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Campfire Screams with Silverstein
Silverstein came up in Burlington, Ontario's post-hardcore wave, pairing tuneful hooks with snap-to-scream dynamics, while Story Of The Year broke out of St. Louis on the strength of heartfelt, high-energy anthems.
Two bands, one scream-sing lineage
The shared bill lands like a mini history lesson, with veterans who still bring new songs and play them beside staples from Discovering the Waterfront and Page Avenue. Expect anchors like My Heroine, Smashed Into Pieces, Until the Day I Die, and Anthem of Our Dying Day, plus a few deep cuts rotated in to keep diehards alert. The floor skews mixed-age, from first-time pit explorers to 30-somethings in sun-faded tees, and the vibe is focused and warm rather than rowdy for its own sake.Small details, big roots
Trivia heads will clock that Story Of The Year once toured as Big Blue Monkey before the name change, and that Silverstein took its moniker from author Shel Silverstein. A notable shift over the years is Paul Marc Rousseau joining Silverstein in 2012 and Adam Russell returning to Story Of The Year later in the decade, which subtly reshaped guitar voicings and low-end punch. All set and production details here are educated guesses based on recent runs and may shift by city.The scene around Silverstein and Story Of The Year
You will see vintage band tees cut at the sleeves, patched denim, and fresh prints side by side, a timeline of the scene worn on jackets and backpacks.
What people wear, what they sing
Pre-chorus woah-oh lines turn into loud room chants, and the mic often meets a front-row pile-on for a shared bar or two. Circle pits open with clear hand signals and quick resets, with people pulling each other up fast so the energy stays forward. Merch favors throwback fonts, razor-edge iconography, and bright-on-black palettes, plus a few zines and tour-only 7-inch style souvenirs.A living-room code in a loud room
Fans trade set predictions, compare favorite bridges, and swap memories of first shows, which shapes how new songs get measured in real time. The mood leans supportive, with water runs and space made for folks at the rail, and the singalongs stretch past the stage into the hall. By the last chorus, you get less scene posturing and more small nods between strangers, a quiet sign that the community still feels lived-in.How Silverstein and Story Of The Year build the night
On stage, Shane Told keeps bright, clear phrasing for hooks and flips to a lean scream that cuts without blur, and Dan Marsala answers with a warmer grit that rides the beat.
Hooks that bite, screams that carry
Guitars from Paul Marc Rousseau and Josh Bradford favor drop tunings for chunkier downstrokes, while Ryan Phillips slashes syncopated accents that kick up the sprint. Both bands like to tighten structures live, shaving intros so songs hit the vocal early, then opening bridges into extended call-and-response to breathe. A reliable trick is the hard stop before a breakdown, a full beat of silence that makes the next hit feel heavier without raising volume.Small choices, big impact
You might also notice a subtle key drop on a couple legacy tracks, half a step down to keep brightness without straining the top note. Between the thunder, a short acoustic or clean-tone interlude often resets ears, letting the big numbers land fresh when they return. Lighting stays purposeful, with cool blues for tension and clean white bursts on downbeats, framing the music rather than fighting it.If you like Silverstein and Story Of The Year
Fans of The Used will find the same push-pull of melody and scream, with choruses built to shout as one.