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High-Sprint Hooks with State Champs
State Champs rose from Albany basements, matching quick drum bursts with shiny, precise melodies, and grew into Warped Tour stalwarts.
Albany grit, pop polish
Their debut The Finer Things set the frame: sprinting verses, big-shoulder choruses, and Derek DiScanio's clear tenor riding on top. A likely arc hits Elevated early, pockets Secrets mid-set for a group shout, then leans on Dead and Gone and Everybody But You to close with bounce.What the room feels like
The crowd tends to be mixed in age, with patch-covered denim next to fresh varsity jackets, and small surfing flurries near the rail while friends further back trade harmonies. Trivia fans enjoy that The Finer Things was made with Sam Pura and New Found Glory's Steve Klein, and that the Around the World and Back deluxe pressed bare-bones acoustic versions that highlight structure. Another thread is their early Overslept cuts popping up on anniversary runs, a quiet thank-you to day-one supporters. For transparency, the song order and production flourishes noted here are thoughtful projections, not locked details.Jerseys, Jump Cuts, and Big Group Shouts
You will see a lot of team-style jerseys, vintage band tees, and beat-up skate shoes, with a few fresh varsity jackets mixed in.
Sporty threads, soft landings
The pit stays active but polite, with quick hands up when someone stumbles and short bursts of surfing near the barricade. When Everybody But You hits, pockets of the room yell the call-and-response lines back at the band, while the outro hook turns into one loud block of voices.Shouts, claps, and cues
Older fans smile when an Overslept or The Finer Things deep cut drops, and they often coach newer friends on the clap pattern before a chorus. Merch tables lean sporty, with hockey-style tops and bright caps selling fast next to minimal black tees. Between songs, State Champs keep the tone light and local, shouting out the city and tossing a memory from early runs to connect the dots. The scene reads like a friendly club of regulars and curious first-timers, bonded by fast songs, shared chants, and a small circle of in-jokes at the rail.Craft, Crunch, and Chorus Lifts
State Champs build songs around Derek DiScanio's steady tenor, letting vowels stretch so the hooks land clean. Guitars favor tight, muted picking in verses, then open to ringing chords for the chorus lift, with the bass sliding in small countermelodies that glue it together.
Speed with room to sing
Drums switch between double-time urgency and broader half-time hits, a simple move that makes space for chant lines without dropping energy. A quieter center often appears mid-set, where they strip to one guitar or add light pads so the vocal sits forward.Small tweaks, big payoff
Live, they often tune a half-step down, which warms the attack and keeps high notes relaxed over long runs. Watch for little rewrites too, like a stop-start break before the last chorus of Secrets or a longer build in Dead and Gone to let the room catch the cue. Lights tend to color-code sections, with cooler washes for verses and white bursts on snare cracks, supporting the music instead of fighting it.Neighboring Waves and Kindred Chords
Fans of Neck Deep will click with the clean-speed bounce and sturdy choruses.