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Rob Zombie in Salt Lake City

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Rob Zombie
Utah First Credit Union Amphitheatre — West Valley City, UT

Rob Zombie started as the keyboardist for the noise rock band White Zombie in the late 1980s before pivoting to a solo career that's basically defined industrial metal for the past 25 years. His records are maximalist exercises in horror movie aesthetics and hard-hitting grooves—think heavily processed vocals, samples from B-movies, and riffs that hit like a sledgehammer. Dragula became his signature track, a driving bass-heavy thing that somehow landed on rock radio and MTV despite sounding like nothing else. Beyond music, he's directed horror films, made Halloween remakes, and generally leaned into a decades-long commitment to trashy Americana and monsters that feels either genuinely eccentric or carefully calculated. Probably both. His production style—all that layered synth noise and samples—has influenced plenty of bands in the industrial and metal spaces, even if his mainstream moment was mostly confined to the 2000s.

Loud, intense, and theatrical in the most straightforward way. Zombie shows are heavy on production—strobes, visuals, the full thing—and crowds go legitimately feral during Dragula and Superbeast. More spectacle than you might expect, less subtlety.

Known for Dragula, Living Dead Girl, Superbeast, More Human Than Human, Meet the Creeper

Rob Zombie has maintained a steady presence in Salt Lake City over the years, consistently drawing the industrial-metal faithful to whatever venue can contain his particular brand of chaos. Most recently, he played Utah First Credit Union Amphitheatre in August 2024, running through a setlist that felt less like a greatest-hits parade and more like a tour through his entire grotesque catalog. He opened with the propulsive "Sinners Inc." and built momentum through the industrial grind of "Superbeast" and the genuinely unsettling "The Satanic Rites of Blacula." The deep cuts mattered as much as the obvious ones—"Well, Everybody's Fucking in a U.F.O." and "What Lurks on Channel X?" gave the show texture beyond the inevitable "Dragula" closer. A drum solo in the middle kept things loose and live-feeling.

Salt Lake City's metal scene has always been scrappier and weirder than people expect from a place with such a dominant religious establishment. That tension creates space for industrial and shock-rock acts like Rob Zombie to find genuinely engaged audiences. The city's DIY ethos and willingness to embrace the strange have made it a reliable stop for touring acts who traffic in theatricality and heaviness. There's an appreciative crowd here for anything that pushes against the grain.

Stay in the Avenues neighborhood—tree-lined streets with actual character, close enough to downtown but removed from the noise. For dinner, Lazy Dog in Sugar House serves exceptional Colorado lamb and maintains a wine list that doesn't insult your intelligence. Spend an afternoon at the Natural History Museum of Utah in Red Butte Canyon; the building itself is architecturally stunning and the collection gives real context to the landscape you're actually standing in. The city's proximity to actual mountains matters when you've got downtime.

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