
Raye Zaragoza
Sparkfest (Ignite: Featuring Raye Zaragoza)
Amphibian Stage
120 S Main St
Fort Worth, TX 76104
Jun 13, 2025
7:30 PM CDT
I Was There
Leave a Review

About this concert
Kick off SparkFest with a joyful night of art, music, and community! Enjoy a blessing from local elder Leslie Thunderhawk, the unveiling of a new mural by Gregg Deal, and finally brace for a powerhouse concert from singer-songwriter Raye Zaragoza.
Show More
Find a place to stay
Official Merch

Hold That Spirit CD
$15.00 USD

Hold That Spirit Vinyl
$35.00 USD

Woman In Color CD
$15.00 USD

Woman in Color Vinyl
$30.00 USD

Fight For You CD
$15.00 USD

Live At Rockwood Music Hall EP CD
$8.00 USD
What fans are saying

Kristin
July 7th 2025
The festival seemed very well organized and the performers were great! The length of the festival should have been much more clearly indicated on the promotional pieces.
King of Prussia, PA@Heuser Park
Easily follow your favorite artists by syncing your music
Sync Music

Share Event
Raye Zaragoza Biography
Raye Zaragoza is a galvanizing presence, a self-assured artist making music to fight for, represent, and celebrate those left too long outside the spotlight. Known for tenacious feminist anthems and fearless protest folk, her stage presence teems with determined morale. However, Zaragoza was not always the fortified woman of color who takes the stage today.
As a Japanese-American, Mexican, Indigenous woman, Zaragoza spent much of her early life trying to assimilate with the world around her, to meet punishing standards of beauty synonymous with just one color of skin—and not her own. Raye confesses, “I truly thought that in order to be beautiful, you had to be white.” She has come a long way from that youthful pain, proclaiming “I am proud to be a multicultural brown woman with insecurities and a vibrant intersectional identity that I continue to grapple with. I hope young girls of today will know that the It Girl is whatever the hell they want to be.”
This rightful confidence radiates across Woman in Color, Zaragoza’s sophomore album out now on Rebel River Records, her own independent label. The album delivers powerful missives about embracing one’s own identity and discovering the power behind it, all across brisk, emotive, compelling folk melodies. Once deemed “one of the most politically relevant artists in her genre” by Paste Magazine, Raye Zaragoza now offers an intimate exploration of coming into her own, in a country where for many, simply existing is political.
Read MoreAs a Japanese-American, Mexican, Indigenous woman, Zaragoza spent much of her early life trying to assimilate with the world around her, to meet punishing standards of beauty synonymous with just one color of skin—and not her own. Raye confesses, “I truly thought that in order to be beautiful, you had to be white.” She has come a long way from that youthful pain, proclaiming “I am proud to be a multicultural brown woman with insecurities and a vibrant intersectional identity that I continue to grapple with. I hope young girls of today will know that the It Girl is whatever the hell they want to be.”
This rightful confidence radiates across Woman in Color, Zaragoza’s sophomore album out now on Rebel River Records, her own independent label. The album delivers powerful missives about embracing one’s own identity and discovering the power behind it, all across brisk, emotive, compelling folk melodies. Once deemed “one of the most politically relevant artists in her genre” by Paste Magazine, Raye Zaragoza now offers an intimate exploration of coming into her own, in a country where for many, simply existing is political.
Folk Rock
Follow artist
Contribute
Help Raye Zaragoza keep making the music you love.
Support