1 different presale code are verified and working
Plus: 1 more password coming soon.
Get All Under Heaven presale tickets
| Citi® Cardmember Preferred Tickets |
|---|
Presale codes were last updated (3 weeks, 9 hours ago) at 02-17 11:59 Eastern. Some presale codes are reserved exclusively for our members, learn why we do this here.
Planet Repair: Failure Reignites the Signal
Failure are a Los Angeles space-rock trio that broke through in the 90s, went on a long hiatus, and returned in 2014 with a focused, self-produced streak.
Hiatus Ended, Signal Strong
The return reshaped their identity, keeping the dense textures of Fantastic Planet while writing leaner, mood-first songs that land well on stage. Expect a patient build, with likely anchors like Stuck On You, The Nurse Who Loved Me, Another Space Song, and Counterfeit Sky threading melody through heavy air.Crowd Details You Can Picture
The crowd skews mixed in age, with worn band tees, closed-back headphones around necks, and folks pointing at the pedalboard between tunes rather than pushing forward. You hear quiet singalongs during the big hooks and respectful silence for the droney intros, a room that treats volume like a shared craft. Lesser-known note one: parts of Fantastic Planet were cut in a rented North Hollywood space where they stacked dozens of guitar takes for width without volume. Lesser-known note two: The Nurse Who Loved Me later found a second life when A Perfect Circle covered it, introducing new fans to Failure deep cuts. For transparency, these song and production expectations are inferred from recent runs and could shift on the night.Quiet Storm, Loud Hearts: The Failure Scene
The scene leans thoughtful and gear-curious, with people comparing stompbox settings on the poster tube while the house music hums.
Signals and Keepsakes
You see old Fantastic Planet shirts next to fresh designs, plus a run on foil posters and a steady line for vinyl reissues. Many dress easy and dark—denim, boots, and well-used hoodies—less about display and more about settling in for long dynamics. During Stuck On You, voices lift on the chorus, then drop to a hush for intros where a single drone holds the room.Rituals Without Fuss
Between songs, fans swap notes about which deep cut they are chasing, often cross-referencing past setlists on their phones. You catch respectful cheers for the trio by name, and quick nods when a familiar pedal click hints at the next tune. It feels like a small community that values patience, tone, and care, happy to walk out hearing a ringing note instead of a last-second blitz.Engines of Drift and Drive: Failure Onstage, Up Close
Live, Failure keeps vocals upfront and dry enough to read every word, with harmonies tucked just under the guitars.
Big Floor, Small Details
The rhythm section favors steady, unhurried tempos, letting tom-heavy patterns and rubbery bass support the lift in the choruses. Guitars arrive in layered pairs, often with one bright and one dark voice, a split-signal setup that widens the room without adding players. They like to reshape endings, stretching a coda or flipping a riff to half-time so tension breathes before the last hit.Craft Over Flash
A neat live quirk is the way a baritone or down-tuned guitar will carry what sounds like a bass hook, leaving the actual bass free to stay clean and punchy. On a song like Another Space Song, delays are timed to the tempo so repeats become part of the groove rather than a haze. Lighting tends to wash in deep blues and reds that follow the dynamic swings, reinforcing the slow-burn arcs without crowding the music.Gravity Wells and Fellow Travelers: Failure Fans' Overlap
Fans of Deftones tend to click with Failure because both fold heaviness into atmosphere, letting guitars smear into melody rather than go for pure crunch.