Lanie Gardner in Los Angeles
794 users on tonedeaf are tracking Lanie Gardner
Never miss another Lanie Gardner show near Los Angeles.
About Lanie Gardner
Lanie Gardner is a country-pop artist who caught serious attention after a viral moment performing the national anthem at a Kansas City Chiefs game in 2021, where her powerhouse rendition got people talking online. That kind of vocal control—big, emotional, technically sharp—is her calling card. She's built a following on social media with original songs that sit somewhere between country authenticity and pop accessibility, the kind of songs that work equally well as bedroom listens and arena moments. Her tracks tend toward relationship narratives with enough edge to avoid saccharine territory, dealing with heartbreak and messy human stuff with a voice that can shift from vulnerable to commanding. Gardner represents that current wave of country artists who don't worry much about strict genre boundaries, pulling from pop production while keeping one foot in country songwriting traditions.
Gardner's live shows run on vocal pyrotechnics. She doesn't hold back—her voice fills the room and people respond to that kind of unironic power. Crowds are attentive, leaning in. There's a sense that everyone showed up to hear her actually sing rather than get through a setlist.
Known for Like A Memory, Messy, Doesn't Matter Anyway, Hurt So Good
Lanie Gardner in Los Angeles News
- “Word on the Street” Is This Country Superstar Just Announced a 2026 Tour: Here’s What You Need To Know American Songwriter · Jan 23, 2026
- Five Finger Death Punch returns to AMP with Cody Jinks and Eva Under Fire Fayetteville Flyer · Jan 13, 2026
- 'Artist Accelerator' 2hollis Performs Live on Alt Nation SiriusXM · Nov 19, 2025
- See All the Stars Arriving on the Red Carpet at the 2025 CMA Awards AOL.com · Nov 19, 2025
- Dorothy Teams Up with Lanie Gardner for a Remix of Her Single “Tombstone Town” Ghost Cult Magazine · Jul 5, 2025
Live Music in Los Angeles
Los Angeles's country music scene is smaller than Nashville's or Austin's, but it's quietly persistent. The city has a country radio station, venues that book country acts, and enough transplants from the South to keep the genre alive. LA tends to treat country artists as passing through rather than staying, which means the ones who do connect here tend to do it hard.
Los Angeles road trip to see Lanie Gardner?
Stay in Los Feliz, where you can walk tree-lined streets and catch views from Griffith Observatory. Dinner at Republique in the Arts District—refined French-inspired food in a restored factory space that feels more Paris than LA. Spend an afternoon at the Huntington Library in San Marino, a world-class art collection that justifies the drive. The city's recording studio history is everywhere; walk through Hollywood and you're literally surrounded by the spaces where hits were made. End the night at a jazz bar like The Fonda Theatre or catch live music on Sunset Boulevard.
Stop missing shows.
tonedeaf. reads your music library and emails you when artists you actually listen to have shows near Los Angeles. No app. No ads. No noise.
Sign Up Free