Stop Missing Shows

The Black Crowes in Detroit

396 users on tonedeaf are tracking The Black Crowes

Never miss another The Black Crowes show near Detroit.

The Black Crowes
Pine Knob Music Theatre — Clarkston, MI

The Black Crowes emerged from Atlanta in 1989 with a sound that felt like they'd unearthed it from a basement tape vault circa 1972. Their debut album, "Shake Your Money Maker," nailed that Zeppelin-meets-Stones groove immediately, anchored by the irresistible blues swagger of "Hard to Handle" and the softer vulnerability of "She Talks to Angels." Brothers Chris and Rich Robinson traded vocals and guitars through the '90s, building a catalog that proved southern rock didn't need to apologize for its influences—just nail the execution, which they did repeatedly. "Remedy" became their other staple, a hypnotic track that showed they understood dynamics as well as riffs. The band fractured, reunited, and fractured again, but their best albums hold up as genuine artifacts of a moment when classic rock DNA could still produce something that felt fresh.

Their shows are sweaty, loose affairs where the brothers bicker and build momentum through extended jams. The crowd feeds on that chemistry—nobody's checking their phone. It's church music played in a honky tonk.

Known for Hard to Handle, Jealous Again, Remedy, She Talks to Angels, Thorn in My Side

The Black Crowes rolled through The Fillmore Detroit on a spring night in April, proving they still know how to work a room. They opened with the deep cut "Bedside Manners" and spent the evening pulling from across their catalog—"Wanting and Waiting," "Black Moon Creeping," and a cover of "White Light/White Heat" showed a band comfortable in their own skin. The setlist balanced their bluesy swagger with genuine surprises, closing out a 17-song set that hit the marks that matter to people who've been paying attention.

Detroit's got soul in its bones — the kind that comes from Motown, MC5, and the Stooges. It's a town that understands rawness and authenticity, which is exactly what The Black Crowes traffic in. Southern rock with real blues credentials fits naturally into a city that's never been interested in polish over substance. Detroit crowds know the difference between nostalgia and legitimacy.

Stay in Corktown, where vintage buildings and independent shops give the neighborhood actual character. Dinner at Selden Standard for refined cooking that doesn't announce itself. Spend an afternoon at the Detroit Institute of Arts—the murals and permanent collection justify the trip alone, and the building itself is worth the walk. The city's music history lives in these spaces. Catch the show, then grab late drinks somewhere on Michigan Avenue. You'll understand why Detroit crowds expect rigor from their musicians.

Stop missing shows.

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

Sign Up Free