The energy is intoxicating. Fans ready to party, but not necessarily ready for what is about to hit them. This is what Frankie and The Witch Fingers bring to the concert circuit.
Magdalena Bay – Live @ The Masquerade
Magdalena Bay has a bright future, destined for bigger venues and crazy exorbitant visual effects.
Los Amigos Invisibles – Live @ The Masquerade
If you like the sound of maracas and bongos, drums and keyboards, a little guitar shredding, a ton of dancing, lively tunes and livelier crowds, and of course, plenty of booze, then Los Amigos Invisibles may just be the show you did not know you needed to see but definitely want to attend.
Dance Gavin Dance – Live @ The Masquerade
The main show does last a wimpy 50+ minutes from start to end; however, the motto goes "quality over quantity," and it seems that is the Dance Gavin Dance game plan on this tour. Sheer quality, indeed.
Maluma – Live @ State Farm Arena
The Papi Juancho Tour was a colorful celebration. A real South American-like atmosphere. If you know, you know. If you don't know, now you know. It's simply Maluma, baby, ya'know.
binki – Live @ Ameris Bank Amphitheatre
It takes a special kind of talent and some serious self-promotion to find yourself as the evening's icebreaker to an amphitheater-based concert for Glass Animals on your first ever U.S. tour. Yes, binki accomplished that.
Marc Anthony – Live @ State Farm Arena
Ultimately, if you ask us if the Marc Anthony show one to catch, we will simply say: "Valio La Pena."
Zoé – Live @ Buckhead Theatre
Assisted by a sick strobe display and some mesmerizing background graphics, Zoé walked the walk and talked the talk for the infectious sing-along-to-every-song couple of thousand or so on hand.
Hella Mega Tour – Live @ Truist Park
Prior to the whole Covid mess we would ask, "Is Rock Music dead?" - silly question if you think about it. The answer is NO, HELL NO, NOT AT ALL. Rock music is definitely not dead. It is very much alive, kicking, screaming, bringing joy and packing stadiums with the likes of Green Day, Fall Out Boy and Weezer.
Japanese Breakfast – Live @ The Masquerade
It is now 2021 and Japanese Breakfast is no longer a band to watch; they are now a band any sane audiophile simply cannot miss.