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Santigold
529,710 Followers
• 11 Upcoming Shows
11 Upcoming Shows
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Show More Dates (11)
Santigold's tour
Live Photos of Santigold

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Fan Reviews

Michelle
June 16th 2025
Per usual she delivers in performance, stage presence, song line up, and crowd work. I always enjoy seeing Santigold! Her music is forever a mood
McKees Rocks, PA@Roxian Theatre

Kristin
June 15th 2025
She is amazing! I have loved her like 15+ years now! The venue is decent too aside that there is like literally no where to sit! I thought that was a little different.
Cleveland, OH@Globe Iron

Kelsey
June 12th 2025
She was so awesome.... she is an absolutely incredible artist. Everything about her show is golden- her voice, the band, those dancers, the visuals, her presence! All. Of. It.
She's top notch.
However, I am profoundly disappointed with whoever is managing the TLA now. I have attended many shows there, and I've always been a big fan of that venue- until last night.
I have never in my life attended a show that was so horribly oversold. It was shameful. I'm not sure when the TLA did their remodel, the last show I attended there was honestly before that- so it's been a while. But from everything I remember--- it was better before. As incredible as she is and as much as I wanted to see her, I debated leaving when I got there. It really was that bad.
Her voice was incredible and she's a consummate professional, but she struggled with the sound the entire time. Signaling what was off at first, but they didn't fix it. She kept going, but they didn't resolve the issues even after she directly addressed it in front of the audience.
She's such a strong vocalist that she sounded amazing the entire time, but it sucks she had to deal with crappy sound all night. They never got it together.
I'll see her again and again if given the opportunity, but I'm so disappointed in what used to be one of my favorite venues. She deserves infinitely better- especially in her hometown.
Santigold- a million stars, TLA- the musicians and attendees deserve better. I'm going to think twice before attending another show there- and that sucks.
Philadelphia, PA@Theatre of Living Arts
View More Fan Reviews
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About Santigold
Santigold’s albums are entire worlds meticulously built, brick by brick, by a master architect who incisively speaks to the present while shaping the future. Her fourth album Spirituals captures the feeling of surviving in the modern world while elevating yourself to new places. Mostly recorded in the 2020 lockdown, Santigold struggled but succeeded in defining a space in which she could center herself and collaborate virtually with producers and contributors including Rostam, Nick Zinner, SBTRKT, JakeOne, Illangelo, Doc McKinney and Carlo Montagnese.
“I loved the idea of calling it Spirituals because it touched on the idea of Negro spirituals, which were songs that served the purpose of getting Black people through the un-get-throughable,” she continues. “In the absence of physical freedom, spirituals have traditionally been music whose sound and physical performance allow its participants to feel transcendental freedom in the moment. That’s what this record did for me.” Meanwhile, the social justice protests of 2020 were unfolding. “I’d never written lyrics faster in my life. After having total writer’s block, they started pouring out,” she says.
Since her last full-length release, Santigold has also engaged new ways to express and release her ideas, allowing her greater range to be even truer to her creative intentions on her own terms. She created Spirituals as a multisensory experience that includes new ways of sharing her visual art; a forthcoming natural skincare line; a new podcast in which she interviews other artists and visionaries; and a memoir tracing the generations of her family and “what it is to be a Black woman, what progress has been made, and what’s stayed the same.”
“I want to continue branching out into all forms of art,” Santigold says. “And I’m really excited to take my music into new places.”
“I loved the idea of calling it Spirituals because it touched on the idea of Negro spirituals, which were songs that served the purpose of getting Black people through the un-get-throughable,” she continues. “In the absence of physical freedom, spirituals have traditionally been music whose sound and physical performance allow its participants to feel transcendental freedom in the moment. That’s what this record did for me.” Meanwhile, the social justice protests of 2020 were unfolding. “I’d never written lyrics faster in my life. After having total writer’s block, they started pouring out,” she says.
Since her last full-length release, Santigold has also engaged new ways to express and release her ideas, allowing her greater range to be even truer to her creative intentions on her own terms. She created Spirituals as a multisensory experience that includes new ways of sharing her visual art; a forthcoming natural skincare line; a new podcast in which she interviews other artists and visionaries; and a memoir tracing the generations of her family and “what it is to be a Black woman, what progress has been made, and what’s stayed the same.”
“I want to continue branching out into all forms of art,” Santigold says. “And I’m really excited to take my music into new places.”
Show More
Genres:
Dub, Electronic, Electropop, New Wave, Reggae, Hip Hop, Indie, Punk, Afrobeat, Pop
No upcoming shows in your city
Send a request to Santigold to play in your city
Request a Show
concerts and tour dates
Upcoming
Past
all concerts & live streams
Show More Dates (11)
Live Photos of Santigold

