Find more presales for shows in Manchester, GB
Show GIVĒON presales in more places
Low Notes, High Feels with Giveon
Giveon rose from Long Beach to worldwide R&B stages with a rare baritone and soft-focus storytelling. He sharpened his craft on the Take Time and When It's All Said and Done EPs before the reflective album Give or Take. Live, his set leans on patient grooves and clean melodies that let the low register carry the room.
Slow-build heartbreak, steady hands
Expect anchors like Heartbreak Anniversary, Like I Want You, and For Tonight, with a likely nod to Chicago Freestyle folded into a mid-set medley. The crowd skews couples and close friends in their 20s and 30s, dressed in neutrals, quietly singing the hooks and saving the loud moments for big choruses. A few superfans hold up handwritten signs for deep cuts, while newer fans perk up when the kick drum drops on the singles.Roots and small revelations
He first caught wide ears by voicing the hook on Drake's Chicago Freestyle, itself referencing Eminem's Superman, and his Take Time EP earned a Grammy nod. Note: songs and production details mentioned here are educated guesses rather than confirmed plans. A fun footnote: he once credited classic crooners for shaping his vowels, which helps those long, glassy notes land live.Quiet Storm Energy: The Giveon Crowd, Up Close
The scene leans clean and simple: neutral fits, crisp sneakers, soft layers, and small silver chains. Fans swap favorite bridges they want to hear, then fall quiet when the band fades to silence before a chorus.
Rituals in the room
Phone lights usually rise for Heartbreak Anniversary, while a gentle hum greets the first notes of For Tonight. Merch trends to minimal text on black or cream, with album-era fonts and a bar of lyrics tucked small on the sleeve. Between songs, short, respectful cheers give way to focused listening, and you can hear harmonies build from pockets across the floor.A soft-volume sing-along
Couples sway more than jump, and friends trade knowing looks when a bass drop lands after a long pause. By the encore, the room tends to sing the last chorus back in a low register, matching the voice rather than trying to outshout it.The Baritone Blueprint: Giveon, Band, and Space
The voice sits front and center, a warm baritone that stays steady even on long phrases. Keys and guitar sketch light chords, leaving the low end for bass and kick to pulse in short, tidy patterns. He often enters a verse slightly behind the beat, which makes the drums feel deeper without getting louder.
Quiet dynamics, real tension
Live arrangements tend to strip the first verse and grow piece by piece, so when the snare finally cracks, the room exhales. On ballads, the drummer swaps to brushes or rim clicks, and the bassist moves higher to keep space under the vocal. A subtle trick he uses is starting a chorus an octave down on the first pass, then lifting for the repeat, which makes the hook feel bigger without changing tempo.Little studio nods on stage
Rhodes-style keys and plate reverb echo the records, while the band stretches outros for a few extra bars to let the crowd sing the last line. Lighting tracks the dynamics with cool blues and warm ambers, but it stays low-key so ears lead eyes.If You Like Cool Flame R&B, You Might Click with Giveon
Fans who ride for Brent Faiyaz will find the same slow-bloom mood and air between the notes. If you like Daniel Caesar for the gentle guitar colors and careful harmonies, the pacing here will feel familiar.