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Toy Factory Project
Music At Maymont
May 20, 2026 • 6:00pm
Richmond, VA

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Toy stories with Toy Factory Project

Toy Factory Project is a rotating pop lab that turns toy tones and synth patterns into crisp, hooky songs.

Gears that giggle

The project grew from home-studio experiments into a live show that leans on small instruments and big rhythm. Expect elastic grooves, chanty hooks, and hand-played percussion sitting on top of minimal drum machines. A likely run could feature Clockwork Hearts, Neon Assembly Line, and Playdate Parade, with a surprise reprise to close.

People-watching with polyrhythms

The crowd skews mixed, from young producers comparing pedal chains to older synth fans nodding to dry 80s drum sounds. You will also spot graphic designers trading sticker packs and parents with ear-protected kids vibing near the back. Nerdy aside: longtime followers note early sketches were made on a four-track cassette, and a studio session once sampled bubble wrap for a snare layer. A small tour quirk is the occasional QR card linking to stems for a crowd-sourced remix drop after the show. These setlist and production notes are educated guesses from recent clips and chatter, and the actual choices may differ on the night.

The Toy Factory Project scene in full color

The scene around a show like this feels like a mini makers fair meeting a pop gig.

Toybox streetwear

You see workwear jackets, bright socks, enamel pins shaped like wind-up keys, and a few DIY hats stitched with barcode lines. People clap on off-beats, trade tiny shakers during the opener, and save the loudest shout for the drop where the kick cuts out.

Hands-on fandom

Chant moments stay simple call-and-response, often a clipped hey or a beep beep tied to a sampler hit. Merch leans tactile with risograph posters, cassettes, patches, and sticker sheets that echo the toy aesthetic. Fans swap production tips in a friendly way, turning the floor into a low-key workshop between songs. The mood is curious more than rowdy, with listeners chasing small sonic jokes and dancing when the groove lands.

How Toy Factory Project makes small sounds feel big

The vocals sit close to the mic, often doubled by a soft vocoder to add shine without burying the words.

Small instruments, big arcs

Arrangements build from a drum machine spine, then layer toy keys, glockenspiel, and short guitar stabs. The bassist favors synth bass that locks with the kick so the tiny percussion can flicker on top. Tempos hover mid-speed, but they drop parts to create a breath before choruses slam back in.

Hooks by subtraction

A recurring live trick is to strip the bridge to voice and drum machine, then bring back toy bells on the final chorus for a lift. You can also catch them retuning a toy glockenspiel by swapping bars to match the song key, which gives a slightly wobbly sparkle. Visuals stay bold and simple, with primary colors and schematic projections that mirror the clean, clicky mix. The band backs the core idea by keeping parts short and leaving air so each small sound reads like a lead.

Kindred circuits for Toy Factory Project fans

Fans of Animal Collective will find kinship in the playful vocal stacks and loop-driven builds.

Collage pop cousins

If you enjoy Superorganism, the internet-age collage vibe and sunny deadpan hooks line up. Tune-Yards is a fit because of hand percussion, body-driven rhythm, and fearless groove changes.

Rhythm first, smiles second

People who ride for Kero Kero Bonito will appreciate bright melodies over crunchy, toybox textures. All of these artists mix whimsy with detail while keeping a beat you can step to. Where Animal Collective leans more psychedelic and free-form, this project trims ideas into quick bursts closer to Superorganism in pacing. That overlap makes cross-fandom natural without the songs sounding alike.

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Please see Terms and Privacy pages for more information. Enjoy the show! Last Updated in 2026