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Zach Williams in Washington DC

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Zach Williams
EagleBank Arena — Fairfax, VA

Zach Williams is a country artist from Tennessee who built his following in the Christian contemporary and country crossover space. He's known for songs that wrestle with faith, redemption, and personal struggle in straightforward terms. 'Chain Breaker' became his breakthrough hit, a guitar-driven track about breaking free from whatever holds you down. His songwriting tends toward the confessional—he's willing to sing about doubt, grace, and hard-won peace without sounding preachy. Williams came up through the Christian music world but has managed to keep one foot in mainstream country radio, which isn't easy. His live presence is steady and unshowy; he plays his songs with the kind of sincerity that either lands or doesn't depending on whether you're in the mood for it.

His crowds tend to lean into the songs quietly—more listening than shouting. Williams plays with conviction but no flash. People come for the emotional directness of it, and they stay still to hear it. The energy is reverent without feeling churchy.

Known for Chain Breaker, Fear Is a Liar, Rescue Story, Witness, Old Church Choir

Zach Williams rolled through EagleBank Arena in December 2018 with the kind of setlist that felt like a conversation with the faithful. He leaned into the spiritual weight of his catalog, opening with "Song of Deliverance" and moving through "Survivor" and the hymnal-adjacent "Old Church Choir" before hitting the declarative force of "Fear Is a Liar." "Chain Breaker" closed things out, which felt right—a song about breaking free played in a city that understands its own reckoning with history. The seven-song set was lean and purposeful, no filler, just the songs that matter to the people who come to hear them.

Washington DC has always had space for artists working at the intersection of faith and authenticity. The city's music landscape skews toward introspection and substance over flash, which suits Williams's unadorned approach to gospel-inflected rock. From the folk-rooted traditions of the Northeast Corridor to the soul and R&B legacies that run deep here, DC crowds tend to respect artists who aren't performing for the back rows. Williams fits that ethos.

Stay in Georgetown or Capitol Hill, both walkable neighborhoods with excellent restaurants and bars. Book a table at Kinfolk in Capitol Hill for refined New American cooking, or head to Pineapple and Pearls for something more elaborate if you want to splurge. During the day, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden offers world-class contemporary art without the crowds of the main Smithsonians. Walk the C&O Canal towpath if the weather cooperates. Hit up one of the city's serious record shops like Smash! Records before the show.

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