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Ginuwine in St. Louis

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Ginuwine
Chaifetz Arena — Saint Louis, MO

Ginuwine came up in Baltimore in the mid-90s, riding the new jack swing wave that was redefining R&B. He made his name with the 1996 album Ginuwine...the Bachelor, a slick, confident debut that established him as a master of the seduction track. "Pony" became his signature, a song so iconic it transcended music—it became a cultural touchstone, the go-to reference for smooth seduction in every context imaginable. But Ginuwine was never just that one song. He kept working, kept releasing albums, maintained a steady presence through the 2000s and beyond without chasing trends. His style stayed consistent: he understood groove, knew how to write hooks that stuck, and could deliver a song with just enough restraint to make it land harder. He's had a genuinely long career in an industry that usually chews people up. That's not accident.

Ginuwine shows are what you'd expect: the crowd wants to hear "Pony" and he knows it, but he's professional enough to make the whole set work. Older venues, dedicated R&B fans. People come to move slowly, not lose their minds. He's got the stamina to work a stage.

Known for Pony, In Those Jeans, Stingy Brim, Holler, Gin and Juice

Ginuwine rolled through St. Louis in November 2022 at Stifel Theatre, bringing the kind of smooth R&B that defined the late 90s and early 2000s. He worked through the hits—Pony, In Those Jeans, Ginuwine...The Bachelor—with the ease of someone who's performed these songs thousands of times and still means them. The audience knew every word, every breath, every pause. There's something about Ginuwine shows that feels less like nostalgia and more like checking in with an old friend. St. Louis has always been R&B territory, and he fits right into that tradition. The encore closed out a night that reminded everyone why these songs stuck around.

St. Louis has a deep R&B lineage—it's Nelly's city, but it's also bigger than that. The town understands smooth, knows soul, and has respect for artists who do one thing and do it well. Ginuwine's brand of calculated sensuality plays well here. The city's music venues cater to artists with staying power, the kind who built careers on consistency rather than viral moments. That's St. Louis—practical about its music tastes.

Base yourself in the Central West End, where the tree-lined streets and converted lofts give the neighborhood a genuinely livable vibe. Hit Broadway Oyster Bar for something with actual character, or Park Avenue Coffee if you need to ease in. Spend an afternoon at the City Museum—it's genuinely weird and worth your time, not a tourist trap. The Pulitzer Arts Foundation is also worth an hour if contemporary art is your thing. St. Louis takes itself less seriously than most cities, which makes it easy to move around and find decent food without overthinking it.

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