From DIY rooms to bigger stages
KennyHoopla came up from Midwest DIY circles, blending post-punk grit with pop-punk rush. His breakout
How Will I Rest in Peace if I'm Buried by a Highway?// set the tone with nervous guitars and a shout-along hook. A key shift was his move into full-bore punk with Travis Barker on
Survivors Guilt: The Mixtape//, trading hazy new-wave mood for sharper, faster hits.
What you might hear
Expect a tight, breathless run through
estella//,
hollywood sucks//, and maybe
smoke break//, with barely any dead air between songs. The crowd skews mixed-age and multiracial, from thrifted-layer kids to long-time alt rock fans, all moving but mostly looking out for one another. One neat tidbit: the double-slash in his titles traces back to his early upload style, and he first cut rough demos in small Wisconsin bedrooms before later sessions in LA. The setlist and production comments here are educated hunches from recent runs, not confirmed plans.
The KennyHoopla Crowd, Up Close
Streetwear with scuffs
The room looks like a mix of black denim, thrifted windbreakers, checkerboard Vans, and a few studded belts from the pop-punk drawer. You will see nail polish, chain necklaces, and DIY patches that nod to both post-punk and skate culture. People yell the opening line of
How Will I Rest in Peace if I'm Buried by a Highway?//, then clap in double-time during breaks without being told.
Shared rituals, zero pretense
Merch leans graphic: bold type with double slashes, highway signs, and photo crops that feel like zine covers. When pits open, neighbors tap shoulders to check in, then reset for quieter songs where phones drop and eyes stay on the stage. After the show, small clusters trade notes about favorite lines and compare thrift finds, more scene scrapbook than status game.
KennyHoopla Under The Hood
Hooks first, then the burn
Live,
KennyHoopla sings with a tight, urgent tone that sits high, then spikes into yells for emphasis. Guitars favor bright, chorus-soaked lines over chug, leaving space for a loud snare and a rubbery bass to drive the pulse. Many songs run a notch faster than on record, and bridges get trimmed so choruses can hit twice and stick.
Small choices, big lift
The band supports this by cueing sharp cutoffs, then slamming back in on the next downbeat for that sprint-start feel. He often flips intros live, like starting
estella// on drums and vocal only for a few bars before the full band lands. Lights track the rhythm with quick strobes on hits and cool-white washes in verses, keeping focus on the music rather than props. Little tweaks like dropping synth pads and letting the bass carry a verse make the songs feel raw without losing melody.
If You Like KennyHoopla, You Might Ride With These
Kindred energy, different angles
Fans of
YUNGBLUD will recognize the same burst of tempo and catharsis, though
KennyHoopla keeps the guitars a bit rougher.
jxdn shares the polished pop-punk sheen and big chorus payoff that sparks group vocals. If you ride with
Machine Gun Kelly, the crossover from radio pop to bratty guitars makes sense here too.
Why the overlap clicks
For darker corners,
nothing,nowhere. mirrors the emo tone and confessional writing that
KennyHoopla taps between bursts of speed. All of them aim for high-impact shows, but
KennyHoopla leans more on wiry post-punk rhythms and less on glossy tracks. That balance makes his lane connect with fans who want hooks and sweat while still hearing the edges.