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Matthew E. White Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts
Matthew E. White Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts

Matthew E. WhiteVerified

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No upcoming shows
Send a request to Matthew E. White to play in your city
Request a Show

Matthew E. White merchamazonview store

K Bay
$27.99
Broken Mirror: A Selfie Reflection
$14.98
Gentlewoman, Ruby Man
$19.98
Cool Out RSD Exclusive
$2.85
Fresh Blood
$28.86
Big Inner
$22.99
View All

Concerts and tour dates

Past

MAR
29
2022
Brighton, United Kingdom
Komedia
I Was There
MAR
28
2022
Birmingham, United Kingdom
Hare & Hounds
I Was There
MAR
27
2022
Manchester, United Kingdom
Band on the Wall
I Was There
MAR
26
2022
Glasgow, United Kingdom
Drygate Brewing Co
I Was There
MAR
25
2022
Leeds, United Kingdom
Brudenell Social Club
I Was There
MAR
23
2022
Bristol, United Kingdom
The Fleece
I Was There
MAR
22
2022
London, United Kingdom
Islington Assembly Hall
I Was There
JAN
28
2022
Allston, MA
Brighton Music Hall
I Was There
JAN
25
2022
Toronto, Canada
The Drake Hotel
I Was There
JAN
20
2022
Washington, DC
Union Stage
I Was There
JAN
16
2022
Morgantown, WV
Mountain Stage Radio Show
I Was There
NOV
20
2021
Maspeth, NY
Knockdown Center
I Was There
AUG
26
2021
Richmond, VA
Virginia Credit Union LIVE! at Richmond Raceway
I Was There
NOV
05
2017
Cork, Ireland
Cyprus Avenue
I Was There
NOV
04
2017
Limerick, Ireland
Dolans Upstairs
I Was There
NOV
03
2017
Galway, Ireland
Roisin Dubh
I Was There
NOV
02
2017
Dun Laoghaire, Ireland
Pavilion Theatre
I Was There
NOV
01
2017
Oxford, United Kingdom
Bullingdon Arms
I Was There
OCT
31
2017
Brighton, United Kingdom
Haunt
I Was There
OCT
30
2017
Ramsgate, United Kingdom
Music Hall
I Was There
OCT
29
2017
Bath, United Kingdom
Komedia
I Was There
OCT
28
2017
Southampton, United Kingdom
Joiners
I Was There
OCT
27
2017
Falmouth, United Kingdom
Arts Centre
I Was There
OCT
25
2017
Cardiff, United Kingdom
Club Ifor Bach
I Was There
OCT
24
2017
Royal Leamington Spa, United Kingdom
Zephyr Lounge
I Was There
OCT
23
2017
Leicester, United Kingdom
Musician
I Was There
OCT
22
2017
Kendal, United Kingdom
Brewery Art Centre
I Was There
OCT
21
2017
Newcastle, United Kingdom
Think Tank
I Was There
OCT
20
2017
York, United Kingdom
Crescent
I Was There
OCT
19
2017
Hebden Bridge, United Kingdom
Trades Club
I Was There
OCT
18
2017
Wolverhampton, United Kingdom
Newhampton Arts Centre
I Was There
OCT
17
2017
Reading, United Kingdom
South Street
I Was There
OCT
06
2017
London, United Kingdom
Barbican Hall
I Was There
SEP
23
2017
Richmond, VA
Carpenter Theater
I Was There
FEB
15
2017
Paris, France
La Maroquinerie
I Was There
FEB
13
2017
London, United Kingdom
Union Chapel
I Was There
FEB
09
2017
Brooklyn, NY
Baby's All Right
I Was There
FEB
07
2017
Richmond, VA
The Broadberry
I Was There
AUG
13
2016
Raleigh, NC
Stephenson Amphitheatre & Rose Garden at Raleigh Little Theatre
I Was There
MAY
28
2016
Suffolk, VA
OConnor Brewing Company
I Was There
FEB
06
2016
Albertslund, Denmark
Forbrændingen
I Was There
JAN
30
2016
London, United Kingdom
The Roundhouse
I Was There
JAN
29
2016
Cambridge, United Kingdom
Cambridge Junction J2
I Was There
JAN
28
2016
Southsea, United Kingdom
Wedgewood Rooms
I Was There
JAN
27
2016
Coventry, United Kingdom
Warwick Arts Centre
I Was There
JAN
26
2016
Sheffield, United Kingdom
The Plug
I Was There
JAN
25
2016
Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Electric Circus
I Was There
JAN
23
2016
Glasgow, United Kingdom
Royal Concert Hall
I Was There
JAN
22
2016
Belfast, Ireland
Voodoo
I Was There
JAN
21
2016
Dublin, Ireland
Button Factory
I Was There
Show More Dates

