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KT Tunstall in Buffalo

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Never miss another KT Tunstall show near Buffalo.

KT Tunstall
Artpark Outdoor Amphitheater — Lewiston, NY

KT Tunstall emerged from Scotland in the mid-2000s with a sound that felt both intimate and expansive. She recorded her debut album in a converted cottage, and that DIY ethos carried through to her biggest hit, "Black Horse and the Cherry Tree," where she basically played everything herself. "Suddenly I See" became inescapable for a minute, but Tunstall's real strength has always been in deeper cuts that showcase her fingerpicking and atmospheric production choices. She's released seven albums across folk-leaning and synth-heavy phases, never settling into one lane. Tunstall can do quiet and contemplative one moment, then layer her vocals into something almost orchestral the next. She's the kind of artist who built a solid fanbase by consistently doing interesting work rather than chasing trends.

Tunstall's live shows feel like watching someone genuinely play their instrument rather than perform their album. She loops and layers, builds arrangements in real time, pulls focus with fingerpicking detail. Crowds lean in. She's not doing stadium energy, she's doing musician energy.

Known for Black Horse and the Cherry Tree, Suddenly I See, Other Side of the World, Miniature Disasters, Under the Weather

KT Tunstall's last Buffalo visit was a tight, conversational set at Iron Works in May 2019. She worked through her catalog with the kind of ease that comes from knowing exactly who you're talking to—mixing obvious touchstones like 'Suddenly I See' with deeper material like 'The Night That Bowie Died' and 'Saving My Face.' A drum battle mid-set gave things breathing room, and covering Tom Petty's 'I Won't Back Down' felt less like obligation and more like settling into a song she'd clearly made her own. The mashups—tacking 'Walk Like an Egyptian' onto 'Hold On,' pairing 'Black Betty' with 'Black Horse and the Cherry Tree'—showed someone still finding new angles on her own catalog.

Buffalo's indie and alternative rock scene has always had room for introspective singer-songwriters, though the city tends to lean heavier toward its punk and garage rock heritage. KT Tunstall's brand of folk-inflected pop-rock with understated production and clever arrangements isn't a natural fit with what typically dominates the Canalside circuit, which makes her appearance here a refreshing outlier. The city's audiences are savvy enough to appreciate her craft.

Stay in Allentown, where the neighborhood's Victorian architecture and walkable blocks of galleries, vintage shops, and bars feel genuinely lived-in. Dinner at Sear should be priority—chef Jeremy Boyle's locally-sourced approach is legitimately ambitious without the pretense. Catch the contemporary art at Albright-Knox (their recent renovations are worth your time), then spend an evening at one of the neighborhood's dive bars like The Owl that still feels like actual people hang there, not tourists.

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