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Back From Vegas: The Cab Rises Again
After years away while singer Alexander DeLeon explored solo work as Bohnes, The Cab is stepping back onstage with a sharper pop-rock lens. They came up in the late-2000s scene, pairing crisp hooks with sleek production that still hits live.
Long break, louder return
Expect a set anchored by Angel With a Shotgun, with room for Bad, Endlessly, and One of Those Nights.What you might hear
Fans span longtime listeners who caught them in the Whisper War era and younger listeners who found the band through playlists and fan edits. You will notice groups trading lyric quotes on hoodies, a few Vegas team caps, and couples swaying during the ballads. Trivia heads will know Symphony Soldier was released independently after a label split, and that Patrick Stump touched early sessions while Brendon Urie guested on One of Those Nights. Given the comeback angle, they may open with a confident mid-tempo before ramping to the big chorus moments. Take the setlist and production notes here as educated guesses drawn from past eras, not guarantees.Living Room Reunion: The Cab's Modern Scene
The room feels like a meetup of eras, with people who rode the 2008 wave beside newer fans who found Angel With a Shotgun online.
Nostalgia meets now
You spot worn tees from early cycles next to clean, modern merch that uses bold fonts and short lyric lines. During the biggest hooks, voices stack loud, phones pop up for a chorus, and then pockets empty so clapping can lead the break. Style leans denim, sneakers, and simple layers, with a few glitter touches that nod to Vegas roots without going full costume.Shared rituals, easy energy
Chants land more like rhythmic call-backs, often echoing the word shotgun between drum hits or clapping into a drop. Fans swap playlist tips, trade pins, and share old show stories in a low-key, friendly way. When the last note rings, people linger to catch breath and keep talking, like ending a long reunion more than a night out.How The Cab Builds The Boom and Bloom
Alexander DeLeon's tenor sits forward in the mix, smooth on verses and gritty on choruses to cut through. Guitars and synths trade space, with chimey arpeggios setting mood while rhythm guitar locks to the kick to launch hooks.
Hooks first, polish second
Live, they tend to tick tempos up slightly from the records, giving choruses more lift without blurring the words. An extra touring player often handles keys and backing vocals, thickening refrains so the lead can stay elastic. On ballads like Endlessly, a soft piano intro may bloom into full-band color for the last chorus.Small switches, big payoffs
They like to stretch the bridge of Angel With a Shotgun for a crowd-led round before snapping back on the one. Capos on higher frets lend guitars a glassy ring, keeping the mix bright while bass and toms add weight. Lighting tends to be supportive, with warm washes on verses and tighter flashes on the biggest hits.Kindred Stages: The Cab's Crowd Overlap
Fall Out Boy fans will find punchy choruses, slick guitars, and big group vocals in the same lane.