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Reheating the Feelings: Microwave
Microwave came up in Georgia's DIY rock circles, pairing tender vocals with sharp, heavy swings.
Ten years, big feelings
This show marks ten years of their 2016 album Much Love, so expect that era to frame the night. They often balance soft verses and explosive hooks, a contrast that landed them on bigger stages without sanding off edges. A likely run could center on Lighterless, Roaches, and a fan-powered shout for Vomit, with Leather Daddy surfacing late for a darker punch.Who's in the room
You will see students and long-time followers from the house-show days mixing in the pit, with plenty of folks mouthing every bridge. Trivia heads note that the Much Love material leans on cleaner guitar layers than their earlier work, and the band sometimes opens a set with a solo voice before the full crash. There is talk that parts of Much Love were road-tested on short runs before tracking, which is why the pauses and builds feel so lived-in. For clarity, everything here about which songs or production touches might show up is an informed read, not a guarantee.Microwave community: small rituals, big choruses
The room skews casual and practical: beat-up Vans, band tees from mid-2010s runs, and a few hand-patched jackets.
What people wear and carry
People tend to move with the music but leave space, with quick hand signals and nods when a pit opens. You will hear full-voice group lines on the bridges, plus a hush for quieter intros out of respect for the dynamics.Shared rituals
Merch tables lean into anniversary items like special posters and a t-shirt in the Much Love palette, plus a small stack of colored vinyl. Between sets, fans compare first-show stories from house basements and swap playlist gems from the same scene. A friendly custom is handing the mic to the front row for a key line, then passing it back without fuss. It feels like people came to hear songs they lived with for years and to check in with the community that formed around them.Microwave on stage: sound before spectacle
Live, the vocal lines tilt clean but can fray on the last word, which adds grit without losing pitch. Guitars favor low, thick tunings and wide open chords, then flip to picked patterns so the voice can float.
Slow burn, sharp strike
The rhythm section sits a hair behind the beat to make the drops feel heavier, then snaps forward when the chorus lands. You might hear parts stretched a bar or two for tension, especially on older Much Love cuts. A quieter trick is using a high capo on one guitar while the other stays open, which widens the stereo image without raising volume.Small choices, big impact
The drummer likes roomy snare tones and rim-clicks in verses, making the loud parts hit harder by contrast. Lights tend to wash in single colors and pulse on hits, framing the music instead of fighting it. For Microwave, those choices keep the focus on melody and words even when the amps grind.Much Love, wider circle: Microwave kin and context
Fans of Balance and Composure will recognize the moody build-and-burst dynamics and the grayscale guitar colors that Microwave favors.