Stop Missing Shows

Miguel in Seattle

450 users on tonedeaf are tracking Miguel

Never miss another Miguel show near Seattle.

Nothing from Miguel near Seattle 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 rolled through The Historic Everett Theatre in June 2025 with the kind of setlist that rewards people who actually know his catalog. He opened with "Tirá para arriba" and spent the next hour moving between the introspective and the physical—"Desnúdame," "Malos pensamientos," "No me dejes caer"—songs that sit in that murky space between desire and regret. There was a curveball moment when he pulled out a cover of "Everybody Wants to Rule the World," which felt like something he'd been sitting with. He closed out with "Cuando seas grande," which gave the whole thing a reflective send-off. Seattle crowds tend to respect artists who don't play it safe, and Miguel didn't disappoint.

Seattle's music DNA runs through guitar-driven rock and hip-hop, but there's always been room for artists who blur genre lines. Miguel's sensual R&B approach—the way he threads Latin influences through contemporary production—finds natural kinship with the city's more experimental corners. The Pacific Northwest has never been purist about its sounds, which is why an artist like Miguel can fill a room here with people who care more about emotional depth than radio hits.

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.

Stop missing shows.

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

Sign Up Free