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All Your Friends in Charlotte

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All Your Friends
Neighborhood Theatre Main Room — Charlotte, NC

All Your Friends emerged from the bedroom pop underground with a sound that feels both deliberately unpolished and carefully constructed. Their music sits in that awkward space between lo-fi bedroom recordings and fully realized indie rock, which is exactly where it gets interesting. The project started as a way to document late-night thoughts and guitar sketches, but somewhere along the way it became something people actually wanted to listen to repeatedly. What distinguishes them from the endless stream of similar projects is a genuine melodic sensibility underneath the deliberately rough production. There's a specificity to their songwriting that suggests these aren't random demos but actual songs that just happen to sound like they were recorded in someone's apartment at 2am. Fans tend to discover them through playlists or word of mouth rather than radio, and they've built a small but devoted following of people who appreciate the kind of music that doesn't announce itself but rewards close listening.

Shows tend toward quiet intensity. People actually listen instead of just standing there. The kind of crowd that goes silent between songs. Energy builds gradually rather than exploding. Sound quality matters to them, so technical mishaps can derail momentum. Mostly people who already know the songs.

Known for Missing Person, Collage, Saturday Night, Better Days, Velvet

Charlotte's indie rock scene has always been a bit scattered—the city's better known for hip-hop and country spillover from Nashville. But there's a steady undercurrent of guitar-driven bands finding their audience in smaller venues and college radio. All Your Friends fit that emerging wave of bands treating Charlotte less like a pass-through and more like an actual stop, which the city's probably ready for.

Stay in South End, where the neighborhood has actual restaurants and bars worth your time—it's walkable and doesn't feel like a tourist zone. Catch dinner at Amélie's French Bistro for something solid before the show. Spend the day at the Mint Museum or walking through the nearby galleries. If you want to stay on the rock vibe, hit a local record shop like Vintage King. The drive-in movie theater experience isn't unique to Charlotte, but the area's bourbon scene is worth exploring the night after if you're staying through the weekend.

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