From dorm rooms to big rooms
Ratboys started as Julia Steiner and Dave Sagan swapping songs at Notre Dame, later settling in Chicago. Their records mix indie rock drive with a gentle alt-country glow, and the live show leans into dynamics and open space. Expect a set that centers
The Window, with
Black Earth, WI,
Elvis Is in the Freezer, and
Alien with a Sleep Mask On likely shaping the arc. The crowd skews mixed-age: gear-curious players, local scene friends, and new fans drawn by story-first writing, mostly calm until the big lifts. Trivia: they celebrated a decade with the compilation
Happy Birthday, Ratboy, and they recorded parts of
The Window with producer Chris Walla in Seattle. For clarity, the set choices and staging cues here are based on patterns and could vary the night you see them.
What might make the cut
The Little Community Ratboys Build Night to Night
Soft singalongs, big feelings
The room tends to be calm and present, with folks lowering voices for quiet passages and lifting into easy singalongs on big hooks. You will notice denim jackets, earth-tone knits, and a few vintage caps, plus guitar-pedal tees and zine-style totes near the rail. Merch leans hand-drawn and heart-on-sleeve: ringer tees, risograph posters, and vinyl with lyric sheets that people actually read between sets. During the longer builds, a soft clap pattern sometimes appears, then drops back when the band goes pin-drop quiet. Friends trade favorite deep cuts and point out tone changes, like when the guitars switch from chime to crunch in an instant. It feels like a local show even in bigger rooms, with strangers giving each other space while still sharing the thrill of the late-set surge.
What the room feels like
How Ratboys Make Small Songs Feel Huge
Songs that swell, voices that carry
Julia Steiner's voice sits upfront with soft grain and steady pitch, telling stories in a clear, talk-like rhythm. Dave Sagan shapes the guitar bed from glassy clean picking to gritty bursts, and the rhythm section keeps it nimble rather than heavy. Arrangements tend to leave air in the verses and then bloom at the end, so choruses feel earned rather than forced. On
Black Earth, WI, they often expand the middle into a long rise, sometimes pausing for a heartbeat before the final rush. Steiner often uses a capo high on the neck, which brightens chords and keeps melodies in a comfortable vocal pocket. Lights are warm ambers and cool blues that frame the music without pulling focus, letting the band carry the drama.
Choices you can actually hear
Kindred Company for Ratboys
Kindred spirits on the road
If you like
Big Thief, the patient builds and hushed-to-roaring swings will feel familiar, though
Ratboys keep a brighter, road-song lilt. Fans of
Waxahatchee will catch the plainspoken vocals and Americana hue, especially on midtempo tracks that let lyrics land.
Pinegrove overlaps in ringing guitars and community-forward shows, but
Ratboys push into longer, cinematic codas.
Soccer Mommy shares the hooky side and clean guitar textures, making the crossover crowd natural. All four acts draw people who want melody first, with bands that breathe and let songs stretch onstage.
Why these fits feel right