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After Dark Returns: Night Bloom with Mr.Kitty
Austin-born producer and singer Forrest Carney makes shadowy synthpop under the name Mr.Kitty, blending coldwave pulse with diary-like hooks. After a turbulent hiatus in the late 2010s and a low profile stretch that followed, the project has returned to stages with a darker, leaner focus.
From bedroom pulses to club shade
Expect a set that balances viral pulls like After Dark with fan staples such as Destroy Me, Chernobyl, and Habits. You will see a patient, mixed-age crowd in black denim and soft knits, plenty of eyeliner, and friends quietly staking out spots to sway rather than shove. The energy tends to build from silent camera flashes to full-voice choruses, with couples trading nods when a deep cut lands.DIY to the core
Early releases were self-made to a near-obsessive level, from programming and vocals to cover art, and he still tweaks project files between cities. A late surge on TikTok sent After Dark back onto streaming charts years after release, reshaping which songs now anchor the show. Note: details on songs and staging here are informed guesses, not confirmed plans.The Mr.Kitty Crowd, Up Close
Expect a soft-spoken scene that dresses dark but not severe, with mesh tops, platform boots, and thrifted coats over band tees. You will notice glitter or black nail polish next to simple jeans, a blend of club kids and studio rats who compare synth patches between sets.
Velvet gloom, kind faces
Phones stay low until a chorus hits, then the room sings, especially on the lines everyone learned online. Merch trends skew black on black with small hearts or wordmarks, plus a few bright pins that pop against jackets.Little rituals in low light
There is a quiet etiquette near the stage, with nods to give space and quick apologies when someone passes through. When the kick drops out, chatter hushes, and you can hear the front rows breathe before the bass returns. After the show, people trade setlist photos and ask about favorite deep cuts, already plotting which city to catch next.How Mr.Kitty Builds the Night
The live rig stays compact, with sequenced drums, thick sub bass, and glassy pads forming a tight frame for a bright, aching vocal. He leans into crisp consonants and long reverb tails, which lets the words cut while the echo paints the edges.
Small rig, big shadow
Arrangements often strip the second verse to synth and voice before the kick slams back in, raising impact without raising volume. Transitions are DJ clean, stitching songs with shared keys and filter sweeps so the flow feels continuous.Sub-bass as spine
Compared to the studio takes, many tempos sit a notch faster live, turning brooding tracks into steady head-nodders. Listen for extended intros on After Dark and outros that loop a hook for crowd vocals, a small change that gives the room time to breathe. Lighting tends to favor deep blues and violet strobes that track the snare, adding motion without stealing focus from the music.If You Like Mr.Kitty: Kindred Spirits on the Road
Boy Harsher brings a minimal, body-moving synth throb that mirrors the same slow-burn tension and smoky vocals.