For six years, I’ve discovered myself randomly questioning, “Is that this the 12 months Phoebe Bridgers lastly places out a brand new album?” The reply has at all times been a convincing “no.”
That modified on Might 8, when mysterious flyers appeared in Roswell, New Mexico, saying a present that very same day on the Liberty, a venue that holds a couple of hundred folks. Equally small pop-ups introduced by flyer have adopted in locations starting from Lubbock, Texas, to Macon, Georgia. On Thursday, one other pop-up—additionally introduced through flyer—is going on at a decidedly larger venue: Madison Square Garden, the place Tidal is a sponsor and tickets are $1.
But regardless of her run of almost 20 reveals, I haven’t heard a single word of latest music. No recording is allowed, with concertgoers required to place their telephones in Yondr pouches. The dearth of knowledge has turned followers into investigators attempting to find out the place the following present might be and if—or when—a brand new album is coming.
When there’s a “firehose of music and content material, shortage turns into a robust software,” says Jesse Sachs, a tradition advertising and marketing strategist. That may, in flip, assist artists make their work stand out in an period of ubiquity.
“A lot of the rollout has resisted the conventional web cycle,” says twilightxgalaxy, a moderator of the Phoebe Bridgers subreddit who requested to stay unnamed to protect their privateness. “Info has been restricted, fragmented, and typically solely out there to the folks bodily current, which has made each new element really feel extra vital.”
They are saying the each day drip of knowledge and engagement on-line turned “a shock announcement right into a full-scale group detective mission.”
That detective work concerned a each day thread of present hypothesis that included educated guesses primarily based on a principle that Bridgers was enjoying locations with a historical past of UFO sightings, in addition to a fair proportion of wishcasting. Group chats sprung up as folks scoured their cities in actual life for present flyers. Persons are digitally compiling images of playing cards handed out on the reveals that seem like a part of an even bigger image—probably an album cowl—and speculating on musical themes.
As a fan, I wasn’t above slightly gentle detective work myself. Did I ask Claude to provide you with a listing of potential California tour stops primarily based on the fan principle that she was enjoying locations with UFO sightings? Was I ready to drive eight hours to Space 51 for a shot to see her reside with a couple of hundred folks? Sure I did, and sure I used to be.
My investigation didn’t yield outcomes, sadly, however LeAnna Chase Williams, a Cincinnati-based content material creator, managed to crack the code. She pegged a venue referred to as the Burl in Lexington, Kentucky—the city the place she grew up—because the possible subsequent tour cease after a Chattanooga, Tennessee, present.
Chase Williams had been following the tour because it wended throughout the Southeast and thru Appalachia. Lexington is rather less than 5 hours from Chattanooga and is a school city, a typical theme for a lot of of Bridgers’ reveals. The Burl is “one of many solely cooler indie music venues in Lex,” says Chase Williams, “and after I seemed up their occasions schedule and noticed that the following day they randomly had no occasion booked, I knew one thing was up.”
She drove down on Might 22 and waited within the rain for hours with dozens of different followers who had made the identical guess, and was rewarded when Bridgers’ crew confirmed up with posters saying the present.
She describes sitting cross-legged watching Bridgers acting on a sofa in entrance of an viewers of round 200 because the “finest.” The no-phones coverage “made your complete expertise,” Chase Williams, 26, says. “I really want each live performance was like that, having now skilled it.”

