Post Malone in Birmingham
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About Post Malone
Post Malone emerged in 2015 with a sound that felt distinctly his own—a blend of mumbled melodic rap, auto-tuned singing, and beats that pulled from cloud rap, country, and pop. Debut album Stoney was a sleeper hit that proved he could write hooks that stuck. By Beerbongs & Bentleys, he was everywhere. Circles became a pandemic staple, a sad-sounding song about depression that somehow became the soundtrack to millions of TikToks. His albums have consistently performed, though critics often struggle to pin down what exactly he's doing. What's clear is that Post Malone makes sad-sounding music that doesn't feel heavy, and he's managed to stay relevant across multiple eras of hip-hop without really changing much. His collaborations range from country (Morgan Wallen) to pop (The Weeknd) to rock, suggesting he's chasing vibes rather than any particular lane.
Post Malone shows are packed and loud. Crowds know every word to every song. He plays it relatively straight—doesn't do much dancing or stage movement. What stands out is how attentive the room is, even when he's just singing. People come to hear the songs they know.
Known for Congratulations, Circles, Psycho, Rockstar, Goodbyes
Post Malone + Birmingham
Post Malone rolled through Oak Mountain Amphitheatre in October 2024, running through 25 songs that felt less like a greatest hits parade and more like a guy who actually wanted to play his whole catalog. He opened with "Wrong Ones" and "Finer Things," then settled into the obvious ones—"Circles," "Psycho," "rockstar"—but the real moments were the deeper cuts. "Dead at the Honky Tonk" and "Pour Me a Drink" showed he's leaning harder into that country-rap blur he's been chasing. Closed out with "Sunflower," which is the kind of song that sounds even better when you're outside in Alabama heat. Birmingham's seen Post Malone before, but this felt like a different version of the artist—less trying to be everything, more comfortable being exactly what he is.
Post Malone in Birmingham News
- Country music superstars announce Alabama stadium concert in 2026 AL.com · Feb 5, 2026
- Post Malone, Jelly Roll to bring their stadium tour to Alabama Montgomery Advertiser · Feb 2, 2026
- Post Malone, Jelly Roll announce tour heading to Birmingham CBS 42 · Feb 2, 2026
- Grammy Award-winner Jelly Roll and Post Malone bringing new stadium show to Birmingham in May Bham Now · Feb 2, 2026
- Post Malone and Jelly Roll bringing stadium tour back to Birmingham WBMA · Feb 2, 2026
Live Music in Birmingham
Birmingham's got a scrappy relationship with hip-hop and pop-rap. The city's bred its own sound for decades—soul, R&B, gospel—but Post Malone's the kind of artist who appeals to that older foundation while also pulling in the streaming generation. He sits somewhere between rap and rock, which is a lane Birmingham understands better than most. The South's always made room for genre-blending, and Post Malone's willingness to drift into country just feels natural when he's playing to a city that's never drawn hard lines between what belongs in which box.
Birmingham road trip to see Post Malone?
Stay in Forest Park—tree-lined streets, restored homes, close to downtown without feeling generic. Eat at Chez Fon Fon for excellent French-Italian food in a real neighborhood setting, or Goro Ramen for something more casual but excellent. Spend an afternoon at the Birmingham Museum of Art, which is genuinely worth your time and free. Walk through the Pepper Place district afterward for galleries and coffee. The city's Civil Rights history is significant; the 16th Street Baptist Church is essential if you have the time and reflective headspace.
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