1 different presale code are verified and working.
Get Pretty Pity presale tickets
Citi® Cardmember Presale |
---|
Presale codes were last updated (3 hours, 4 minutes ago) at 10-01 12:13 Eastern. Some presale codes are reserved exclusively for our members, learn why we do this here.

Bloom To Form with Bloomer
Bloomer started as a bedroom project and now tours as a tight four-piece. The songs lean dreamy but hold a steady indie backbone.
Bedroom bloom to full band
Guitars shimmer without getting lost, and the rhythm section keeps things clear and patient. Expect a set that blends slow-burn openers with a few punchy mid-tempo cuts. Likely picks include Bloom, Half-Light, and Night Swimming, with a closer like No Vacancy stretching into a long outro. Crowds tend to be mixed in age, with college radio fans next to thirty-somethings comparing guitar tones. You will see small notebooks out during quiet numbers, and a few disposable cameras near the rail.Small lore and night-of quirks
A neat bit of lore is that early songs were sketched on a travel-size nylon guitar, which helps explain the soft attack in the strums. Another recurring quirk is a hand written setlist taped to an amp and given to a fan after the show. These notes about songs and production are educated guesses and may change based on the room.The Bloomer scene, in soft colors
The scene around a Bloomer show feels handmade in the best way, with tote bags, zines, and risograph posters tucked under arms. Clothes lean toward soft colors, worn denim, and a couple of vintage windbreakers that nod to late 90s college radio.
Rituals that stick
There is usually a quiet hush before the first note and a heartfelt cheer when the drummer counts in. Between songs, the room stays respectful, then snaps alive when a familiar riff hints at a favorite chorus. You might hear a one-line chant for the opener during the encore request, a small show-of-love habit among regulars. Merch tends to include a city-specific print and a plain black tee with a tiny album glyph, both popular with the line after the set.Little signals of a shared lane
Fans trade setlist photos, compare pedal guesses, and swap playlists while packing up coats. The vibe is calm, curious, and rooted in listening, which suits songs that reward patience.How Bloomer builds the hush and the surge
Live, the vocal sits slightly ahead of the beat, giving the words a gentle push without sounding rushed. Guitars favor clean tones with a light chorus effect, then add a fuzzy layer for the last chorus to widen the frame.
Building space without dead air
Drums ride on the floor tom during verses to keep things grounded, then open the hats in the refrains so the room breathes. Bass lines stay melodic, often walking into a chorus instead of just thumping root notes. A neat live habit is dropping some songs down a half step, which warms the key and makes the singalong feel easier. They also like to trim a verse and stretch the outro, so the structure feels familiar but more focused. If a song starts slow, the band resists the urge to speed up, and that patience pays off when the hook finally lands. Lighting tracks the dynamics with soft washes for whispers and a cooler backlight when the fuzz kicks in.If You Like Bloomer, You Might Drift Toward These
If you like crisp dream-pop hooks with a bit of grit, Alvvays sits in a similar lane for melody and jangly lift. Snail Mail makes sense because of the diaristic lyrics and the slightly rough guitar edges that feel honest on stage. Fans of Soccer Mommy will hear the same quiet-to-loud arcs and the way a chorus blooms without rushing. For a more luminous, synth-leaning cousin, Japanese Breakfast offers layered textures and a gentle glow that overlaps with slow-build moments.