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Gigi Perez in San Francisco

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Gigi Perez
Oracle Park — San Francisco, CA

Gigi Perez is an indie pop artist who emerged from the bedroom pop scene with a distinctly lo-fi sensibility and introspective songwriting. Her breakout track "Heather" became a viral moment on TikTok and streaming platforms, introducing her to a wider audience hungry for her particular brand of melancholic, melodic storytelling. The song's understated production and conversational lyrics about longing and displacement resonated with listeners tired of polish. Since then, Perez has continued to write songs that feel like private conversations — addressing relationships, self-doubt, and small moments of daily life with a wry, honest perspective. Her catalog suggests someone more interested in capturing actual feeling than fitting into any particular aesthetic. Her music tends to live in quieter moments: late night thoughts, car rides, the space between what you want to say and what actually comes out.

Perez's shows have a basement-show intimacy even when they're bigger. Crowds lean in rather than jump around. People watch her hands on the guitar, remember lyrics they didn't know they knew. The energy is focused and still, which somehow makes it feel more alive.

Known for Heather, Driver, Sailor Moon, Coffee, Mess It Up

Gigi Perez pulled into Charmaine's on a Saturday night in August and ran through seven songs that felt less like a setlist and more like a conversation. There's something about watching someone play "Sailor Song" in a room that size—it's the kind of venue where you catch every breath, every string bend. "Please Be Rude" opened things up, and by the time "Fable" rolled around, the room had locked in completely. "Nothing, Absolutely" and "At the Beach, in Every Life" hit different live, the kind of tracks that reveal themselves better when you're standing three feet away. San Francisco's seen plenty of artists pass through, but Perez left the kind of impression that sticks—understated intensity, no wasted motion.

San Francisco's always been a place where introspective songwriters can actually breathe. There's an audience here that doesn't need everything turned up to eleven, that actually listens. The city's indie and folk-leaning artists find room to exist alongside the bigger acts, and venues like Charmaine's have stayed crucial to that ecosystem. Perez fits that lineage—someone working in emotional precision rather than spectacle.

Stay in Hayes Valley or the Mission—both neighborhoods have the kind of restaurants and bars that make a weekend feel deliberate rather than touristy. Head to State Bird Provisions for dinner if you can get in; it's precise and inventive without being pretentious. Spend a day in Muir Woods or hiking around Twin Peaks for actual views of the city. The de Young Museum in Golden Gate Park is worth a couple hours if the weather holds. Hit up a coffee place on Valencia Street in the Mission just to sit and watch the neighborhood move around you.

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