iDKHOW in Detroit
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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 + Detroit
iDKHOW has maintained a steady presence in Detroit's venue circuit, most recently touching down at Saint Andrew's Hall in November 2024. That night they ran through a 19-song set that balanced their stranger impulses with crowd-pleasing moments—opening with the defiant "Leave Me Alone" before sliding into deep cuts like "GLOOMTOWN BRATS" and "Visitation of the Ghost." The real test came mid-set when they deployed "SATANIC PANIC," a track that captures their theatrical unease perfectly. Closing with "Choke" left the room with something unsettling still hanging in the air, which feels exactly right for a band that treats rock venues like they're hosting a séance.
iDKHOW in Detroit News
- Boys Like Girls Announce Tour with iDKHOW and Arrows In Action idobi · Nov 3, 2025
- Waterparks Announce ‘THE PROWLER TOUR’ live in limbo · Jul 25, 2025
- Waterparks Map Out North American Tour Exclaim! · Jul 21, 2025
- iDKHOW announces iMPENDiNG GLOOM Tour Melodic Magazine · Jun 9, 2025
- IDKHOW Announces 2024 Tour Dates & Releases New Song, "GLOOMTOWN BRATS" Prelude Press · Dec 7, 2023
Live Music in Detroit
Detroit's music DNA runs through industrial experiment and garage rawness, which is fertile ground for iDKHOW's particular brand of theatrical alt-rock weirdness. The city's history of bands unafraid to sound genuinely uncomfortable—from MC5's feedback assaults to Thee Oh Sees' controlled chaos—creates an audience here that doesn't need their rock music to be polished or reassuring. iDKHOW fits seamlessly into that tradition of Detroit acts that treat the stage like a place to unsettle rather than soothe.
Detroit road trip to see iDKHOW?
Stay in Corktown, where vintage buildings and independent shops give the neighborhood actual character. Dinner at Selden Standard for refined cooking that doesn't announce itself. Spend an afternoon at the Detroit Institute of Arts—the murals and permanent collection justify the trip alone, and the building itself is worth the walk. The city's music history lives in these spaces. Catch the show, then grab late drinks somewhere on Michigan Avenue. You'll understand why Detroit crowds expect rigor from their musicians.
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