Stop Missing Shows

Our Lady Peace in Hartford

250 users on tonedeaf are tracking Our Lady Peace

Never miss another Our Lady Peace show near Hartford.

Our Lady Peace
The Paramount in concert with Northwell — Huntington, NY
Our Lady Peace
Toad's Place — New Haven, CT

Our Lady Peace formed in Toronto in 1992, anchored by vocalist Raine Maida's distinctive nasal delivery and introspective lyrics. They broke through in the late 90s with Superman's Dead, a track that captured the angst of Gen X while maintaining genuine melodic hooks. The band built a devoted Canadian following through the 2000s, shifting between heavier guitar-driven alt-rock and more synth-forward production depending on the album. Starseed became their biggest commercial moment, a soaring anthem that felt genuinely earned rather than calculated. They've maintained a steady touring presence across North America, never quite achieving arena-headliner status in the US but commanding respect from people who actually follow alternative rock. The band treats their catalog seriously without pretension, playing deep cuts alongside hits.

Shows feel like conversations with friends who happen to be on stage. Maida's voice carries even in larger venues, and crowds sing along to every word of the mid-90s material. The energy is sustained but never frantic—people stand still and listen, which is its own kind of intensity. They're good at reading the room.

Known for Starseed, Innocent Man, Superman's Dead, Toronto 4 A.M., Life

Our Lady Peace last touched down in Hartford back in 2009 at Webster Theater, running through a setlist that hit the expected notes — 'Superman's Dead,' 'Clumsy' — but also dug into the catalog with deeper cuts like 'Escape Artist' and 'Paper Moon.' They closed out the night with 'Naveed / Kids,' which is the kind of move that suggests they weren't just phoning it in. It's been over a decade since they were last through town, which feels like a gap for a band that's built a pretty devoted following.

Hartford's rock scene has always been workmanlike and unpretentious. The city doesn't chase trends—it appreciates bands that show up, deliver, and move on. Our Lady Peace fits that ethos perfectly. They're the kind of band that plays a solid set without needing much fanfare, which aligns well with Hartford's no-nonsense approach to live music. Mid-sized venues here tend to draw loyal crowds who actually listen.

Stay in the West End neighborhood—it's got actual character and puts you near some decent restaurants. Head to Saluto for Italian that doesn't oversell itself, or The Sycamore for New American food done properly. Before the show, walk through Bushnell Park and check out the Elizabeth Park conservatory if the weather cooperates. After, grab a drink at Vaughan's Public House if you want to decompress somewhere that feels lived-in rather than designed. The Wadsworth Atheneum is worth an hour if you have time to kill during the day.

Stop missing shows.

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

Sign Up Free