Saskatoon roots run through Bombargo, a soul-pop outfit led by brothers Nathan and Anthony Thoen, mixing sunny hooks with a touch of funk. They cut their teeth in prairie clubs, then found wider ears when Taylor Swift added Mr. No Good to her playlist in 2017.
From prairies to playlists
Expect an upbeat arc built on tight harmonies, crisp guitar chops, and keys that keep the chords feeling warm. A likely set dips into
Mr. No Good and
Oxygen, with a mid-set breather that turns into a big singalong. Crowds skew community-minded: groups of friends up front dancing, couples in the middle swaying, and locals who shout for deep cuts without drowning the room.
Notes and nuggets
Watch for small touches like a call-and-response vamp, or a short acoustic intro that snaps back into full band for the chorus. Another small note: the project began as the Thoen brothers trading songs before adding friends on bass, drums, and keys, a jam-first approach that still shows live. Note: any setlist and production details mentioned here are educated guesses based on recent shows and could change on the night.
The Bombargo Scene, Up Close
Bright threads, open arms
You will see color: vintage windbreakers, denim with prairie patches, and a few wide-brim hats that nod to home turf. Fans clap on the twos and fours, and the band encourages short call-backs that feel more like conversation than a command. There is a habit of forming small dance circles near the front, with friends swapping spots rather than staking territory.
Little rituals
Merch leans pastel and retro font, and the line often includes folks chatting about which chorus they plan to belt. Between songs, people trade local stories about seeing the band in small rooms, which frames the show as a community catch-up. Chant moments are short and tuneful, often a clipped hey or a synced clap, so the room stays musical even when the band drops out. By the encore, the vibe is easygoing and neighborly, more shared block party than scene pose.
How Bombargo Builds The Sound Live
Groove first, gloss second
Nathan's tenor rides clean and bright, with a grain that cuts through the mix without shouting. Guitars favor tight, percussive strums on the off-beats, while bass stays melodic enough to sing along with the kick drum. Keys fill the gaps with warm pads or a touch of vintage piano, leaving space so choruses feel bigger when the harmonies stack. Live,
Bombargo often stretches a bridge into half-time to reset the pulse, then snaps back to full speed for a heavier last chorus.
Little choices, big lift
They sometimes swap a guitar for tambourine or shaker on upbeat tunes, which makes the groove bounce without turning up the volume. A common tweak is a shorter first verse and a double-tagged outro, letting claps and voices become part of the arrangement. Lighting tracks the dynamics in warm ambers and cool blues, adding contour without pulling focus from the rhythm section. The net effect is music-first production that lets hooks land and keeps bodies moving in pocket rather than in a blur.
Why Bombargo Fans Click With These Acts
Kindred vibes, shared rooms
Fans of
Vance Joy tend to lean toward heartfelt singalongs and acoustic-bright melodies, a lane
Bombargo cruises comfortably.
Fitz and The Tantrums fit for their danceable snap, handclap grooves, and crowd-led hooks that echo
Bombargo's party-side.
Acoustic hearts, rhythmic feet
Walk Off the Earth brings DIY charm, multi-instrument swaps, and a family-show energy that mirrors
Bombargo's inclusive feel. If you like soul-rich vocals with a pop engine,
Allen Stone checks the same boxes in a more R&B-leaning frame. All four acts keep tempos lively, put harmonies up front, and invite the room to sing, so the overlap is about connection as much as genre. They also prize positive lyric themes without getting sugary, which keeps the shows warm but grounded.