Stop Missing Shows

Zach Bryan in San Antonio

894 users on tonedeaf are tracking Zach Bryan

Never miss another Zach Bryan show near San Antonio.

Zach Bryan
Alamodome — San Antonio, TX

Zach Bryan is an Oklahoma-born singer-songwriter who writes songs that feel lived-in before you hear them. His debut album arrived in 2019 with the kind of quiet gravity that doesn't announce itself, but sticks with you. Something in the Orange became his calling card—a sparse, aching song about small-town heartbreak that sounds like it was recorded in a barn, which somehow makes it more powerful. He's not trying to be a traditionalist or a revivalist; he's just writing country songs with the same emotional bluntness that alternative rock used to have. His sound sits somewhere between genuine Americana and the kind of folk music people actually listen to when they're alone. DeAnn and Zach Bryan showcase his ability to build songs around simple observations—the kind of detail work that makes you believe he's lived every line. He's managed to get bigger without sounding like he's aiming for bigger, which is increasingly rare.

His crowds are quiet and attentive in a way that suggests people actually came to listen. Shows feel intimate even in larger venues. He doesn't need to work a crowd—they're already with him. Lots of singing along, not much talking between songs.

Known for DeAnn, Something in the Orange, Zach Bryan, The Great American Bar Scene, Poker Flats

Zach Bryan rolled through Frost Bank Center in San Antonio on July 31, 2024, with the kind of setlist that rewards the people who've been paying attention. He opened with "Overtime" and spent the next two hours moving through his catalog with the ease of someone who knows exactly what he's doing. The deep cuts landed hard—"East Side of Sorrow" and "Fifth of May" showed why people keep coming back—but it was the closer, "Revival," that felt like the real point of it all. Bryan's music has always had that Texas twang running through it, and San Antonio, with its own complicated relationship to country and tradition, seemed like the right place for him to dig in.

San Antonio's music scene has always been about mixing cultures and sounds. It's a city where country doesn't exist in a vacuum—it lives next to conjunto, tejano, and everything else that makes Texas what it is. Zach Bryan's brand of rootsy Americana fits naturally into that ecosystem, the kind of music that doesn't need to choose between honoring tradition and doing its own thing. The city's venues and crowds get that.

Stay in Southtown, where the gallery scene and restored Victorian homes give you something real to walk through between dinner reservations at Cured, which does thoughtful Italian-influenced cooking without pretension. Catch the show, then spend the next morning at Pearl Brewery itself—the district's worth an hour of wandering. The Majestic Theatre or the Tobin Center are your likely venues depending on the tour routing. Head to the McNay Art Museum if you've got afternoon time; it's one of the better regional collections in Texas and won't feel like you're wasting daylight.

Stop missing shows.

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

Sign Up Free