H20 presale codes in New Haven, CT

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Pennywise
Toad's Place
Sep 29, 2026 • 7:30pm
New Haven, CT

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South Bay lifers, still sprinting: Pennywise

Pennywise came out of Hermosa Beach's surf-skate punk scene, mixing fast tempos with blunt, melodic hooks.

From Hermosa garages to worldwide chants

The band's story carries loss and resolve, with Jason Thirsk's passing in 1996 shaping their community-first stance and the re-recorded Bro Hymn. Jim Lindberg's brief exit and return a decade ago tightened their focus on speed, songcraft, and chant-ready choruses.

Likely songs and who shows up

Expect a set that draws from Unknown Road, About Time, and Straight Ahead, with Fuck Authority, Alien, and Bro Hymn as anchors. The crowd usually spans long-time South Bay punks, skaters in fresh tees, and younger fans who found them through Epitaph playlists, all singing the gang parts. A small but telling quirk: early singles were cut at Westbeach Recorders, and they still favor that crisp, dry guitar sound live. Another note fans trade is how they stretch the end of Bro Hymn to let the room carry the whoa-oh melody before the final sprint. For clarity, everything here about songs and staging is an informed read, not a locked blueprint.

The Pennywise scene: South Bay spirit in the pit

The scene around a Pennywise show feels like South Bay meets every city, with flat-brim hats, worn Vans, and clean band tees next to patched jackets.

South Bay codes on the road

You see parents with teens trading song histories, skaters comparing scars, and friends timing their water breaks around the circle. Chants of "Pennywise" pop up between songs, then flip to the whoa-oh from Bro Hymn before the encore.

Chants that travel home

Merch leans on the classic scrawl logo, bold block fonts, and Hermosa Beach callouts, plus a few tour-specific colors for locals. People bring flags or homemade banners, but they keep the floor clear when a surfer drops and help them up fast. The front thrives on motion while the edges turn into a choir, so even quieter folks get pulled into the chorus work. After the show, stairwells and train platforms keep the chant going, more like a local team win than a party. The culture prizes respect and stamina, a mix of skate-park manners and punk show timing.

Grit, glide, and gang vocals: how Pennywise hits

Pennywise's live sound hinges on Jim Lindberg's sandpaper tenor riding above tight downstroked guitars.

Fast, clear, and built to shout

Fletcher Dragge keeps riffs locked to the kick drum, while Randy Bradbury's pick-driven bass lines add shape rather than haze. Byron McMackin plays fast but clear, using short fills to frame turnarounds instead of crowding verses. The band often drops to half-time for a measure or two before choruses so the chant lands big, then snaps back to full sprint.

Little choices, big impact

On staples like Society and Bro Hymn, they extend breaks by a beat to cue louder gang vocals, a small change that feels huge in the room. Lindberg trims vibrato live and punches phrases early, which keeps lyrics intelligible even at high speed. Visuals stay simple and high-contrast so the ears do the heavy lifting, with lights accenting stops and shouts rather than drowning them. A subtle insider note: the bass sits unusually forward in their mix, giving the choruses a lift without adding extra guitars.

If you ride with Pennywise, you might ride with these

If you like Pennywise, chances are Bad Religion hits the same nerve with brisk tempos and smart, harmony-lined choruses.

Kindred speed, shared chorus

NOFX fans overlap too, drawn by sardonic banter and punchy skate-punk energy, even when the songs lean into bounce. The melodic roots go further back with Descendents, whose coffee-fueled hooks and tight rhythm sections shaped the Southern California blueprint that Pennywise pushes harder.

Where the pits overlap

For grittier street-punk color and shout-along power, Rancid shares the same pit ethos and boots-on-the-floor feel. Fans moving between these bands tend to chase fast songs that still leave room for melody and clear vocals. They also value shows that feel communal, where choruses become a group sport rather than a solo. That blend of speed, message, and melody is the glue across these crowds.

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