Find more presales for shows in Mesa, AZ
Show Kxllswxtch EYESORE Tour presales in more places
Scars and Screams with Kxllswxtch
Kxllswxtch comes from the internet-born trap-metal wave, mixing serrated screams with gloomy, bass-heavy beats. He is a solo artist, keeping the focus on one voice cutting through industrial drums and guitar-like synths.
Bruised beats, serrated voice
Expect a set built around the EYESORE era, with fan staples like PUBLIC ENEMY and MISERY showing up early to light the floor. Between songs, he tends to let the bass ring out while pacing the lip of the stage, which keeps tension high without long breaks.Pit spark, studio scars
The crowd skews mixed: local rap kids in oversized tees, punk-leaning kids in boots, and a few metalheads comparing favorite breakdowns. Trivia: several early tracks were cut on a basic USB mic at home, leaving the crunchy edges in as a choice rather than a mistake. Another small quirk is a stacked vocal doubler on the choruses, making the screams feel wider than the room. Heads up: any setlist picks and production notes here are informed guesses and may not match what happens on your night.Pits, Prints, and Quiet Codes
The scene blends streetwear and punk cues: shredded black denim, chain belts, battered skate shoes, and DIY prints over long sleeves. You will hear sharp, two-syllable chants between songs, often on the name or a favorite hook fragment.
Style tells and shared rituals
Circle pits open fast but stay compact, and people post up on the edges to pull others back to their feet. Merch leans heavy on distressed back prints in red and bone-white, with a few small items like patches and beanies that sell out early.Nostalgia, now
Pre-show playlists nod to the SoundCloud peak and late-2000s metalcore, which shapes how the crowd moves when the kicks start rolling. After the set, fans swap quick phone clips of a line they cared about rather than full songs, then drift to the sidewalk still humming the hook. The vibe is intense but not cruel, more coiled energy than chaos, and that balance is part of why people keep returning.Riffs in the Red, Drums on Edge
Live, the vocals switch between chesty shouts and tight, percussive lines that lock to the hi-hats. Hooks often pull the beat down to half-time, giving the room a heavy sway before the drums snap back to double-time for the verse.
Arrangements built to drop harder
A DJ handles stems and mutes, cutting the low end right before each drop so the return lands like a shock. Guitar tones usually come from samples or synth patches, but an added guitarist sometimes doubles the riff to thicken the crash.Voice, layers, and the room
He uses a low, pitched-down ad-lib layer under screams, which makes choruses sound bigger without drowning the main take. One under-the-radar habit is opening a song with just vocal and click, letting the first line hit dry before the sub comes in. Lighting rides the music rather than the other way around, with stark strobes on drops and deep red washes during slow builds. The net effect keeps the music first, while the visuals underline changes in tempo and mood.Kindred Noise, Shared Nerves
If you enjoy the high-speed bark and industrial-leaning beats, start with Scarlxrd, whose rapid-fire delivery rides blown-out drums. Ghostemane leans colder and more mechanical, but the blend of scream-rap and doom-y textures hits a similar mood.