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New Found Glory in Pittsburgh

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New Found Glory
UPMC Events Center — Moon Township, PA

New Found Glory formed in Coral Springs, Florida in the late 90s and basically defined what pop punk sounded like for a generation. Their self-titled debut in 2000 and follow-up "From the Screen to Your Stereo" established them as the band that could write hooks sharp enough to stick in your head for years. "My Friends Over You" became their signature moment—a song about choosing your friends over a relationship that somehow resonated way beyond its simple premise. They've kept at it for over two decades, never chasing trends but not quite willing to disappear either. The band's been through lineup changes and label shifts, but they've maintained the core appeal: earnest, melodic rock that doesn't require you to be fifteen to appreciate, even if it definitely hits different when you are.

Shows are loud singalongs where everyone knows the words. Crowd's genuinely there for it, not just going through the motions. They play the hits without irony and the energy never really dips. People lose their minds in the best way possible.

Known for My Friends Over You, Head on Collision, Dressed to Kill, All the Same, This Disaster

New Found Glory rolled through the Roxian Theatre in June 2022, and they weren't interested in playing it safe. Sure, they hit the obvious landmarks—"Kiss Me" closed things out—but the real meat of the set was deeper. "The Great Houdini," "Dressed to Kill," and "Truth of My Youth" showed a band comfortable mining their catalog beyond the usual suspects. Twenty songs in, they'd earned their place in Pittsburgh's pop-punk pantheon, the kind of band that treats a mid-sized venue like it matters.

Pittsburgh's always had a soft spot for melodic rock — it's a city that respects craft and earnestness over flash. The pop-punk revival has legs here, where people still care about hooks and lyrics that hit somewhere real. New Found Glory fits naturally into that lineage, alongside the city's broader tradition of bands that prioritize the song over the spectacle.

Stay in Lawrenceville—the neighborhood's got real character now, tree-lined streets with actual restaurants instead of chains. Book a table at Smallman Galley or Legume for proper food. Spend an afternoon at the Heinz History Center learning about the city's actual past, not the sanitized version. Walk through the Strip District, grab coffee at La Prima, and check out independent record shops. The Duquesne Incline offers views worth the minimal effort. This is a city that knows how to take itself seriously without being pretentious about it.

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