Find more presales for shows in Nashville, TN
Show High Fade presales in more places
Street Grooves to Stage Moves with High Fade
High Fade emerged from Edinburgh street sets, shaping a funk-first sound with tight grooves and playful turns. The music leans on crisp rhythm guitar, nimble bass, and pocketed drums, with short vocal hooks that stick. You can expect a set that flips between brisk dance tempos and mid-tempo struts, with a couple of stretched instrumental breaks.
From Cobblestones to Clubs
Early fans found them busking near the Royal Mile, where improvised outros and call-and-response became part of the show. A notable quirk is how full-length street videos helped them grow, letting longer jams breathe instead of just short clips.What Might Get Played
Likely picks include taut spins on funk staples like Superstition, Cissy Strut, and a hometown nod with Pick Up the Pieces, plus originals shaped for big choruses. The crowd skews mixed in age, from students who found them online to longtime funk fans, with musicians clocking parts while families dance near the sides. These notes on songs and production are informed guesses; the exact choices can shift from night to night.The Funk Commons: Fans in the Pocket
The scene leans casual and colorful, with thrifted blazers, vintage tees, and sneakers ready for a full night of dancing. Expect claps on the backbeat and quick call-and-response moments seeded from the mic.
Little Rituals, Big Smiles
In Scotland and beyond, the classic one more tune chant often rings out, and the encore usually honors it with something fast. Merch tables favor tape-style tees, bright bass-logo stickers, and sometimes a 7-inch for crate diggers.Community in the Pocket
You will spot pockets of players near the mix position counting hits while friends test dance moves up front. People tend to give each other room when solos stretch, then crowd back in when the hook returns. Pre-show playlists nod to 70s funk and modern groove pop, setting a relaxed tone before the first downbeat.Tight Pockets, Loose Hips: Live Craft
Vocals sit in the groove, often doubled by guitar or bass so hooks feel sturdy and easy to sing. Arrangements favor quick verses and then roomy breaks where bass and drums trade short, catchy ideas.
Groove First, Then Fire
The guitarist keeps a dry, percussive tone and uses three-note chords, leaving air for the snare to speak. The bassist leans on short, palm-muted notes in verses, then opens up in choruses for lift, sometimes clicking on an octave pedal for extra snap. Drums ride a tight hi-hat just behind the beat, making mid tempos feel deep without dragging.Live Tweaks That Land
On stage they often stretch a vamp, drop to near silence, and crack a unison hit to reset the floor. You might hear a tune nudged a step higher live to brighten the vocal, or a half-time bridge that tees up a longer final chorus. Lights track those dynamics with warm whites for the pocket and quick color pops on the hits.Cousins in Funk: Pals in the Pocket
Fans of Vulfpeck will feel at home with clean tones, clipped guitar, and jokes slipped between airtight grooves. Cory Wong fits too, since his shows put rhythm guitar out front and keep tempos brisk for nonstop movement. For a more expansive, horn-forward jam vibe, Lettuce attracts listeners who prize pocket over flash. If your playlist leans toward modern soul covers and crisp YouTube-ready arrangements, Scary Pockets lines up well. Listeners who chase instrumental interplay and clever stops might also cross over with The Fearless Flyers, though that group leans more virtuosic and minimal. These artists share bright tones, short songs that land hard, and a crowd that claps on two and four. The overlap is about dance-floor funk played with precision and humor.