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Riding the Lines with Stick Figure
Scott Woodruff started as a one-man studio project in Massachusetts before growing into a full touring band anchored in California. The music blends roots reggae, layered dub echoes, and easy tempos that leave room for singalong hooks and deep bass.
From bedroom tracks to beach stages
A recent shift in the show's feel comes from the loss of Cocoa, the beloved tour dog, which the crew now honors with visuals and a quiet nod during the set. Expect a balanced run mixing fan staples like World on Fire, Smokin' Love, and Angels Above Me with deeper cuts that stretch into dub sections. Crowds tend to be multi-generational, from longtime reggae heads to casual beach-town fans, with relaxed movement, soft conversations between songs, and focused listening up front. A lesser-known detail is that Woodruff tracks most instruments himself in the studio, so the live band re-voices parts to add call-and-response keys and guitar. Another quirk is the habit of dropping drums and bass for a few bars so the tape-echo trail carries a chorus before the rhythm slams back.Little studio secrets, big stage moments
For clarity, these set ideas and production guesses draw from prior runs and will shift with the room, the night, and the mood.The Stick Figure Scene, Up Close
The scene leans relaxed and practical: sun-faded tees, lightweight button-ups, bucket hats, and sandals that can handle hours on your feet. Many fans carry beach blankets or wear woven bracelets from past summer runs, and you will spot a few homemade signs honoring Cocoa.
Shared choruses, small rituals
Singalongs arrive fast on songs like Once in a Lifetime and Shelter, with the crowd locking into the oohs between lines. Call-and-response moments pop up when the band drops the instruments and lets handclaps keep time, then the bass floods back. Merch skews toward soft hoodies, wave graphics, and dog tributes, with a steady line for hats right after the set. You will hear friendly song debates and setlist trades between strangers, more about favorite grooves than rare deep cuts.Style you can dance in
The overall tone is considerate and easygoing, shaped by the 2010s West Coast reggae wave but welcoming to anyone who just likes a steady rhythm.How Stick Figure Builds the Pulse
Vocals sit warm and centered, with a relaxed delivery that favors clear phrasing over big runs. The band builds songs from the drums and bass up, then layers keys and guitar stabs that leave space for echo to breathe.
Dub as an instrument
Live arrangements often stretch a verse or tag a chorus to set up a dub break, where echoes and spring reverb turn a simple line into a call from the back wall. Tempos tend to be a notch slower than rock shows, but they will flip a bridge into halftime to make the drop feel heavier. Guitar tones stay clean and percussive, while the keyboardist toggles between organ bubbles and a brighter piano patch for hooks. A small but telling habit: they mute the kick for a bar before a chorus to make the bass return hit harder, a classic sound-system trick repurposed for stages.Space where the bass breathes
Visuals back this music-first approach with color washes and soft strobes that mark transitions instead of stealing focus.Kindred Waves Around Stick Figure
If you connect with steady mid-tempo grooves and airy hooks, Rebelution sits close by, leaning toward crisp guitar skank and bright horn parts. Slightly Stoopid shares the beach-town ease and jam-friendly pockets, often stretching songs while keeping the rhythm simple.