Stop Missing Shows

Lorna Shore in Charlotte

731 users on tonedeaf are tracking Lorna Shore

Never miss another Lorna Shore show near Charlotte.

Lorna Shore
Truliant Amphitheater — Charlotte, NC

Lorna Shore emerged from New Jersey's metalcore scene with a sound that treats brutality as a technical exercise. The band built a following through relentless album cycles and a willingness to push deathcore into weirder, more abstract territory. Their breakthrough came with albums that balanced wall-of-sound production with genuinely intricate songwriting. Singer Will Ramos became known for vocal performances that border on the inhuman, hitting frequencies most singers wouldn't attempt. The band's appeal extends beyond the usual metalcore audience because they treat their music with genuine compositional care—songs have structure and dynamics, not just breakdowns. They've spent years touring non-stop, playing festivals, building a dedicated fanbase that respects the musicianship involved. Lorna Shore represents metalcore as a legitimate heavy music pursuit rather than just a scene aesthetic.

Ramos commands the stage with unsettling focus. Crowds go still during verses, then absolutely lose it at breakdowns. The band locks in tight. People stage dive. It's violent but controlled. Genuinely heavy.

Known for Pain Remains, Immortal, King ov Serpents, To the Hellfire, Cursed to Die

Lorna Shore last touched down in Charlotte back in October 2022, hitting the Neighborhood Theatre for a setlist that leaned into their heavier material—they rolled through "Welcome Back, O' Sleeping Dreamer" and ten other tracks that night. The metalcore outfit has a decent track record here, and fans who caught that show are probably hoping for a return.

Charlotte's metal and hardcore scene has quietly developed some depth over the past few years, with venues like The Underground and Fillmore taking on heavier bookings alongside the city's established rock infrastructure. Lorna Shore's symphonic deathcore sits in an interesting pocket—heavy enough for the metal faithful, theatrical enough to pull from the broader rock audience. The city's been ready for this kind of intensity.

Stay in South End, where the neighborhood has actual restaurants and bars worth your time—it's walkable and doesn't feel like a tourist zone. Catch dinner at Amélie's French Bistro for something solid before the show. Spend the day at the Mint Museum or walking through the nearby galleries. If you want to stay on the rock vibe, hit a local record shop like Vintage King. The drive-in movie theater experience isn't unique to Charlotte, but the area's bourbon scene is worth exploring the night after if you're staying through the weekend.

Stop missing shows.

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

Sign Up Free