iDKHOW in Baltimore
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About iDKHOW
iDKHOW is a two-piece band featuring Dallon Weekes and Ryan Seaman, emerging from the alternative rock scene with a sound that straddles emo sensibility and indie rock irreverence. Weekes, known for his work with The Brobecks, brought songwriting chops to the project while Seaman provided tight, precise drumming. The band's early output caught attention for its slacker energy and genuinely weird subject matter delivered with deadpan intensity. Songs like Choke showcase their ability to make anxious, introspective lyrics feel almost conversational rather than desperate. They've built a dedicated following by refusing to take themselves too seriously while actually caring about the craft, a balancing act that resonates with people tired of both irony and sincerity as separate extremes. Their presence feels less like a band with a mission statement and more like the work of two people making music they wanted to hear.
Shows are tight and weird in equal measure. Weekes has this detached stage presence that somehow holds attention, while Seaman locks in drumming that hits harder live. Crowds tend toward genuine fans rather than casual listeners, people who actually know the deeper cuts. Lots of singalongs on choruses but it never tips into crowd-service territory.
Known for Choke, Web Weaver, Leave Me Alone, Absinthe, The Funeral
iDKHOW + Baltimore
iDKHOW rolled through Rams Head Live in November 2024 with the kind of setlist that rewards people who actually listen to their albums. They opened with "Leave Me Alone" and spent the night threading deep cuts like "GLOOMTOWN BRATS" and "Visitation of the Ghost" between the songs people came for. "Choke" closed things out, which tracks—the band has a way of building sets that feel like they're taking you somewhere specific rather than just hitting the expected marks. Baltimore's gotten familiar with their particular brand of theatrical alt-rock over the years.
Live Music in Baltimore
Baltimore's always had a soft spot for acts that don't fit neatly into one box, and iDKHOW's theatrical approach to alternative rock sits comfortably in that tradition. The city's produced enough avant-garde and experimental artists to know what it means when a band refuses to play it straight. Venues like Rams Head Live have carved out space for artists who treat a setlist like narrative rather than a checklist, which is exactly what iDKHOW does.
Baltimore road trip to see iDKHOW?
Stay in Canton or Federal Hill—both neighborhoods have the restaurants and bars worth spending time in. Try Alma Cocina for Peruvian fare or Pabu for Japanese if you want something substantial before the show. Walk around the Inner Harbor, grab coffee at a local roaster. The Walters Art Museum is genuinely excellent and free. Check out what's at The Lyric or Hippodrome if there's live music the nights before or after. Baltimore's best asset is that it doesn't feel overly polished—the authenticity matches the vibe of a band like Journey.
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