
With Sweet Chaos arriving June 5, Damian Lewis is bringing back one of the things fans loved most during the Mission Creep era: intimate album launch shows with live music, conversation, and signings.
Three years ago, I went to one at Rough Trade East in London.
And honestly?
I still think about that night.
Because if you’ve never been to one of these… it’s not just a gig.
It’s something else.
Let me take you there…

This was one of my classic lightning trips.
I flew in from Turkey—my summer home base—on a tight schedule, but just enough time to make it to Rough Trade East. And honestly? I would do it again in a heartbeat.
There’s something about these moments. You just know they’re going to be special.
And this one really was.
If you’ve never been, Rough Trade East is not a big venue. That’s the point.

It’s a record store. Shelves of vinyl, people browsing, chatting, waiting. And then suddenly, that same space becomes a stage.
You’re close. Really close.
No barriers, no distance, no “you’re miles away from the artist” feeling.
Just a room full of people who are all there for the same reason.
And then… he walks in.
And yes—I was filming it, of course.
Damian Lewis is in da house!
And he brings it.
Before any music, we got something I always love: a proper chat.
Damian on stage with his friend, collaborator, and producer Giacomo Smith, talking about how Mission Creep came to life.
Not in a formal, polished way. Just… talking.

They shared how they first connected (thank you, Steve Abbott), how they started by playing jazz covers from the ’30s and ’40s, and how that slowly turned into something completely different.
There was this great moment where they talked about their “30 song” idea—picking songs, then picking more songs, and then somewhere in that process, Damian starts remembering titles mid-sentence.
Very real. Very human.
And then you start to see how the album came together.
From swing and jazz roots to something more “rootsy, story-telling, folky, bluesy”—his words, and honestly, exactly right.

One of my favorite parts of the chat was hearing Damian talk about writing his own songs.
He said he used to write when he was younger, didn’t like what he wrote, and stopped. And then, coming back to it years later, it just felt natural.
Easier. More honest.
He writes on piano. On acoustic guitar. You can feel that busking background in the way he talks about it. And that’s where Mission Creep really lives—that mix of storytelling and sound.

And Giacomo said something that really stayed with me. While this wasn’t the kind of music he had made before, it was the kind he loved listening to.
So they built something new together.
Another thing that came through in that chat was how much Damian respects his band.
These are highly trained musicians—conservatoire background, deep musical language—and he talked about how he had to find his own way of communicating with them.
And this is where he told that brilliant story that Mandy Patinkin shared with him about how Leonard Bernstein conducted through imagination.
Not technical language, but images:
You’re at a river…
Now it’s moving faster…
Now you hear a waterfall…
Now you’re falling…

And that’s how Damian started describing music.
I love that.
Because it tells you everything about how he approaches this—not as a “musician first,” but as a storyteller.
At some point, Giacomo asked:
“Should we do a gig?”
Damian: “Yeah.”
And just like that, we move from conversation to music.

It’s a short set. About half an hour max.
But it doesn’t feel short.
Because it’s so present.
The band comes on—Dave Archer on guitar, Will Cleasby on drums, Kitty Liv (always a highlight), Phil Donnelly on bass—and they go straight into it.

“Down on the Bowery” opened the set.
And the moment the band kicked in, the whole room changed energy.
You could feel the floor vibrate from the drums. Heads started moving immediately. People smiled at each other like: oh yes, this is going to be good.
He talked between songs. Checked in with the crowd.
“Are you doing alright? Been to the bar? Had a beer?”
It was relaxed, playful, warm.
At one point:
“Sober crowd, I like it…”
We got “My Little One”…
“Wanna Grow Old in Paris”…
“Never Judge a Man by His Umbrella”…
“Makin’ Plans”…
and “She Comes.”
And then… something special.
Instead of the usual encore, he gave us a new song.
At the time, it didn’t even have a title. Just a glimpse of what might come next.
And I remember thinking: oh, this is not the end of this journey.
One of the best parts of these launch shows is watching people discover the music in real time.
You can feel the room changing song by song.
People come because they know Damian the actor—and leave talking about the songs.
Now let’s talk about the part everyone always asks me about.
The signing.
Look at the line! Rough Trade East has a capacity of 300 people. The event was sold out.
And yes—it is absolutely worth it.
Because Damian didn’t rush through it.
He chatted.
He signed.
He took photos.
He listened.
He figured out how to spell names (Tsvete, we saw you).

He shared moments with people—real ones.
And what I loved most was this: he gave each person his attention.
Not performative. Not “fan service.”
Just… kind.

By the end of the night, everyone was smiling.
People were comparing notes, showing their signed albums, sharing photos, talking about their favorite songs, and making new friends.
Fans had come from all over—and by the end of the night, nobody regretted the trip.
That night at Rough Trade East, there was this sense that we were all part of something together. I think that’s what makes these events so memorable.
It’s not just about watching. It’s about being there.

I can’t believe this was three years ago. It still feels incredibly fresh in my mind.
And now, with Sweet Chaos coming, Damian is doing these album launch events again:
Leeds.
Liverpool (x2).
Marlborough.
London.
Brighton.
Kingston.
And from everything we’ve heard so far, Sweet Chaos feels even bigger, louder, and more electric live.
Same idea.
Short set.
Conversation.
Signing.
Connection.
These are not arena shows where you watch from a screen half a mile away.
Most of these venues are tiny by concert standards.
You’re genuinely in the room with the music.
So if you’re thinking about going…
Go. (tickets here)
Especially if you’ve never seen Damian live before.
Go hear the songs live before the album fully takes over your playlists.
Go stand in that small room and feel that energy.
Go have that quick chat, take that photo, get that album signed.

Because these are intimate shows.
You don’t experience many music nights like this anymore.
And honestly?
They’re the kind of nights you remember.
Four more sleeps…
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Author: Damianista
Academic, Traveler, Blogger, Runner, Theatre Lover, Wine Snob, Part-time New Yorker, and Walking Damian Lewis Encyclopedia :D Procrastinated about a fan's diary on Damian Lewis for a while and the rest is history! View all posts by Damianista