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Yard Act
O2 Academy Brixton
Nov 26, 2026 • 7:00pm
London, GB
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Yard Act
O2 Victoria Warehouse Manchester
Nov 13, 2026 • 7:00pm
Manchester, GB
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Yard Act
O2 Academy Leeds
Nov 6, 2026 • 7:00pm
Leeds, GB
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Yard Act
The Opera House
Sep 22, 2026 • 7:00pm
Toronto, ON
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Yard Act
The Sinclair
Aug 16, 2026 • 8:00pm
Cambridge, MA
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Yard Act
Underground Arts
Aug 15, 2026 • 8:30pm
Philadelphia, PA
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Yard Act
Black Cat
Aug 14, 2026 • 7:30pm
Washington, DC
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Yard Act
Warsaw
Aug 13, 2026 • 7:00pm
Brooklyn, NY
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Yard Act with Special Guests
The Pearl
Aug 11, 2026 • 8:00pm
Vancouver, BC
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Yard Act
The Pearl
Aug 11, 2026 • 8:00pm
Vancouver, BC
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Yard Act
Neptune Theatre
Aug 10, 2026 • 8:00pm
Seattle, WA
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Yard Act
Revolution Hall
Aug 9, 2026 • 8:00pm
Portland, OR
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Outside Lands
Golden Gate Park
Aug 9, 2026 • 11:00am
San Francisco, CA
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Outside Lands
Golden Gate Park
Aug 8, 2026 • 11:00am
San Francisco, CA
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Outside Lands
Golden Gate Park
Aug 7, 2026 • 11:00am
San Francisco, CA
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Yard Act
Teragram Ballroom
Aug 6, 2026 • 7:00pm
Los Angeles, CA
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Yard Act
Belly Up
Aug 5, 2026 • 8:00pm
Solana Beach, CA
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Into the Yard with Yard Act
This Leeds-born post-punk outfit pairs dry spoken-sung storytelling with springy rhythm-section grooves.
Sharp tongues, tight grooves
They rose from DIY singles on Zen F.C. to larger stages, keeping the humor sharp while the beats got dancier. On Where's My Utopia? they push beyond the wiry snap of The Overload, adding synth colors and a rounder bass thump.What might get played
Expect a punchy run built around The Overload, Fixer Upper, Land of the Blind, and Dream Job, with spoken bits stretching the tension before the hooks. The crowd skews record-collector and gig-regular, with zine totes, vintage football tops, and people mouthing entire verses word for word. Early on they wrote with a simple drum-machine backbone before a full-kit sound, which is why the bass lines often carry the tunes live. Their first 7-inch runs on Zen F.C. came in hand-stamped sleeves, and between songs the frontperson often riffs in long, wry monologues that feel half-standup. Note: the song choices and staging notes here are educated guesses and could differ on the night.Yard Act Fans IRL: Zines, Chants, and Sharp Threads
Scene-wise, you see workwear jackets, thrifted knits, and old club scarves, but also parents with ear protection and teens comparing playlists.
Smart shirts, smarter banter
Chants bloom in pockets, often on the title lines of The Overload and Fixer Upper, and the talky intros spark quiet so the punchlines land. Merch leans practical and text-forward, with Zen F.C. vinyl variants and simple type tees that nod to xeroxed zines. People swap notes on which B-sides got aired last run, and a few bring homemade badges quoting favorite one-liners.Rituals without rules
Phones come out for the big refrains, then go down when stories start, like a crowd that knows the arc matters. Venue bars buzz about bass tone and snare crack as much as lyrics, which tells you rhythm fans are here for the mix as well as the message. Post-show, small groups linger to decode references while others hunt the setlist for that one deep cut. It feels communal but unforced, a room full of sharp listeners who still want a beat heavy enough to move.How Yard Act Sounds Live: Tight Lines, Loose Lips
Live, the vocals ride like spoken news bulletins, clipped and rhythmic so every joke and jab lands on the snare.
Words on the beat
Guitar stays bright and percussive, often leaving space while bass takes the melodic lead and the drums nudge the groove forward. They like mid-tempo struts that suddenly kick up a notch for choruses, which keeps the floor moving without losing the words. A common trick is dropping to just bass and hats for a fake-out count, then slamming back into the hook so the chant hits harder.Groove mechanics, not guitar heroics
Keys and samples show up as small smears or doubled lines, not wallpaper, giving Dream Job and newer cuts a warmer sheen. Under the talk-sung verses, the band stacks simple parts in layers, so the impact comes from timing and accents rather than flashy runs. Lighting tends to mirror the music: stark whites for the tight talky bits, then warmer color washes when the groove opens. The result keeps focus on words first, rhythm second, with little solos but lots of left-turn stops and deadpan pauses.If You Dig Yard Act, You Might Also Book These
If you like talk-forward rhythm and social detail, Sleaford Mods match the dry bark and drum-machine stomp, though this band swings more.