(L) Amaarae. Photo by Jenna Marsh. (M) Cortisa Star. Photo via Audible Treats. (R) OsamaSon. Photo by @GK
There are thousands of shows to see in New York City every month, which makes keeping a live music calendar hard and choosing between shows even harder. We here at The FADER are always making note of the upcoming performances we’re interested in attending, and we’re now publishing our picks. Ahead, find the 45 shows we’re most looking forward to in November 2025, from crust punk to acid house, Afrobeats, Memphis hip-hop, harsh noise, and more.
November 1: UNSOUND: Sinfonietta Cracovia, Lucrecia Dalt @ Alice Tully Hall (Lincoln Center)
After a break for Halloween, UNSOUND New York will return with a performance by Polish chamber ensemble Sinfonietta Cracovia of a piece for strings and electronics by Polish composer Aleksandra Słyż. Then Columbian experimental composer turned pop singer-producer Lucrecia Dalt will play songs from her swampy new album. Finally, Sinfonietta Cracovia will return to play a composition by iconic singer, producer, and film scorer Mica Levi.
Read excerpts of our conversations with seven artists from UNSOUND 2025’s Krakow edition for our ongoing “Offline” series.
November 1: Amaarae @ Knockdown Center
Ghanaian-American artist Amaarae is a master of every style of music that makes you want to dance, and her new album BLACK STAR is one of this year’s best.
November 1: Beach Fossils, Being Dead, Smut, Scarlet Rae @ Elsewhere
Bayonet Records’ three-night 10th-anniversary concert series culminates with an indie-rock extravaganza in The Hall at Elsewhere, featuring Brooklyn scene veterans Beach Fossils, Austin oddballs Being Dead, Cincinnati’s own Smut, and L.A.-born, NYC-based popgazer Scarlet Rae.
Watch our “At Home With” Beach Fossils video from 2013, read our interviews with the band from 2014 and 2017, and check out our Opener profile of Scarlet Rae.
November 1: Leftöver Crack, FEAR, and more @ Warsaw
Cracktöberfest XXV is here. Blending hardcore, ska, and crust punk, LC are perhaps best known for a late-aughts feud with the NYPD, who kept threatening to shut down clubs that hosted them. The rivalry led to singer Scott Sturgeon’s arrest for throwing donuts at the officers of Manhattan’s ninth precinct while chanting “kill the police.” They’ll be joined at Warsaw by long-running (since 1977) Los Angeles hardcore project FEAR, with further support from Spaceman Bob, Sunnyside Social Club, and REBELMATIC.
November 1: Tame Impala, Fcukers @ Barclays Center
Perth psych-popper Kevin Parker has been proudly repping Australian music for nearly 20 years, accumulating a formidable catalog as a soloist and collaborator. His new Tame Impala album Deadbeat, Parker’s first in five years, has been quite divisive for its embrace of techno. You’ll hear songs from that at Barclays following an opening set from super-sceney New York electronic duo Fcukers.
Read our 2011 Tame Impala GEN F profile, our 2012 Tame Impala cover story, and our 2020 Tame Impala interview. And listen to Parker’s conversation with Mark Ronson on The FADER Uncovered podcast.
November 1–3: A Guy Called Gerald, Bobby., and more @ H0L0
U.K. acid house/jungle/dnb legend Gerald leads a stacked lineup in a marathon rave that’s scheduled to run from 10 p.m. Saturday night to 4 a.m. Monday morning. Costumes are encouraged.
November 2–3: OsamaSon @ Brooklyn Paramount
“Osamason is rap,” Vivian Medithi wrote in a January FADER profile. That about sums it up.
Get tickets for night one here and night two here.
November 2: Nu Jazz, Leila Bordreuil, and more @ Pianos
Pianos is back, hosting an essential recurring series brilliantly titled Stereo Mandrax. The next edition features all-star Brooklyn experimental collective Nu Jazz; a supertrio featuring French cellist/composer/sound artist Leila Bordreuil, founding Black Dice member Hisham Akira Bharoocha, and innovative percussion improviser Nava Dunkelman; and post-jungle “drum & space” duo Moment Machine.
