Find more presales for shows in Concord, CA
Show illuminati hotties presales in more places
Jimmy Eat World Hits the Middle Mark
Born in Mesa, Arizona, Jimmy Eat World grew from DIY emo roots into radio-sharp rock with open-hearted hooks.
Quarter-Century Focus
This run centers on 25 years of Bleed American, the record that carried them from clubs to big rooms and briefly bore a self-titled name after 2001. Expect the album played in sequence, with highlights like The Middle, Sweetness, and Hear You Me bringing the loud-quiet-loud arc into focus.Concrete Crowd Energy
You will see thirty- and forty-somethings shoulder to shoulder with newer fans who found the band on playlists, sharing verses more than selfies. Trivia heads will note Davey von Bohlen's fingerprints on A Praise Chorus, and that Sweetness was road-tested before the album even dropped. Another deep-cut fact: Hear You Me honors Mykel and Carli Allan from the early Weezer community. For clarity, the song choices and any production cues described here are informed guesses and may shift from show to show.Jimmy Eat World: The Scene, The Chorus
The room feels like a meet-up of people who grew up with the record and those just now catching the bug, and both groups are game to sing full verses.
Nostalgia, Kept Honest
You will spot vintage band tees, clean sneakers, and a few patched jackets from the early-2000s punk orbit, plus parents pointing out choruses to teens. Show merch leans into the bold album art and the number 25, with simple black shirts and clean poster designs.Shared Rituals, Simple Joys
Chant moments are communal: the whoa-ohs in Sweetness, the gang hits in Bleed American, and that quiet hush before Hear You Me lands. Between songs, people trade stories about burned CDs and late-night radio, but the mood stays present-tense and kind. By the end, it reads less like dress-up nostalgia and more like a check-in on songs that still carry real weight.Jimmy Eat World: How the Songs Breathe Live
Jimmy Eat World keeps vocals clean on top, with Jim Adkins riding a clear mid-range while Tom Linton adds grit in harmonies and the odd lead line.
Hooks Built for Rooms
Guitars favor crisp downstrokes and ringing open chords, so the choruses feel wide without turning mushy. Zach Lind's drumming is tight and unflashy, giving songs a sprint-start feel and then easing back so verses can breathe.Small Tweaks, Big Payoff
Live, they often speed up a notch on The Authority Song and Get It Faster, then stretch outros for crowd call-backs. A subtle detail: the band sometimes drops tuning a half-step or nudges a key down so Adkins can hit the last chorus strong rather than strained. Lighting follows the dynamics, with strobe bursts for the noise break and warm washes on ballads like Hear You Me.Jimmy Eat World: Kindred Stages
Fans who line up for Taking Back Sunday often feel at home here, thanks to punchy guitars and shout-along choruses that still leave room for melody.