Stop Missing Shows

Miguel in Salt Lake City

450 users on tonedeaf are tracking Miguel

Never miss another Miguel show near Salt Lake City.

Nothing from Miguel near Salt Lake City right now.

They're probably in the studio. We'll email you when that changes.

Sign Up Free

Miguel emerged in the early 2010s as one of R&B's most technically proficient singers, capable of hitting notes most people can't reach and making it sound effortless. His 2012 debut Kaleidoscope introduced "Adorn," a track that became the song people played to convince their friends that R&B still mattered. He's spent the last decade building a reputation as someone who takes craft seriously—his vocal runs are intricate without being showoff-y, his production choices are deliberate, and his songs tend to be about actual emotional states rather than generic romance. He's collaborated with everyone from J. Cole to Kendrick to Bryson Tiller. His second album Willpower solidified that he could make hits on his own terms. Miguel doesn't get the mainstream recognition some of his peers do, but his influence runs deep in contemporary R&B.

Miguel's shows feel like watching someone solve a puzzle in real time. His vocal control live is genuinely unsettling—those runs hit exactly as written. Crowds are respectful, leaning in rather than losing it, which tracks with his vibe. He's not trying to hype you. He's trying to sing well.

Known for Adorn, Arch & Point, How Many, Coffee, Waves

Miguel's relationship with Salt Lake City runs deeper than most touring artists who pass through. When he rolled into Rockwell on March 6, 2026, it felt like a homecoming of sorts—the kind of show where an artist digs into both new material and the songs that built their reputation. He moved through his catalog with the kind of precision you only get from years of owning a room. The setlist hit the expected marks: the slow-burn seduction of his biggest tracks, the deeper cuts that make devoted fans lean in. By the encore, the whole thing had that feeling of inevitability, like everyone in the venue had been waiting for exactly this moment.

Salt Lake City's R&B and soul scene exists in the shadow of its own indie rock legacy, but it's quietly developed teeth. The city has become a reasonable pit stop for artists who traffic in Miguel's lane—sophisticated R&B that doesn't apologize for its smokiness or its emotional directness. Venues like Rockwell have proven they can hold space for these shows without pretension. The audience tends to be informed, attentive, and there for the music rather than the scene.

Stay in the Avenues neighborhood—tree-lined streets with actual character, close enough to downtown but removed from the noise. For dinner, Lazy Dog in Sugar House serves exceptional Colorado lamb and maintains a wine list that doesn't insult your intelligence. Spend an afternoon at the Natural History Museum of Utah in Red Butte Canyon; the building itself is architecturally stunning and the collection gives real context to the landscape you're actually standing in. The city's proximity to actual mountains matters when you've got downtime.

Stop missing shows.

tonedeaf. reads your music library and emails you when artists you actually listen to have shows near Salt Lake City. No app. No ads. No noise.

Sign Up Free