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Presales to unpeople: members use these when buying pre-sale tickets
unpeople: we are unpeople tour
Electric Ballroom
Jan 28, 2027 • 7:00pm
London, GB
Unpeople - we are unpeople tour
O2 Institute2 Birmingham
Jan 26, 2027 • 7:00pm
Birmingham, GB
unpeople
King Tuts Wah Wah Hut
Jan 25, 2027 • 7:30pm
Glasgow, GB
unpeople: we are unpeople tour
Rebellion Manchester
Jan 23, 2027 • 6:00pm
Manchester, GB
Unpeople
Voodoo
Jan 19, 2027 • 7:00pm
Belfast, GB
Unpeople
The Grand Social
Jan 18, 2027 • 7:00pm
Dublin, IE
Don Broco
Outernet Live
Oct 12, 2026 • 7:00pm
London, GB
Don Broco
Leas Cliff Hall
Oct 11, 2026 • 6:30pm
Folkestone, GB
Don Broco
Portsmouth Guildhall
Oct 8, 2026 • 7:00pm
Portsmouth, GB
Don Broco
Cambridge Corn Exchange
Oct 6, 2026 • 7:00pm
Cambridge, GB
Don Broco
Watford Colosseum
Sep 27, 2026 • 7:00pm
Watford, GB
RADAR Festival: Saturday
O2 Victoria Warehouse Manchester
Aug 1, 2026 • 12:00pm
Manchester, GB

How to find unpeople presale codes

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Big Broco Energy with Don Broco

Don Broco are a Bedford-born alt-rock band blending crunching riffs with danceable pop hooks and cheeky wit. Their core of Rob Damiani, Matt Donnelly, Si Delaney, and Tom Doyle has stayed intact, sharpening a sound that jumps from heavy chugs to slick funk breaks.

Crunch meets bounce

Expect a set that pivots between bounce and bite, with likely anchors like T-Shirt Song, Everybody, Gumshield, and Come Out to LA. The crowd skews mixed in age, with longtime UK rock fans shoulder to shoulder with newer pop-leaning listeners who came in through viral clips and festival sets. You will see shirts windmilled en masse during the chorus of T-Shirt Song, while pockets up front move from push-pits to synchronized jumps.

Shirt-swinging lore and studio quirks

A neat detail: drummer Matt handles soaring harmonies while keeping tight kick patterns, and the band often triggers sample stabs from a pad hidden near the bass rig. Another tidbit: early singles leaned punky before the group folded in glossy R&B phrasing and octave guitars on Technology-era cuts. This preview mixes recent show habits with history, so treat the song picks and production notes here as informed possibilities, not guarantees.

The Don Broco Crowd, Up Close

The room usually feels like a friendly collision of gym-core tees, vintage football tops, and bright merch splashes from the Technology and Amazing Things eras. Expect call-and-response moments on the easy vowels, plus the time-honored shirt whirl when T-Shirt Song hits.

Terrace energy, gig manners

People near the middle tend to bounce in unison with elbows tucked while the edges open brief pits and then reset when the hook returns. You will spot handmade signs with cheeky lines from Come Out to LA, and more than a few bucket hats nodding to the band's playful image.

Bold colors, inside jokes

Merch tables lean into bold fonts and sports-club colors, and scarves or bandanas show up for the terrace-flavored chants. Between songs, fans trade knowing grins about deep cuts, but the mood stays open to first-timers who just want a chorus to shout. When the lights rise for the big closer, there is a casual roll call of cities and in-jokes shouted back at the stage, like a tour within the room.

How Don Broco Make It Hit Live

On stage, Rob's baritone sits slightly ahead of the beat while Matt's higher harmonies glue the choruses and keep phrases bright. Guitars favor tight palm-muted riffs that open into wide chords on refrains, with the bass popping syncopations that make the bounce feel elastic.

Groove-first choices, song by song

The band often drops into halftime for bridges, then snaps back to a faster feel, which keeps pits moving without losing melody. A small but telling habit is tuning the main guitars down to drop C and using an octave pedal to thicken single-note hooks without adding a third guitar. They also like to reframe intros live, turning the first chorus of Everybody into a tease before unleashing the full stack the next pass.

Small tweaks with big impact

Electronic touches matter, but they serve the groove: kick-triggered samples, a few vocal chops, and lights that pulse to quarter notes rather than strobe chaos. Because the drummer runs a click for sample sync, the band can stretch outros a few bars without the track falling apart. The result is music-first showmanship where clarity, punch, and playful shifts do the heavy lifting.

Kindred Spirits: Don Broco Fans Might Also Roll With

Fans who enjoy the heavy-pop tightrope will likely connect with Bring Me The Horizon, whose recent sets mix metal crunch with electronic heft and giant singalongs. Enter Shikari appeal to the same crowd that likes high-BPM shifts, synth stabs, and big communal chants.

If you like hooks with heft

If you come for glassy falsetto hooks riding muscular grooves, Nothing But Thieves share that balance of polish and punch. Listeners who grew up on slick UK alt-rock choruses will find kinship with You Me At Six, especially in the way guitars leave space for rhythm-heavy vocals.

UK alt lineage and festival energy

All four acts value dynamics and crowd interplay, which mirrors how Don Broco flips from bounce-along funk to sharp down-picked grind within a single song.

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