November 2: Anastasia Coope, Ryley Walker @ Night Club 101
Anastasia Coope’s unapologetically odd sophomore album drops on Halloween, and she’ll celebrate the release with a performance at New York City’s buzziest club/bar. On DOT, she adds extra instrumentation and verse-chorus structures to her oeuvre, which was all acoustic guitar/voice and repeated lyrics ad infinitum on her debut LP Darning Woman. Veteran experimental guitarist Ryley Walker will support.
Read our 2024 profile of Anastasia Coope.
November 2: UNSOUND: John Cale, Heinali & Andriana-Yaroslava Saienko @ David Geffen Hall (Lincoln Center)
There are few artists with careers as illustrious as John Cale’s — Velvet Underground co-founder, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, and creator of some of the best rock albums of all time, not to mention a sub-catalog of challenging experimental forms. In his UNSOUND debut, he’ll have support from the Ukrainian duo of Heinali and Adriana Yaroslava Saienko, whose recent album Гільдеґарда (Hildergard) recontextualizes the music of 12th-century composer and nun Hildegard von Bingen through “Ukrainian folk singing, synthesis techniques, and ancient wisdom,” according to press materials.
Read our interview with John Cale on our site or listen to it on The FADER Podcast.
This concert is currently sold out, but tickets may become available closer to the show via this link.
November 4: Boris, Uniform @ Brooklyn Steel
Japanese doom-metal giants Boris are bringing their iconic Pink album to Brooklyn Steel. They’ll be joined by NYC industrialists Uniform, with whom they collaborated on an absolutely lethal album back in 2023.
November 4: Shintaro Sakamoto, Habibi, El Michels Affair (DJ) @ Knockdown Center
Psych-funk superfreak Shintaro Sakamoto created a signature Okinawan island sound with seminal albums like 2014’s Let’s Dance Raw. He continues to push himself in new directions, most recently dropping an extremely chilled-out LP titled Like a Fable in 2022.
November 4: Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Irma Thomas, Yola @ City Winery
New Orleans jazz scene staple Pres Hall Jazz Band will perform with (or after? unclear) the legendary Soul Queen of New Orleans Irma Thomas and the genre-surfing English ~country~ singer Yola in the posh environs of City Winery. Worth it for Irma alone.
November 4: DSA-NYC presents: Club Zohran @ Nowadays
Celebrate Zohran Mamdani’s impending mayoral victory at Nowadays with a lineup of DJs that includes Amelia Holt, Eamon Harkin, and JADALAREIGN.
RSVP here. There will be a suggested $10 donation at the door, with proceeds going to G.L.I.T.S, a “Black trans-led advocacy and direct services organization that is dedicated to fighting systemic discrimination against marginalized communities, in New York City and beyond.”
November 5–9: DURATIONS: Actress, Jan Jelinek, Jeff Partker, Umfang, and more @ Public Records/Pioneer Works
DURATIONS’ lineup this year is bonkers. The names listed above are just a small sample of the 30-odd diverse acts scheduled to perform. All shows will take place at Public Records except for Andy Stott and Carrier’s sets at Pioneer Works on Thursday the 6th.
November 5, 12: The Music of Anthony Braxton @ Roulette
Roulette Intermedium have been celebrating the work of restructuralist composer Anthony Braxton all year in honor of his 80th birthday back in June. On November 5, saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock and pianist Shinya Lin will open the evening with a rendition of Braxton’s Composition No. 101 (1981). Then the Tri-Centric Vocal Ensemble will demonstrate his Syntactical Ghost Trance Music, as they did under his direction on their mega-album GTM (Syntax) 2017. On November 12, the 10-piece International Contemporary Ensemble will perform works by Braxton and his frequent collaborator Mary Halvorson — an ultra-innovative guitarist whose work spans jazz, classical, and parts unknown.
November 5: Lucrecia Dalt & Aaron Dilloway @ Giorno Poetry Systems
Dalt makes deliciously swampy pop music now, but in a not-so-distant past life, she was an ardent experimentalist, conjuring oddly gorgeous synth worlds from thin air. Dilloway, on the other hand, has stuck to his mutilating harsh noise practice since at least the late ’90s, when he became the second member of notorious psycho-jazz group Wolf Eyes. He upped his horrific antics even further upon leaving the group in 2004, and his live shows are the stuff of legend. Dalt and Dilloway’s 2021 collab album Lucy & Aaron occupied a surprising middle ground between their divergent styles and was one of The FADER’s favorite records of the year. Despite their shared past, this will be the first time they’ll be performing together live.
