Looking for tickets for Myles Smith in Liverpool? Jacaranda Baltic hosts an intimate folk-pop evening with a stripped back set and Q&A on June 12, 2026, just before My Mess, My Heart, My Life. Plan your ticket purchase for a close-up show built around voice, guitar and warm crowd energy
Myles Smith in Liverpool: an intimate meeting before the new album
Myles Smith arrives at Jacaranda Baltic in Liverpool on Friday, June 12, 2026, in the matinee format "Short Stripped Back Set + Q&A". This is not a classic evening with a large production, but a closer meeting with a songwriter whose songs grew out of acoustic guitar, open choruses and direct conversation with the audience. The start is listed for 17:00, and the format itself gives a good clue as to what visitors can expect: a shorter stripped-back performance and conversation, in a space where there is no great distance between the stage and the audience. Ticket sales for this event are in progress.
This performance carries additional weight because it comes only a few days before the release of the debut album "My Mess, My Heart, My Life.", announced for June 19, 2026. The concert in Liverpool should therefore be seen as part of a broader album moment: the audience will not only hear familiar songs, but also get context for a phase of the career in which Myles Smith is moving from the status of a viral and radio discovery into a performer with a major international tour and a rounded first album.
From acoustic beginnings to songs sung by a wide audience
Myles Smith comes from Luton and is recognized on the British pop scene as a songwriter who combines folk-pop, indie-pop and a radio-friendly sense for a chorus. His breakthrough did not come through a strictly produced image, but through voice, guitar and songs that are easy to remember. "Stargazing" became his most recognizable song, and "Nice To Meet You" further expanded the circle of the audience that looks in his music for warmth, melody and lyrics that rely on personal situations rather than on a distant pop pose.
An important part of his story is also the BRIT Rising Star recognition for 2025, which placed Myles Smith among the performers the British industry sees as bearers of a new wave. Biographical descriptions often emphasize that he received a guitar as a child, that he began performing early in local venues and that he first attracted the attention of a wider audience through cover posts on social networks. That path can still be felt today in the way he approaches the audience: the song must first work stripped down, and only then does it receive a broader arrangement.
What "stripped back" means for this kind of concert
The title "Short Stripped Back Set + Q&A" clearly points to an evening that does not rely on stage design, pyrotechnics or a long set list. In this kind of format, the focus is on the song, the voice and the explanation of the process behind it. This is especially interesting for an audience that wants to hear how familiar choruses sound when the large production layer is removed from them. Instead of guessing about the exact repertoire, it is more realistic to expect a selection from the songs that mark the current phase, with room for conversation about the album and writing.
Such a format particularly suits Myles Smith. His songs rest on rhythmic guitar, rising melodies and verses that easily turn into communal singing. In a larger space this can sound like a festival chorus, but at Jacaranda Baltic the audience gets a different angle: smaller changes in vocal dynamics, the way he begins a song, short introductions and eye contact that quickly disappears in arenas. It is worth securing tickets in time.
Songs that set the tone of the evening
"Stargazing" is a key point of his career so far. The song opened the doors to radio and an international audience, and in a concert context it carries the kind of chorus that asks for a collective response from the audience. "Nice To Meet You" shows the brighter, more mobile side of his expression, while newer material connected with "My Mess, My Heart, My Life." brings a framework in which the themes of vulnerability, moving on and emotional disorder connect into a larger album. If the evening is conceived as an introduction to the album, it is precisely that transition between the familiar and the new that is its most interesting point.
With Myles Smith, it is also important that his songs are not locked into one genre. A folk-pop foundation can be heard in them, but also a pop construction that does not run away from a big chorus. That is why this concert can attract several groups of audience: those who discovered him through "Stargazing", those who follow the new British singer-songwriter pop scene, but also visitors who like concerts at which it is possible to hear a song before it is swallowed by the big touring machinery.
- For long-time fans: an opportunity to hear familiar songs in a more stripped-back form and to ask questions in the Q&A section.
- For a new audience: an overview of what made Myles Smith one of the most visible new names in British folk-pop.
- For lovers of album performances: the concert is connected with the release of "My Mess, My Heart, My Life.", which gives it a different context from a standard festival show.
- For travelers to Liverpool: Jacaranda Baltic is located in the Baltic Triangle, a district known for music, food, bars and repurposed industrial spaces.
Jacaranda Baltic: a small space with a strong musical identity
Jacaranda Baltic is a record store and concert space in Liverpool's Baltic Triangle. Its basement live room holds around 400 visitors, which is an extremely close setting for a performer of Myles Smith's caliber. The space is connected with album launch performances and meetings with performers who could not achieve the same level of contact with the audience in larger halls. For this kind of "stripped back" format, this is an advantage, because every silence, question and acoustic detail can be heard more clearly than in large halls.
