Smoke-and-honey origins
Puma Blue is the project of South London singer, writer, and producer Jacob Allen, known for hushed vocals and jazz-leaning indie-soul. He rose from homemade EPs like
Swum Baby to full-length statements
In Praise of Shadows and
Holy Waters, expanding from bedroom haze to bolder band colors. On stage, expect slow-bloom grooves, drowsy guitar, and patient tension that finally releases. Likely set pieces include
Moon Undah Water,
Only Trying 2 Tell U, and
Want Me, with one or two newer cuts reworked for the live band. The crowd often blends young producers, jazz students, and longtime soul fans, with dates and solo listeners leaning in rather than shouting over the music. A neat tidbit: those early tracks were cut late at night in a tiny flat to keep noise down, which shaped the close-mic whisper you hear now. Another: he often double-tracks vocals on record to make a soft chorus effect that the sax or guitar echoes live. Consider these set and production notes as informed guesses rather than a locked plan.
Quiet storm, deep roots
The Puma Blue Room, Up Close
Late-night dress code
The room tends to look like midnight even at 9 p.m., lots of navy, charcoal, and soft knits with worn sneakers or loafers. People carry small film cameras, a tote for vinyl, and maybe a notebook, and they give space during the quietest songs. You might catch a hushed singalong on the hook of
Only Trying 2 Tell U, and a shared exhale when the drums finally open up. Between songs the chatter stays low, with kind nods instead of loud chants, and a quick cheer when the sax takes a lead line. Merch usually leans simple and tactile, like riso-print posters, a lyric zine, and clean tees in off-white or deep blue. References float from 90s trip-hop to torch-song jazz, not as costume but as mood cues. It feels like a listening club that also dances, measured and warm rather than showy.
Rituals of a soft-room show
How Puma Blue Makes Quiet Hit Hard
Hushed voice, deep pocket
Live,
Puma Blue sings in a breathy tenor that can flip to a gentle falsetto, close to the mic so every phrase feels near. The band keeps space in the mix, letting guitar chime with light chorus, warm bass glide, and drums use brushes or soft mallets to sit deep in the pocket. Songs often start unhurried, then tighten with a small rhythmic push on the snare, turning the room from sway to slow nod. Arrangements stretch codas so the sax or keys can answer the vocal line, creating a call-and-response that builds emotion without raising volume. A neat live tweak: he sometimes drops a song a half-step lower than the record so the voice sits darker and the guitar blooms a little wider. Expect subtle reharmonizing too, with the keyboard adding extra color notes that make simple progressions feel misty and new. Lights usually stay low with deep blue and violet tones that support the music rather than chase it.
Crescendos by inches
If You Like This Shade of Puma Blue
Kindred night-walkers
Fans of
King Krule might hear the same late-night grit and jazz-smudged chords, though
Puma Blue leans softer and more intimate.
Jordan Rakei is a match for the supple keys, head-nod tempos, and a band-first approach that favors feel over flash. If you like the smooth guitar glide and pocketed drums at a
Tom Misch show, this sits in that lane but moodier. For range and dynamic hush,
Moses Sumney overlaps in the way the voice can float above spare arrangements and then swell without clutter. All four acts draw crowds who listen closely, care about tones, and prize songs that reward quiet rooms. That shared vibe means crossover fans will likely appreciate the patient builds and dusky color of
Puma Blue.
Shared corners of the map