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Jan/31 · Travis – Raze The Bar Tour
Feb/1 · Gallant
Feb/2 · The Vaccines
Feb/5 · Eivør – North American Tour 2025
Feb/7 · Daniel Donato’s Cosmic Country
Feb/11 · Dhruv
Feb/13 · Lotus
Feb/14 · Lotus
Feb/15 · 070 Shake: The Petrichor Tour
Feb/16 · DeVotchka
Feb/18 · Tuxedo
Feb/26 · BAYNK – ‘Senescence’ USA/Canada Tour 2025
Feb/28 · Rare Americans North American Tour 2025
Mar/1 · The 2025 Portland Mardi Gras Ball
Mar/8 · Jerry Cantrell
Mar/12 · Evan Honer
Mar/15 · Cold Cave
Mar/17 · Bishop Briggs: The Tell My Therapist I’m Fine Tour
Mar/19 · Lime Cordiale – Enough of the Sweet Talk Tour
Mar/21 · Paris Paloma – Cacophony North American Tour
Mar/22 · Daily Bread – Flash Flood Tour
Mar/27 · Kolton Moore & the Clever Few
Mar/28 · Corook: Committed to a Bit Tour
Mar/29 · Daniel Seavey – Second Wind Tour
Mar/30 · Hovvdy – The Hovvdy Tour
Apr/4 · Wax Tailor
Apr/5 · Hulvey – “All For You” Tour
Apr/8 · Bob Mould
Apr/10 · Tophouse
Apr/11 · Deep Sea Diver
Apr/13 · Juvenile & The 400 Degreez Band
Apr/14 · Dom Kennedy
Apr/21 · Leprous: Melodies of Atonement 2025
Apr/27 · Mereba
Apr/29 · Yukimi
May/5 · Circa Waves and Friday Pilots Club Tour
May/6 · Godspeed You! Black Emperor
May/7 · Godspeed You! Black Emperor
May/8 · Marc Scibilia
May/9 · The Moss
May/16 · Orla Gartland
May/17 · Allison Russell
May/18 · Steel Pulse
May/20 · Sasami
May/21 · Panda Bear
May/30 · Alex Warren – Moved to Crystal Ballroom
Jun/2 · Blondshell
Jun/10 · The Blue Stones – Metro North America ‘25
Jul/20 · Cosmo Sheldrake – North America Tour
Oct/25 · Kneecap

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Monqui Presents

With special guest Akira Galaxy

Friday, January 31
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$46.87 to $52.02

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Saturday, February 1
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 21 +
$23.69 to $35.79

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

with special guest THUS LOVE

Sunday, February 2
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 21 +
$23.69 to $38.37

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

With special guest Sylvaine

Wednesday, February 5
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$35.79

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Emporium Presents
Friday, February 7
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$42.49

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

with guest Tara Lily

Tuesday, February 11
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$21.12 to $33.22

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

with Yak Attack

Thursday, February 13
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 21 +
$25.75 to $36.31

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

with Yak Attack

Friday, February 14
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 21 +
$25.75 to $36.31

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

with Bryant Barnes & Johan Lenox

Saturday, February 15
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$49.02 to $259.71

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Sunday, February 16
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 21 +
$33.22 to $44.55

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

With special guest Gavin Turek

Tuesday, February 18
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 21 +
$35.28 to $165.57

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

with Bad Tuner

Wednesday, February 26
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$35.28

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

With special guest Shauna Dean Cokeland

Friday, February 28
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$35.28

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Mysti Krewe of Nimbus Present
Saturday, March 1
Doors : 7pm, Show : 7pm
ages 21 +
$30

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

Saturday, March 8
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 21 +

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

with Leon Macjen

Wednesday, March 12
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$35.28

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

With special guests Kontravoid and Buzz Kull

Saturday, March 15
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 21 +
$36.31

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Monday, March 17
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$46.61

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Wednesday, March 19
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$31.67 to $155.48

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Friday, March 21
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Showbox Presents
Saturday, March 22
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 18 +
$32.45 to $49.70

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Thursday, March 27
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$29.10

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Friday, March 28
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$29.10 to $127.46

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Saturday, March 29
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Sunday, March 30
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$29.10

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

with special guest Napoleon Da Legend

Friday, April 4
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 21 +
$31.67

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

With special guest nobigdyl.

