From the clubs to the charts
TWISTED SISTER cut its teeth on the Long Island and NYC club circuit, turning barroom grit into chant-along hard rock. This run is defined by change:
Sebastian Bach is on lead vocals while
Dee Snider sits out, and the band has been largely off the road since farewells after drummer
AJ Pero's passing.
What you might hear
Expect a tight, no-frills set anchored by
We're Not Gonna Take It,
I Wanna Rock,
The Price, and
Burn in Hell. You will likely see multi-gen rock fans in patched denim and clean sneakers, plus younger folks who learned the hooks from movies and sports arenas, all singing the choruses on beat. A neat bit of history: the melody of
We're Not Gonna Take It mirrors the carol
O Come, All Ye Faithful, a wink they have quoted live before. Before MTV broke them, the group set attendance marks at tri-state clubs by playing marathon nights, which taught them how to pace big crowds. For this lineup, expect the guitars of
Jay Jay French and
Eddie Ojeda to carry more melody while
Sebastian Bach stretches notes in a higher register. Setlist and production mentions here are educated projections rather than confirmed details.
Twisted Sister Culture: Loud, Warm, Specific
Denim, patches, and pink stripes
You will see patched vests, clean band tees, and the classic pink-and-black stripe nod in scarves or wristbands, but plenty of folks also show up in simple jeans and black hoodies. There is a proud tri-state thread, with older fans swapping club stories and younger fans asking about
Stay Hungry era videos. Expect loud but friendly call-and-response moments, especially on the I wanna rock shout and the hey man, leave us alone break. Merch skews retro, with fork-through-the-bone art, baseball tees, and a clean tour date back print for the collectors.
Rituals that still land
Some fans still have SMF patches and will chant those letters during intros as a nod to the old fan club spirit. Between songs, expect quick, wry banter and roll-call shoutouts to the band, the city, and the old scene rather than long speeches. The overall mood is rowdy on the floor and social at the edges, with people trading photos of vintage tickets and showing kids where the big choruses land.
Twisted Sister Live: Sound Over Spectacle
Hooks with bite
Sebastian Bach brings a sharper, higher edge to the melodies, while the band leans into midtempo stomp and crisp choruses. Guitars from
Jay Jay French and
Eddie Ojeda work like a two-voice engine, one holding the grind while the other colors with harmonized lines.
Mark Mendoza's bass locks to a straight, roomy kick, giving the gang shouts space to sit on the beat.
Subtle tweaks for the stage
Do not be surprised if the tuning drops a half-step to suit the new vocal range, which adds a darker hue without slowing the songs. They often stretch the pre-chorus of
I Wanna Rock into a stop-time moment so the crowd fires back the hook before the band slams in. In
We're Not Gonna Take It, listen for a quick tease of
O Come, All Ye Faithful in the outro figure, a wink that shows how the hook is built. Lighting tends to punch on snare hits and flip to wide color washes during guitar solos, keeping focus on the music first. Expect concise arrangements with few indulgent detours, more muscle than polish, and voice-led dynamics that rise and fall cleanly.
If You Like Twisted Sister, Try These
Crossovers that make sense
Fans of
Skid Row will connect with the familiar bite in
Sebastian Bach's tone and the late 80s swing in the riffs.
Def Leppard brings the same love of stacked backing vocals and arena-size choruses that make these songs land in big rooms. If you like the riff-forward, street-level feel of
Ratt, this show scratches that itch without gloss.
Poison fans also tend to enjoy bright hooks and swaggering banter, which this band delivers with veteran timing.
Why your playlist overlaps
All four acts share a crowd that likes melody with muscle and a set that moves quickly from opener to encore. The overlap lives in punchy guitars, call-and-response chants, and choruses designed for thousands of voices.