Fan Reviews

Tom
November 28th 2015
Fabulous, Mr White was silky smooth and full of soul.
Glasgow, United Kingdom@
Royal Concert Hall

About Matthew E. White

On Dec. 24, 2013, Matthew E. White could not fall asleep in his childhood bedroom. The Richmond singer, bandleader and modern soul visionary had returned to his parents’ home in Virginia Beach for the holidays. During the previous 18 months, he’d toured Europe and America extensively, played Primavera and Glastonbury, performed at The Hollywood Bowl and the Sydney Opera House, and even staged a live rendition of his surprise-hit debut, 'Big Inner,' with a band of 30 members. 'Big Inner' earned five stars in The Guardian and a spot on its year-end list, plus those of Pitchfork, eMusic and Consequence of Sound. But White hadn’t rested or seen his family very much. At last, he was excited to do both.

The insomnia, though, didn’t stem from childlike anticipation of early-morning presents. Actually, White hurt too much to sleep. Not long after he arrived in Virginia Beach, he developed a sudden case of shingles, the stresses of the last year-and-a-half rendering themselves in painful physical form. So while his parents visited his grandmother and his sister celebrated with her own family just a few blocks away, White spent Christmas Eve alone in his childhood double bed.

But that was OK, as the break gave him the chance to consider the bizarre turns his life had taken—that is, how he went from making a solo record by accident to embracing a solo career so busy it had made him sick.

“For the first time, I remember thinking, ‘What just happened?’” he says, laughing long after the shingles have passed. “I thought about all the places I went, the people I played to, the people who cared about my record and felt moved by it. That was the craziest year of my life by miles and miles—and the hardest and the most exciting, too.”

To backtrack, briefly: In 2009, White and a cadre of friends developed the idea of Spacebomb Records, an old-fashioned label and production house meant to turn the tunes of songwriters they liked into grandiose, graceful statements. They had in-house strings and horns and a choir at their behest, too. Collectively, the musicians possessed a wide, working knowledge that could pivot from the gusto of New Orleans to the verve of Detroit, from tube-amp rock to hi-fi pop. Sure, people like to talk about White’s past with jazz or his love of classic American songcraft. It’s telling, however, that as a high school student, he interned at Master Sound, the hometown studio that Pharrell Williams eventually turned into the epicenter of his empire.

To demonstrate the Spacebomb ideal, White and his wide cast recorded a few songs he’d pieced together, hoping mostly to show other songwriters how the system would work. But those cuts became Big Inner, the record that Uncut termed “one of the great albums of modern Americana” and caused Paste to proclaim that White was one of music’s “best new bands.” Tours, interviews, photo shoots and, well, the shingles followed.

While White spent Christmas Eve considering what had happened, he already knew what was going to happen next: When the holidays ended, he would begin turning the bits and bobs of song ideas he’d collected on tour into his second album, bolstered by the validation of welcome he’d found in the wider world.

If the first album had been serendipity, every step of this one was to be deliberate, from his co-writing sessions with longtime friend and former bandmate Andy Jenkins to his steady arrangement brainstorms with the trusted Spacebomb house band—bassist Cameron Ralston, drummer Pinson Chanselle and guitarist Trey Pollard, who co-produced the subsequent recording sessions with White. There were timelines and deadlines, detailed discussions about who would mix the music (New York staple Patrick Dillett) and the many stories the songs would share. The result is the audacious, confident and masterful Fresh Blood, a record that feels like the brilliant bloom to Big Inner’s striking bud.

Fresh Blood is a bracing, beguiling record and a bold advance for White. Opener “Take Care My Baby” is his step-into-the-light moment, a sophisticated but instantly winning soul number where love becomes a panacea for woe. That enthusiasm crosses over for “Fruit Trees,” a smiling, seductive number where White—his voice traced and teased by horns, strings and harmonies—begs for a paramour to “let me sleep in your tent tonight.”

Sometimes these situations don’t go well, though, which White confesses during “Feeling Good is Good Enough.” It’s a breakup song in ecstatic pursuit of temporary carnal relief. And while it’s got nothing to do with love, lust or leaving, the sassy “Rock & Roll is Cold” radiates the aplomb of an artist who has stumbled into success and taken charge of the circumstances. White’s having fun, trading lines with backup singers and saxophones alike, teasing components of the gospel, soul and rock form that shape the very backbone of the music he makes. This is White’s party, and he’s a most welcoming host.

