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Sparks And Candor With Free Throw
Nashville's Free Throw pairs confessional emo with lean, shout-along hooks, while Atlanta's Microwave swings from hushed indie to stormy, post-hardcore bite. Both came up in DIY rooms, and that mix of sweat, humor, and blunt lyrics still guides their shows.
From house shows to hard-won headlines
Expect a set built for release and melody, with likely anchors like Two Beers In, Randy, I Am the Liquor, Lighterless, and DIA. Crowds skew mixed-age and welcoming, with flannels and skate shoes beside workwear boots, and people mouthing every bridge like it is a promise. Quick aside: any talk here about the songs or staging is an informed read of recent gigs, not a locked blueprint.Hooks that lean on truth, not polish
That Trailer Park Boys nod in Randy, I Am the Liquor is a long-running in-joke they sometimes tease before the count-in. Early Microwave shows often circled The Masquerade in Atlanta, and you can still feel that room's punch in their quiet-loud swings.Free Throw & Microwave: The Shared Code of the Crowd
The scene feels earnest and practical, with patched denim next to clean hoodies and a lot of lived-in sneakers.
Patches, chorus ink, and practiced care
You will hear pockets chant the last line of a bridge unprompted, then hush for fingerpicked intros out of respect for the quiet. Merch tables lean toward hand-drawn fonts, split long-sleeves, and lyric back prints that read like diary pages. Between songs, people trade water or swap earplugs, and you will see quick hand signals to clear space when someone slips. Crowd-surfers get passed with palms up and quick nods, usually setting down near center-left before a big downbeat. The generational blend is real too, with newer fans in bright caps beside older heads in faded tour tees comparing which deep cut they hope shows up. Post-show, folks tend to linger to debrief set order and pick a favorite one-liner from the banter, smiling more than shouting.Free Throw & Microwave: Grit, Glide, and Live Detail
Both groups prize feel over flash, and it shows in how the vocals drive the room before the guitars color in the lines.
Dynamics that breathe, not brag
Free Throw leans on cracked-voice choruses and interlocking rhythm guitars that punch the downbeats, while the bass keeps a warm, simple throb that lets the words hit first. Microwave is mercurial, with Nathan Hardy flipping from clean croon to bark, and the band widening or tightening the groove so those shifts land hard. Expect tempos that nudge a hair faster than on record, plus endings that stretch just long enough for one more shouted refrain. A neat wrinkle: Microwave has been known to drop tuning a step for heavier cuts, thickening the choruses without muddying the mix. Another tell is Free Throw holding a chorus back for a half-bar to let the crowd take the line a cappella, then slamming the kit fill like a door. Lights usually trace the dynamics rather than chase them, so the brightest hits coincide with the sharpest drum figures and stops.Free Throw & Microwave: Kindred Roads, Kindred Fans
Fans of Hot Mulligan will find the same melody-dense emo with shout-friendly choruses and whip-fast turnarounds.