Read Lucrecia Dalt’s track-by-track breakdown of her astonishing 2022 album !Ay!
November 6: Playboi Carti, Ken Carson, Destroy Lonely, and more @ Barclays Center
Carti may be a business now, but he’s still one of the most exhilarating rap stars out there. His Barclays Center show will be a much more attractive affair for Carti heads than his three gigs opening for The Weeknd earlier this year at MetLife Stadium, where the sound was awful and the vibes cursed. Not that the vibes will be great at this Opium showcase, which is sure to curate a crowd of newly minted toxic adult males of the Gen-Z variety. Still, it just might be worth braving the sea of Supreme to see Carti and his protegé Carson.
Check out our first interview with Carti from 2017 and our 2019 Carti cover story.
November 6: Dripping X UNSOUND: Mica Levi (DJ), Cry, and more
UNSOUND is teaming up with kindred New Jersey festival Dripping to bring a varied lineup of DJs and synthesists to Nowadays. Levi is the star attraction, but don’t sleep on punk-fueled live electronic duo Cry; dnb, dubstep, and hardcore blender LCY; house minimalist Leonce; or the early-evening installation by experimental music’s reigning power couple Jim O’Rourke and Eiko Ishibashi, followed by a performance/installation from art-world-to-rave-underground bridge builder Keioui Keijaun Thomas.
Check out our 2016 Mica Levi Q&A and our 2024 interview with Ishibashi, for which O’Rourke acted as an interpreter and frequent commentator.
November 6: @ @ Night Club 101
@, the unGooglable duo of Stone Filipczak and Victoria Rose, epitomize bedroom folk–pop at its finest.
November 7: Orcutt Shelley Miller @ Union Pool
Godlike guitarist Bill Orcutt recruited longtime Sonic Youth drummer Steve Shelley and bassist Ethan Miller — who’s founded and played in countless killer bands in the past 30 years —for a shreddy jazz-rock album that absolutely rips. It’s hard to imagine their live show won’t go just as hard.
November 8: Red Bull Symphonic w/ Asake @ Kings Theatre
Asake is one of the biggest names in Afrobeats for good reason; his silky voice feels tailor made to slide over the smooth instrumentals characteristic of his genre. It may be lonely at the top, but Asake’s music is the perfect facilitator for joyous group gatherings. His performance at Kings Theatre is an edition of Red Bull Symphonic, a series that’s previously paired artists like Rick Ross and Metro Boomin with full orchestras.
November 11–12: Wednesday, Daffo @ Brooklyn Steel
Karly Hartzman, MJ Lenderman, and Co. have been making inspired country rock together since 2017. Rat Saw God was our second favorite album of 2023, and their brand new LP is quite good too. Lenderman is no longer touring with the band due to his solo project’s massive success (he still contributes in the studio), but that’s no reason to skip one of the see-and-be-seen indie rock events of the fall. Beyond that, the music will be quite good.
Read our interview with Wednesday on our site or listen to it on The FADER Podcast.
Get tickets to night one here and night two here.
November 12: Neil Hamburger, Erik Paparozzi @ White Eagle Hall
Gregg Turkington is one of the funniest men alive, and Neil Hamburger is his most enduring solo creation. As the super-sleezy lounge lizard who tells uncomfortable dirty jokes and carries three drinks under his arm at once, Hamburger has released ultra-meta anti-comedy albums and one quirky musical ensemble called Seasonal Depression Suite, released in 2023. Erik Paparazzi is the album’s co-creator, and while it’s unclear whether he and Hamburger will be performing together or separately in Jersey City, the show will be worth a short PATH train ride either way.
November 14–16: Tortoise, Chris Corsano & Bill Orcutt @ Bowery Ballroom
Tortoise are nominally a post-rock band, but their blend of styles is so eclectic it feels unfair to pigeonhole them as such. They just dropped a new album called Touch in physical formats, and it’s scheduled to hit the DSPs on November 11. Meanwhile, the elite duo of drum deity Chris Corsano and guitar god Bill Orcutt — creators of one of the best experimental jazz records in recent memory — are not to be missed.