That same spirit presides during the set of more solemn and pointed songs that serve as Fresh Blood’s core. For White, one lesson of Big Inner and the tours that followed was that he wanted to be able to believe in his songs every night, to know that the words he sang were more than vehicles for memorable melodies.

“I didn’t like singing ‘Steady Pace’ every night. It was too light. It didn’t age well for me,” he says. “My peers and I sometimes have a lack of concern and awareness for the world around us—culturally, politically, socially. We are in danger of being lulled to sleep by our culture’s excess. I’m not writing political songs yet, but I’ve tried to at least write songs that have to do with the variety and reality of our lives."

And so, at the record’s center, White delivers a trilogy of beautiful reflections on the world as he sees it. An agitated but elegant excoriation of sexual abuse in the church, “Holy Moly” rages like a missing midpoint between Neil Young’s Harvest and Tonight’s the Night. “Tranquility” meditates on the death of Philip Seymour Hoffman, a consummate artist whose dual force and frailty has long resonated with White.

And in “Circle ’Round The Sun,” a look at the suicide of a dear friend’s mother, White finds one of the most exquisite moments of balance in his entire career. It is a love song written from the perspective of the recently departed, calmly exploring a tumult of conflicting loyalties—to Jesus, to family, to life, to death.

“Wading in the water, Lord, keep my son and daughter,” White sings, at once gentle and resolved over steady and soft piano and drums. “Put your arms around me, Jesus, tonight.”

At the risk of heresy, Fresh Blood feels as comfortable and fraught as those lines and that song. Simultaneously recognizing the trouble and delight that life can bring, these 10 numbers are guides for times of joy, agony and the middle distance where we most often linger. After only two albums, Matthew E. White feels now like an old friend who has seen what we’ve seen, heard our stories and done his best to make a record that gives them necessary gravity. That way, when we lay awake at night considering our own pain or worry, we’ve got new anthems to keep us company.

Domino will release Fresh Blood worldwide on CD, LP and digitally March 15, 2015.
Show More
Genres:
Singer, Folk, Songwriter

No upcoming shows
Send a request to Matthew E. White to play in your city
Request a Show

Matthew E. White merchamazonview store

K Bay
$27.99
Broken Mirror: A Selfie Reflection
$14.98
Gentlewoman, Ruby Man
$19.98
Cool Out RSD Exclusive
$2.85
Fresh Blood
$28.86
Big Inner
$22.99
View All

