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Seether in Atlanta

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Seether
Lakewood Amphitheatre — Atlanta, GA

Seether emerged from South Africa in the early 2000s with a sound that felt oddly American—all brooding post-grunge riffs and Shaun Morgan's vocals caught between singing and screaming. They hit their stride with 2002's Disclaimer, where songs like Fake It and Fine Again established their template: heavy but catchy, angry but melodic. Their biggest moment came with Remedy, which dominated rock radio around 2006 and became unavoidable. What's actually interesting about Seether is how consistent they've been. They never chased trends or reinvented themselves in obvious ways. They just kept making albums of straightforward rock songs about relationships falling apart and personal disappointment, which apparently never gets old. They're the kind of band you respect for showing up and doing the same thing well for two decades, even if they're not trendy.

Seether shows are workmanlike and direct. Morgan's voice carries the room, the band plays tight, the guitars are loud. Crowds are made up of people who genuinely want to hear these songs, not casual observers. They'll sing every word back. It's honest, professional rock.

Known for Fake It, Broken, Remedy, Fine Again, Against the Wall

Seether rolled through Synovus Bank Amphitheater at Chastain Park in October 2025, settling into the kind of venue that suits their particular brand of post-grunge heaviness. They opened with "Judas Mind" and spent thirteen songs methodically working through the catalog—"Fine Again" still hits different live, that mid-2000s radio moment now carrying more weight with time. "Remedy" closed things out, which felt appropriate for a band that's been quietly consistent for two decades. Atlanta's never been their biggest market, but Seether's the kind of band that shows up anyway, plays the songs people remember, and doesn't need the hype machine. The setlist mixed the obvious moves with deeper cuts like "Wasteland" and "Words as Weapons," suggesting they weren't phoning it in.

Atlanta's hard rock scene exists in the shadow of hip-hop dominance, but there's always been room for guitar-driven acts in the Southeast. Seether fits that lineage—heavy without being metal, melodic without being soft, the kind of band that connects with people who grew up on post-grunge radio. The city's rock venues lean toward nostalgia tours and legacy acts, which is exactly what Seether represents: a band that mattered in the 2000s and never pretended otherwise.

Stay in Buckhead or Virginia Highland for the neighborhood feel — tree-lined streets, good restaurants, walkable enough to actually enjoy yourself. For dinner, Sotto Sotto does excellent Italian in a no-fuss basement setting, or Rathbun's for steak if you want something more formal. Spend an afternoon at the High Museum of Art, then grab drinks at The Eagle, which has the kind of dark-wood-and-whiskey vibe that actually works. Catch a Braves game at Truist Park if timing lines up. The food scene here is legitimately good without being try-hard about it.

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