To request ADA seating: Please send us an email at boxoffice@thechapelsf.com or call our box office at (415) 551-5157 and we can assist you. Our ADA area can reach capacity early, so we highly recommend contacting us as soon as possible. Day of show requests may not be able to be accommodated.
Dine with us at Curio and receive Expedited Entry into The Chapel! When you kick off your evening with dinner and drinks at Curio, we will check your tickets at your table and you will avoid the line outside. Be sure you tell us you're coming to the show when you make your reservation and upon arrival to the restaurant. Reserve HERE.
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$38 Advance / $42 Day Of Show
Allah-Las make music that resists easy placement. Since forming in Los Angeles in 2008, the band has steadily sidestepped trends, creating a sound rooted not in nostalgia, but in feel—instinctual, atmospheric, and often instrumental in its storytelling, even when words are not present. Their records suggest a band uninterested in spectacle, focused instead on tone, pacing, and space.
Their last release, Countryman ’82 b/w Dume Room, strips things down even further: two instrumental demos, raw but complete in their intent. “Countryman ’82” rides a pulsing rhythm and circular guitar line that never quite resolves, while “Dume Room” suggests a different kind of tension—slower, hazier, more deliberate.
Over the past decade and a half, Allah-Las have released five studio albums, toured across continents, and built an audience that doesn’t need to be told what genre this is. Their sound is built on interplay. They’ve always written songs that work just as well from the back of a room as they do up close. If there’s a larger point to what they do, it might be this: not everything needs to shout to be heard.
New track “Ultramarine” also points toward what’s ahead. The band has been expanding its palette in the studio, introducing new instrumentation and pushing further into open-ended arrangements. If this latest single is any indication, new music anticipated for release later this year will find Allah-Las exploring new textures and stretching their sound in unexpected directions.