Hooks, humor, and Maryland roots
Born out of suburban Maryland in the mid-2000s,
All Time Low built a pop-punk identity on bright hooks, quick tempos, and joking stage banter. The core four have stayed intact, and after the 2023 LP
Tell Me I'm Alive they have leaned into tighter, shinier arrangements. Expect a set that moves fast, with singalongs like
Dear Maria, Count Me In,
Weightless, and
Monsters anchoring the arc. A short acoustic breather tends to pop up mid-set, which lets
Alex Gaskarth's voice sit up front.
What they might play and who shows up
The room tends to be a smart mix of longtime Warped-era fans now in their 20s and 30s, newer pop listeners who found them on streaming, and a handful of parents enjoying generous choruses. Small details stand out:
All Time Low have a tradition of inviting fans onstage for the gang vocals of
Time-Bomb, and in 2019 they re-recorded
Nothing Personal track-for-track as a studio tribute to how far they had come. You will notice denim with old patches, bright hair dye, and enamel pins tucked on jacket collars, but the energy stays friendly and loud rather than rough. Note that these song picks and production flourishes are educated guesses from recent runs and could change on the night.
All Time Low, Up Close
What people wear and shout
You will spot vintage
Nothing Personal tees next to newer
Tell Me I'm Alive prints, plus custom jackets covered in stitched patches from early club eras. Many fans bring hand-lettered signs for deep cuts, and there is a friendly trade of enamel pins and setlist paper once the lights come up. Call-and-response banter between
Alex Gaskarth and
Jack Barakat has become part of the rhythm, with the room chiming in on jokes built over years.
Little rituals that stick
During
Therapy, phone flashlights rise quietly, while
Dear Maria, Count Me In turns into a full-room jump with a loud count-in. A round of drum-name chants often breaks out for
Rian Dawson, and you may catch the long-running habit of a tossed bra clipped on a mic stand that the crew treats lightly. The culture here is welcoming and memory-rich, more about swapping favorite bridges and merch stories than gatekeeping.
All Time Low, Under the Hood
Hooks first, engine tight
Live,
Alex Gaskarth keeps a bright, slightly gritty tenor that sits on top of the mix, while
Jack Barakat locks simple lead figures to the vocal melody.
Zack Merrick adds low-end weight and sturdy harmonies, and
Rian Dawson favors tight kick patterns that make the choruses feel like a sprint, not a blur. Arrangements lean on start-stop breaks and crisp count-offs so crowd vocals can hit clean, then the band slams back in a hair faster.
Small tweaks that lift the room
The guitars often drop a half-step live to ease the top notes and thicken the sound, which you can hear when familiar hooks feel warmer than the studio. They like to stretch outros by a few bars to milk a chant, and an acoustic turn on
Therapy or
Remembering Sunday resets the ears before the final run. Lights track the drums with saturated color washes and quick blackouts, supporting the music instead of chasing spectacle. On
Monsters, the guest verse is usually handled by the crowd or a touring multi-instrumentalist, and the band shortens the bridge to keep momentum.
If You Like All Time Low, You Will Feel at Home
Kindred hooks and big choruses
Fans of
Fall Out Boy often slide into
All Time Low shows because both lean on sharp pop hooks over punchy drums and witty one-liners.
5 Seconds of Summer shares the polished pop-rock glow and clean harmonies that make radio-friendly cuts land.
Waterparks push the neon side of pop-punk, and their crowds love fast tempo changes and shout-along bridges that mirror
All Time Low's high-energy runs.
Where fan circles overlap
State Champs bring crisp riffing and athletic drums, and if you enjoy brisk two-guitar interplay and melodic hooks, that match is clear. All four acts balance big-chorus catharsis with a sense of humor, which keeps rooms loose even when the lyrics get raw. If you favor earnest lines that still feel like a party, this cluster sits in the same lane without sounding copy-and-paste.