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Vada Vada Origins with The Garden

Twin-engine punk, born OC

The Garden are OC twins Wyatt and Fletcher Shears who built a bass-and-drum punk core with flashes of oddball electronics. They call their approach Vada Vada, a do-what-feels-right rule that keeps the songs lean and jumpy.

What they might play tonight

Expect quick jolts like HaHa, Vexation, All Smiles Over Here :), and Sneaky Devil, often slammed back to back. The room usually mixes fashion kids, DIY punks, and curious indie fans, with nails painted, boots scuffed, and plenty of stripes. Trivia worth knowing: the twins also flood the world with solo work as Enjoy and Puzzle, and many early tracks were home-recorded. You might spot them swapping roles mid-set or firing samples from a tabletop unit between breaks. Treat the set choices and production notes here as informed guesses that can vary by night.

The Garden fans, up close

Stripes, zines, and polite chaos

Fashion leans striped and monochrome, with face paint nods to jester looks, thrifted suits, and chunky boots you can actually move in. You will hear 'Vada Vada' chanted between songs by pockets of fans, not the whole room, like a club password. Pits form and dissolve quickly, and people near the front often trade places after a burst to keep it breathable.

Little rituals in the pit

Merch skews stark and limited, plus the occasional zine or sticker sheet that feels hand-cut more than glossy. During HaHa, many shout the title on the hits, while a few start a sideways shuffle instead of a full spin. After the show, small groups linger to compare scuffed shoes and swap photo dumps, less about clout and more about proof you were in the noise. If you are new to The Garden, the scene reads like art class kids who learned mosh etiquette.

The Garden on stage: sound over spectacle

Bass as blade and anchor

The Garden runs on Wyatt's bass tones that cover both low-end thump and guitar bite, using fuzz, chorus, and an octave-up layer. Fletcher's drumming pivots between pogo beats and half-time stomps, leaving pockets for shouty, sardonic vocal lines. Live, they tighten arrangements, clipping intros and jumping straight to the hook to keep momentum high.

Short songs, long impact

They often stitch two short tracks together with a single sample hit, turning breathers into transitions. Vocals flip from deadpan to bark, and the mic effects add a thin metallic edge that helps cut through the fuzz. Lighting tends to pulse in block colors that match sections, supporting the music without telling it what to do. On some nights the bass signal splits to two amps for size, which is how they fill a guitar slot without adding players.

If You Like The Garden: Kindred Acts

Kindred chaos, different angles

Fans of Turnstile often click with The Garden's sprinting tempos and upbeat crowd energy, even if the tones differ. Show Me The Body shares the bass-forward grind and a New York hardcore edge that attracts similar pit behavior. If you like high-BPM chaos and sample hits, Machine Girl brings a digital-slam version of the same release valve.

Where punk meets digital shock

For rap-punk hybrids with menace and humor, Ho99o9 lives in the same late-night, freight-train lane. All four acts value short songs, sudden drops, and crowds that move in bursts rather than slow sway. If those traits sit well with you, The Garden will feel like a sibling, not a stranger.

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Please see Terms and Privacy pages for more information. Enjoy the show! Last Updated in 2026