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Do That Again, But Louder: Malcolm Todd
Malcolm Todd blends breezy indie pop with R&B swing, coming up from self-posted tracks to club stages without a big-label gloss.
From bedroom demos to bright stages
The current era finds him scaling up from laptop demos to a fuller band sound, but the songs still center on conversational hooks and tight bass lines. Expect a compact run that likely features fan favorites like Roommates and Japan, with a mid-set pocket where he stretches grooves and talks to the crowd. You will see college friends rolling deep, a few older siblings or parents checking out the buzz, and plenty of thrifted button-ups, skate sneakers, and low-key jewelry.Small revelations between choruses
One neat detail: he often produces or co-produces his releases, keeping drum programming simple so the vocal phrasing sits on top. Another tidbit is how he tests ideas in short clips before finishing the studio version, so some choruses may feel familiar even if the song is new. Note: any setlist picks and staging details here are informed guesses, not promises.The Malcolm Todd Crowd, Up Close
The crowd skews campus-age but mixed, with friend groups in relaxed denim, soccer jerseys, and vintage caps standing beside couples in simple knits.
How fans show up
Phones rise for the first hook, then drop as people lock into the bounce and trade harmonies on the call-and-response bits. You may hear soft group shouts on a favorite ad-lib or the title line, more like a choir than a scream. Merch lines move for clean designs in neutral colors, and the tote or cap is the piece many carry out rather than a loud tee.Rituals in the room
Between songs, fans swap song-rec stories and compare playlist finds, which gives the room a low-pressure, club-meetup feel. After the closer, the exit chatter is about bass lines and one-liners, not pyros or giant props, which fits how this scene values songs first.How Malcolm Todd Makes It Land Live
Malcolm Todd sings in an easy mid-range, keeping vowels round so the lines land like conversation rather than belting.
Hooks first, then pocket
Arrangements favor bass and drums setting a steady pocket, with guitar clipping in bright, staccato chords and a few synth pads for lift. Live tempos start relaxed and nudge up a hair by the second chorus, which makes the hooks feel like they are opening a window. The band leaves space between phrases, so ad-libs and crowd echoes breathe without stepping on the groove.Small choices that shape the feel
A neat under-the-radar detail: the guitarist often leans on clean single-coil tones with a subtle chorus pedal, giving the funk chops a glassy edge. Lighting tends to paint warm ambers for the story songs and cool blues on the bouncier cuts, keeping focus on the players instead of screens.Kindred Sounds for Malcolm Todd Fans
Fans of Dominic Fike will track the same guitar-forward pop bounce and talk-sung phrasing that Malcolm Todd also favors.