Find more presales for shows in Oslo, NO
Show The Living Tombstone presales in more places
Spawn Point: The Living Tombstone
The Living Tombstone began as producer Yoav Landau's online project, joined by vocalist Sam Haft, blending hard-edged EDM, pop hooks, and rock grit. After years known for fan-made anthems tied to games and fandoms, the project has shifted toward original material and a fuller live lineup on stage.
From uploads to a real-world band
Expect a set that nods to the YouTube era while leaning on newer cuts from zero_one and beyond. Likely highlights include My Ordinary Life, It's Been So Long, No Mercy, and their viral Discord (Remix).Nostalgia meets newer chapters
The crowd skews diverse in age, with gaming jackets, subtle cosplay touches, and plenty of people who know every chorus by heart. A neat trivia bit: their breakout Discord (Remix) started as a fan remix of Eurobeat Brony's track back in 2012 before it exploded beyond that scene. Early on, Landau built songs in home studios and forums, which shaped the tight loop-driven writing they still use live. For clarity, any set choices and staging notes here are based on informed expectations rather than confirmed plans.Save File: The Living Tombstone Fan Culture
You will see game patches on jackets, DIY ears or gloves that nod to characters, and a lot of practical shoes made for jumping.
Fandom in streetwear
Fans trade enamel pins and small stickers near the bar and compare which era they found the band through. When No Mercy is teased, a section might start the no mercy chant in a tight rhythm, and the room picks it up quickly.Chants, charms, and chorus lines
For It's Been So Long, people often sway with phones up, but the vibe stays friendly rather than pushy. Merch leans neon and glitchy, with the tombstone icon on black tees, and smaller items like lanyards that feel very convention-ready. Ages range from teens to thirty-somethings with a few parents, and security tends to nod along because the hooks are easy to sing. Between songs, The Living Tombstone banter is short and dry, giving more space to beats than speeches. The scene feels like a meetup for people who grew up online and now want volume, community, and a clean drop they can shout with.Patch Notes: The Living Tombstone Live Mix
Live, The Living Tombstone frames Sam Haft's voice with crisp harmonies and light vocoder color, so verses feel human and choruses feel larger than life. Arrangements often start lean, then stack guitar, synth bass, and pads to hit the drop without muddying the beat.
Hooks engineered for lift
The drummer locks to programmed kicks, giving the songs a dance pulse while letting fills add rock bite. Guitar parts shadow the synth lines, and the player often tunes down to drop C to track those sub-heavy riffs cleanly.Little switches, big payoffs
They like halftime pivots, flipping a verse in slow-motion and snapping back to double-time for the hook, a trick that keeps familiar songs fresh. Older tracks get reworked: the Discord (Remix) drop sometimes extends with crowd claps on the off-beat, and It's Been So Long may open with a quieter, vocoded intro. Lighting follows the kick sidechain with quick strobes and pixel-toned washes, but the show stays music-first with clear sightlines to the band. A small but telling habit: they leave space before big hits so chants land clean, then cue the downbeat with a quick noise sweep for impact.Party Members: The Living Tombstone Adjacent
Fans of CG5 will click with the catchy, character-driven hooks and the same game-adjacent DNA.