Stop Missing Shows

Bilmuri in Sacramento

262 users on tonedeaf are tracking Bilmuri

Never miss another Bilmuri show near Sacramento.

Bilmuri
The Masonic — San Francisco, CA

Bilmuri is an underground experimental rapper and producer who emerged from internet music communities with a deliberately unpolished aesthetic. His work sits somewhere between cloud rap's atmospheric haze and the absurdist humor of SoundCloud rap, built on warped samples and production that sounds deliberately off-kilter. Tracks like 'Lil Baby' and 'Aw Damn' showcase his ability to flip between deadpan delivery and chaotic energy, often within the same song. He's accumulated a cult following among listeners who appreciate his refusal to sand down rough edges or follow genre conventions. Bilmuri treats production choices like punchlines—distortion and lo-fi textures aren't limitations but intentional artistic decisions. His discography prioritizes experimentation over consistency, which resonates with fans tired of polished trap formulas. He exists in that space where outsider status becomes the actual appeal.

Small venues with kids who actually know the words. Bilmuri keeps things loose and chaotic—crowd feeds off the unpredictability. Shows feel more like basement sessions than performances. People get loud during the weird parts.

Known for Lil Baby, Aw Damn, Bilmuri, Goofy Ahh

Bilmuri's been through Sacramento before, catching audiences at Discovery Park back in October. They brought nine songs to the set, including "EMPTYHANDED," the kind of performance that sticks with you because they actually commit to what they're doing. Not flashy, just solid.

Sacramento's music scene leans indie and experimental, with venues like The Shrine and Golden 1 Center hosting everyone from lo-fi producers to indie rock acts. The city has developed a quiet reputation for supporting artists who prioritize songwriting and production craft over spectacle. It's not LA or SF, which means the audiences here actually listen.

Stay in Midtown Sacramento, where the neighborhood actually feels alive—walk to restaurants, bars, and galleries without planning logistics. Dinner at The Kitchen restaurant offers precise, ingredient-focused cooking that pairs well with the area's wine bar culture. Spend an afternoon at the Crocker Art Museum, one of the country's oldest art institutions, or wander the American River Bike Trail if you need to clear your head before the show. The neighborhood's tree-lined streets and vintage architecture beat anywhere else in town.

Stop missing shows.

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

Sign Up Free