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Big Flock Energy: Geese take flight
Geese are a Brooklyn art-rock band that grew from a high-school project into a sharp, adventurous live act.
Sharp corners, wide skies
The music snaps with post-punk angles, then loosens into twangy swirl and open-ended jams when the mood builds. A likely set leans on Low Era, Disco, 3D Country, and Cowboy Nudes, with deep cuts surfacing when the guitars start to drone. The crowd skews mixed in age, with DIY kids up front and long time record hounds nearby, both reacting to the same tense to release pull.Basement seeds, big rooms
They almost ended the band before graduation, only to sign and finish Projector instead of heading straight to college. Early sessions reportedly happened in a basement after hours, using a small pile of thrifted pedals and one faithful dynamic mic. Live, they often stitch songs together with feedback interludes so the room never fully exhales. Please read all setlist and production specifics here as smart guesses from prior gigs, not a guarantee.Field Notes: Geese fan world in 3D
The scene tilts arty and practical at once, with thrashed denim, workwear jackets, thrift blazers, and beat-up skate shoes near the rail.
Denim, wire, and ink
You hear quick gear chatter between songs near the board, while up front the push starts when the bass gets rubbery and the snare snaps. Hook moments become group cues, like the title drop in Disco and a yeehaw burst during 3D Country.Little rituals that stick
Merch trends toward bold type and bird iconography, with patches, risograph zines, and a tee that looks hand-stenciled. People swap notes about tiny club shows from the first record cycle and compare setlist quirks without treating it like sport. It feels like a community that met Geese in small rooms and kept the spark as the rooms got bigger.Gears and Grain: Geese's live engine
Geese lean on a vivid vocal lead that can croon low, bark sharp, and then float just above the guitars.
Tension then release
Twin guitars trade clipped jabs and glassy arpeggios, while bass and drums spring the songs forward and pull them back for contrast. Tempos often breathe, with verses held on a tight leash and choruses pushed a notch faster so the floor moves. The band likes knife-edge stops and quick dropouts, making returns hit harder without extra volume.Small choices, big lift
One guitarist may capo high while the other stays open, which spreads the chords like a chorus effect without pedals. They sometimes flip a bridge to half time and then slingshot to double time for the last hook, giving a set-piece feel. Visuals tend to mirror the dynamics, with stark white during tense lines and warm amber when the songs open wide.Flock Theory: Geese and fellow travelers
Fans of Black Midi will vibe with the sudden left turns and athletic rhythms that Geese ride when jams peak.