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Sydney Sprague
5,469 Followers
• 25 Upcoming Shows
25 Upcoming Shows
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Sydney Sprague's tour
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Fan Reviews

mckayla
January 17th 2025
Sydney Sprague was amazing! Such a great performance, amazing stage presence, and wow what a voice! Loved seeing Sydney at the Burl and hope to have her and her incredible band back in town soon!!
Lexington, KY@The Burl
View More Fan Reviews
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About Sydney Sprague
SYDNEY SPRAGUE channels her sadness, anxiety, and existential dread through
driving guitars, shimmering melodies, and the deceptively sweet weapons of indie
pop-rock and keen observation.
Self-aware with a knowing injection of dark humor, her songs summon the best of 90s alt-
rock and classic power-pop without sacrificing a melancholy befitting of the end
times.
The Phoenix, Arizona singer/songwriter sharpened her creative voice across two radiant albums. Her sophomore record, somebody in hell loves you, is as devilishly saccharine as the title implies, boldly accessible and smart.
Take, for example, the summertime glimmer of the punchy “overkill” or the inescapable hook of the ode-to-
dreaming that is “smiley face.” There’s an audible recreation of panic in the escalating loudness of “terrible places.”
An ocean of clever nuance powers “god damn it, jane.” The diverse extremes anchoring somebody in hell
loves you are both fresh and familiar, like the most timeless of indie rock.
Sprague, once described as “the punk rock Kacey Musgraves,” first fell in love with the unapologetic guitar
-fueled pop of Avril Lavigne and Kelly Clarkson. Bands like All-American Rejects and Fall Out Boy followed. She next immersed herself in The National, and Death Cab For Cutie.
Refinery 29, UPROXX, Rock Sound, NPR, Guitar World, and American Songwriter were among the tastemaker outlets who lavished praise upon her 2021 debut, maybei will see you at the end of the world.
“Unfiltered lyrics meet ‘sad’ and ‘anxious’ sounding music,” Kerrang! observed. “[But] this record isn’t a
doom-laden diatribe; there’s an underlying tongue-in-cheek humor bubbling through.”
The candid, authentic emotions on maybe i will see you at the end of the world and somebody in hell loves you
are keys to her relatability. A grownup emo kid who loves pop-punk, indie rock, hooky radio hits, and everything between, Sydney shares the same struggles as her crowd. It’s a connection forged further on the road, like her tour
with Jimmy Eat World and Dashboard Confessional. Music helps Sydney Sprague get through it all, and her hope is thather songs will help folks to do the same.
driving guitars, shimmering melodies, and the deceptively sweet weapons of indie
pop-rock and keen observation.
Self-aware with a knowing injection of dark humor, her songs summon the best of 90s alt-
rock and classic power-pop without sacrificing a melancholy befitting of the end
times.
The Phoenix, Arizona singer/songwriter sharpened her creative voice across two radiant albums. Her sophomore record, somebody in hell loves you, is as devilishly saccharine as the title implies, boldly accessible and smart.
Take, for example, the summertime glimmer of the punchy “overkill” or the inescapable hook of the ode-to-
dreaming that is “smiley face.” There’s an audible recreation of panic in the escalating loudness of “terrible places.”
An ocean of clever nuance powers “god damn it, jane.” The diverse extremes anchoring somebody in hell
loves you are both fresh and familiar, like the most timeless of indie rock.
Sprague, once described as “the punk rock Kacey Musgraves,” first fell in love with the unapologetic guitar
-fueled pop of Avril Lavigne and Kelly Clarkson. Bands like All-American Rejects and Fall Out Boy followed. She next immersed herself in The National, and Death Cab For Cutie.
Refinery 29, UPROXX, Rock Sound, NPR, Guitar World, and American Songwriter were among the tastemaker outlets who lavished praise upon her 2021 debut, maybei will see you at the end of the world.
“Unfiltered lyrics meet ‘sad’ and ‘anxious’ sounding music,” Kerrang! observed. “[But] this record isn’t a
doom-laden diatribe; there’s an underlying tongue-in-cheek humor bubbling through.”
The candid, authentic emotions on maybe i will see you at the end of the world and somebody in hell loves you
are keys to her relatability. A grownup emo kid who loves pop-punk, indie rock, hooky radio hits, and everything between, Sydney shares the same struggles as her crowd. It’s a connection forged further on the road, like her tour
with Jimmy Eat World and Dashboard Confessional. Music helps Sydney Sprague get through it all, and her hope is thather songs will help folks to do the same.
Show More
Genres:
Alternative, Indie Pop, Pop Rock
Hometown:
Phoenix, Arizona
No upcoming shows in your city
Send a request to Sydney Sprague to play in your city
Request a Show
concerts and tour dates
Upcoming
Past
all concerts & live streams
Show More Dates (25)
Live Photos of Sydney Sprague
View All Photos
Sydney Sprague's tour
Fan Reviews

mckayla
January 17th 2025
Sydney Sprague was amazing! Such a great performance, amazing stage presence, and wow what a voice! Loved seeing Sydney at the Burl and hope to have her and her incredible band back in town soon!!
