Bleachers is Jack Antonoff's New Jersey project, mixing big 80s pop, Jersey soul, and horn-forward hooks. He started it as a secret side project while touring with fun., writing on buses and in hotel rooms. The current self-titled phase leans even harder into live-band grit and shout-along refrains. Expect I Wanna Get Better, Modern Girl, Don't Take The Money, and Rollercoaster to anchor the night. The room skews mixed: indie-pop kids with film cameras, Jersey rock fans in denim, and pop listeners who found him through Taylor Swift sing side by side.
From Bedroom to Boardwalk
Antonoff founded the Shadow of the City festival in Asbury Park, and during the
Gone Now era he toured a replica of his childhood bedroom as an installation.
Horns Lead, Heart Follows
Horns often carry the hooks, a nod to boardwalk marching bands and to
Bruce Springsteen's E Street spirit. These set choices and production notes are informed guesses and could shift from night to night.
The Bleachers Scene, Up Close
Jersey Prints and Camera Straps
You see varsity jackets, old tees with block lettering, and denim that feels ready for a boardwalk night. Film cameras and Polaroids pop up between songs as friends trade quick snaps and compare lyric tattoos. When
I Wanna Get Better hits, the crowd shouts the title line like a promise, and hands rise on the snare for a clean group clap.
Chants, Claps, and Little Rituals
During
Modern Girl, that sax riff turns into a mouth-horn chant, and pockets of harmony appear by instinct. Merch goes bold and simple, with big type and varsity marks, plus the kind of hoodie you actually wear the next day. You catch nods to Asbury Park and 80s pop art on signs and jackets, and the mood stays neighborly and open. Post-show chatter centers on which bridge soared highest and which horn line got stuck in everyone's head.
Horns, Heart, and How Bleachers Build It
Horns Out Front, Heart On Sleeve
Bleachers leans on a bright tenor vocal that cracks on purpose at big peaks, which sells the sprint-to-the-chorus feeling. Guitars strum wide, keys add vintage sparkle, and the sax often takes the hook like a lead guitar would. Live, tempos run a touch quicker than on record so claps and shouts lock with the kick.
Little Switches That Hit Bigger
The band likes to reframe intros, starting a hit in half time with just piano and voice before snapping to full speed when the horns arrive. In the middle stretch, Antonoff often drops to acoustic or a vintage mic for a storytelling cut, which resets the ear before the next surge. Expect a clap-and-shout bridge in
I Wanna Get Better and an extended outro for
Don't Take The Money where the drums ride the floor tom for extra drive. Lighting leans warm and bold, keeping faces clear while horns punch in silhouette.
Kindred Roads for Bleachers Fans
Kindred Roads and Pop Hearts
If you like the horn-kissed pop-rock and earnest storytelling,
The 1975 will land with their glossy guitars and talk-sung confessions.
Maggie Rogers shares the communal, hands-in-the-air choruses and a warm, earthy band feel. Fans of
Bruce Springsteen will hear the Jersey lineage in highway rhythms, big sax hooks, and working-town glow. And
Taylor Swift crossover listeners connect to Antonoff's songwriting fingerprints and the crowd-sized chant sections. All four acts prize dynamic shows that swell from hush to roar, with melody up front and drums hitting with purpose.