Salt Air Origins, Barroom Grit
Songs Fans Hope To Hear
[The Growlers] cut their teeth in Orange County bars, building a hazy
beach goth sound that bends surf, garage, and lounge. After a long post-2020 pause and side projects, especially
Brooks Nielsen's solo run, any return would likely feature a leaner lineup and a back-to-basics feel. Expect a set built around fan anchors like
Dope on a Rope,
Going Gets Tough,
City Club, and
Chinese Fountain, with a few deep cuts for day-one fans. The floor tends to be a mix of skaters in scuffed shoes, couples in thrifted prints, and thirty-somethings who grew with the band, all swaying more than moshing. One lesser-known note: during the
City Club era, sessions felt outside production influence from
Julian Casablancas, nudging synths and tighter grooves into their palette. Another tidbit: the group popularized the
Beach Goth festival concept, treating it as a costume-friendly gathering that still prized songs over spectacle. Heads up: the setlist and production mentions below are informed guesses from past shows, not locked-in facts.
The Growlers Scene, Up Close
Beach Goth, Grown Up
Sway Over Frenzy
The room usually shows off thrift smarts: striped tees, sun-faded denim, black nails, and a few Halloween-in-July touches that nod to the
Beach Goth past. You hear pockets of Spanish and English mixing between songs, then a shared hum when the first guitar chime cues a favorite. The biggest singalong tends to land on the chorus of
Going Gets Tough, with voices riding above the band for a verse or two. Merch runs toward washed-out pastels, hand-drawn fonts, and the occasional skeleton palm, plus a poster style that looks like it came from a surf shop wall. Between sets, longtime fans trade stories of small-club nights and compare editions of old Beach Goth flyers rather than chasing rarities. It feels like a scene that prefers a steady sway, a good hook, and friends nearby over spectacle or stunts.
How The Growlers Build The Sound Live
Groove Before Flash
Small Moves, Big Feel
Live,
The Growlers work around a warm, slightly raspy vocal that sits on top of tight, dry drums and surf-clean guitars. Arrangements favor simple chord loops that let the bass walk and the organ paint thin lines, keeping room for the vocal to lean and sway. Many songs run a notch slower on stage, turning quick studio struts into looser grooves where the crowd can actually breathe between choruses. When they kick into
City Club material, the drummer locks four-on-the-floor while a small synth pad fills the midrange, giving the set a dance pocket without going full electronic. A neat quirk: guitarists often roll back tone knobs to shave treble during verses, then pop them open for choruses, which feels like a mini lighting cue for your ears. Visuals tend to be warm amber and sea-glass green with a few shadowy cutouts, accenting the mood without stealing focus from the rhythm section.
Kindred Seas for The Growlers Fans
Kindred Coasts
Where Fans Overlap
If you like jangly, sun-bleached grooves,
Allah-Las share the laid-back surf tint and crate-digger guitar tones. For wistful, danceable indie with clean hooks,
The Drums hit the same seaside melancholy that
The Growlers fans gravitate toward. Fans who enjoy dreamy textures and steady head-nod rhythms should look to
Beach Fossils, whose live sets float but still punch. The slicker, motorik edge that surfaced in the
City Club period lines up with
The Strokes, especially for listeners who like tight drum patterns and baritone croon over choppy guitars. Altogether, these artists orbit coastal moods, mid-tempo sway, and choruses built for communal singing rather than chaos.