Sam Fender Montreal Concert — Next Date & Ticket Alerts
Sam Fender hasn't announced a Montreal date yet
Tour routing can change late, and Montrealdates are often added after the first on-sale. Here's how to be first in line — plus everything worth checking while you wait.
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About Sam Fender
Sam Fender was born in 1994 in North Shields, a port town on the Tyneside coast east of Newcastle, and the geography is not a footnote. The North East — its docks, its closing shipyards, its pubs, its specific dialect of working-class disappointment and pride — is the lyrical centre of everything he has released. He learned guitar as a teenager in his bedroom, bartended in North Shields working men's clubs and the Low Lights Tavern, and was discovered by his future manager Owain Davies in one of those rooms. A development deal with Polydor followed in the mid-2010s, then a slow build of singles — Play God, Dead Boys, That Sound — that established the template: Springsteen-coded saxophone-driven indie rock with lyrics that named the actual streets and the actual problems.
The debut album Hypersonic Missiles arrived in September 2019 and went straight to number one on the UK Albums Chart, an unusually decisive opening from a new British rock act in the streaming era. The title track became the calling card; Dead Boys, written about the suicide epidemic among young men in the North East, became the song that established him as a writer prepared to address subjects most mainstream guitar music had quietly stopped touching. Two years of touring and a pandemic later, Seventeen Going Under was released in October 2021. The album peaked at number one, was nominated for the 2022 Mercury Prize, and produced the title track that has become the centrepiece of every show he has played since — a coming-of-age anthem that lands with the kind of universal recognition rock songs are not really supposed to achieve anymore.
The collaborator who matters most across that catalogue is Joe Atkinson, his longtime co-writer and producer, whose work with Fender has shaped the sonic identity of the records. The Bruce Springsteen co-sign — multiple public endorsements, an onstage duet at Wembley — turned the obvious comparison into something closer to a lineage. The North East framing, the political voice, the willingness to write about masculinity and class and the specific texture of Tyneside life, is what separates Fender from the pack of British indie acts working in adjacent territory.
People Watching followed in February 2025 — third album, third UK number one, and the record that consolidated his standing as a stadium-scale artist rather than an arena one. The two St James' Park homecoming nights in summer 2025, around fifty thousand a night, were the cultural payoff: the first solo artist to headline Newcastle United's ground, a hometown statement that no other contemporary British songwriter could plausibly have made.