Get tickets to night one here, night two here, and night three here.
November 14–15: Cindy Lee, Freak Heat Waves @ Brooklyn Paramount
The most hotly anticipated NYC shows of the year are Cindy Lee’s back-to-back performances at Brooklyn Paramount. After abruptly canceling their tour last spring before it reached Ridgewood, Lee’s triumphant return will take place in a much more spacious venue. Cindy Lee is the drag project of former Women bandleader Pat Flegel, blending the Spectoresque sounds of ’60s girl groups with forays into heady psychedelia and some of the best guitar licks you’ll ever hear. Their 2024 triple LP Diamond Jubilee has been almost universally lauded as a modern classic. Support comes from Lee’s stalwart openers, the Canadian genre melters Freak Heat Waves.
Read our 2020 Cindy Lee profile.
Get tickets to night one here and night two here.
November 14: Peter Zummo & Tom Hamilton @ Light and Sound Design
Veteran synthesist Tom Holland (electronics, modifiers) and stalwart trombone freak Peter Zummo, who also plays “special transformers” in their duo, are an unlikely pair instrumentally, but their creative partnership makes perfect sense: Both bona fide icons of the Downtown Manhattan experimental music scene, they share an endless curiosity and a hunger for strange new sounds. In the cozy confines of Light & Sound Design, they’ll have support from dub-loving production duo Nuke Watch and interdisciplinary arts legend Kamau Patton.
November 14: Mary Lattimore @ David Rubenstein Atrium (Lincoln Center)
Mary Lattimore is one of the best harp players alive, and one should jump at every possible opportunity to see her play. It’s unfortunate that she’s playing on such a stacked night, but if impossibly lush ambient adventures are your bag, this might be the show for you.
Read our interview with Lattimore and Paul Sukeena on our site or listen to it on The FADER Podcast.
November 14: Cortisa Star, Angel Money, Infinite Coles @ Elsewhere
Cortisa Star seems to be taking over the world even faster than we thought she would. “The teenage sensation’s already broken the internet with her blown-out, outrageous sound,” Vivian Medithi wrote in a recent GEN F profile of the rapper-producer-model. “What comes next might shatter it.”
November 14: Laraaji, Ana Roxanne @ Marble Collegiate Church
Laraaji is the patron saint of ambient music, and Ana Roxanne is part of a new generation of auteurs in the genre. The show is part of the long-running, multi-city Ambient Church series, so you can count on the music being ambient, the setting churchy, and Laraaji wearing orange.
November 15: Downtown Boys, Shop Talk, Silly Zach @ TV EYE
Downtown Boys are one of the last explicitly political, legitimately good punk bands standing. Fronted by fearsome vocalist and NYC public defender Victoria Ruiz, with Joey La Neve DeFrancesco — tubaist and founder of United Musicians and Allied Workers (UMAW) — behind her every step of the way, their their shows are explosive affairs, full of righteous indignation and communal catharsis.
Check out our 2016 Downtown Boys GEN F profile and our 2017 interview with the band, and read our review of their 2017 album Cost of Living.
November 16: Dis Fig & King Vision Ultra, Dreamcrusher, and more @ Trans-Pecos
Celebrating the first full year of their live “harsh sonics” live performance series HEAVY HEARTS, Harlem-based experimental artist yaz lancaster is throwing a show with an eclectic lineup. Heavy sounds come from Dis Fig, King Vision Ultra, and NYC noise scene staple Dreamcrusher; Miss Grit will offer left-field pop drenched in dark overtones, and Chris Williams serves ambient trumpet tunes that skew atmospheric. Also billed are the U.K. MC Lo.S.O in his U.S. debut and techno bruiser latinacrofT.
Read Hanif Abdurraqib’s Dreamcrusher profile for The FADER.
November 18: Mariam (of Amadou & Mariam), L’Amour à la Folie, dj.henri @ Sony Hall
Bamako, Mali-born Mariam Doumbia went blind at age five. She met her future husband and bandmate Amadou Bagayoko, who passed away earlier this year, at Mali’s Institute for the Young Blind (he lost his sight at age 15), playing together in the school’s orchestra. Active since the ’70s, their music reached the Western listening public in the early aughts following the pre-virality spread of their single “Dimanche à Bamako” — first to France, then throughout Europe, and finally across the Atlantic. They soon became the de facto representatives of their country’s music for most non-African listeners, but their style is eclectic, pulling instruments and techniques from Cuba, Syria, India, and beyond to create a hybrid style dubbed “Afro-disco-funk” by the French music magazine Les Inrockuptibles. In light of Amadou’s passing, Mariam (now 67) is touring solo, bringing her transcendent style to the States for the first time since her husband’s death.
