When the music industry crashed in the early 2000s and national touring routes through Upstate New York started to thin out, Jeff Smith built a company that kept the region on the map. Founded in Buffalo in 2001, After Dark Presents has grown into “Upstate New York’s largest independent concert promoter” — a single operation that produces up to 250 events a year across Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, Albany, and the Finger Lakes.
Founding After Dark
Smith launched After Dark Presents in Buffalo at the dawn of the streaming era, when independent promoters were being squeezed by venue consolidation and the collapse of physical album sales. His bet was that Upstate New York’s mid-sized rock clubs, theaters, and outdoor spaces could remain viable on national touring schedules if someone was willing to handle the logistics market by market. He was right. By the late 2000s, After Dark had become a fixture in Buffalo’s club ecosystem — booking everyone from rising hardcore and punk acts to mid-career indie, hip-hop, and electronic touring artists into Town Ballroom, Rapids Theatre, and other rooms.
Upstate’s Largest Independent
From the Buffalo base, After Dark expanded across Upstate New York. The company now produces shows in Rochester, Syracuse, Albany, and the Finger Lakes — including venues at Beak & Skiff Apple Orchards, Empire Live, the Aud Theatre, and dozens of other regional rooms. The scale puts After Dark in a category that didn’t really exist before: an Upstate-wide independent operating at a volume historically associated only with corporate promoters or major-market specialists.
Keeping the Routing
The real impact of Smith’s work is harder to see than a single show — it’s structural. By maintaining a high-volume calendar across the state, After Dark has helped ensure that mid-tier national tours continue to route through Upstate New York. Without an independent of his scale handling the logistics, many of those shows would skip the region entirely on their way between Boston and Cleveland. Smith’s quiet contribution is that Upstate audiences still get to see touring artists that, in a different market structure, would have stopped coming years ago.
Jeff Smith is the rare modern promoter whose work spans every major Upstate market. The independent concert circuit in the region exists, in 2026, in large part because his company kept showing up.