Saturday, April 5
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$35.28 to $75.45

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Tuesday, April 8
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 21 +
$39.91

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

with special guest The Wildwoods

Thursday, April 10
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$35.28

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Friday, April 11
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$29.10

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

with special guest Mannie Fresh

Sunday, April 13
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 21 +
$74.68

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
ENT Legends Presents
Monday, April 14
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Monday, April 21
Doors : 6:30pm, Show : 7:30pm
ages 21 +
$38.37

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Sunday, April 27
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$35.28

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Tuesday, April 29
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$43.52

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Monday, May 5
Doors : 6:30pm, Show : 7:30pm
all ages
$35.28

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Tuesday, May 6
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 21 +
$52.02

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Wednesday, May 7
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 21 +
$52.02

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Thursday, May 8
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$35.28 to $133.13

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Friday, May 9
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$36.31

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Friday, May 16
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$38.88

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

With special guest: Kara Jackson

Saturday, May 17
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$133.13

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Sunday, May 18
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 21 +
$46.61

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

With special guest Mood Killer

Tuesday, May 20
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Wednesday, May 21
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
ages 21 +
$41.97

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Friday, May 30
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Monday, June 2
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$29.10

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents
Tuesday, June 10
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$35.28

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Holocene Presents

Sunday, July 20
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages
$38.37

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Monqui Presents

Saturday, October 25
Doors : 7pm, Show : 8pm
all ages

This performance has been moved from The Crystal Ballroom. All previously purchased 070 Shake Crystal Ballroom tickets will be honored at the Wonder Ballroom.

About 070Shake:

You can’t put 070Shake into a box. The artist born Danielle Balbuena makes renegade anthems that exhibit her ever-shifting, experimental spirit, while maintaining a glowing core of pure emotion. Since her breakout in 2018, she established her chameleonic presence across the worlds of rap, R&B, alternative, and pop through two ambitious studio albums: 2020’s Modus Vivendi and 2022’s You Can’t Kill Me. Now, she readies Petrichor, her third album and most daring, fully fleshed out statement yet, arriving November 15.

The title Petrichor refers to the earthy scent that accompanies a rainfall—one of Shake’s favorite scents after her mother always pointed it out to her while growing up. “It brings me to this part of myself where I feel oneness with everything that I’ve ever been through, every age that I’ve ever been,” Shake says of the smell. She’s contributed piercing hooks to tracks by Kanye West, Nas, and Pusha T, and scored a UK No. 1 hit with her RAYE collaboration, “Escapism.” But Petrichor is Shake’s true original statement, bringing together fractured facets of Shake’s life and spirit, and weaves it all into a heroic tale.

Petrichor displays Shake’s most adventurous and far-reaching compositions to date, as she embarks on a search for salvation while battling the vices of the world and the inner turmoil of her mind. Opener “Sin” plunges the listener into this twisted universe: “Let’s go to Sin City/I ain’t talkin’ Las Vegas/…I don’t care how lost we get,” she sings over menacing synths. The LP then sees Shake falling deep into an irreversible romance to which she must fully surrender. The album portrays this odyssey by careening through psychedelic guitars, nocturnal dance beats, melodramatic piano, classic rock-inspired melodies, and soul-bearing lyricism.

“It starts with ‘Sin,’ which represents where I was at the time. But then the project says: ‘Let’s go through this darkness together and make it out the other side,’” Shake explains of the album executive produced in partnership with her longstanding collaborator Dave Hamelin. “It finishes with ‘Love,’ and everything in-between was the journey. As long as you realize in the end that everything is love, then you can appreciate the road you took to get there.”

Shake attributes the album’s unpredictable sound to the way that she lets songs “lead her” in the creation process. “It feels like I’m channeling something when I’m recording,” she explains. “I’m waiting until I find this thing that’s searching for me, and I’m not satisfied until what I hear in my head is manifested in the music. I think it’s also my ADHD—when I hear a song going a certain way for too long I just have to take it somewhere else.” Or on “Elephant,” a song about having her first fight with a lover on a rowdy night out, Shake ended up keeping unconventional chord switches that were originally a “mistake” in the studio. “A lot of times, people have to be careful with making mistakes around me because I end up liking it more,” she laughs.

A wide range of guests lend their voices to Petrichor’s epic narrative, including Courtney Love on Shake’s cover of the 1970 Tim Buckley song “Song to the Siren,” JT of City Girls on the mystical track “Into Your Garden,” and Nashville singer-songwriter Cam on the euphoric “Never Let Us Fade.” Lily-Rose Depp appears on the emotionally charged “Blood On Your Hands,” on which Shake recites a spoken-word passage of devotion to a “fatal lover.” Then Depp enters, reading aloud from a letter she had originally written to Shake that begins with the words: “I cannot begin to untangle myself from you.”

Depp also appears as a muse in the music video for “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” a song that honors Shake’s present and past; the track’s first half was inspired by her current home of southern California and 1950s surf rock, while the second half is an homage to her New Jersey upbringing where she “paid her dues.” Bridging these worlds is Shake’s greaser character in the video, inspired by S.E. Hinton’s coming-of-age drama The Outsiders. Other visual inspirations for the album include Ingmar Berman’s 1966 psychological drama Persona and Sergei Parajnov’s 1969 poetic classic The Color of Pomegranates.

As she strips back the Auto-Tune and focuses on delivering rawness and vulnerability—while being more exploratory than ever before—Shake finds her true self on Petrichor. “Right now, I’m rediscovering my voice and becoming one with it,” she says.