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Pedro the Lion Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts

Pedro the Lion

Pedro the Lion 30th Anniversary Show

Barboza
925 E Pike St

Apr 26, 2025

7:00 PM PDT
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Pedro the Lion Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts
Streaming on
pedrothelion.bandcamp.com
About this concert
To celebrate 30 years of Pedro the Lion, we’re playing five very special shows at Barboza in Seattle. We’ll be playing over 75 songs spanning the entire catalog, including Headphones and Bazan solo with a different set list for each show.
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Event Lineup
Pedro the Lion
60.8K Followers
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David Bazan
43.4K Followers
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Headphones
4.65K Followers
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Official Merch

Headphones (20th Anniversary Reissue)
$14.00 USD
Phoenix
$10.00 USD
Santa Cruz
$10.00 USD
Havasu
$10.00 USD
B split 7" vinyl - Pedro the Lion / L...
$10.00 USD
First Drum Set Tote Bag
$15.00 USD
Hieroglyphics Tote Bag
$15.00 USD
First Drum Set Shirt - Athletic Heath...
$24.00 USD
First Drum Set Shirt - Black Heather
$24.00 USD
Lion Logo Shirt
$24.00 USD

Live Photos

Pedro the Lion at Phoenix, AZ in Crescent Ballroom 2024
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What fans are saying

October 19th 2024
This was an AMAZING experience. Undertow connected the fans with the artist in a small space and it was fantastic. All of we listeners were there for one thing: to experience the performance. Got to chat with Bazan after the performance, a nice bonus. His music is moving, introspective, and he was a joy to see/hear.
Charlotte, NC@
Pedro the Lion (SOLO) Undertow Show
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Pedro the Lion Biography

For thirty years, David Bazan has been writing about what it means to believe in something—and what it means when those beliefs fray. When Pedro the Lion released It's Hard to Find a Friend in 1998, Bazan was already a keen observer of moral and existential conflict, capturing minor human disappointments with devastating attention. By the time Control came out, his writing had sharpened, slicing through suburban politeness and the American dream with pinpoint precision. For over a decade, he built Pedro the Lion into one of indie rock's most quietly radical projects, chronicling doubt, faith, guilt, and the messy pursuit of grace in a way that felt both deeply personal and universally resonant.

Then, in 2006, he retired the Pedro the Lion moniker, as if setting down an old burden. Bazan kept writing, releasing the synth project Headphones and five solo albums that were blunt and revelatory in their own right, but the decision to retire the name felt definitive. Until, suddenly, it wasn't. In 2017, after being dormant for more than a decade, Pedro the Lion was back. The deeply autobiographical albums to follow, Phoenix, Havasu and Santa Cruz, marked a return to the places that shaped him literally and metaphorically, tracing the lines of the past to understand the shape of the present. 

Now, on the occasion of Pedro the Lion's 30th anniversary, Bazan is doing what he does best: stepping onto a stage and making these songs feel brand new again. The anniversary shows are less about commemoration than they are continuation, a chance to revisit the entire 30 year catalog in a way that is still active, still evolving. "The name felt like an imaginary friend for me," he says, "a way to have a relationship with myself." But if Pedro the Lion was once an imaginary friend, it is now something else. It is less like a ghost from the past and more like an old companion you fall back in step with, no matter how much time has passed.

For all the sorrow and searching that has shaped it, the music has always had an essential warmth—a belief in people, in possibility, and in the redemptive power of bearing witness to your own life. Three decades in, Pedro the Lion remains a project about faith, even if that faith has taken on new shapes. It's the persistent hope that there is meaning in the telling: if you lay it all out, every doubt and devotion, every failure and flicker of hope, something honest will emerge.

- Danielle Dietze
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Folk
Rock
Indie Rock
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