

Helado Negro by Sadie Culberson

FESTIVAL FINALE!
Sunday, April 21, 2026
Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk, Grove Events Venue
VIP Reception: 4:30 – 5:30 PM
General Admission Doors: 5:45 PM
A no-host bar will be available throughout the evening.
Close out the Ripple Effect Arts Festival with an evening of music and creative energy at the Grove Event Center at the iconic Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk. This celebratory finale brings festival artists and audiences together for a night that reflects the spirit of the festival - connection, creativity, and the way art moves through a place like waves.
TICKETS ON SALE SOON!
Headlining Performance: Helado Negro
Join us for a special performance by acclaimed artist Helado Negro. Blending electronic soul, Latin rhythms, ambient textures, and dreamlike pop, Helado Negro creates an atmosphere that feels both intimate and expansive. Helado Negro explores themes of identity, belonging, and emotional connection, inviting listeners into a rich sonic landscape of rhythm, language, and feeling..
The Venue
The Grove Event Center offers a unique indoor space just steps from the ocean. Located within the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk, the venue provides an intimate setting for this one-night-only finale performance.
Festival Finale Highlights
A closing night community gathering and celebration to reflect on all that the Ripple Effect Arts Festival has created!
Live music and performance by artists and collaborators from across the festival including:
Tannery World Dance and Cultural Center
Redwood Records DJ
Black Box Artists
Kaleidoscope Art, Ned Greene
Riley Nicholson
Join us as we celebrate the final wave of the Ripple Effect Arts Festival together!

Helado Negro Artist Biogaphy by Brandon Stosuy
Born in South Florida in 1980 to Ecuadorian immigrant parents, the world-building multi-instrumentalist Roberto Carlos Lange stitches together memories, impressions, and atmospheres to make detailed dreamscapes as Helado Negro. He produces, engineers, and mixes his own songs, literally creating and populating his own sonic world. Lange has a degree in Computer Art and Animation from Savannah College of Art and Design and works extensively with video, sculpture, sound, and performance. He brings that toolbox to whatever he makes, and there’s a seeming ertlessness to the complexity. His songs are awash with vibrant melodies, sharp lyrical vignettes, and subtle, even whispered hooks.
Since his 2009 debut, Awe Owe, across multiple projects and collaborations, through his breakthrough records, 2016’s Private Energy and 2019’s This Is How You Smile, and to 2021’s Far In, Lange’s work continues to move past easy genre assignments. Showcasing that interest in open-ended multidisciplinarity, in 2022, he and his wife, the artist Kristi Sword, created the multidisciplinary exhibition, Kite Symphony, with Ballroom Marfa—it was a collection of impressionistic installations, drawings and sound pieces that encourages listeners to “open their ears to the sky, the sound of cacti, and the feeling of the wind on their skin.” Lange’s ninth studio record, Phasor, picks up on that interest in the natural world but in the form of pop music. Deep, atmospheric, and meticulously executed, it’s Lange’s tightest collection to date. Lange has been awarded a United States Artist fellowship and a Foundation for Contemporary Arts grant. He lives in Asheville, NC.