View All Photos
Santigold's tour
Fan Reviews

Michelle
June 16th 2025
Per usual she delivers in performance, stage presence, song line up, and crowd work. I always enjoy seeing Santigold! Her music is forever a mood
McKees Rocks, PA@Roxian Theatre

Kristin
June 15th 2025
She is amazing! I have loved her like 15+ years now! The venue is decent too aside that there is like literally no where to sit! I thought that was a little different.
Cleveland, OH@Globe Iron

Kelsey
June 12th 2025
She was so awesome.... she is an absolutely incredible artist. Everything about her show is golden- her voice, the band, those dancers, the visuals, her presence! All. Of. It.
She's top notch.
However, I am profoundly disappointed with whoever is managing the TLA now. I have attended many shows there, and I've always been a big fan of that venue- until last night.
I have never in my life attended a show that was so horribly oversold. It was shameful. I'm not sure when the TLA did their remodel, the last show I attended there was honestly before that- so it's been a while. But from everything I remember--- it was better before. As incredible as she is and as much as I wanted to see her, I debated leaving when I got there. It really was that bad.
Her voice was incredible and she's a consummate professional, but she struggled with the sound the entire time. Signaling what was off at first, but they didn't fix it. She kept going, but they didn't resolve the issues even after she directly addressed it in front of the audience.
She's such a strong vocalist that she sounded amazing the entire time, but it sucks she had to deal with crappy sound all night. They never got it together.
I'll see her again and again if given the opportunity, but I'm so disappointed in what used to be one of my favorite venues. She deserves infinitely better- especially in her hometown.
Santigold- a million stars, TLA- the musicians and attendees deserve better. I'm going to think twice before attending another show there- and that sucks.
Philadelphia, PA@Theatre of Living Arts
View More Fan Reviews
About Santigold
Santigold’s albums are entire worlds meticulously built, brick by brick, by a master architect who incisively speaks to the present while shaping the future. Her fourth album Spirituals captures the feeling of surviving in the modern world while elevating yourself to new places. Mostly recorded in the 2020 lockdown, Santigold struggled but succeeded in defining a space in which she could center herself and collaborate virtually with producers and contributors including Rostam, Nick Zinner, SBTRKT, JakeOne, Illangelo, Doc McKinney and Carlo Montagnese.
“I loved the idea of calling it Spirituals because it touched on the idea of Negro spirituals, which were songs that served the purpose of getting Black people through the un-get-throughable,” she continues. “In the absence of physical freedom, spirituals have traditionally been music whose sound and physical performance allow its participants to feel transcendental freedom in the moment. That’s what this record did for me.” Meanwhile, the social justice protests of 2020 were unfolding. “I’d never written lyrics faster in my life. After having total writer’s block, they started pouring out,” she says.
Since her last full-length release, Santigold has also engaged new ways to express and release her ideas, allowing her greater range to be even truer to her creative intentions on her own terms. She created Spirituals as a multisensory experience that includes new ways of sharing her visual art; a forthcoming natural skincare line; a new podcast in which she interviews other artists and visionaries; and a memoir tracing the generations of her family and “what it is to be a Black woman, what progress has been made, and what’s stayed the same.”
“I want to continue branching out into all forms of art,” Santigold says. “And I’m really excited to take my music into new places.”
“I loved the idea of calling it Spirituals because it touched on the idea of Negro spirituals, which were songs that served the purpose of getting Black people through the un-get-throughable,” she continues. “In the absence of physical freedom, spirituals have traditionally been music whose sound and physical performance allow its participants to feel transcendental freedom in the moment. That’s what this record did for me.” Meanwhile, the social justice protests of 2020 were unfolding. “I’d never written lyrics faster in my life. After having total writer’s block, they started pouring out,” she says.
Since her last full-length release, Santigold has also engaged new ways to express and release her ideas, allowing her greater range to be even truer to her creative intentions on her own terms. She created Spirituals as a multisensory experience that includes new ways of sharing her visual art; a forthcoming natural skincare line; a new podcast in which she interviews other artists and visionaries; and a memoir tracing the generations of her family and “what it is to be a Black woman, what progress has been made, and what’s stayed the same.”
“I want to continue branching out into all forms of art,” Santigold says. “And I’m really excited to take my music into new places.”
Show More
Genres:
Dub, Electronic, Electropop, New Wave, Reggae, Hip Hop, Indie, Punk, Afrobeat, Pop
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