From hiatus to hard-charging return
Vancouver's
Default came up in the early 2000s with radio-sized post-grunge that leaned on big hooks and sandpaper guitar tones. After years on pause while
Dallas Smith built a solo country career, the band has eased back for select rock dates, which frames this bill with a reunion feel. Expect a tight set built around
Wasting My Time,
Deny, and
Throw It All Away, with one deeper cut like
Count on Me slipped in for fans who kept the CDs.
Who shows up and what they sing
The room should mix thirty-something rock-radio lifers, alt-leaning college kids there for
The Blue Stones, and discovery-minded pop fans catching
Fionn. A neat footnote: the band got an early boost from
Chad Kroeger and 604 Records, and they still favor chunky drop-D shapes that make choruses hit harder. You might also hear Smith tweak a melody lower than the record, trading shine for grit as the crowd takes the top note. These notes on songs and staging are educated guesses, not a promise of what you will see.
Default, The Blue Stones & Fionn: The Scene Up Close
Vintage tees and fresh ink
You will spot sun-faded early-2000s rock tees next to crisp duo-blues posters on shirts, plus a few country caps from folks who follow
Dallas Smith. Black denim and lived-in sneakers rule, but plenty of fans dress light for movement, saving space for a hoodie from the table later. When
Fionn plays, the room tends to hush and listen, then answers choruses with soft harmonies from the back rows.
Shared rituals, low drama
By the time
The Blue Stones hit a stomping riff, claps land on the two and four, and hands go up for the breaks without anyone barking orders. Expect loud group lines on
Wasting My Time, with a few voices taking the high ad-lib while the floor hammers the beat. Merch leans toward bold type, tour-year prints, and soft tees, plus a small line of caps and beanies for the cold walk out. Between songs you hear stories about MuchMusic spins, Windsor-Detroit radio memories, and first shows at tiny clubs, shared in a friendly, matter-of-fact way.
Default, The Blue Stones & Fionn: Music First, Always
Crunch meets craft
Default leans on stacked guitars and a rhythm section that leaves air for
Dallas Smith to sit high and clear, then pushes into wide-open choruses. Live, they often slow a verse a hair to make the hook feel like a lift, and the guitars favor down-tuned shapes that punch without harsh fizz.
The Blue Stones work the power-duo formula by running the guitar through octave and fuzz, while the drummer drives with deep kick and roomy cymbals.
Small details that change the feel
They like to stretch intros by a few bars, then drop the groove on a dime, which makes even a mid-tempo riff feel urgent.
Fionn open the sound up with close sisters' harmonies, bright acoustic strums, and soft-snap percussion that can loop under the last chorus. Expect lighting that tracks dynamics rather than gimmicks, with warm whites for story songs and color bursts when the riffs bark. A small but telling touch:
The Blue Stones sometimes swap the original key for a thicker, lower live feel, while
Default might add a guitar counterline where a record used pads.
Default, The Blue Stones & Fionn: Kindred Roads
If you like weighty hooks
Fans of
Nickelback will feel at home with the glossy crunch and sing-along choruses that
Default still favors.
Theory of a Deadman brings a similar radio-ready stomp and storytelling swagger, drawing a crowd that values hooks over fuss.
Blues-duo energy and radio rock
If you like the darker, thicker riff lane,
Seether overlaps on mood and mid-tempo release. For the duo blues-rock side that pulls
The Blue Stones,
Royal Blood is a clear neighbor, with punchy bass tones standing in for a second guitar. Cross-genre listeners who chase big choruses and sturdy grooves tend to bounce between these bands from festival cards to theater tours. That overlap means a crowd willing to belt the refrains and nod along to a pocket you can feel more than you need to analyze.