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There are 18 presales happening right now, we have 6 different presale codes.
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Vine and Dine with Bryce Vine

Bryce Vine blends sing-along pop hooks with laid-back rap cadences, built for warm-night drives. He came up writing in small LA studios and built a lane where bright guitars and elastic bass leave room for his conversational voice.

Breezy roots, radio-ready hooks

Expect a set that leans on early favorites and radio staples, likely pulling Drew Barrymore, La La Land, and Sour Patch Kids into big chorus moments. Deeper cuts like Baby Girl often work as tempo pivots between breezy and bounce-heavy sections.

Who shows up, what lands

The room skews mixed-age, with friend groups in streetwear, students in ball caps, and longtime pop-rap fans who know the bridges better than the verses. A small craft note: producer Sir Nolan helped shape the uncluttered sparkle on his breakout, a minimalist approach that translates cleanly on stage. Early in his career he issued the Lazy Fair EP, a title that winks at laissez-faire while nodding to his West Coast ease. Heads up: any setlist or staging mentions are inference from recent patterns and could differ at your show.

The Bryce Vine Crowd, Up Close

The scene leans casual and colorful: retro team jerseys over tees, light denim, bucket hats, and clean sneakers that can take a bounce. You will spot handmade signs quoting Drew Barrymore and La La Land, plus disposable film cameras and phone flashes during the biggest hooks.

Chants, claps, and chorus duty

Chants tend to be rhythm-first, with the crowd clapping the backbeat before dropping into the chorus lines the band tees up. Merch mirrors the palette on the records, with bright pastels, varsity fonts, and a cheeky tee nodding to the tour name.

Community over flex

Friends trade verses during openers, then lock in for the sing-backs, keeping the room friendly and focused on the shared groove. The vibe skews West Coast in attitude more than geography, easygoing but tight, like a summer kickback that just happens to be very loud. After the show, people compare favorite bridges rather than solos, because here the sweet spot is the hook that sticks all week.

How Bryce Vine Keeps It Smooth Onstage

Vocally, Bryce Vine rides a relaxed mid-range that flips between speaking rhythm and light melody, so the band keeps arrangements uncluttered. Drums emphasize a crisp snare and off-beat hi-hats, while bass stays round rather than buzzy, letting the kick and vocal share the front.

Space for the hook to breathe

Guitars favor clean, slightly chorused tones that trace the topline without stealing it, and keys handle the sparkle and pads. He often stretches a bridge by dropping to drums and bass, inviting the crowd to carry the hook before the final chorus hits harder.

Little switches, big payoffs

When a track leans slower, the drummer nudges the groove forward with tiny pushes on the snare, keeping the set from dragging. A neat live tweak: the band will flip a verse to half-time, then snap back to original speed to make a drop feel bigger without adding volume. Visuals tend toward warm neons and city-night backdrops that support the sun-on-concrete sound rather than distract from it.

If You Like Bryce Vine, You Will Like These Too

If you like tuneful rap with pop polish, Quinn XCII is a close neighbor, pairing feel-good tempos with confessional lines that play well live.

Kindred hooks, kindred rooms

blackbear shares the talk-sung delivery and glossy low-end, though his mood runs darker, which still clicks for fans who prize catchy hooks. For bright summer bounce and friendly charisma, KYLE brings a similar grin-in-the-beat energy and a crowd that shows up to sing rather than posture.

Pop-first ears, live-band feel

MAX is more R&B-leaning, but his big choruses and danceable arrangements appeal to the same pop-first ears that latch onto Bryce Vine's hooks. These acts tour rooms where a live drummer keeps pop-rap from feeling canned, and the bass is tuned for body-friendly thump. Fans who like nimble genre mixing and positive crowd interplay tend to float between these bills without missing a step. Translation: you will hear polished beats, melodic toplines, and plenty of call-and-response moments across all four.

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