The venue's address is Cains Brewery Village, Stanhope St, Liverpool L8 5XJ. This gives visitors a practical bonus: the concert takes place in a part of the city where it is easy to plan an earlier arrival, coffee, food or a shorter walk before entering. The Baltic Triangle is known for warehouses converted into bars, food markets, creative offices and music spaces, so the evening does not have to begin only at the moment when the doors open. Tickets for this event are in demand.
How the concert fits into Liverpool
Liverpool is a city whose audience does not need much convincing about the importance of small concert spaces. Precisely such spaces are often the places where the real strength of a performer can be seen: without great distance, without the protective layer of production and without the possibility for a weaker song to hide behind an effect. Jacaranda Baltic continues that logic in a contemporary form, as a space that combines vinyl, album launch culture and performances in which the audience comes closer to the process of making music.
For Myles Smith, the performance in Liverpool comes at a moment when his career is growing toward larger stages, but this date preserves the feeling of a club encounter. It is an interesting contrast: a songwriter whose songs already have broad radio reach performs in a space that is intentionally intimate. The audience therefore does not come only for the "hit", but for the possibility of hearing how that hit breathes without a large arrangement and how it fits into the story of the new album.
Practical information for visitors
The event is announced for Friday, June 12, 2026, starting at 17:00. The announcements list the format "Myles Smith Matinee: Short Stripped Back Set + Q&A", which means that it is an earlier slot, not a late-night concert. The age rating for the event is 14+, and for younger visitors it is worth checking the conditions for adult accompaniment before setting off. Since this is a concert in a smaller space, it is recommended to arrive early enough, especially if you want to calmly pass through the entrance, cloakroom and find a good place in the standing area.
For arrival by public transport, it is useful to count on the Baltic Triangle as the destination, not only on the name of the venue itself. In the venue information, Stanhope Street is listed as the nearest bus point, while Liverpool Central or Brunswick are listed as rail options. Local parking is not emphasized as an advantage of the venue, so for visitors arriving by car it is wise to plan parking in the wider area in advance and leave enough time to walk to Cains Brewery Village.
Why this date is interesting for fans
The greatest special feature of this concert is not only that Myles Smith is performing in Liverpool, but the timing of the performance. The date falls immediately before the release of "My Mess, My Heart, My Life.", so the audience arrives in a period when the album already has its shape, but has not yet fully come to life in everyday listening. This often changes the energy in the room: the audience knows the key songs, but is still listening for traces of what is yet to come. For fans, this is a rare position, closer to a conversation with the songwriter than to a standard promotion.
In the Q&A part, the audience can expect a format focused on questions and answers, but the specific course of the conversation should not be assumed in advance. The best part of such meetings is precisely in their openness: a question can lead toward a song, a tour, writing, collaboration or the personal background of the album. In the case of Myles Smith, who built his career on immediate communication with the audience, that part can be just as important as the performances themselves.
The atmosphere worth expecting
At Jacaranda Baltic there is no need for exaggerated descriptions. A space of around 400 people naturally creates a denser audience sound, faster reactions and less formality. If "Stargazing" is sung in such a space, the chorus will not sound like a distant stadium wave, but like a choir of people a few meters from the performer. If a new song is introduced, the audience will hear it as a sketch of emotion before it becomes part of the large concert repertoire.
This is a concert for visitors who like to hear a song in its basic form. It is not intended only for fans who know every word, but also for those who want to understand why Myles Smith in a short period traveled the path from an online discovery to a performer with an international audience. In such a framework, Liverpool gets an evening that is more a meeting than a standard gig, and Jacaranda Baltic has exactly the right size for that.
Planning the evening in the Baltic Triangle
For travelers coming from outside Liverpool, it is a good idea to treat the Baltic Triangle as part of the experience. Cains Brewery Village and the surrounding streets offer enough content for arriving before the concert, especially if you want to avoid the last-minute rush. Since the slot is at 17:00, it is possible to plan an early arrival, a short walk around the neighborhood and entry without the pressure of late evening crowds. Before setting off, check the latest information about entry time and age conditions, because practical notes for concerts in smaller spaces are sometimes updated.
Sources:
- Liverpool Music City - date, city and start of the event at Jacaranda Baltic.
- Bandsintown - name of the matinee format, venue address and start time.
- Jacaranda Records - description of the Jacaranda Baltic space, capacity and concert character of the venue.
- BRIT Awards - biographical context of Myles Smith and the Rising Star 2025 award.
- Official Charts - context of the song "Stargazing" and the performer's genre framework.
- Visit Liverpool - context of the Baltic Triangle and Cains Brewery Village for visitors.