Stop Missing Shows

Five Finger Death Punch in Portland

748 users on tonedeaf are tracking Five Finger Death Punch

Never miss another Five Finger Death Punch show near Portland.

Five Finger Death Punch
Cascades Amphitheater — Ridgefield, WA

Five Finger Death Punch formed in Las Vegas in 2005 and became one of the loudest metal bands of the 2010s. They built their audience on heavy groove riffs and Ivan Moody's vocals, which range from melodic singing to full-throttle screaming depending on the song. Wrong Side of Heaven became their biggest crossover moment, landing mainstream radio play in 2014. Their approach has always been about straightforward metal delivered with maximum volume—no prog complexity, no genre experimentation, just heavy riffs and lyrics about struggle, loss, and survival. Songs like Remember Everything and Wash It All Away showed they could write hooks as catchy as they are crushing. They've sold millions of albums worldwide and consistently pull enormous crowds, the kind of band that fills arenas with the kind of people who don't usually go to concerts.

Their shows are loud and aggressive in the most literal sense. Massive crowds, lots of metal horns in the air, mosh pits that swallow people whole. Moody commands the stage without much talking. You go to see riffs executed at maximum volume. It's relentless.

Known for Wrong Side of Heaven, Wash It All Away, House of the Rising Sun, Remember Everything, Got Your Six

Five Finger Death Punch rolled through Portland back in 2018, hitting the Cross Insurance Arena with a 17-song set that included "Under and Over It." The heavy metal outfit has built a solid following in the Pacific Northwest over the years, and their shows tend to draw the kind of crowds that don't mess around.

Portland's metal scene has always been fragmented — more into doom and sludge than the radio-friendly heavy metal Five Finger Death Punch trades in. But the city's never been precious about genre lines. There's a solid contingent here who appreciate straightforward, heavy rock without the indie rock irony, and they show up when the right band comes through.

Stay in the Pearl District or Nob Hill for walkability and the kind of quiet that lets you recover between shows. Eat at Canard, where the charcuterie and wine list are thoughtfully curated—it's the kind of place that respects both food and your time. Spend the afternoon at Powell's Books, the massive independent that justifies its reputation. Walk through Forest Park if the weather cooperates. Portland's best element is how it refuses to take itself too seriously while maintaining actual standards. That's worth the trip.

Stop missing shows.

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

Sign Up Free