November 19–22: Music For Two Pianos @ Roulette
Four nights of piano duets at Roulette, including: two Anthony Braxton pieces, performed by Ursula Oppens and Adam Tendler; Sarah Cahill and Joseph Kubera’s tribute to unlikely collaborators Robert Ashley and “Blue” Gene Tyranny; works by avant-jazz legend Henry Threadgill, presented by Rahul Carlberg and Maya Keren; and, in a slight twist, Jace Clayton (aka DJ/rupture) leading renditions two pieces by iconoclastic composer Julius Eastman alongside pianists David Friend and Emily Manzo.
Get tickets to Braxton night here, Ashley/Tyranny night here, Threadgill night here, and Eastman night here.
November 20–23: Arooj Aftab @ Blue Note (early and late sets)
Qawwali-jazz fusionist Arooj Aftab has one of the most gorgeous voices in contemporary music, now internationally known for the way it soars over the sumptuous arrangement of her Grammy-winning breakout single “Mohabbat.” The wistful song appeared on 2021’s Vulture Prince, a debut album colored with the grief of losing a brother. Her sophomore LP Night Reign is a much more playful endeavor that finds the Pakistani artist singing in English for the first time.
November 20–21: Geese, Racing Mount Pleasant, Dove Ellis @ Brooklyn Paramount
It’s fair to say Geese have more juice than any ascendant indie act in the world right now. Frontman Cameron Winter took off after his acclaimed solo record Heavy Metal in December; with their new album Getting Killed, Geese have upped their game exponentially. Alongside Cindy Lee and Wednesday, these are the shows to hit if you want to meet a music microcelebrity and brag about it to your three friends.
Read our review of Getting Killed.
Get tickets to night one here and night two here.
November 20: Momma, Narrow Head, Jawdropped @ Brooklyn Steel
Over the course of the past 10 years, Momma have emerged as one of the world’s premiere power-pop acts. Blessed with a sharp edge that gets them past the competition, they’ve got nowhere to go but up. Opening act Narrow Head are no slouches themselves; the Dallas post-hardcore five-piece make songs that pop with electric intensity, tempering their heavy sonics with a pop sensibility.
Read our March 2025 Momma profile.
November 20: Evanora:Unlimited @ Market Hotel
Oakland artist Evanora:Unlimited wears many hats. Also known as Marjorie -W.C. Sinclair and housepett, he’s a vocalist, producer, performance artist, and sneaky troll who describes his primary project as a “based-on-true-events erotic science fiction religious horror epic.” Despite all that, the music is great, a glitchy maelstrom of mutant hyperpop. Picture a younger, even-more-disturbed Machine Girl, though maybe not quite as chaotically loud.
November 21: Gwar, Helmet, Helmet, Dwarves, Blood Vulture @ Palladium Times Square
Gwar are bringing their theatrical thrash metal and silly monster costumes to Times Square. What could be more fun than that?
November 22: Project Pat @ Xanadu
Project Pat is bringing his gritty, raunchy, jubilant Memphis bars — so many of which have appeared on Three 6 Mafia classics (as well as a substantial number of solo ones) — to Bushwick’s premiere roller rink. What could be more fun than that?
Watch our 2013 FADER TV interview with Pat.
Get tickets here.
November 24: Bktherula @ Irving Plaza
Since “Tweakin’ Together” blew up in 2020, Bktherula has continued to release stylistically varied but consistently great music. Her June 2025 album LUCY, following her two LVL5 projects, emblematizes her ability to slide confidently from sound to sound. For instance: four blown-out, Carti-indebted cuts; several lightly dusty, lyrics-forward tracks; a semi-cover of A$AP Rocky’s “L$D” that is, in this writer’s opinion, much better than the original. Now 23, Bk may be aging out of the chaotic antics that characterized her earlier work, but she’s no less engaging.