Concerts and tour dates

Past

MAR
29
2022
Brighton, United Kingdom
Komedia
I Was There
MAR
28
2022
Birmingham, United Kingdom
Hare & Hounds
I Was There
MAR
27
2022
Manchester, United Kingdom
Band on the Wall
I Was There
MAR
26
2022
Glasgow, United Kingdom
Drygate Brewing Co
I Was There
MAR
25
2022
Leeds, United Kingdom
Brudenell Social Club
I Was There
MAR
23
2022
Bristol, United Kingdom
The Fleece
I Was There
MAR
22
2022
London, United Kingdom
Islington Assembly Hall
I Was There
JAN
28
2022
Allston, MA
Brighton Music Hall
I Was There
JAN
25
2022
Toronto, Canada
The Drake Hotel
I Was There
JAN
20
2022
Washington, DC
Union Stage
I Was There
JAN
16
2022
Morgantown, WV
Mountain Stage Radio Show
I Was There
NOV
20
2021
Maspeth, NY
Knockdown Center
I Was There
AUG
26
2021
Richmond, VA
Virginia Credit Union LIVE! at Richmond Raceway
I Was There
NOV
05
2017
Cork, Ireland
Cyprus Avenue
I Was There
NOV
04
2017
Limerick, Ireland
Dolans Upstairs
I Was There
NOV
03
2017
Galway, Ireland
Roisin Dubh
I Was There
NOV
02
2017
Dun Laoghaire, Ireland
Pavilion Theatre
I Was There
NOV
01
2017
Oxford, United Kingdom
Bullingdon Arms
I Was There
OCT
31
2017
Brighton, United Kingdom
Haunt
I Was There
OCT
30
2017
Ramsgate, United Kingdom
Music Hall
I Was There
OCT
29
2017
Bath, United Kingdom
Komedia
I Was There
OCT
28
2017
Southampton, United Kingdom
Joiners
I Was There
OCT
27
2017
Falmouth, United Kingdom
Arts Centre
I Was There
OCT
25
2017
Cardiff, United Kingdom
Club Ifor Bach
I Was There
OCT
24
2017
Royal Leamington Spa, United Kingdom
Zephyr Lounge
I Was There
OCT
23
2017
Leicester, United Kingdom
Musician
I Was There
OCT
22
2017
Kendal, United Kingdom
Brewery Art Centre
I Was There
OCT
21
2017
Newcastle, United Kingdom
Think Tank
I Was There
OCT
20
2017
York, United Kingdom
Crescent
I Was There
OCT
19
2017
Hebden Bridge, United Kingdom
Trades Club
I Was There
OCT
18
2017
Wolverhampton, United Kingdom
Newhampton Arts Centre
I Was There
OCT
17
2017
Reading, United Kingdom
South Street
I Was There
OCT
06
2017
London, United Kingdom
Barbican Hall
I Was There
SEP
23
2017
Richmond, VA
Carpenter Theater
I Was There
FEB
15
2017
Paris, France
La Maroquinerie
I Was There
FEB
13
2017
London, United Kingdom
Union Chapel
I Was There
FEB
09
2017
Brooklyn, NY
Baby's All Right
I Was There
FEB
07
2017
Richmond, VA
The Broadberry
I Was There
AUG
13
2016
Raleigh, NC
Stephenson Amphitheatre & Rose Garden at Raleigh Little Theatre
I Was There
MAY
28
2016
Suffolk, VA
OConnor Brewing Company
I Was There
FEB
06
2016
Albertslund, Denmark
Forbrændingen
I Was There
JAN
30
2016
London, United Kingdom
The Roundhouse
I Was There
JAN
29
2016
Cambridge, United Kingdom
Cambridge Junction J2
I Was There
JAN
28
2016
Southsea, United Kingdom
Wedgewood Rooms
I Was There
JAN
27
2016
Coventry, United Kingdom
Warwick Arts Centre
I Was There
JAN
26
2016
Sheffield, United Kingdom
The Plug
I Was There
JAN
25
2016
Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Electric Circus
I Was There
JAN
23
2016
Glasgow, United Kingdom
Royal Concert Hall
I Was There
JAN
22
2016
Belfast, Ireland
Voodoo
I Was There
JAN
21
2016
Dublin, Ireland
Button Factory
I Was There
Show More Dates

Fan Reviews

Tom
November 28th 2015
Fabulous, Mr White was silky smooth and full of soul.
Glasgow, United Kingdom@
Royal Concert Hall

About Matthew E. White

On Dec. 24, 2013, Matthew E. White could not fall asleep in his childhood bedroom. The Richmond singer, bandleader and modern soul visionary had returned to his parents’ home in Virginia Beach for the holidays. During the previous 18 months, he’d toured Europe and America extensively, played Primavera and Glastonbury, performed at The Hollywood Bowl and the Sydney Opera House, and even staged a live rendition of his surprise-hit debut, 'Big Inner,' with a band of 30 members. 'Big Inner' earned five stars in The Guardian and a spot on its year-end list, plus those of Pitchfork, eMusic and Consequence of Sound. But White hadn’t rested or seen his family very much. At last, he was excited to do both.

The insomnia, though, didn’t stem from childlike anticipation of early-morning presents. Actually, White hurt too much to sleep. Not long after he arrived in Virginia Beach, he developed a sudden case of shingles, the stresses of the last year-and-a-half rendering themselves in painful physical form. So while his parents visited his grandmother and his sister celebrated with her own family just a few blocks away, White spent Christmas Eve alone in his childhood double bed.

But that was OK, as the break gave him the chance to consider the bizarre turns his life had taken—that is, how he went from making a solo record by accident to embracing a solo career so busy it had made him sick.

“For the first time, I remember thinking, ‘What just happened?’” he says, laughing long after the shingles have passed. “I thought about all the places I went, the people I played to, the people who cared about my record and felt moved by it. That was the craziest year of my life by miles and miles—and the hardest and the most exciting, too.”

To backtrack, briefly: In 2009, White and a cadre of friends developed the idea of Spacebomb Records, an old-fashioned label and production house meant to turn the tunes of songwriters they liked into grandiose, graceful statements. They had in-house strings and horns and a choir at their behest, too. Collectively, the musicians possessed a wide, working knowledge that could pivot from the gusto of New Orleans to the verve of Detroit, from tube-amp rock to hi-fi pop. Sure, people like to talk about White’s past with jazz or his love of classic American songcraft. It’s telling, however, that as a high school student, he interned at Master Sound, the hometown studio that Pharrell Williams eventually turned into the epicenter of his empire.