Lexington, KY@The Burl
View More Fan Reviews
About Sydney Sprague
SYDNEY SPRAGUE channels her sadness, anxiety, and existential dread through
driving guitars, shimmering melodies, and the deceptively sweet weapons of indie
pop-rock and keen observation.
Self-aware with a knowing injection of dark humor, her songs summon the best of 90s alt-
rock and classic power-pop without sacrificing a melancholy befitting of the end
times.
The Phoenix, Arizona singer/songwriter sharpened her creative voice across two radiant albums. Her sophomore record, somebody in hell loves you, is as devilishly saccharine as the title implies, boldly accessible and smart.
Take, for example, the summertime glimmer of the punchy “overkill” or the inescapable hook of the ode-to-
dreaming that is “smiley face.” There’s an audible recreation of panic in the escalating loudness of “terrible places.”
An ocean of clever nuance powers “god damn it, jane.” The diverse extremes anchoring somebody in hell
loves you are both fresh and familiar, like the most timeless of indie rock.
Sprague, once described as “the punk rock Kacey Musgraves,” first fell in love with the unapologetic guitar
-fueled pop of Avril Lavigne and Kelly Clarkson. Bands like All-American Rejects and Fall Out Boy followed. She next immersed herself in The National, and Death Cab For Cutie.
Refinery 29, UPROXX, Rock Sound, NPR, Guitar World, and American Songwriter were among the tastemaker outlets who lavished praise upon her 2021 debut, maybei will see you at the end of the world.
“Unfiltered lyrics meet ‘sad’ and ‘anxious’ sounding music,” Kerrang! observed. “[But] this record isn’t a
doom-laden diatribe; there’s an underlying tongue-in-cheek humor bubbling through.”
The candid, authentic emotions on maybe i will see you at the end of the world and somebody in hell loves you
are keys to her relatability. A grownup emo kid who loves pop-punk, indie rock, hooky radio hits, and everything between, Sydney shares the same struggles as her crowd. It’s a connection forged further on the road, like her tour
with Jimmy Eat World and Dashboard Confessional. Music helps Sydney Sprague get through it all, and her hope is thather songs will help folks to do the same.
driving guitars, shimmering melodies, and the deceptively sweet weapons of indie
pop-rock and keen observation.
Self-aware with a knowing injection of dark humor, her songs summon the best of 90s alt-
rock and classic power-pop without sacrificing a melancholy befitting of the end
times.
The Phoenix, Arizona singer/songwriter sharpened her creative voice across two radiant albums. Her sophomore record, somebody in hell loves you, is as devilishly saccharine as the title implies, boldly accessible and smart.
Take, for example, the summertime glimmer of the punchy “overkill” or the inescapable hook of the ode-to-
dreaming that is “smiley face.” There’s an audible recreation of panic in the escalating loudness of “terrible places.”
An ocean of clever nuance powers “god damn it, jane.” The diverse extremes anchoring somebody in hell
loves you are both fresh and familiar, like the most timeless of indie rock.
Sprague, once described as “the punk rock Kacey Musgraves,” first fell in love with the unapologetic guitar
-fueled pop of Avril Lavigne and Kelly Clarkson. Bands like All-American Rejects and Fall Out Boy followed. She next immersed herself in The National, and Death Cab For Cutie.
Refinery 29, UPROXX, Rock Sound, NPR, Guitar World, and American Songwriter were among the tastemaker outlets who lavished praise upon her 2021 debut, maybei will see you at the end of the world.
“Unfiltered lyrics meet ‘sad’ and ‘anxious’ sounding music,” Kerrang! observed. “[But] this record isn’t a
doom-laden diatribe; there’s an underlying tongue-in-cheek humor bubbling through.”
The candid, authentic emotions on maybe i will see you at the end of the world and somebody in hell loves you
are keys to her relatability. A grownup emo kid who loves pop-punk, indie rock, hooky radio hits, and everything between, Sydney shares the same struggles as her crowd. It’s a connection forged further on the road, like her tour
with Jimmy Eat World and Dashboard Confessional. Music helps Sydney Sprague get through it all, and her hope is thather songs will help folks to do the same.
Show More
Genres:
Alternative, Indie Pop, Pop Rock
Hometown:
Phoenix, Arizona
Fans Also Follow
Dashboard…
625K Followers
Follow
Momma
27K Followers
Follow
Oso Oso
50K Followers
Follow
Mom Jeans.
179K Followers
Follow
Pool Kids
15K Followers
Follow
Lucy Dacus
258K Followers
Follow
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