Helado Tropical

Helado Tropical

Neptune Theatre, 1303 NE 45th Street, 98105 Seattle Kort

þri. 18.08.2026 20:00

The Neptune Theatre is located in Seattle, Washington at 1313 NE 45th Street in Seattle's University District. This is a general admission event. The ADA section on the seating map does not represent a specific seat location. 6 ticket limit per patron. Patrons exceeding the ticket limit will have their orders cancelled at the venue's discretion. Performed in English & Spanish. All sales are final. No refunds or exchanges. Unless otherwise noted, each person must have a ticket regardless of age. No babies in arms. Mobile ticket delivery will be delayed until 4 days prior to event.

Flytjendur

  • Helado Negro
    Helado Negro

    Roberto Carlos Lange better known by his stage name Helado Negro, is an American musician. In 2019 he was awarded a United States Artists Fellow in Music and is also the recipient of a 2019 grant award in Music from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts.

  • Reyna Tropical
    Reyna Tropical
    Reyna Tropical is led by guitarist, singer, songwriter and producer Fabiola Reyna (founder of She Shreds Media). Investigating landscapes of the tropical diaspora, Reyna Tropical is a musical exploration of intuition, transition, connection and continuation—a celebration of spiritual survival pulsing with the beat of all things tropical. In July of 2022, faced with the passing of co-founder and bandmate, Sumohair (Nectali Diaz), Reyna made the decision to continue in solidarity with the band’s founding vision to be a voice and a platform for the joy and injustices living within the spectrum of Queer Love & Afro-Mexico. Reyna Tropical's debut album, Malegría (out March 29th) is a contemporary celebration and continuation of wide-reaching cultural traditions—from Congolese, Peruvian, and Colombian rhythms to revolutionary artists like lesbian guitarist-singer Chavela Vargas—these influences meld and are remixed through Fabi Reyna's distinctive lens. Traversing themes including queer love, feminine sensuality, and the transformative power of intentional relations to the earth, Malegría spotlights narratives often pushed to the margins and offers them a sonic homeland.