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Bad News Boogie with Eagles Of Death Metal

Born from the Palm Desert scene, the band mixes garage rock thump, boogie swing, and a wink of glam. This run centers on the 20th birthday of Death By Sexy, so expect that record to frame the night and color the pacing.

Anniversary spotlight, desert DNA

Core cuts like I Want You So Hard (Boy's Bad News), I Gotta Feeling (Just Nineteen), and Cherry Cola should land early, with Wannabe in L.A. saved for a grin-and-shout payoff. The crowd skews mixed in age, from vinyl-carrying lifers to newer garage kids, with denim, band patches, and earplugs clipped to jackets.

What the night likely sounds like

Many drum parts on the early records were tracked under the alias Carlo Von Sexron, a detail that hints at their playful studio spirit. Several Death By Sexy cuts took shape during loose, late-night sessions at Rancho de la Luna in Joshua Tree, which explains the laid-back swing. Consider these setlist and production details as informed guesses shaped by recent gigs and the anniversary focus.

Inside the Eagles Of Death Metal Crowd

Before the band walks out, you hear old garage and boogie over the PA, and folks nod along instead of staring at phones.

Denim, decals, and backbeat claps

Trucker hats, vintage tees, and lived-in boots are common, but you also see sharp jackets and bright lipstick that nod to glam-era attitude. People clap the backbeat on Cherry Cola and chant E-O-D-M between songs, with a few fans flashing hand-drawn moustache signs from the old logo. Merch leans into the Death By Sexy theme, with retro poster art and possibly a tour-specific tee or a limited vinyl colorway. Older fans trade stories from club shows while newer fans compare favorite deep cuts, and the tone stays friendly and curious. After big singles, the room relaxes into easy chatter, then tightens up when the count-in clicks, like a neighborhood bar that just happens to roar.

Why Eagles Of Death Metal Hit Hard Live

Jesse Hughes sings with a sly, nasal edge that flips to a warm croon on choruses, which keeps the banter and the hooks in the same voice.

Tight stomp, bright bite

Guitars favor bright, slightly gritty tones that cut, while the rhythm section leaves space so riffs can stomp without mud. Live, many songs pop a click faster than the record, which tightens the dance feel and turns vamps into quick payoffs. The band often extends the outro of I Want You So Hard (Boy's Bad News) for handclaps and shouts before snapping back on the final hit. On I Gotta Feeling (Just Nineteen) they sometimes drop to bass and drums before the last chorus, letting the guitar crash back in like a door slam. Lighting usually sticks to warm reds and tungsten ambers that flatter the desert-rock tone without stealing focus from the groove. A small but telling habit: they favor crisp, stop-start tags at the end of tunes, so the last chord lands like punctuation.

If You Ride with Eagles Of Death Metal, You Might Like These

Fans of Queens of the Stone Age will feel at home with the desert groove and dry, driving drums that sit just behind the beat.

Kindred racket, shared grit

The Hives share the same high-energy, garage-punk snap and crowd-banter instincts that keep songs short and sharp. The Black Keys appeal overlaps on fuzzy riffs, foot-leaning boogie, and a love of simple hooks pushed loud. The Kills bring a darker minimalism, but the grit, swagger, and tight two-guitar language align with this show. If you chase raw rock with melody up front, these artists cover the same lane from different angles.

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