From Jacksonville to global pits
This band started in Jacksonville, mixing hardcore riffs, hip hop bounce, and DJ texture into a blunt, catchy swing. After years of on and off touring, their original DJ returned full-time and the
Still Sucks era sharpened the hooks while the frontman leaned into a dry, wry Dad Vibes persona.
What they might play
Expect a front-loaded hit run with
Break Stuff,
Nookie,
Rollin' (Air Raid Vehicle), and
Take a Look Around anchoring the arc. The room usually holds a blend of fans who saw them in the TRL years and younger pit-seekers who found the band through memes and festival clips, often trading tips on when to circle up. You may notice deep-cut shouters near the rail calling for
Boiler or
My Generation, while casuals wait for the big choruses. A neat bit of trivia:
N 2 Gether Now was produced by
DJ Premier, and the band earned early buzz by dropping a heavy cover of
Faith in tiny Florida clubs. Set choices and cues mentioned here are educated surmises from recent runs, and the actual night can flip on a whim.
The Pit, The Fit, The In-Jokes
Red caps and rail calls
You will see vintage tees from
Significant Other and
Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water, fresh bootlegs, and a surprising number of red caps tipped low. Cargo shorts, skate shoes, and wide-legged jeans share space with modern streetwear, and plenty of people bring earplugs on lanyards without making a fuss about it. Chants pop up before the drops, with a loud "break stuff" pulse and a unified "keep rollin" echo that the band can ride for an extra bar. Pits open fast but tend to reset after songs, and the usual code of quick pick-ups and thumbs-up checks is respected. Merch leans into
Dad Vibes humor and retro fonts, plus high-contrast photos of the band for old-school poster heads.
Nostalgia with open arms
Between sets, fans trade stories of radio premieres, TRL countdowns, and first CD copies, yet the mood stays welcoming to anyone showing up for their first nu-metal show.
Riffs First, Then Fireworks
Big riffs, tight pivots
The vocalist works the mic like a host, shifting from clipped rap verses to drawled hooks and quick asides that cue the next surge. The guitarist builds the core grind with dropped tunings and rubbery, percussive picking, then colors it with wah, octave, and eerie clean parts. The rhythm section stays dry and tight, with bass lines doubling riffs for weight before slipping into simple, head-nod syncopation between choruses. The DJ glues it together with scratches and stabs that mark transitions, often mirroring guitar bends to make the drops hit harder. A cool live tweak: in
Take a Look Around, they square the Mission: Impossible motif into a straight pulse for the verse, then hint at the odd count during fills so the chorus lift feels bigger. Expect a few breakdowns stretched longer than the record, and the band will often restart a hook if the pit energy peaks at the wrong moment. Lights follow the drums and stop short of blinding, mostly framing the silhouettes so the riffs stay the focus.
Kindred Noise, Shared Pits
Overlapping crowds, adjacent sounds
Fans of
Korn will recognize the low-slung grooves, barked hooks, and a similar push-pull between menace and bounce.
Papa Roach crowds overlap thanks to shout-along choruses and a show that swings from tough to playful in minutes. If you like how
P.O.D. blends rap cadences with chunky guitars and positive crowd energy, this set scratches that itch.
Deftones bring a moodier, more atmospheric edge, yet the shared 90s-to-00s lineage and dynamic drops make crossover likely. In short, these bands attract people who enjoy big riffs that breathe, drums you feel in your chest, and a front person who can crack jokes between surges.