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Sabrina Song in Concert

  • Hawthorne Barn 29 Miller Hill Road Provincetown, MA, 02657 United States (map)

6pm doors | 7pm show

$45

Early Access Tickets available now to Members. Not a Member? Visit our donate page to join today. TIckets open to all April 15.

Sabrina Song’s music captures the weary heart of young adulthood—with all its heartbreak and bursts of hope in between. The Brooklyn-based singer, songwriter, and producer emerged as a rising star with her early trilogy of EPs—2019’s Undone, 2020’s How’s It Going to End?, and 2022’s When It All Comes Crashing Down—which saw her unpacking growing pains with plainspoken vulnerability. In 2023, she broke out with her 2022 single “Strawberry,” which captivated a newfound online audience with its delicate, emotionally stirring sound. Now, the 24-year-old artist is poised to become a new force in introspective indie rock with her debut album, You Could Stay In One Spot, and I'd Love You The Same, out now. 

On You Could Stay In One Spot, Song parses through the existential thoughts and murky relationship dynamics that arise in ones’ early 20s and crystallizes the pure, timeless emotions at the core of all the turmoil. “This album touches on the things that I’m constantly thinking about but not always expressing,” Song says. “I’m grappling with the oppressive feeling of time slipping away, the experience of womanhood, and trying to find balance as I fully become an adult.” She exhibits a wisdom beyond her years as she writes of letting go of people-pleasing tendencies, the rage of being looked down upon, and the magic of surrendering into love—despite self-sabotage and doubt.

Born and raised on Long Island, New York, Song began taking piano and violin lessons while participating in community theater productions at a young age. As she honed her songwriting as a teen, she was drawn to singer-songwriters like Joni Mitchell, Carole King, and Mitski for their deeply personal and narrative-driven lyricism. With their influence, her songs capture universe experiences, while still tapping into a specifically Gen-Z ethos. As her work tracks the process of her abandoning her perfectionist and realist mindset, Song faces these messy coming-of-age feelings to find herself anew on the other side. “My projects are something I feel I can put on a shelf, and have it be timeless,” she concludes.