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Presales to nick hakim: members use these when buying pre-sale tickets
Nick Hakim - I Can See Live: In Concert
Gretchen
Nov 11, 2026 • 8:00pm
Berlin, DE
Nick Hakim - I Can See Live: In Concert
Bahnhof Pauli
Nov 10, 2026 • 8:00pm
Hamburg, DE
Nick Hakim
Brudenell Social Club
Nov 3, 2026 • 7:30pm
Leeds, GB
Nick Hakim
King Tuts Wah Wah Hut
Nov 2, 2026 • 7:30pm
Glasgow, GB
Nick Hakim
YES (Pink Room)
Oct 31, 2026 • 7:00pm
Manchester, GB
Nick Hakim
The Workmans Club
Oct 30, 2026 • 8:00pm
Dublin, IE
Nick Hakim
August Hall
Oct 5, 2026 • 8:00pm
San Francisco, CA
Nick Hakim
Hollywood Theatre
Oct 1, 2026 • 8:00pm
Vancouver, BC
Nick Hakim
Larimer Lounge
Sep 28, 2026 • 8:00pm
Denver, CO
Nick Hakim
Turf Club
Sep 26, 2026 • 8:00pm
Saint Paul, MN
Nick Hakim
Lincoln Hall
Sep 25, 2026 • 8:00pm
Chicago, IL
Nick Hakim
The Mod Club
Sep 23, 2026 • 7:00pm
Toronto, ON
NICK HAKIM
La Sala Rossa
Sep 22, 2026 • 8:00pm
Montreal, QC
Nick Hakim
The Sinclair
Sep 20, 2026 • 8:00pm
Cambridge, MA
Nick Hakim
Warsaw
Sep 19, 2026 • 7:00pm
Brooklyn, NY

How to find Nick Hakim presale codes

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Soft Focus, Deep Feeling with Nick Hakim

From D.C. basements to tape-warm ballads

D.C.-raised and Brooklyn-based singer and producer Nick Hakim makes hazy soul that leans toward psych and folk. He broke out with the Where Will We Go EPs, then drew wider notice with Green Twins, and grew bolder on Will This Make Me Good and COMETA. Live, he keeps the volume low but the tension high, letting small details carry weight.

What you might hear tonight

Expect a set that moves between sparse keys and rubbery bass, with likely turns through QADIR, Roller Skates, Cuffed, and Happen. The room usually skews cross-generational, with producers, crate-diggers, and R&B fans standing shoulder to shoulder and listening closely. You may notice a portable tape machine or old synth on stage, a nod to the way he preserves grit in the studio. A handy bit of background is that he studied at Berklee, which shows in his patient harmony choices and ear for texture. Another small quirk: he often lets songs spill into each other, trimming the banter so the mood does not break. For clarity, any talk here about song order or production touches is based on informed expectation rather than a confirmed plan.

The World Around Nick Hakim Shows

Quiet rites of a careful crowd

The scene around a Nick Hakim show feels like a listening club more than a party. People dress in soft layers, vintage work jackets, loose knits, and a lot of earth tones. You will hear quiet hums on wordless hooks, and the claps tend to land on the backbeat only after songs fully end.

Style built from texture, not trends

Couples lean into each other near the bar while a few heads nod by the soundboard, trading notes on pedals and keys. Merch usually leans understated, with risograph-style posters, a clean logo tee, and a record that sells out at the table before doors close. When the band locks into a slow pocket, phones go down because the draw is in the air between notes, not a moment to capture. Encores do not feel scripted. If they happen, they are short, and people leave talking about textures rather than peaks.

How Nick Hakim Builds the Quiet Storm

Slow-burn craft over volume

Nick Hakim sings in a soft, grainy register that slides into falsetto without showy runs. Arrangements tend to start skeletal, often just Rhodes or guitar and voice, then add bass and drums in careful steps. The band favors round bass tones and light cymbal work, which lets the chords ring and keeps the groove slow but steady.

Small choices, big mood

He likes to flip a chorus into half-time on the last pass, which makes the hook feel heavier without getting louder. A small but telling habit is how he will stretch intros with a single-note drone from a synth, giving the vocal more room to glow. Guitars sit slightly detuned and a touch warbly, a tape-style echo trailing notes so phrases feel like they smudge into each other. When he revisits older cuts, he often trims the high notes and shifts the melody lower, trading flash for control. Lights usually follow the music, staying warm amber and midnight blue, so your ear leads and your eye never steals the scene.

Kindred Currents Around Nick Hakim

Kindred tones, kindred patience

If you are into Sampha, you will recognize the quiet emotional pull and care with piano and breathy phrasing. Fans of Moses Sumney may also lean in, since both explore soft falsetto and space as a tool, turning silence into shape.

Where whisper-level music blooms

Jordan Rakei overlaps on mellow grooves and jazz-minded chords that still land like pop. Listeners who follow Helado Negro will hear a shared fondness for gentle rhythms, bilingual audiences, and warm, hand-played textures. These artists tour rooms where people come to listen, not shout, and they reward that patience with small dynamic shifts that feel earned. That is the lane Nick Hakim lives in, easing between soul, indie, and slight psych colors without rushing the payoff.

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