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Summer Walker in Worcester

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Summer Walker
TD Garden — Boston, MA

Summer Walker emerged from Atlanta's R&B scene with a voice that sits in the space between whisper and song. Her debut album Over It became a sleeper hit, driven by the viral success of "Playing Games" and the collaborations that followed—Drake showing up on "Girls Need Love," London On Da Track and A Boogie wit da Hoodie on "Come Thru." Her music exists in that gray area between lo-fi bedroom pop and legitimate R&B productions, all understated vocal runs and beats that sit just slightly off-kilter. She doesn't announce herself loudly; instead, she lets you lean in to hear her. That approach—sometimes cryptic, sometimes brutally direct lyrically—has made her a fixture for people who treat R&B as a thinking person's genre. Her follow-up projects continued this formula: intimate, skeptical about relationships, and deeply invested in sound design that other artists were still catching up to.

Summer Walker's shows are deliberately low-energy in the best way. Crowds are quiet, attentive, mostly still—people actually listening rather than waiting for drops. She moves minimally onstage, which somehow makes the performance feel more genuine. The vibe is less party, more late-night conversation.

Known for Playing Games, Girls Need Love, Come Thru, Wearing a Wire, Session 32

Worcester's music scene has quietly developed a taste for contemporary R&B and neo-soul over the past few years, with venues like The Palladium hosting artists working in similar emotional registers. The city's audiences tend toward the thoughtful end of things — less hype, more listening. That sensibility aligns well with Walker's approach to songwriting and production, where restraint and vulnerability matter more than spectacle.

Stay in the Elm Hill neighborhood — it's got actual character with tree-lined streets and the best local dining concentration. Book a table at Elm Tavern for elevated comfort food, then spend an afternoon at the Worcester Art Museum, which has a surprisingly strong collection that rewards a couple hours. If you want something quieter before the show, The Hanover Theatre is worth checking even if you're not catching a play — the building itself is an ornate 1904 gem. The walk from Elm Hill to the venue area is doable and keeps you off the highway entirely.

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