Stop Missing Shows

Forrest Frank in Seattle

989 users on tonedeaf are tracking Forrest Frank

Never miss another Forrest Frank show near Seattle.

Forrest Frank
Tacoma Dome — Tacoma, WA

Forrest Frank is a singer-songwriter who emerged from the indie pop scene with a knack for introspective lyrics and understated production. His work tends toward melancholic arrangements that build with purpose rather than bombast. Frank's approach is more notebook-and-guitar than synth-heavy, which gives his songs the quality of overhearing someone's private thoughts. He's developed a modest but devoted following among listeners who appreciate music that doesn't announce itself loudly. His tracks explore themes of self-doubt, connection, and the small moments that stick with you. While he hasn't achieved mainstream saturation, Frank represents a particular strain of contemporary indie sensibility—careful with words, patient with arrangements, resistant to easy answers. He continues to work independently or with small label backing, releasing music on his own terms rather than chasing algorithmic favor.

Frank's shows are low-key affairs where people actually listen. The crowd tends toward attentive silence rather than shouting along. He plays with noticeable restraint, letting the songs breathe. Not the type of set where people check their phones.

Known for Lighthouse, Sour Times, Therapy, Crush, Better Days

Forrest Frank played WaMu Theater in Seattle on May 1, 2025. The venue is a solid mid-size room that suits his growing audience well, and Seattle's been a reliable market for the contemporary Christian scene. Forrest Frank has been steadily moving up in venue size, and WaMu Theater reflects that trajectory.

Seattle's indie and alternative scene has always had a soft spot for producers who blur genre lines, especially those working in the overlap between hip-hop, electronic, and indie pop. That's the territory Forrest Frank occupies—he's a behind-the-scenes architect as much as a performer. The city's tradition of supporting experimental production work gives him a natural fit here.

Stay in Capitol Hill if you want walkable nightlife and independent record stores, or head to Fremont for quirky charm and coffee culture. Before the show, eat at Altura in Pike Place Market—serious, ingredient-focused cooking that doesn't announce itself. Spend an afternoon at the Frye Art Museum, a genuinely world-class collection in an underrated space. The city's waterfront is worth a walk, and if you time it right, catch the sunset from Gas Works Park. Seattle takes its music seriously and moves at its own pace—which means you should too.

Stop missing shows.

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

Sign Up Free