Date
Tuesday, December 2, 2025
Time
Doors: 7:00 PM - Show: 8:00 PM
Age Restriction
All Ages
Venue
Longboat Hall
Address
103 Dovercourt Rd, Toronto, Ontario
Isaia Huron
Artist Presale: October 29 @ 10:00AM ET
MRG Presale: October 30 @ 10:00AM ET
RAPSEASON Presale: October 30 @ 10:00AM ET
On Sale: October 31 @ 10:00AM ET
Isaia Huron has always been obsessed with sound, not just the polish and precision of a finished track, but the volatile emotion that simmers underneath. Born and raised in Greenville, South Carolina, Isaia grew up surrounded by music that was both sacred and survivalist. His father, a pastor and civil rights activist who faced threats from the KKK, led a congregation and Isaia’s mother directed the choir. Voices filled the room, not just with praise, but with desperation, devotion, and defiance. That collision of beauty and burden still pulses in everything Isaia creates.
By 13, he was already behind the drums, studying every groove he could find. He played for a megachurch congregation of over 4,000 people and performed as a Christian rapper while still in grade school. But even then, he wasn’t content with applause, he wanted control. A self-described “DIY artist to a fault,” he taught himself production on Ableton while on a cruise in 2018. No teachers or no cosigns, just stubborn ambition. His early releases, Libbie and Libbie 02, were experiments in identity: abstract sketches of a mind in motion. If the first was an open wound, the second was the scar tissue, more intentional, more defiant.
Now, with his upcoming concept album, Isaia steps into the most ambitious chapter of his artistry yet. The record is circular, narrative-driven, and emotionally dense. It traces the unraveling of a man who built his life around the chase, collecting women, distractions, and escapes until he was forced to confront the emptiness at the center of it all. The story isn’t just about lust or heartbreak, it's about ego-death and staring down your own hollowness. About wondering what part of you is even real anymore. “I wanted it to feel like sensory overload,” Isaia says. “You can’t say nobody’s doing this anymore, because it’s right here, all at once, daring you to look away.”
Musically, the album draws from Isaia’s heroes Marvin Gaye, D’Angelo, and gospel choirs, but refuses to stay reverent. It pushes and distorts. 90s R&B textures bleed into glitchy modern production. Grit meets elegance. There are moments of cinematic swell and moments that feel like a confessional booth. It’s an overcorrection by design: a rebellion against algorithmic emptiness. A return to feeling as the centerpiece of sound.
Already, Isaia’s work is resonating beyond his DIY roots. He amassed over 38 million global streams, 1.8 million YouTube views, and earned co-signs from artists like Kehlani and Drake, who praised Isaia’s viral cover of “Teenage Fever.” But accolades haven’t softened him, they’ve sharpened him. His story is one of refusal: to conform, to rush, to water it down. From church kid to pandemic-shut-in to relentless creator, Isaia is constantly reinventing, constantly seeking. He’s currently planning to study classical music formally, another tool in an arsenal built from discipline and obsession.
At its core, Isaia Huron’s music is about the friction between devotion and desire, chaos and control. It’s spiritual and bodily. Intellectual and impulsive. A world built so vividly that once you’re inside it, you forget where you were before. With this album, Isaia isn’t just honoring his influences, he’s daring R&B to remember its depth and forcing anyone listening to feel something again.
Have an MRG Credit/Gift Card? Redeem for tickets HERE
Isaia Huron has always been obsessed with sound, not just the polish and precision of a finished track, but the volatile emotion that simmers underneath. Born and raised in Greenville, South Carolina, Isaia grew up surrounded by music that was both sacred and survivalist. His father, a pastor and civil rights activist who faced threats from the KKK, led a congregation and Isaia’s mother directed the choir. Voices filled the room, not just with praise, but with desperation, devotion, and defiance. That collision of beauty and burden still pulses in everything Isaia creates.
By 13, he was already behind the drums, studying every groove he could find. He played for a megachurch congregation of over 4,000 people and performed as a Christian rapper while still in grade school. But even then, he wasn’t content with applause, he wanted control. A self-described “DIY artist to a fault,” he taught himself production on Ableton while on a cruise in 2018. No teachers or no cosigns, just stubborn ambition. His early releases, Libbie and Libbie 02, were experiments in identity: abstract sketches of a mind in motion. If the first was an open wound, the second was the scar tissue, more intentional, more defiant.
Now, with his upcoming concept album, Isaia steps into the most ambitious chapter of his artistry yet. The record is circular, narrative-driven, and emotionally dense. It traces the unraveling of a man who built his life around the chase, collecting women, distractions, and escapes until he was forced to confront the emptiness at the center of it all. The story isn’t just about lust or heartbreak, it's about ego-death and staring down your own hollowness. About wondering what part of you is even real anymore. “I wanted it to feel like sensory overload,” Isaia says. “You can’t say nobody’s doing this anymore, because it’s right here, all at once, daring you to look away.”
Musically, the album draws from Isaia’s heroes Marvin Gaye, D’Angelo, and gospel choirs, but refuses to stay reverent. It pushes and distorts. 90s R&B textures bleed into glitchy modern production. Grit meets elegance. There are moments of cinematic swell and moments that feel like a confessional booth. It’s an overcorrection by design: a rebellion against algorithmic emptiness. A return to feeling as the centerpiece of sound.
Already, Isaia’s work is resonating beyond his DIY roots. He amassed over 38 million global streams, 1.8 million YouTube views, and earned co-signs from artists like Kehlani and Drake, who praised Isaia’s viral cover of “Teenage Fever.” But accolades haven’t softened him, they’ve sharpened him. His story is one of refusal: to conform, to rush, to water it down. From church kid to pandemic-shut-in to relentless creator, Isaia is constantly reinventing, constantly seeking. He’s currently planning to study classical music formally, another tool in an arsenal built from discipline and obsession.
At its core, Isaia Huron’s music is about the friction between devotion and desire, chaos and control. It’s spiritual and bodily. Intellectual and impulsive. A world built so vividly that once you’re inside it, you forget where you were before. With this album, Isaia isn’t just honoring his influences, he’s daring R&B to remember its depth and forcing anyone listening to feel something again.
Get your tickets now
Secure Transaction
Get your tickets now
Secure Transaction