Read our 2022 Bktherula GEN F profile and our review of 2024’s LVL5 P2.
November 25: IMPROV NIGHT @ Roulette
Fundraising for their continued existence, the folks at Roulette Intermedium invited John Zorn, guardian angel of the avant-garde, to recruit a band of friends who just so happen to be killer musicians for a no-holds-barred improv set. These artists include legendary interdisciplinarian Laurie Anderson on voice and violin, omnipresent guitar whisperer Marc Ribot, keys master John Medeski, and Tokyo percussionist/synth sorceress Ikue Mori on electronics. If you’ve ever seen a performance of Zorn’s game piece “Cobra” — or any of his other pieces, really — you’ll know this is not one to miss.
Roulette is a not-for-profit organization that runs on donor support. Tickets are selling on a sliding scale — $50, $75, $100 — depending on financial comfortability. Get them here.
November 29–30: Blood Orange (in the round), Dan English @ Brooklyn Steel
I’m not sure what playing in the round looks like at Brooklyn Steel, but the clips I’ve been seeing from Dev Hynes’ recent lead me to believe that it’ll work out fine. Hynes has always been a super-talented performer; he exhibited a Princian knack for R&B theatrics early in his career, and more recently he’s pursued a more subdued, focused practice on stage suits him as he lopes gracefully toward his 40th birthday in December.
Read our 2013 Blood Orange cover story and our review of his third album Freetown Sounds.
Buy tickets to night one here and night two here.
November 29: Sammy Weissberg, Eliana Glass, Luke Bergman @ The Owl
Subtly brilliant strings sorcerer Sammy Weissberg, eerily transcendent singer-pianist Eliana Glass, and guitar/pedal steel wiz Luke Bergman will take over the humble back room of The Owl for a night of sonic exploration.
Tickets will be available at the door for a suggested donation of $15.
November 29: Hayden Pedigo, Jens Kuross @ St. John’s Lutheran Church
Fingerstyle guitarist Hayden Pedigo is fresh off one of the prettiest guitar records of the new millennium and is about to drop a totally different project — a collab album with OKC sludge titans Chat Pile that finds both acts way out of their comfort zones but somehow succeeds spectacularly. It’s tender at moments, snarling at others, and discomfiting throughout. I’m guessing we’ll get Pedigo’s lovely side at St. John’s, but you never know.
Check out our 2014 Q&A with Hayden Pedigo and our 2023 Pedigo profile.
Other shows we recommend
November 1: Byron Westbrook, Testu, Sabrina Salamone, Matthew Ryals @ Light and Sound Design
November 1: Mark Dresser Quartet @ the Stone
November 1: Eli Escobar, Lloyd, Andy Pry @ Good Room
November 1: RamonPang, Arielle Lana @ Rash
November 2: Anastasia Coope, Ryley Walker, Pregnancy @ Night Club 101
November 2: Field Replaceable Units (Mike Videopunk), Sev1 @ Dada
November 2: Robert Glasper @ Blue Note (early and late sets)
November 2: DJ Hell, Helena Hauff, Juliana Huxtable, and more @ Nowadays
November 2: Junior M, @KJON @ Animal
November 2: Swarnendu Mandal & Ehren Hanson @ DROM
November 3: Corbin, Psymun, Bobby Raps @ Webster Hall
November 5–8: Basya Schecter residency @ the Stone
November 5–6: Lola Young @ Terminal 5
November 5: Akai Solo, Infinity Knives, Brian Ennals, and more @ Union Pool
November 5: Public Circuit, Le Bang, AFK, Crate (DJ) @ TV EYE
November 6: Selendis Sebastian Alexander Johnson, Paul Sakai, and more @ Brothers Wash & Dry Laundromat
November 6: Kelly Moran @ Roulette
November 6: Nuovo Testamento, NUXX @ Night Club 101 (late)
November 6: Grumpy, 2nd Grade, D.A. Crimson @ TV EYE
