Stop Missing Shows

Two Feet in Kansas City

653 users on tonedeaf are tracking Two Feet

Never miss another Two Feet show near Kansas City.

Two Feet
The Truman - Kansas City — Kansas City, MO

Two Feet (William Strickland) emerged from the Brooklyn electronic scene with a distinctly minimal approach to pop production. His breakthrough came with the sparse, haunting track 'Go,' which built from almost nothing into something genuinely gripping—that restraint became his signature. Working primarily alone in the studio, he constructs songs from fragmented vocals, analog synths, and plenty of empty space. Tracks like 'Rocket' and 'She Keeps Me Up' showcase his ability to make loneliness sound sonically compelling rather than mopey. His music sits in that uncomfortable middle ground between bedroom pop and indie rock, favoring atmosphere over catchiness. Two Feet doesn't try to fill every frequency; instead, he lets the silence do work.

Two Feet's sets are understated and deliberate. He moves through songs with minimal banter, letting the sparse production hit harder in a room. Crowds tend toward attentive rather than rowdy—people actually listen. The energy is more hypnotic than explosive, which means dead air feels intentional rather than awkward.

Known for Go, Rocket, She Keeps Me Up, Hurt People, Latch

Two Feet last touched down at Sprint Center in February 2019, delivering a tight nine-song set that cut straight to the point. The show opened with "Back of My Mind" and built through fan favorites like "You're So Cold" and "Had Some Drinks," but the real moments came in the deeper cuts—"Quick Musical Doodles" showed off the producer's experimental side, while "I Feel Like I'm Drowning" closed things out as the finale. It was a set that valued substance over spectacle, letting the music do the talking.

Kansas City's electronic and indie music communities have always had space for artists who operate in the gray zone between producer and performer. Two Feet fits that mold perfectly—bedroom-pop sensibilities meeting live instrumentation. The city's venues, from larger rooms like Sprint Center to smaller independent spaces, have consistently supported artists who blur genre lines, giving electronic-leaning acts the platform they need.

Stay in Midtown, where the neighborhood has a real rhythm to it beyond just the venue. Hit up Betty Rae's for upscale barbecue that actually justifies the hype, then walk it off exploring the galleries and vintage shops along Baltimore. Catch a show at the Truman or Liberty Hall depending on the size, but leave time to visit Union Station—it's legitimately one of the finest Beaux-Arts buildings in the country, and worth seeing even if you're just passing through. The Power and Light District is there if you want drinks after, but Midtown's got better bones.

Stop missing shows.

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

Sign Up Free