Find more presales for shows in Asbury Park, NJ
Show North 2 Shore Presents The Weeklings & Friends 21+ Event presales in more places
Getting Back to Where The Weeklings Belong
The Weeklings are a New Jersey-born band of lifers who celebrate The Beatles while writing sharp, original power-pop. Their identity leans on deep-cut Beatle picks played with period-correct tones, plus witty originals that keep things brisk and tuneful.
Jersey roots, British bite
Expect them to frame the night as a fast, guitar-led revue that spotlights harmonies and crisp rhythm-section turns. Likely moments include Taxman, Paperback Writer, It Won't Be Long, and a closing sprint through I Saw Her Standing There.Who shows up and why it clicks
The room usually mixes crate-digging collectors up front, local Shore rock regulars by the rail, and younger players eyeing the Rickenbacker and Vox rigs. Trivia fans will note that co-founder Glen Burtnik did time in Styx, and the group has recorded in Abbey Road's Studio 2 to catch that room's lively slap. They also use tongue-in-cheek Weeklings stage names, a small ritual that adds a touch of 60s showmanship to the banter. Consider these setlist and staging notes as educated guesses based on recent shows, not fixed promises.The Weeklings Crowd, From Lapel Pins to Singalongs
The scene skews welcoming and focused, with people comparing pressings and swapping favorite B-sides before the band plugs in.
Style cues with a purpose
You will spot mod jackets, slim ties, Chelsea boots, and a few Sgt. Pepper pins mixed with hometown tees. When the band hits an early-60s sprint, the crowd answers with tight handclaps and a bright "yeah yeah yeah" refrain on cue.Shared rituals, not nostalgia traps
Merch tends to favor classic looks: clean logo tees, a 7-inch or two, and sometimes colored vinyl that nods to mid-60s sleeves. Between songs, you hear easy chatter about arrangements and gear rather than volume bravado, which keeps the room friendly. Older fans often bring younger players to show how harmony singing carries a rock set, and those moments land without fuss. By the end, the vibe feels like a club of song-craft diehards who came to sing, listen, and leave with one tune stuck in their head.The Weeklings' Sound Up Close
Live, The Weeklings push the vocals first, stacking three and sometimes four parts so the choruses ring without getting harsh.
Harmony first, gear second
Guitars favor bright, chiming tones and short, melodic solos, while the bass stays round and percussive to lock the backbeat. They keep tempos tight and a touch faster than the records, which adds lift without rushing the words. Arrangements often swap the original key to suit the singers, and they are not shy about trimming verses to keep momentum.Smart tweaks to classic parts
A small but telling habit is doubling choruses with a Nashville-tuned acoustic, which thickens the jangle without adding volume. You might also notice the 12-string taking the lead line while the other guitar strums on the off-beats, a flip that opens space for handclaps and tambourine. Lights tend to stay warm and simple, letting the tight stops, quick count-ins, and harmony blends do the heavy lifting.If You Like The Weeklings, You Might Love These
Fans of The Weeklings often connect with The Fab Faux, who chase studio-level vocal stacks and meticulous Beatles-era arrangements on stage.