Formed in London, Ontario by sisters Morgan Lander and Mercedes Lander, Kittie built a fierce mix of groove metal, nu metal bite, and death-style growls. After a long hiatus following 2011's I've Failed You, they roared back in 2024 with the album Fire and a sharpened lineup with Tara McLeod on guitar and Ivy Vujic on bass. Expect a tight, heavy set that nods to early days while leaning on new strength.
Old scars, new sparks
Anchors like
Brackish and
Charlotte sit well next to fresh cuts like
Eyes Wide Open and
We Are Shadows. Crowds skew mixed in age, with late 90s diehards shoulder to shoulder with younger metalcore fans, plenty of women up front, and a chill but focused pit.
Small details fans notice
Trivia heads know
Spit was made when the band were teens, and that the group has often favored drop tunings to keep riffs thick and percussive. You might also spot the subtle reunion detail that
Ivy Vujic returned after a decade away, locking in with
Mercedes Lander's drums. Consider this a best-guess read on the set and staging, drawn from recent dates and may change show to show.
The Pride Around The Pit: Kittie Scene
Look and feel in the crowd
You will see vintage
Spit shirts next to brand new
Fire designs, plus DIY denim with patches from early 2000s tour cycles. Boots, cargo pants, and black eyeliner are common, but so are bright hair streaks and grins when the first riff drops. Chant moments tend to be simple, with
Kittie chants between songs and big crowd vocals on
Brackish.
Rituals that stick
The pit is watchful, with people picking each other up fast and giving space near the rail to shorter fans. Merch lines move for screen printed posters and a claw logo tee that nods to the early era without mimicry. Between song banter is short and dry, and you can sense old and new fans trading stories about high school shows, Ozzfest memories, and rediscovering the band during the comeback. It feels less like nostalgia and more like a scene that grew up and kept the volume high.
Claw-to-the-Core Musicianship: Kittie Live
Riffs first, then the roar
Kittie on stage is music-first, with
Morgan Lander switching from rasp to clear tone without dropping the guitar pulse.
Tara McLeod colors the riffs with harmonics and octave slides, while
Ivy Vujic keeps lines simple and thick to glue kick and chugs. Live, the band often rides tempos a hair faster than the records, pushing choruses so mosh parts release into big sing lines.
Small tricks that hit hard
A neat quirk is how they reharmonize the bridge of
Charlotte into a half-time stomp before snapping back, which heightens the last chorus. Older cuts tend to sit in drop C, but some new material dips lower for extra weight, and guitars use tight noise gates so rests feel like punches. Vocals get light slapback on a few hooks, and tom heavy fills from
Mercedes Lander set up breakdowns without overplaying. Lighting usually favors cool white strobes and deep red washes that frame the stops and starts rather than steal attention.
Pack Mates: Kittie Fans' Adjacent Faves
Kindred heavies, shared hearts
Fans of
Spiritbox should feel at home, as both acts balance crushing low-end with hooky, skyward choruses.
Jinjer is a fair match too, thanks to agile vocals that jump from roar to clean and a rhythm section that likes stutter stop grooves. If you lean darker and moodier,
Deftones share that blend of atmosphere and weight that makes slower parts hit hard. For theatrical heaviness with a polished edge,
In This Moment brings a similar mix of modern production and crowd-leaning breakdowns.
Where grooves and hooks meet
All of these bands draw mixed-gender pits and listeners who want melody without losing the punch. That overlap means discovery moments are common, like hearing a new song then recognizing its cousin energy in an older deep cut.