Pity Party (Girls Club) came up in the DIY show circuit, blending crunchy indie-punk guitars with tuneful, plainspoken vocals.
DIY heart, pop sense
The songs land fast and honest, swapping slick polish for hooks you can shout and remember. Expect a front-loaded set that leans on fan favorites like
Sick Sad World,
Line Cook, and
Bug, paced with short breathers to let the words ring.
What might be on stage
Crowds tend to be a mix of local scene regulars, college radio kids, and first-timers pulled in by word of mouth, with a light push-pit near the center and plenty of space to the sides. A small quirk: they often handle their own stage changeover, which keeps the room informal and quick between songs. Another tidbit is that the group keeps merch DIY, with hand-stapled zines and small-run tapes that change artwork from city to city. Take this as an informed guess, because both song choices and production touches can move around from night to night.
The Pity Party (Girls Club) scene, in real life
Patches, pins, and chorus wins
The scene around the show feels neighborly and self-made, with patched denim, thrifted skirts, band caps, and boots that have seen a few basements. You will hear quick consent checks near the front and a clear lane for anyone who wants to dodge the push-pit without missing the chorus. Between songs, fans trade zines and compare screen-printed shirts, and a few still collect tapes for the art as much as the sound.
How the room moves
Chants tend to be short and rhythmic, like a clipped hey-hey over a snare count, and verses often turn into call-and-response without the band asking. Phone use stays low during the loudest parts, hands go up for the last chorus, and folks up front know exactly when to shout a big line back. It nods to 90s alt and Riot Grrrl energy without cosplay, more about shared space and stories than scenes or status.
How Pity Party (Girls Club) makes the noise hit just right
Hooks by volume knob
Live, the vocals sit right on the front edge of the beat, a little ragged in tone by design, with quick harmonies that answer the lead like a friend finishing a thought. Guitars favor thick, open power chords and palm-muted verses, while the bass writes simple counter-melodies that glue the rhythm to the tune. Drums push the tempo without racing, using crisp hi-hat work and tight snare pops to make the choruses feel wider when they open up.
Little choices, big feel
They often drop a song a half-step or into drop-D to fatten the riff, which lets the singer carry more of the top line without shouting. A common live tweak is shaving a verse down to vocal and guitar, then slamming back with gang shouts on the turnaround to give the hook extra lift. Lighting is simple color washes that change mood rather than tell a story, keeping ears on the playing. The band listens well, leaving gaps for lines to breathe, and those tiny pauses make the punchy parts hit harder.
Kin to Pity Party (Girls Club): who you'll vibe with
Neighboring sounds
Fans of
Mannequin Pussy will hear the same tension between bite and melody, with songs that sprint then snap into big choruses.
Pom Pom Squad is a fit for the gritty glam streak and cathartic themes that lean into vulnerability without losing the stomp.
Where fans overlap
If you like bright, buzzy indie hooks,
Beach Bunny shares the sing-along bounce and heart-on-sleeve writing. And
Diet Cig overlaps on choppy rhythm guitar, conversational vocals, and a live show that prizes connection over polish. Taken together, these artists point to a scene where garage crunch meets pop instinct, and the room moves because the words feel close to real life.