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Machine Head
The Van Buren
Jan 16, 2020 • 8:00pm
Phoenix, AZ
Tickets

How to find Machine Head presale codes in Phoenix

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Forged in the Furnace: Machine Head Set It Off

Machine Head formed in the Bay Area in 1991, fusing thrash speed with thick groove and a melodic streak.

Bay Area roots, rebuilt engine

The current chapter follows a major reset in 2018, with a refreshed guitar-and-drum team joining Jared MacEachern around Robb Flynn. They often choose an Evening With format, stretching to two-plus hours and giving each era room.

Songs that punch and breathe

Expect anchor songs like Davidian, Imperium, Halo, and a newer hammer like Choke on the Ashes of Your Hate. The room skews mixed-age: veteran fans in patched denim next to first-timers learning the pit, with plenty of women up front and friends swapping set predictions. Early on, the band tracked Burn My Eyes in the Bay Area with producer Colin Richardson, and their down-tuned bite often sits in drop B for extra weight. Live, Halo tends to get a fake-out ending and a crowd-held chant before the final surge. Take these song picks and staging notes as informed reading of recent shows, not a guarantee of what you will get.

Patches, Pits, and Pride: Machine Head's Crowd Rituals

Battle jackets and shouted lines

You will see battle jackets patched with Roadrunner-era logos next to crisp shirts from Of Kingdom and Crown and The Blackening. Many fans call themselves Head Cases, and they belt the "Let freedom ring" line in Davidian like a ritual. Circle pits form fast, but there is quick care for anyone who slips, and you will notice hands up to call space before a surge.

Traditions that stick

Between songs, Robb often trades jokes and quick stories, keeping the room loose before the next volley. Merch trends lean toward the diamond logo hoodies, back-print tees, and limited vinyl reissues of Burn My Eyes. Pre-show, people compare past Evening With marathons and swap memories of the 90s club days or the global runs in the 2000s. After the encore, a chunk stays to chant the band name in clipped bursts and to trade patches and setlists by the rail. It feels like a city-wide meet-up more than a faceless crowd, with names learned and gear praised between riffs.

Steel and Surge: Machine Head on Stage

Riffs that swing and slice

Robb Flynn's vocal shifts between a rasping bark and a steady clean, and he paces those turns to keep choruses clear. Guitars favor tight downpicking and wide-voiced chords, so the grooves hit like a piston while melodies float above. The rhythm section drives a bounce that sits between thrash speed and a hip-shake pocket, giving pits something to move to. Many staples live in drop B or similar low tunings, which thickens the riffs without muddying the kick drum.

Small tweaks, big lift

They often open Imperium a hair slower than the album, then ramp to full clip to make the first pit break explode. Halo gets stretched with a call-and-response and a brief space where guitars ring clean, letting the final chorus cut harder. Lighting runs hot whites and blood reds that snap on the snare accents, supporting the punch without stealing focus. The band leaves oxygen in the arrangements, so each chorus breathes before locking back into chugs.

Kindred Fire: Machine Head Fans' Other Homes

Adjacent heavyweights, shared grit

If you ride for Lamb of God, you will find the same hard groove and precision riffing here. Fans of Gojira tend to click with the weighty, percussive chug and the tight stage focus. Trivium shares the sing-and-growl balance and the modern metal polish that keeps choruses big. Older heads who track Bay Area history often cross paths with Testament, thanks to shared roots and a love of palm-muted stomp. All four acts prize crowd movement that feels intense but mindful, and their pits swell and settle in similar arcs. They also split the difference between technical flair and chants you can shout, which is the sweet spot for Machine Head lifers.

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