Stop Missing Shows

Wolfmother in Detroit

917 users on tonedeaf are tracking Wolfmother

Never miss another Wolfmother show near Detroit.

Wolfmother
Saint Andrew's Hall — Detroit, MI

Wolfmother is an Australian rock band built on the foundation of Andrew Stockdale's guitar work and raw, powerful vocals. They emerged in the mid-2000s with a sound that felt like a rediscovery of heavy 70s rock—think Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, and Deep Purple filtered through a modern lens. Their self-titled debut in 2006 became an instant classic, driven by the massive hit "Woman," which grabbed the world's attention with its crushing riff and arena-sized swagger. "Joker and the Thief" followed as another stone-cold essential, proving they weren't a one-hit situation. The band's catalog built on this momentum with albums like "Cosmic Egg" and "New Crown," but it's those early tracks that defined their legacy. Stockdale's voice cuts through walls of distortion with precision, and the band's commitment to straightforward, heavy rock—without irony or apology—made them stand out when a lot of rock was getting precious. They've remained active, relentless road warriors who treat every show like it matters.

Wolfmother shows are loud, heavy, and unadorned. Stockdale plants himself center stage and commands the room through sheer force of presence. The crowd gets physical but not chaotic—people come to feel the weight of the riff. No surprises, no extended jams, just well-executed rock.

Known for Woman, Joker and the Thief, Dimension, Vagabond, White Unicorn

Wolfmother rolled through Detroit in November 2023 at Saint Andrew's Hall, a venue that's hosted enough heavy hitters to know the difference between a good rock band and one that can actually fill a room. They opened with "Dimension" and didn't waste time—21 songs deep, they were still moving. The setlist had the expected classics like "Woman" and "Joker & the Thief," but the real moment came when they dredged up "Paranoid" and "Communication Breakdown" in the same set, songs that showed they weren't just coasting on the Cosmic Egg era. They closed it out with "Rock and Roll," which felt like the only logical way to end a show that was essentially Wolfmother proving they still know how to sound huge in a room full of people who remember when they mattered.

Detroit's rock legacy is foundational enough that bands like Wolfmother—steeped in blues-rock swagger and heavy psych grooves—feel at home here. The city's always had room for acts that treat rock as something primal rather than precious, from MC5's raw proto-punk aggression to modern acts that still believe in the power of a thick riff. Saint Andrew's Hall sits right in that tradition, a space where bands come to prove they've still got it.

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