Bring Me The Horizon in Washington DC
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About Bring Me The Horizon
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 + Washington DC
Bring Me The Horizon rolled through Jiffy Lube Live in July 2023, landing right in the sweet spot of their post-amo rebrand. They opened with "AmEN!," a song that basically soundtracks their entire evolution from screamo kids to electronic experimentalists. The setlist threaded that needle well—"Shadow Moses" and "Can You Feel My Heart" reminded everyone why people still care about their earlier work, while "DiE4u" and "sTraNgeRs" showed they weren't done twisting themselves into new shapes. "Throne" closed things out, which feels right for a band that's spent the last decade proving they're not interested in playing it safe. DC crowds tend to respect that kind of restlessness.
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Live Music in Washington DC
Washington DC's music scene has always had room for weirdos and genre-hoppers—the city's post-punk and experimental underground taught people to value boundary-pushing over convention. That sensibility actually aligns pretty well with what Bring Me The Horizon became. They're not quite metal, not quite synth-pop, not quite whatever comes next, which resonates in a city that's supported everyone from Dischord Records' math rock obsessives to recent indie experimentalists. DC audiences don't need their rock bands to stay put.
Washington DC road trip to see Bring Me The Horizon?
Stay in Georgetown or Capitol Hill, both walkable neighborhoods with excellent restaurants and bars. Book a table at Kinfolk in Capitol Hill for refined New American cooking, or head to Pineapple and Pearls for something more elaborate if you want to splurge. During the day, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden offers world-class contemporary art without the crowds of the main Smithsonians. Walk the C&O Canal towpath if the weather cooperates. Hit up one of the city's serious record shops like Smash! Records before the show.
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