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Anne Wilson

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Anne Wilson
Altria Theater — Richmond, VA
Anne Wilson
Travis County Expo Center — Austin, TX
Anne Wilson
Jacksonville Center for the Performing Arts - Moran Theater — Jacksonville, FL
Anne Wilson
David A. Straz Center - Carol Morsani Hall — Tampa, FL
Anne Wilson
Fox Theatre - Atlanta — Atlanta, GA
Anne Wilson
Ovens Auditorium — Charlotte, NC
Anne Wilson
Indiana University Auditorium — Bloomington, IN
Anne Wilson
Rosemont Theatre — Rosemont, IL
Anne Wilson
San Gabriel Park — Georgetown, TX
Anne Wilson
Stifel Theatre — Saint Louis, MO
Anne Wilson
Boch Center Shubert Theatre — Boston, MA
Anne Wilson
The Lyric - Baltimore — Baltimore, MD
Anne Wilson
Fraze Pavilion — Kettering, OH

Anne Wilson came from a place where faith and grief intersected in the most profound way possible. The Kentucky-born singer lost her brother Jacob in a car accident when she was just seventeen, and that loss became the foundation for everything that followed. She started posting videos of herself singing on social media, processing her pain the only way she knew how, and one of those videos caught the attention of people who could actually do something with it.

Her breakout came with "My Jesus" in 2021, a song that somehow managed to feel both deeply personal and broadly relatable without tipping into the kind of saccharine territory that plagues a lot of contemporary Christian music. The track went to number one on multiple Christian radio charts and earned her a Dove Award for New Artist of the Year. It also crossed over enough to get mainstream attention, which is harder to pull off in that genre than people realize.

Wilson signed with Capitol Christian Music Group and released her debut album "My Jesus" in 2022. The project leaned into her story without exploiting it, which is a fine line to walk. Songs like "Hey Girl" and "Sunday Sermons" showcased a voice that could handle both vulnerability and power, often in the same breath. She wasn't trying to reinvent Christian pop, but she brought enough rawness to it that it didn't feel like committee-written radio bait.

What sets Wilson apart is her willingness to sit in the uncomfortable spaces. A lot of Christian artists rush to the resolution, the hope, the light at the end of the tunnel. Wilson gets there eventually, but she doesn't skip over the part where everything hurts. Her music acknowledges doubt and pain as real things, not just obstacles to be overcome with enough faith. That honesty resonates, particularly with younger listeners who are tired of being told to simply pray harder.

She's been pretty active on the touring circuit, sharing stages with the likes of Crowder and Zach Williams. Her live performances have a reputation for being emotionally intense without veering into manipulation, which is refreshing. She'll tell Jacob's story, but she's not using it as a gimmick. It's just part of who she is and why she makes music in the first place.

As of now, Wilson is still relatively early in her career, building on that initial momentum. She released "Rebel" in 2023, continuing to explore themes of faith, loss, and finding your way forward when the map doesn't make sense anymore. She's not trying to be the next big crossover star or revolutionize Christian music. She's just making songs that mean something to her, and it turns out they mean something to a lot of other people too.

Her shows are quiet when they need to be. Crowds lean in rather than lose it, which says something about her pull. She builds moments slowly instead of blasting them at you. People actually listen.

Known for My Jesus, Trying, Carry Me, Somebody's Daughter, Hurt

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