Lettuce came up from Boston and NYC in the late 90s, a crew of friends who met at Berklee College of Music and chased heavy funk with hip-hop edges.
Built at Berklee, seasoned on the road
They built a tight, mostly instrumental identity where deep pocket, punchy horns, and thick bass lines do the talking, with soulful hooks from keys and the occasional vocal feature.
What likely lands in the set
A likely set could drop early heaters like
Phyllis and
Lettsanity, then stretch into a sing-ready
Do It Like You Do and a
Move On Up cover when the room is fully bouncing. Expect a multi-genre crowd of groove nerds, dancers, and curious first-timers, with musicians clocking the drum feel near the board while couples and friend groups stake space up front. Trivia heads know the name came from years of saying 'let us play,' and that their Miles salute
Witches Stew was captured live on a Halloween in New Orleans. They also moonlight as the Shady Horns for Soulive, which explains the airtight hits and friendly show-to-show musical in-jokes. These setlist notes and production guesses are informed by past tours and recordings, not a firm blueprint for this stop.
The Lettuce scene and fan culture
Funk fashion meets jam comfort
You will see vintage sports caps, worn-in sneakers, and band tees from 70s funk heroes next to bright windbreakers and a few tie-dye nods from the jam side. Small pockets of dancers carve space near the subs while head-nod rows hold down the middle, and you can spot drummers counting the backbeat under their breath.
Rituals in the room
Claps on two and four bloom quickly, and a quick 'Lettuce!' chant often snaps back between songs like a friendly roll call. Merch skews practical and groove-minded, with vinyl, soft tees, and leaf-logo hats that look right at a club or a lazy brunch. Fans trade notes on favorite versions of
Do It Like You Do or
Phyllis, swapping dates and cities like sports stats. Post-show chatter leans toward tone talk and pocket praise, with people comparing the night’s slow-burn build to past tours rather than hunting for one big singalong moment.
How Lettuce builds the groove
The pocket comes first
Vocals show up as flavor, but the music is the lead actor, with drums and bass locking a deep, unhurried pocket that lets the horns punch through in short, bold lines. Keys fill the middle with warm chords and gritty clav sounds, so the guitar can focus on choppy rhythms and quick, syncopated riffs. Horns often state the theme in tight unison, then split into harmony for extra lift, returning to unison when it is time to land a big hit.
Small choices, big movement
Live, they sometimes start songs a touch slower than the record, which makes the beat feel heavier and gives dancers more room to settle in. The sax often runs through subtle effects like an envelope filter or octave, adding a chewy edge that blends with the keys rather than sitting on top. Expect tidy form work too, with breakdowns that mute the low end for a few bars so the next drop feels larger without turning up. Lighting tends to track the music's rise and fall, warming during vamps and flashing tight with the horn accents to underline the groove without stealing focus.
If you like Lettuce, try these live neighbors
Kindred grooves across scenes
Fans of
Galactic will feel at home with the same brass-forward New Orleans funk energy and long-form grooves that keep the floor moving.
The Motet brings a Colorado spin on danceable funk with similar bass-and-drum thrust and crowd-friendly peaks.
Snarky Puppy overlaps on rich arrangements and heady textures, appealing to listeners who like instrumental detail with big payoffs. If you enjoy minimalist hooks and pocket precision,
Vulfpeck hits a comparable sweet spot, trading flash for feel. Guitar-forward fans who crave clean tones and tight showcraft will also connect with
Cory Wong, whose bright rhythms and sharp dynamics mirror Lettuce's snap-and-release live arcs.