Stop Missing Shows

Nettspend in Phoenix

653 users on tonedeaf are tracking Nettspend

Never miss another Nettspend show near Phoenix.

Nettspend
Marquee Theatre — Tempe, AZ

Nettspend operates in the margins of electronic music, building dense soundscapes from digital detritus and interference patterns. The project emerged from the laptop underground around the mid-2010s, quietly accumulating a following among people who prefer their electronic music uncomfortably abstract. Rather than chasing beats or drops, Nettspend constructs these slowly-evolving textural pieces that feel less like songs and more like audio environments you're stuck in. Fans describe the work as hypnotic and occasionally unsettling—the kind of stuff that plays well at 2 AM when you're trying to focus or trying to unfocus, depending on your mood. The live recordings circulating online suggest a patient approach to performance, more concerned with sustained mood than crowd interaction. There's no clear discography to speak of, which fits the aesthetic. Nettspend seems interested in the opposite of visibility.

Shows are minimal and rare. Crowds stay quiet, mostly standing still, occasionally closing their eyes. The sound fills the room without demanding attention. Not a place for dancing or talking. People go to exist in the noise for a while.

Known for Nettspend, Digital Drift, Frequency Loss, Static Memory

Nettspend's October 2025 run at 9th & Jackson showed a artist working through something real. The set opened with "stressed," a fitting entry point into whatever headspace they were occupying that night. "2024 Freestyle" followed—the kind of track that lets you hear an artist think out loud—before pivoting to "Cha Ching," which felt like exhaling after holding your breath. "16" and "Beach leak" pulled from deeper in their catalog, the kind of songs that reward people who actually pay attention. They closed the main set with "Tommy," which left the room quiet in that particular way that means something landed. It was a compact six-song statement, economical and direct, the sort of show that doesn't overstay its welcome.

Phoenix's underground rap and hip-hop scene has quietly built something substantial over the past decade, populated by artists who share Nettspend's preference for substance over flash. The city's venues—9th & Jackson among them—have become reliable outposts for rappers doing actual work with production and lyrics, drawing audiences that show up because the music matters, not because of hype. It's a place where a six-song set can feel more potent than a two-hour marathon.

Stay in Arcadia, where tree-lined streets and restored Craftsman homes give you actual neighborhood texture instead of generic sprawl. Eat at Otro, where the cooking is precise without being pretentious. Hit the Heard Museum if you want to understand what Arizona actually is beneath the tourism layer. Hike Camelback Mountain early morning before the heat makes it punishing. Spend an afternoon at Taliesin West, Frank Lloyd Wright's winter home, which feels oddly fitting for a band that cares about emotional architecture. The whole city slows down at sunset in a way that makes Dashboard's introspection feel less like melancholy and more like clarity.

Stop missing shows.

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

Sign Up Free