November 6: gabby cocco, Danti Scaglione, Andi @ Bossa Nova Civic Club
November 6: Kilopatrah Jones, DJ Tara, and more @ Nublu 151
November 6: Nabihah Iqbal, Dynoman, Zara Dekho @ Mood Ring
November 7: Josh Perry @ MISE-EN_PLACE
November 7: Ghost Train Orchestra @ Roulette
November 7: Oneida, Antietam, Sloppy Heads @ TV EYE
November 7: Avalon Emerson @ Nowadays
November 9: Kaytranada, Justice @ Barclays Center
November 9: Prison, V.Nudo & M.Razo, M.Barr & S.Bernstein @ Pianos
November 10: Very Quiet SSAJ Big Band @ Brothers Wash & Dry Laundromat
November 11: Ulcerate, Spirit Possession, Pyrrhon @ the Meadows
November 11: Frigo (student concert) @ the Stone
November 11: Isobel Waller-Bridge @ National Sawdust
November 12–15: Patricia Brennan residency @ the Stone
November 12: Joan As Police Woman @ The Owl
November 12: Asher White @ Rough Trade Below
November 13/14: Merce Lemon, hemlock, Carol/more eaze @ Union Pool
November 13: Frost Children (DJ set) @ Good Room
November 13: Questlove @ Isola Brooklyn
November 14: K Porcelain, John Roseboro @ The Owl
November 14: Dafna Naphtali @ MISE-EN_PLACE
November 14: Henry Threadgill, Vijay Iyer, Dafnis Prieto Trio
November 14: Photay @ Public Records
November 14: Frost Children, Peterparker69 @ Warsaw
November 15–16: Dekmantel Nonstop: Blake Baxter, Doudou MD, and more @ Nowadays
November 15: GZA, Phunky Nomads @ Elsewhere
November 15: Honey Dijon @ Knockdown Center
November 15: Truth Club, Nara’s Room
November 15: Infected Mushroom @ The Brooklyn Monarch
November 15: Lefty Parker, Knife in the Water, Blue Ranger @ Union Pool
November 15: Aurora Halal, Naone, and more @ TBA (announced day of)
November 15: Love Injection, Jihad Muhammad, and more @ Public Records
November 15: AMX, Detroit In Effect, KYRUH b2b WTCHCRFT @ Signal
November 16: Mat Brooke & Jenn Champion (Carissa’s Wierd) @ Public Records
November 16: Jihwon Na @ MISE-EN_PLACE
November 16: Jens Lenkman @ Music Hall of Williamsburg
November 18: Wendy Eisenberg, Ryley Walker, Lily Talmers @ Night Club 101
November 18: Helado Negro @ Public Records
November 18: Tom Morello (& friends) @ Warsaw
November 19–22: Stone BrassFest (Frank London residency) @ the Stone
November 19: Stevie Nicks @ Barclays Center
November 19: Tom Morello (& friends) @ Irving Plaza
November 19: Dr. S+M, Molto Ohm, DJ Olivia @ Light and Sound Design
November 19: Digable Planets @ Webster Hall
November 20–23: LCD Soundsystem @ Knockdown Center
November 20: Cut Chemist, Chali 2NA @ Brooklyn Bowl
November 20: Fenne Lily, Free Range, Isaac Pierce @ Public Records
November 20: Body Hack @ Nowadays
November 21–22: Patti Smith & Her Band @ Beacon Theatre
November 21: War On Women, The Hirs Collective, Pillowbiter @ The Meadows
November 21: Ghost Funk Orchestra @ ALPHAVILLE
November 21: Ovlov, Prewn, Washer, Rick Rude @ Baby’s All Right
November 22: bar italia, Lifeguard @ Brooklyn Paramount
November 22: Pink Siifu @ SILO Brooklyn
November 22: Gunna @ Madison Square Garden
November 22: Shwayze @ Mercury Lounge
November 22: Haley Heynderickx, Max Garcia Conover @ Public Records
November 22: AceMo, Linapary, and more @ Paragon
November 23: Piano+ #48 @ MISE-EN_PLACE
November 23: Krill 2, Baked, Smile Machine, Landowner, Beck Zegans @ Night Club 101
November 28: Rochelle Jordan @ Bowery Ballroom
November 28: Aimee Man, Ted Leo, and more @ City Winery
November 28: Soulection, Joe Kay, Gia Fu @ Knockdown Center
November 28: Theo Parrish @ Nowadays
November 28: DJ Enuff, Stretch Armstrong, Tony Touch @ Xanadu
November 29: Kalia Vandever Quartet @ Public Records
November 30: SOSA @ 99 Scott
