Twin Hooks and Heartbeats with The Beths
The Beths come from Auckland indie rock circles, building bright guitar lines and airtight harmonies, while Beach Bunny grew out of Chicago DIY with sugar-rush hooks and pop-punk snap. This co-headline tends to alternate sets, with both bands leaning into nervous-hearted songs that feel big but still personal.
Two bands, one nervy pop core
Expect Future Me Hates Me and Expert in a Dying Field from The Beths, with Prom Queen and Cloud 9 likely anchors for Beach Bunny. Crowds skew mixed-age, with friend groups comparing guitar tones, first-timers drawn in by playlists, and longtime indie fans mouthing harmonies more than they dance. You may notice quiet pockets up front where people film the choruses, and clusters in the back swapping notes about releases and local openers.Small facts, big context
Trivia: the members of The Beths met in a university jazz program, which explains their quick chord turns, and Beach Bunny began as a solo project before growing into a full band. Another nugget: early The Beths recordings were pieced together in their guitarist's small Auckland studio, so the live show often emphasizes harmony stacks the records hint at. These guesses about songs and production are drawn from recent tours, but the choices can shift by city and mood.The Beths x Beach Bunny Crowd, Up Close
This crowd trends friendly and detail-oriented, the kind that notices a good harmony as quickly as a sharp lyric. You will see thrifted denim, band tees with hand-drawn fonts, enamel pins, and a surprising number of guitar strap patterns.
Indie pop, sleeves rolled up
Chant moments show up on the short shouts in Future Me Hates Me and the big chorus of Prom Queen, with pockets of voices taking the top harmony. Between sets people trade favorite B-sides, compare pedal picks, and line up for posters and tote bags with risograph-style art.Sing along, but listen close
Phones are out for the first chorus, then down when the harmonies stack, which tells you the draw here is sound first. Mosh behavior stays light and respectful, more bounce than push, with quick resets so everyone keeps their footing. The scene nods to 90s alt-pop and 2010s Bandcamp energy, but it feels present-tense rather than nostalgic. It is a room that rewards listening and rewards singing, in equal measure.How The Beths and Beach Bunny Make It Land Live
The Beths work around crisp, high-contrast vocals over interlocking guitars, with the rhythm section pushing tempos just a notch faster than on record. Three-part harmonies are the secret engine, popping in and out to frame the hook rather than sitting on it the whole time.
Hooks built for speed
Guitar arrangements split the difference between jagged downstrokes and chiming arpeggios, while Beach Bunny leans on down-the-middle strumming that lets the kick and snare carry the bounce. Live, both bands often shave a bar off a verse or hold a pre-chorus a breath longer, tiny moves that make the payoff feel earned.Little choices, big lift
A small but telling detail: the guitarist-producer in The Beths usually runs a modest chorus and slapback to widen lines that would be double-tracked on the album, keeping the mix clear without extra players. Expect steady color washes and brisk strobe accents that match dynamic jumps, but nothing that drags focus from the playing. When the room is locked in, you will hear the bass outline the chord changes so cleanly that the guitars can skate on top without turning into fuzz soup. And when Beach Bunny hits a bridge, the drums often drop to half-time for a few bars, giving the vocal space before a tight final chorus rush.If You Like The Beths and Beach Bunny
Fans of Alvvays tend to click with this bill because both acts favor bright melodies over fuzzy guitars and bittersweet stories you can sing out loud. Soccer Mommy is a fit for the diaristic lyrics and mid-tempo sway that still hits hard when the drums open up.