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Lords of Acid in San Jose

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Lords of Acid
The Ritz — San Jose, CA

Lords of Acid formed in Belgium in 1988 as the musical side project of Praxis member Bill Leeb, though the project quickly took on its own identity as a vehicle for deliberately crude industrial-dance provocation. They built a reputation on tracks that combined gritty synth lines with explicit sexual content and confrontational vocals, treating shock value as just another production element rather than the whole point. Pretty in Pink became their accidental crossover hit, bringing their abrasive brand of electronic music to radio in the early 90s despite—or because of—its deliberate bad taste. Burning Inside showed they could write genuinely hooky dance material underneath the transgression. Across multiple lineups and albums, they've remained committed to that core formula: industrial grooves, sexual explicitness, and a refusal to soften any edges. They're not trying to make you comfortable, but if you're willing to engage with the music underneath the provocation, there's actually craft there.

Their shows are aggressively fun in a way that catches people off guard. Sweaty crowds, lots of body contact, people actually dancing hard rather than posturing. The energy is rowdy but rarely hostile. The sexual content hits differently live—less shocking, more celebratory. Expect singalongs to the dirty stuff.

Known for Pretty in Pink, Burning Inside, The Crablouse, Funky Jay, Rough Sex

San Jose's music landscape has historically leaned toward rock and hip-hop, but the Bay Area's experimental electronic tradition runs deep. Industrial and synth-forward acts have always found pockets of support here, especially among the region's tech-forward crowds who appreciate the mechanical precision and attitude that Lords of Acid bring. The city's live venues are finally catching up to what experimental audiences want.

Stay in Willow Glen, where tree-lined streets and local galleries give you something to do before the show. Hit Adega for Portuguese cuisine that actually justifies the price, then walk off dinner around the neighborhood's vintage shops. If you've got afternoon time, the San José Museum of Art is legitimately worth an hour—it's small enough to not feel like a chore, and their contemporary collection is better curated than you'd expect. Grab coffee at Chromatic before heading to the venue. The area's low-key enough that you won't feel like you're in a tourist trap, but established enough that everything works.

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