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Megan Moroney in Washington DC

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Megan Moroney
CFG Bank Arena — Baltimore, MD

Megan Moroney is a Nashville-based country artist who blends pop sensibilities with traditional country storytelling. She broke through with "I Had Some Help," a track that showcases her conversational lyrical style and ability to write songs that feel like confessions between friends. Her songwriting draws from real relationship dynamics and small-town observations, delivered with an understated confidence that avoids the typical country clichés. Before her mainstream push, Moroney spent years in the Nashville songwriter community, crafting songs for other artists while building her own sound. Her music occupies that space where country radio overlaps with pop radio—accessible without feeling watered down. Tracks like "Drunk" reveal her gift for specificity, turning a particular moment or feeling into something that resonates broadly. She's become known for relating to a younger demographic that grew up on pop but gravitates toward country's narrative depth.

Her shows have an intimate quality despite the crowd size. She's good at holding moments—letting songs breathe between verses. Audiences lean in rather than shout. She connects with people genuinely, which translates to a room that pays attention.

Known for I Had Some Help, Tennessee Orange, Drunk, Woman Up, Circles

Megan Moroney brought her brand of unflinching country introspection to The Anthem in May, running through a setlist that proved she's more than her radio moments. The night hit harder on the deeper cuts—"Hair Salon" and "Mama I Lied" carried real weight in that room, the kind of songs that work best when you're watching someone sing them live. She closed with "Am I Okay?," which feels right for an artist this honest about the messier parts of her own life.

Washington's country scene operates differently than Nashville or Austin. It's smaller, more understated, but genuine — people here tend to care about substance over spectacle. The city has a solid lineup of country venues and a fanbase that appreciates artists who write their own material and don't lean too hard on the slick production angle. Moroney fits that ethos.

Stay in Georgetown or Capitol Hill, both walkable neighborhoods with excellent restaurants and bars. Book a table at Kinfolk in Capitol Hill for refined New American cooking, or head to Pineapple and Pearls for something more elaborate if you want to splurge. During the day, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden offers world-class contemporary art without the crowds of the main Smithsonians. Walk the C&O Canal towpath if the weather cooperates. Hit up one of the city's serious record shops like Smash! Records before the show.

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