The Sound of Stillness: Samara Joy in Palo Alto

Samara Joy © AB + DM
Samara Joy © AB + DM
At a rare, reverent performance in Palo Alto, Samara Joy transforms a room of strangers into a quietly unified audience, reminding us of the power of stillness, attention, and truly listening.
Stream: “Lush Life” – Samara Joy




Moments of stillness during a performance feel increasingly precious – rare.

On average, I go to more than six concerts a month, and almost every one feels like an invitation to overstimulation. Don’t get me wrong: I enjoy crowds, I look forward to performances, and I love people. But I miss walking into a space where the music is treated with deep reverence, where no one dares reach for a phone, and even the smallest whisper feels like it could break something sacred.

Samara Joy © AB + DM
Samara Joy © AB + DM

Every time I’ve had the pleasure of watching the illustrious Samara Joy – as I did most recently in Palo Alto on April 13 – she invites that kind of quiet from the room. Not an enforced silence, but an earned one. An evening that makes your body settle rather than tighten. A performance where the audience collectively decides to be present.

From the first few notes, there was a noticeable absence of distraction. No glowing screens, no restless shifting toward exits, no competing attention. Just 800 people arranged vineyard-style around a stage, held in place by something delicate and deliberate. For the entire set, I didn’t see a single phone raised. It felt almost disorienting at first – like stepping into a version of time that no longer quite exists, back when a night out for music was a marked date on the calendar.




Listening to Joy’s voice, it’s easy to understand why. Her singing carries that classic jazz feeling without sounding dated. She sits firmly in a lineage shaped by artists like Duke Ellington, Thelonious Monk, Billy Strayhorn – yet nothing about her performance feels like imitation. She treats that history as something alive: actively studied, honored, and reshaped in real time.

One of the most moving parts of the night was “Five Stages of Love,” her original, wordless vocal composition that’s become a staple of her touring set. In it, she moves through emotional shifts with striking ease – tenderness, tension, release – without ever leaning on language to do the work. At 26, she sings with the kind of emotional range that feels lived-in, not put on.

Her band – Jason Charos (trumpet), Kendric McCallister (tenor sax), David Mason (alto sax), Donovan Austin (trombone), Connor Rohrer (piano), Felix Moseholm (bass), and Evan Sherman (drums) – functions less like accompaniment and more like a shared nervous system. Each player listens as carefully as they play, and that collective restraint is part of what holds the whole room steady.




Samara Joy © AB + DM
Samara Joy © AB + DM

By the end of the set, after a minutes-long standing ovation, what lingered most wasn’t volume or spectacle, but its opposite: Clarity.

A room full of strangers had been asked to do one simple thing – to listen – and, without resistance, agreed.

Maybe that’s what I’ve been missing in so many other performances: Not novelty or scale, but attention. The kind that doesn’t fracture every time a notification appears. The kind that builds a temporary community out of silence.

I may be getting older, or I may just be noticing something I used to take for granted. But in that room, I didn’t feel alone in the longing. I felt it mirrored back at me – quietly – by everyone else who stayed still long enough to hear it.

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