From Craigslist to Neon Groove
Cannons rose out of
Los Angeles with a sleek, dream-pop pulse shaped by Michelle Joy, Ryan Clapham, and Paul Davis. They started by swapping ideas online and self-releasing EPs before
Shadows and
Fever Dream sharpened the neon-lounge sound.
What the night might sound like
On this Everything Glows run, expect a slow-burn open that slides into
Fire for You, with
Bad Dream and
Hurricane raising the tempo mid-set. A deep cut like
Tunnel of You often sneaks in for fans who like the midnight-drive side of the set. Crowds lately skew mixed in age, with fits leaning black, silver, and soft pastels, and a calm, locked-in sway instead of pushy energy. Trivia: the trio first linked up through a Craigslist post, and
Fire for You found new life after a
Netflix sync pushed it onto radio. Lights usually bathe the room in cool blues and pinks while guitar shimmer fills the space between beats. For transparency, any setlist or production details here are drawn from patterns and may shift by city.
Where Cannons Fans Shine: The Scene
Night-drive fashion, patient energy
The scene around
Cannons shows leans toward simple lines and soft sheen: black denim, satin bombers, shimmer tops, clean sneakers. Fans tend to sing the choruses in full voice, then drop to a hush for verses, which fits the push-pull of the songs.
Shared signals and keepsakes
You will hear claps on the off-beat before drops and a low cheer when a familiar guitar delay rings out. Merch skews tasteful and pastel: vinyl with glossy art, script-logo tees, and small totes that match the color palette on stage. People film short, steady clips rather than long videos, catching the swell into the chorus and moving on. Post-show chatter is often about tones and mood rather than spectacle, which suits a band built for late-night drives.
How Cannons Build The Glow, Note by Note
Slow-bloom pulse, crisp edges
Michelle Joy sings with a soft, breathy attack that sits right on the beat, and
Cannons lets that space shape the groove. Ryan Clapham favors clean, glassy guitar lines that echo the synths, while Paul Davis stacks warm keys and tight drum programming.
Small choices, big payoffs
Live, they keep tempos a hair under the record to deepen the pocket, then lift the chorus with brighter guitar and a fatter kick. They often strip the first verse to kick, bass, and vocal, saving the guitar bloom for verse two so the hook lands bigger. On older cuts, Ryan uses volume swells to mimic pad chords, which keeps the mix light while leaving room for the vocal to carry. A common onstage tweak is stretching the outro of
Fire for You for an extra call-and-response, turning it into a slow dance. Lighting stays moody and color-blocked, but the focus is the pulse and the interplay between voice, guitar shimmer, and sub-bass.
If You Like Cannons, These Roads Converge
Kindred synth glow
Fans of
Cannons will likely overlap with listeners of
CHVRCHES for the bright synth hooks and cool, airy vocals.
Phantogram fits too, blending shadowy beats with guitar textures that scratch the same late-night itch.
If this clicks, try these acts
M83 appeals to the cinematic side, favoring long builds and hazy nostalgia that mirror the slow-bloom arcs in a
Cannons set. Fans who like the patient, nocturnal mood might also drift to
Cigarettes After Sex, where the tempos stay unhurried and the atmosphere does the heavy lifting. All four acts prize melody over flash, so the overlap comes from tone and pacing more than volume. If you enjoy grooves you can sway to without shouting over, this lane will feel familiar.