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Anthony Green in Tampa

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Anthony Green
House of Blues Orlando — Orlando, FL

Anthony Green is best known as the vocalist for Circa Survive, the Philadelphia post-hardcore band that's spent two decades perfecting a particular brand of angular, atmospheric heaviness. Before that, he was the original singer for Saosin, the Orange County mathcore outfit whose 2003 demo basically defined a generation's taste in discordant drums and soaring vocals. His thing is an almost liquid voice that can shift from whisper to wail without losing its emotional heft, usually over arrangements that are deliberately weird—lots of odd time signatures, dissonant guitars that somehow resolve into something catchy. Green's solo work explores similar territory but lets him breathe a bit more, trading some of the post-hardcore scaffolding for something closer to alternative rock. He's released a few solo albums that feel like the sound of someone figuring out who he is when he's not locked into a band's template. He's the kind of singer who makes people care about progressive song structures because the songs actually feel like they need to be that complicated.

Green commands a room with minimal theatrics—just his voice and the band's tightness. Crowds lean in rather than leap. He hits the emotional notes and people feel it visibly. Not a singalong moment so much as a listening moment, which somehow hits harder.

Known for Nightmare, Everything Goes On, Young Mountain, Oscillate, Sorrow

Anthony Green brought his distinctive intensity to The Orpheum in March, running through a setlist that balanced the personal and the expansive. He opened with "Holding Someone's Hair Back" and closed with "Seven Years," bookending a set that dug into deeper cuts like "Frozen Creek" and "Dear Child (I've Been Dying to Reach You)" alongside fan favorites. "Imposter Syndrome" and "Meet Me in Montauk" stood out as moments where the room seemed to lean in closer, the kind of songs that feel like private conversations happening in public. Over 22 songs, Green demonstrated why his work resonates beyond the immediate—there's a vulnerability threaded through everything he does.

Tampa's got a solid punk and post-hardcore backbone running through it, which is exactly the lane Anthony Green has occupied for years. The city's never been a major touring hub compared to Miami or Jacksonville, but it's always supported the kind of introspective, heavier rock that Green represents. Venues like The Orpheum cater to the kind of audience that actually listens—people who know the deep cuts and don't need the songs dumbed down.

Skip the strip and head to Hyde Park, Tampa's most livable neighborhood with tree-lined streets, independent shops, and genuine character. Stay nearby and eat at The Bricks of Hyde Park for elevated Southern cuisine in a refurbished historic building. Spend an afternoon at the Dali Museum in nearby St. Petersburg—it's legitimately world-class and a solid hour drive but worth it. Walk along Bayshore Boulevard at sunset before the show. The whole vibe is understated enough that Johnson will feel like the most exciting thing happening all weekend.

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