Stop Missing Shows

Bring Me The Horizon in Las Vegas

967 users on tonedeaf are tracking Bring Me The Horizon

Never miss another Bring Me The Horizon show near Las Vegas.

Bring Me The Horizon
Las Vegas Festival Grounds — Las Vegas, NV

Bring Me The Horizon started in Sheffield as a metalcore band with something to prove, all screams and breakdowns. By the time 'Sempiternal' dropped, they were already shifting toward synths and bigger hooks. Then 'That's The Spirit' happened and suddenly they were making actual pop songs. 'amo' went full electronic-pop, which felt like a betrayal to some purists but honestly made sense given where they'd been pointing. They've settled into this space where they can be heavy when they want, melodic when they want, and genuinely experimental without it feeling like a gimmick. Oli Sykes has become a more interesting frontman as the band got weirder rather than more accessible. They're probably the closest thing modern rock has to a band that actually evolved instead of just getting older.

Their shows are chaotic in the best way. The pit is serious business when they hit the heavy tracks, but the crowd sings every word to the electronic stuff just as hard. Oli commands the stage like he's working out something personal, and the band feeds off that energy. They'll go from ambient soundscapes to absolute mayhem in minutes.

Known for Mantra, Wonderful Life, Can You Feel My Heart, Dethrone, Avalanche

Bring Me The Horizon rolled through Las Vegas Festival Grounds in April 2024, hitting a solid thirteen-song set that balanced their heavier material with newer territory. They opened with "DArkSide" and worked through the catalog with precision—"Shadow Moses" landed hard in the middle, followed by "Kingslayer," which still carries that raw weight despite how far the band's pushed their sound. The real moment came late when they closed with "Throne," a track that showed how much confidence they've built in their evolution. Las Vegas doesn't always feel like natural ground for a band like this, but they made it work.

Las Vegas is mostly a cover-band and legacy-act town, which makes a band like Bring Me The Horizon feel like an outlier. The city's music venues lean toward established acts and residencies rather than the kind of guitar-forward alternative rock that built their following. But when heavier acts do pass through—especially at festival-style venues—there's a solid crowd waiting. Vegas crowds tend to be less invested in being seen and more interested in just hearing the band, which suits a group that's always been more about their sound than their image.

Stay in The Arts District if you want to feel like you're actually in a city rather than a resort. The neighborhood has real restaurants and galleries, plus it's close to Downtown Vegas, which has actual bars with character. For dinner, Carnevino in the Palazzo does excellent beef if you want upscale without pretension. Spend an afternoon at the Neon Museum—it's Vegas history stripped of artifice, just old signs and the stories behind them. Walk the Vegas Strip at night if you haven't in years; it's changed enough to be interesting.

Stop missing shows.

tonedeaf. reads your music library and emails you when artists you actually listen to have shows near Las Vegas. No app. No ads. No noise.

Sign Up Free