Sofar Sounds takes grassroots underground to resurrect the live music experience in KC
November 30, 2018 | Elyssa Bezner
Kansas City has a reputation as a home for talented artists, said Hank Wiedel, but restricted resources limit the potential for grassroots performers to reach a global — or sometimes even local — audience.

Hank Wiedel, director of Sofar Sounds Kansas City
Sofar Sounds — an international event series operating under the radar in the metro for two years — reimagines live shows by providing curated, secret performances at which attendees are kept unaware of the location — or if they’re even attending —until a couple nights before. They also don’t know the lineup until the night of a Sofar Sounds performance, said Wiedel, director of the series’ Kansas City branch.
“It’s not like in a normal show … when you have an opening slot and you hope that people show up before the headliner,” he said. “[The audience is] there and they’re listening. I saw the value in that as an artist [myself] and as somebody who also works in the industry.”
Originating in London in 2009, founder Rafe Offer began by orchestrating a small gig for a room of friends, said Wiedel. The shows now appear in more than 350 cities around the world.
Click here to apply to attend a show.
Keep reading after the video.
Wiedel brought Sofar to KC in November 2016 after experiencing a disconnect between performers at packed concerts and shafted artists who were beginning shows in empty venues, he said.
“[It’s] a wonderful concept for artists who are just looking to get their name out there and build a fan base in new markets that they normally couldn’t [reach] if they play the normal club show for up to 15 people,” he added.
Each lineup is intentionally diverse, Wiedel said, citing music ranging between rock, pop, country, electronic, and even Americana artists from Sweden singing in different languages — whatever seems conducive to the listening environment, he said.
“I see it as a way to improve my listening skills as a music lover,” said Wiedel. “It just kind of brings it on home as to why it is that we do the shows and why we love live music.”
Click here to see recent performances.
Keep reading after the video.
Wiedel’s own beach rock, indie band and played a set in between an emo band and a folk artist on a Sofar stage at a firehouse in St. Louis, he added.
“Next thing we know, there’s 70 people in the room, dead silent, all eyes on us,” he recalled. “It was kind of nerve wracking … [but] from an artist’s perspective, it was also exciting just to know that there’s a resource out there that provided an environment for our music to be heard in the way that we would want it to be.”
Wiedel’s band saw a sizable increase in its following after the show — because people took the time to listen, he said.
“All of us remember our first concert and we remember why we were there — it was because we loved the band and we really wanted to see that band. That’s really the only reason,” he added. “The benefit that it has on a guest is that it [gives them a chance to] respect the artist and the environment … and just kind of eliminating any distractions that might inhibit them from enjoying that experience.”

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Superstars pack KC Chamber celebration with gratitude; thankful for a space to belong when many feel lost
Julie Cortes beamed as she took in the energy of Kansas City’s small business community Tuesday evening — surrounded by hundreds of her fellow Small Business Superstars and a crowd eager to build an emerging spirit of entrepreneurship. “It feels so amazing to be here,” Cortes, founder of Freelance Rockstar, said from inside the packed…
Ixtapa closes JoCo favorite; owner says he won’t compromise family recipes or up prices as food, rent costs rise
Ixtapa Fine Mexican Cuisine has closed in Johnson County after five years. Co-owner Victor Esqueda blamed rising costs — rent, ingredients and more — for the closing of the restaurant at 7305 W. 95th St. in Overland Park, near the sprawling Shamrock Trading Company campus. “Everything has increased so much — food, alcohol 20 to…
Coffee cluster percolating on one Troost block; will business support the buzz of six spaces to sip?
A new stretch of coffee shops in the 5500 block of Troost will test the caffeine tolerance of folks seeking a fix. Six options soon fill out the menu along this bustling corridor. Blackhole Bakery, High Hopes Ice Cream and The Littlest Bake Shop currently offer coffee along with their core menu items. But Blackhole…


