Country/Folk
Kameron Marlowe Tickets
Concerts4 results
Concerts in Ireland
- 19/12/2024Thursday 19:00BelfastThe Limelight 2Kameron MarloweLimited Availability
- 19/12/2024Thursday 19:00BelfastThe Limelight 2Kameron Marlowe - VIP Upgrade (Event Ticket Not Included)
Venue
International Concerts
- 13/12/2024Friday 19:00Birmingham, GBO2 Institute2 BirminghamKameron MarloweLimited Availability
- 15/12/2024Sunday 19:00Glasgow, GBGalvanizers SWG3Kameron MarloweLow Availability
About
One of Nashville’s most exciting up-and-coming voices, Marlowe has indeed been through some changes recently, from adapting to a new life on the road to breaking through with the Platinum-certified single “Giving You Up” and touring alongside some of country music’s biggest stars. That journey is reflected in the sixteen songs of his sophomore album, Keepin’ the Lights On, from the introspection of “On My Way Out” to the romantic turmoil of “Strangers.”
Born in Kannapolis, North Carolina, Marlowe grew up singing in church and formed a band in high school. After leaving college to help support his family, he began uploading performances online and started gaining traction. He subsequently moved to Nashville and released "Giving You Up" independently; when the song—written by himself after his girlfriend broke up with him, right before he was planning on proposing—went viral, Marlowe landed management and songwriting deals and eventually signed with Sony Music Nashville.
He released several more singles and, in 2022, put out his acclaimed debut album We Were Cowboys, which included the Gold-certified tracks “Burn ‘Em All” and “Girl On Fire.” Named to CMT’s 2023 Listen Up class and Opry’s NextStage program, Marlowe was also highlighted as “One to Watch” by Amazon Music, Pandora and Spotify.
His powerful vocals made an immediate impression, but Marlowe wasn’t satisfied with his songwriting. “I felt like some of my songs in the past were surface level as I was still growing in my comfort and confidence around songwriting and sharing my story,” he says. “But on this, it was time to dig deeper. I can write a break-up song 573 different ways, but if it's saying the same thing, to me it's the same song.”