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Madison Beer in Seattle

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Madison Beer
Paramount Theatre — Seattle, WA

Madison Beer started as a Justin Bieber discovery in 2013, but that origin story undersells what she's actually built. She's released multiple EPs and albums that show someone working through the specific anxiety of being a young woman in the public eye. Her earlier tracks like 'Playboy' caught people's attention with slick production and that particular blend of confidence and vulnerability she does well. By the time she put out 'Home' and started leaning into more introspective material, it was clear she was treating songwriting as something serious. She's put out the albums 'Life Support' and 'Reckless,' both of which trace what happens when you're trying to figure out who you are while everyone's watching. Her music tends toward polished pop that's more interested in production details than blunt statements, which means her songs reward close listening. She's the kind of artist whose actual fanbase is more devoted than her casual listener count might suggest.

Her crowds are relatively young and come ready to sing every word. The energy stays engaged but controlled, more singalong than mosh pit. She handles herself well in smaller venues where people can actually hear her vocals, which matters since that's where her music lives.

Known for Playboy, Tied Up, Home, Hurts to Hurt You, Say It

Madison Beer touched down at The Moore Theatre in June 2024, running through a setlist that proved she's moved well beyond her early viral moments. The show opened with "Home to Another One" and built momentum through deeper cuts like "Envy the Leaves" and "Stained Glass"—songs that showcase the introspective songwriting she's developed over the years. By the time she hit "BOYSHIT" and closed with "King of Everything," it was clear this wasn't a greatest-hits victory lap. The 24-song set felt like watching someone comfortable in her own catalog, neither chasing the hits that made her name nor apologizing for them. Seattle got the full picture of who Beer has become.

Seattle's indie-pop and alternative R&B scenes have always had room for artists who blur genre lines, and Madison Beer fits that mold. The city has a taste for singers who layer vulnerability with polish, from the bedroom-pop era through today's more polished pop-soul hybrids. The Moore Theatre crowd—a venue known for hosting acts at that sweet spot between club intimacy and arena scale—was exactly the right fit for her brand of personal, beat-driven pop.

Stay in Capitol Hill if you want walkable nightlife and independent record stores, or head to Fremont for quirky charm and coffee culture. Before the show, eat at Altura in Pike Place Market—serious, ingredient-focused cooking that doesn't announce itself. Spend an afternoon at the Frye Art Museum, a genuinely world-class collection in an underrated space. The city's waterfront is worth a walk, and if you time it right, catch the sunset from Gas Works Park. Seattle takes its music seriously and moves at its own pace—which means you should too.

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