Stop Missing Shows

Alex Warren in Kansas City

412 users on tonedeaf are tracking Alex Warren

Never miss another Alex Warren show near Kansas City.

Alex Warren
T-Mobile Center — Kansas City, MO

Alex Warren is a British singer-songwriter who built a quiet following on YouTube before getting picked up by the streaming algorithm. His songs tend toward lo-fi indie arrangements with introspective lyrics about relationships and self-doubt. 'Roof Racks' became his breakthrough moment — a deceptively simple track about escaping that somehow resonated with millions. What separates Warren from the endless scroll of bedroom producers is a genuine sense of melody and restraint. He doesn't overcomplicate things. Songs like 'Misunderstandings' and 'Tired' prove he's interested in the spaces between notes, the moments where silence says more than another verse could. He's released material through smaller labels and has developed a steady fanbase of people who appreciate earnest songwriting without the production sheen. His work appeals to listeners who've spent too much time alone with their thoughts.

Alex Warren's shows are quiet and focused. Audiences are attentive rather than rowdy. He plays close attention to the setlist and lets songs breathe. The room leans in. People put their phones down. It's the kind of show that feels like an intimate conversation scaled up just slightly.

Known for Roof Racks, Misunderstandings, Tired, Carry, Safety

Alex Warren brought a lean, focused set to The Midland Theatre in May, moving through ten songs with the kind of precision that comes from knowing exactly what you're doing. He dug into deeper material like 'Yard Sale' and 'Bloodline' alongside the more familiar touchstones, which suggested he trusts Kansas City audiences to sit with the uncomfortable stuff. There's something about Warren's approach that works in a room like this—intimate enough to catch the details, big enough to let the songs breathe. The run through 'Chasing Shadows' and 'Never Be Far' had the feel of someone working through something, and closing with 'Carry You Home' sent people out thinking rather than just feeling good.

Kansas City has always had a soft spot for songwriters who trust the song over the spectacle. From its jazz and blues roots to its modern indie folk scene, the city gravitates toward artists with something to say rather than something to prove. Warren's introspective, guitar-driven approach fits naturally into that lineage—he's the kind of artist Kansas City audiences will sit with, letting the words do the heavy lifting. The Midland crowd proved that the city still values restraint and craft over noise.

Stay in Midtown, where the neighborhood has a real rhythm to it beyond just the venue. Hit up Betty Rae's for upscale barbecue that actually justifies the hype, then walk it off exploring the galleries and vintage shops along Baltimore. Catch a show at the Truman or Liberty Hall depending on the size, but leave time to visit Union Station—it's legitimately one of the finest Beaux-Arts buildings in the country, and worth seeing even if you're just passing through. The Power and Light District is there if you want drinks after, but Midtown's got better bones.

Stop missing shows.

tonedeaf. reads your music library and emails you when artists you actually listen to have shows near Kansas City. No app. No ads. No noise.

Sign Up Free