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Presale codes were last updated (13 minutes, 37 seconds ago) at 06-09 10:04 Eastern. Some presale codes are reserved exclusively for our members, learn why we do this here.
Presale codes were last updated (13 minutes, 37 seconds ago) at 06-09 10:04 Eastern. Some presale codes are reserved exclusively for our members, learn why we do this here.
Split-Second Fury with 156/Silence
156/Silence come out of Pittsburgh with a jagged blend of metalcore, hardcore, and off-kilter groove.
From basements to big rooms
After grinding DIY rooms and later joining SharpTone Records, they sharpened that sound across Irrational Pull and Narrative. On stage they chase tension-and-release, jumping from blast energy to bounce and then to sudden quiet for contrast.What they might play
A likely set could hit Vexation, Irrational Pull, A Past Embrace, and Say the Phrase, with breakdowns stretched just enough for crowd call-and-response. The room usually blends regional hardcore regulars, curious metal fans, and first-timers found via playlists, with most people watching cues and giving space between surges. Tidbit: the slash in their name echoes their lyrical push and pull, and guitars often sit in very low drop tunings that favor open-string grind. Note: song choices and production touches here are my best-guess projections, not a confirmed run-of-show.Black Shirts, Clear Signals
The scene skews mixed-age and practical: black long sleeves, work pants or shorts, skate shoes, and earplugs tucked into pockets.
Shared rules, sharp edges
When the set spikes, you hear short, low chants and counted claps, then a quick reset as the band cues the next hit. Merch leans toward stark type logos, split-color long sleeves, and big back prints that read from across the room.Black ink, bright etiquette
Pit zones tend to rotate roles, with a ring for two-step, a rail for head-nodders, and a calm lane along the wall for breathers. Regulars keep eyes up, point out dropped phones, and close gaps so movement stays fluid rather than pushy. Newer faces often ask about song names at the table, and that small cross-talk keeps things warm without softening the impact. Expect a culture that prizes awareness and respect as much as heaviness, where helping someone up is simply part of the rhythm.Riffs First, Then the Room Shakes
Vocals sit front and dry: a serrated yell with quick dips into a weary clean tone used as contrast, not candy.
Built to hit, built to breathe
Guitars ride low drop tuning with gritty gain, favoring sliding chords and dissonant stabs that smear into the kick drum for one big push. Drums flip from sprint to half-time lurch, with bright cymbal barks marking downbeats you can anticipate and meet.Silence before impact
Arrangements often trim a verse live, aiming for a shorter blast before a longer breakdown so the arc feels like inhale then exhale. A neat detail is the intentional breath: they pause on a silent eighth before the drop, making the slam feel larger without changing volume. Bass keeps the glue, doubling roots but adding small bends at phrase ends so the rumble feels alive. Visuals lean on cold-white strobes and deep-blue washes that outline silhouettes while the music stays the focus.If You Like Fractured Groove and Weight
Fans of Knocked Loose will recognize frantic tempo swings and barked catharsis, though 156/Silence lean a bit more jagged.