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Gable Price

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All upcoming Gable Price shows.

Gable Price
The Fillmore Charlotte — Charlotte, NC
Gable Price
The Fillmore Charlotte — Charlotte, NC
Gable Price
Arizona Financial Theatre — Phoenix, AZ
Gable Price
Arizona Financial Theatre — Phoenix, AZ
Gable Price
The Sound — Del Mar, CA
Gable Price
SACRAMENTO MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM — Sacramento, CA
Gable Price
Fillmore Auditorium (Denver) — Denver, CO
Gable Price
Aragon Ballroom — Chicago, IL
Gable Price
Citizens House of Blues Boston — Boston, MA

Gable Price started making music in the kind of setup that's become almost cliché now — bedroom recordings, DIY ethos, figuring things out as he went. But what set him apart was how he approached songwriting from the beginning, treating vulnerability like a tool rather than a trend. Growing up in the Seattle area, he soaked up both the region's history of honest, unpolished rock and the introspective folk that tends to thrive in rainy climates.

He formed Gable Price and Friends around 2017, and the "and Friends" part wasn't just branding. The project always felt loose and collaborative, with a rotating cast that kept the sound from calcifying into one thing. Early tracks like "Dreamstate" showed someone wrestling with faith, doubt, and the awkward space between who you are and who you're supposed to be. The music landed somewhere between indie rock and folk, but with enough tension that it never felt safely categorized.

The breakthrough, if you can call it that for someone operating mostly outside mainstream radar, came with the EP "Fractioned Heart / Fractioned Mind" in 2019. It was raw in the way that actually matters — not lo-fi for aesthetics, but emotionally unguarded. Songs like "Suicide" tackled mental health and spiritual crisis without the safety net of easy answers or redemptive arcs. It connected with people who were tired of music that tied everything up neatly.

His 2020 album "Fractioned Heart / Fractioned Mind Pt. II" expanded on those themes, diving deeper into the tension between religious upbringing and personal truth. Price writes from inside the questions rather than from any place of certainty, which makes the music feel lived-in. Tracks like "Candlelight" and "Natural Disaster" balance melodic hooks with lyrical weight, never sacrificing one for the other.

What makes Price's work stick is how he avoids the usual traps of faith-adjacent music. He's not selling inspiration or comfort. He's documenting the mess, the cognitive dissonance, the parts of belief and doubt that coexist uncomfortably. The production stays relatively sparse, letting the songs breathe and keeping the focus on what's being said.

More recently, he's continued releasing music that refuses to simplify his internal landscape. The sound has gotten a bit more expansive, incorporating fuller arrangements without losing the intimacy that made the early work compelling. He's built a dedicated following of people who see their own complicated relationships with faith, identity, and mental health reflected back at them.

Price exists in that space where indie credibility and spiritual exploration overlap, carving out room for music that's both personal and unflinching. He's not trying to be the next anything. He's just documenting what it feels like to be uncertain, and doing it with enough craft that the specifics become universal.

Shows are intimate even in larger rooms. Crowds go quiet during verses. Price doesn't talk much between songs, just plays with the kind of focus that makes you feel like you're overhearing something private. The kind of set where everyone's phone stays in their pocket.

Known for Honey, Cigarettes, New Light, Better Days, Worn

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