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Sharp Hooks, Warmer Hearts with Spoon

Spoon honed a lean, percussive indie rock in Austin, building songs around dry drums, clipped guitars, and Britt Daniel's grainy drawl.

Two Bands, One Tight Focus

The Beths bring bright New Zealand guitar-pop with quick turns and stacked harmonies led by Elizabeth Stokes. Expect a set that trades pace cleanly, with Spoon leaning into The Hardest Cut and I Turn My Camera On, and The Beths hitting Future Me Hates Me and Expert in a Dying Field. You will see long-time indie fans next to new listeners, with worn tees, earplugs, and a few people pogoing near the rail while others nod and mouth lines. Spoon tracked much of Lucifer on the Sofa live at Jim Eno's Public Hi-Fi studio, which is why the drums feel so immediate on stage. The Beths cut Future Me Hates Me in guitarist Jonathan Pearce's small Auckland room, and the band met in jazz school, which explains those tight harmonies.

Set Moves and Small Surprises

Do not be surprised if Spoon stretches the bridge of Inside Out with keys and feedback while The Beths punch choruses a notch faster than on record. Note: song choices and staging details here are educated guesses based on recent gigs and may differ on the night.

Where Indie Lifers and New Fans Meet

This scene feels relaxed and curious, with people swapping set notes and pointing out gear between changeovers.

Small Rituals, Big Choruses

You will hear a crisp clap pattern kick off when a familiar Spoon riff starts, and a loud group sing on the big chorus in Future Me Hates Me. Clothes lean practical and thrifted, with faded button-ups, well-worn sneakers, and a few bright windbreakers. Merch lines move for screen-printed posters, enamel pins, and clean type tees over loud graphics. You will also spot tote bags and a couple of 7-inch singles tucked into jackets. Chatter skews nerdy but kind, like debates about which press of Kill the Moonlight sounds best or whether the Beths will dust off a deep cut.

Nods To Eras, Not Nostalgia

The vibe is hopeful and low-drama, and most people give room up front to shorter fans or anyone clearly there to sing. References span early-2000s blog-rock and present-day guitar pop, but the mood stays forward-looking rather than stuck in the past.

Tight Grooves, Clear Lines

Spoon's rhythm section keeps drums dry and up front, with bass carving simple shapes that leave space for scratchy guitar stabs and piano hits.

Parts That Click Into Place

Britt Daniel's voice sits rough but clear, and the band often nudges verses slightly under tempo so choruses can hit harder. The Beths thread bright leads over downstroke strums, and their three-part vocals snap into place without sliding off pitch. Live, they often push tempos by a few clicks, which tightens the hooks and lifts energy without blurring parts. Spoon sometimes plays The Underdog without horns, rebuilding the parts with strum patterns, handclaps, and keyboard stabs.

Lights That Serve The Song

Expect straightforward color washes and quick blackouts that mark section changes rather than steal focus. Guitar tones stay sharp, often with slight grit instead of fuzz, and keys shade chords more than they solo. These choices keep words and rhythm at the center, which is where both bands land best.

Kindred Acts for Curious Ears

Fans of Phoenix will connect with the clean pulse, sly melodies, and danceable undercurrent Spoon taps when the groove locks in.

Adjacent Sounds, Shared Rooms

The Shins share the tuneful, literate side of guitar pop that The Beths bring, plus a similar balance of bounce and bittersweet. Alvvays will resonate for anyone who loves chiming tones, quick choruses, and sly hooks delivered with a bright wash. If you prefer wiry rhythms and talk-sung wit, Parquet Courts map onto the angular side that both bands flash between songs. Taken together, these artists attract crowds who enjoy crisp arrangements, singable lines, and shows that move without dead air.

Why You Might Cross Over

They each favor tight stage economy over spectacle, and they tend to keep guitars bright rather than heavy. Fans who chase smart hooks over volume will feel at home across these bills.

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