To demonstrate the Spacebomb ideal, White and his wide cast recorded a few songs he’d pieced together, hoping mostly to show other songwriters how the system would work. But those cuts became Big Inner, the record that Uncut termed “one of the great albums of modern Americana” and caused Paste to proclaim that White was one of music’s “best new bands.” Tours, interviews, photo shoots and, well, the shingles followed.

While White spent Christmas Eve considering what had happened, he already knew what was going to happen next: When the holidays ended, he would begin turning the bits and bobs of song ideas he’d collected on tour into his second album, bolstered by the validation of welcome he’d found in the wider world.

If the first album had been serendipity, every step of this one was to be deliberate, from his co-writing sessions with longtime friend and former bandmate Andy Jenkins to his steady arrangement brainstorms with the trusted Spacebomb house band—bassist Cameron Ralston, drummer Pinson Chanselle and guitarist Trey Pollard, who co-produced the subsequent recording sessions with White. There were timelines and deadlines, detailed discussions about who would mix the music (New York staple Patrick Dillett) and the many stories the songs would share. The result is the audacious, confident and masterful Fresh Blood, a record that feels like the brilliant bloom to Big Inner’s striking bud.

Fresh Blood is a bracing, beguiling record and a bold advance for White. Opener “Take Care My Baby” is his step-into-the-light moment, a sophisticated but instantly winning soul number where love becomes a panacea for woe. That enthusiasm crosses over for “Fruit Trees,” a smiling, seductive number where White—his voice traced and teased by horns, strings and harmonies—begs for a paramour to “let me sleep in your tent tonight.”

Sometimes these situations don’t go well, though, which White confesses during “Feeling Good is Good Enough.” It’s a breakup song in ecstatic pursuit of temporary carnal relief. And while it’s got nothing to do with love, lust or leaving, the sassy “Rock & Roll is Cold” radiates the aplomb of an artist who has stumbled into success and taken charge of the circumstances. White’s having fun, trading lines with backup singers and saxophones alike, teasing components of the gospel, soul and rock form that shape the very backbone of the music he makes. This is White’s party, and he’s a most welcoming host.

That same spirit presides during the set of more solemn and pointed songs that serve as Fresh Blood’s core. For White, one lesson of Big Inner and the tours that followed was that he wanted to be able to believe in his songs every night, to know that the words he sang were more than vehicles for memorable melodies.

“I didn’t like singing ‘Steady Pace’ every night. It was too light. It didn’t age well for me,” he says. “My peers and I sometimes have a lack of concern and awareness for the world around us—culturally, politically, socially. We are in danger of being lulled to sleep by our culture’s excess. I’m not writing political songs yet, but I’ve tried to at least write songs that have to do with the variety and reality of our lives."

And so, at the record’s center, White delivers a trilogy of beautiful reflections on the world as he sees it. An agitated but elegant excoriation of sexual abuse in the church, “Holy Moly” rages like a missing midpoint between Neil Young’s Harvest and Tonight’s the Night. “Tranquility” meditates on the death of Philip Seymour Hoffman, a consummate artist whose dual force and frailty has long resonated with White.

And in “Circle ’Round The Sun,” a look at the suicide of a dear friend’s mother, White finds one of the most exquisite moments of balance in his entire career. It is a love song written from the perspective of the recently departed, calmly exploring a tumult of conflicting loyalties—to Jesus, to family, to life, to death.

“Wading in the water, Lord, keep my son and daughter,” White sings, at once gentle and resolved over steady and soft piano and drums. “Put your arms around me, Jesus, tonight.”

At the risk of heresy, Fresh Blood feels as comfortable and fraught as those lines and that song. Simultaneously recognizing the trouble and delight that life can bring, these 10 numbers are guides for times of joy, agony and the middle distance where we most often linger. After only two albums, Matthew E. White feels now like an old friend who has seen what we’ve seen, heard our stories and done his best to make a record that gives them necessary gravity. That way, when we lay awake at night considering our own pain or worry, we’ve got new anthems to keep us company.

Domino will release Fresh Blood worldwide on CD, LP and digitally March 15, 2015.
Show More
Genres:
Singer, Folk, Songwriter

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