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Alabama Shakes in Miami

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Alabama Shakes
Sunset Cove Amphitheater — Boca Raton, FL

Alabama Shakes are a four-piece from Athens, Alabama that somehow managed to make soul music feel urgent and unfinished in the best way possible. Brittany Howard's voice is the thing that stops you mid-conversation—it's got this raw, searching quality that sounds like it's being pulled from somewhere deep. The band broke through around 2012 with Boys & Girls, an album that felt genuinely different in a landscape of carefully calibrated indie rock. Hold On became their crossover moment, a song so fundamentally right that it still sounds fresh. Their follow-up Sound & Color showed real growth, with Howard's voice getting stranger and more confident at once. What makes them matter is that they never sound like they're performing soul music so much as living in it. There's always something slightly off-balance about their arrangements, a willingness to let songs breathe unevenly. They've never chased trends or tried to be cooler than they are. Just four people from Alabama making music that feels true.

They command a room with zero showmanship. Howard stands still mostly, lets her voice do the talking while the band locks into grooves that get tighter as the set goes on. Crowds quiet down to listen. When they hit the big ones, people lose it quietly—no screaming, just this palpable relief.

Known for Hold On, Don't Wanna Fight, Sound & Color, Girls in Alabama, Be Mine

Alabama Shakes brought their blue-collar soul to The Fillmore Miami Beach back in December 2013, digging deep into their catalog with cuts like 'Heat Lightning' and the grooving 'Makin' Me Itch' alongside crowd favorites. Brittany Howard's voice filled that old theater with the kind of raw power that doesn't need much else—just a good band and a song that hits. They closed out the night with 'You Ain't Alone,' which felt earned after spending two hours making their case for being one of the most vital acts of their generation.

Miami's relationship with soul and rock has always been complicated—the city's known for bass-heavy electronic sounds and Latin rhythms, not exactly the gospel-touched rock Alabama Shakes dealt in. But that's exactly why their December 2013 show mattered. Brittany Howard's voice, rooted in Alabama church music and real emotional weight, offered something different from what Miami's clubs usually pushed. The Fillmore crowd that night represented the city's smaller but dedicated audience for guitar-driven soul music, the people who wanted their rock to have grit and their soul to have punch.

Stay in Wynwood if you want walkable energy—the neighborhood's shifted from pure arts district into something with real restaurants and bars. Hit up Juvia for dinner: it's the kind of place that doesn't feel like it's trying too hard, with actual good food across Latin, Asian, and Peruvian influences. Spend the day at Vizcaya Museum before the show—the grounds are genuinely beautiful and give you that old Miami feeling without the tourist trap vibe. Then catch the show and actually enjoy the city instead of just passing through it.

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