00s emo/pop-punk scene Jimmy Eat World come to The National in support of their 10th album, which further proves that they’ve got what it takes to survive any flash-in-the-pan musical trend.

Dust off your Converse and grab your favorite hoodie, Richmonders. Pop-punk outfit Jimmy Eat World is making a pit stop in town this Tuesday at The National as part of their Surviving Tour and XL102’s Friendsgiving Show Series.

Originally based in Mesa, Arizona, Jimmy Eat World — Jim Adkins on lead guitar and vocals, Zach Lind on drums, Tom Linton on rhythm guitar, and Rick Burch on bass — originally got its kitschy name from a drawing. After a fight between Linton’s younger brothers, Jim and Ed, Ed drew a picture of Jim shoving the world in his mouth. The rest, as they say, is history.

Jimmy Eat World is undeniably best known for their fourth album, the certified-platinum Bleed American, which featured hits of your middle school youth like “The Middle” and “Sweetness.” If you thought that album was self-titled, you’re not losing your mind — it was actually known as Jimmy Eat World for seven years. This was due to a title change prompted by the September 11 attacks, which occurred seven weeks after its release.

The Surviving Tour will no doubt touch on a few of these jams of yore, but the tour is actually in support of their tenth studio record, Surviving, which was released on October 18th and features leadoff single “All The Way.”

The band’s previous album was Integrity Blues, their ninth, which was released in 2016 and featured the single “Get Right.” That album was the first released after bandleader and chief songwriter Jim Adkins sought treatment for alcohol abuse, and that action fueled the songs he wrote for Integrity Blues.

“Instead of writing about a problem, I wanted to write about a solution,” Adkins said of Integrity Blues in a 2016 statement. “If you look at your life for what’s going wrong, it won’t be too hard to find things. If you start looking at what you have rather than what you’re missing out on, you come away from things with a much different perspective that’s a lot more grateful and positive.”

Now six years sober, on Surviving Adkins is taking another look at the things that make him, and so many other people, feel trapped in their own unhappiness. “I think we’re much more likely to try to rationalize and justify our unhappiness instead of looking at what might be behind that and [taking] action,” he told Alternative Press. “Like I say in one of the songs, it’s the difference between surviving and really living.”

This kind of introspection and continued growth, not just musically but emotionally, is what makes Jimmy Eat World endure while many other pop-punk bands tend to scrape off or fade away like the bumper stickers we put on our cars a decade ago. They’ve grown and gotten better, aging like the finest wine. On Surviving, Jimmy Eat World proves that they’re here to stay. 

Jimmy Eat World will be performing on Tuesday, November 19 at The National, with special guests Pronoun. Doors open at 6:30 pm, and the show starts at 7:30. Tickets are $29.50 in advance, and can be bought at the box office or at thenationalva.com.

Ash Griffith

Ash Griffith

Ash is a writer and improviser from Richmond. She has a BA in English from VCU and an associates in Theater. When she isn't writing or screaming on a stage, she can usually be found wherever the coffee is. Bill Murray is her favorite person along with her black cat, Bruce.




more in music

Photos | TsuShiMaMiRe, Tear Dungeon, Steelboy at Get Tight Lounge

Japanese art-punk trio TsuShiMaMiRe brought their long-running experiment in sound and spectacle to Get Tight Lounge last week. Formed in 1999 in Chiba, Japan, the group has carved out a global cult following with music that darts between jagged punk riffs, bursts of...

Deau Eyes’ Tour De Richmond is a Love Letter to the City

Deau Eyes continues on her Tour de Richmond with headline show tomorrow night at The Camel. Richmond native and indie rock troubadour, Ali Thibodeau, also known as Deau Eyes, has been making the rounds this month with a city-wide musical celebration called Tour de...

SALON DE RÉSISTANCE | The Death of Science in America?

Dispatch number two: The State of Science in 2025 Join us for Salon de Résistance on September 25 at Black Iris for a conversation about science in America. Scientific progress shouldn't be optional. From vaccines and clean energy to space exploration and evolutionary...

Photos | Sierra Ferrell and Nikki Lane Bring Americana to Richmond

Sierra Ferrell took over Brown’s Island earlier this week, transforming Richmond’s riverfront into fantasy. Surrounded by oversized mushrooms, flowers, and a stage dressed like an Appalachian fever dream, Ferrell delivered a set that moved easily from honky-tonk stomp...

Salon de Résistance | A Live Interview Series From RVA Mag

"The absurd is the essential concept and the first truth" - Albert Camus Dispatch NUmber One: Salon de Résistance | presented by RVA Mag, Black Iris, and Le Cachet Dulcet Not long ago, salons were a catalyst for intellectual expression. Spaces where creators,...

Confederate Nostalgia, Black Voices: The Paradox of Polk Miller

Over a century ago, engineers from the Edison Company hauled their bulky recording equipment from New Jersey to Richmond, Virginia. In 1909, they captured one of the first interracial recording sessions in American history: Polk Miller, a white Confederate veteran...