Seether in Phoenix
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About Seether
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 + Phoenix
Seether's relationship with Phoenix runs deep into the 2000s, when post-grunge bands like them filled amphitheaters across the Southwest. By May 2025, when they took the Talking Stick Resort Amphitheatre stage, the South African outfit had spent two decades proving their staying power. They opened with "Super Bon Bon," a track that showed their willingness to dig into catalog depths, then moved through the setlist with the efficiency of a band that knows exactly who their audience is. "Rise Above This" and "Broken" landed where you'd expect them—hard and direct—while "Wasteland" and "Judas Mind" kept the pit engaged with that grinding, sludgy riff-work Seether built their reputation on. By the time they reached "Remedy" as the closing track, the Phoenix crowd had witnessed a band still genuinely invested in their craft.
Seether in Phoenix News
- Staind Details ‘Break the Cycle’ 25th Anniversary Tour ft. Seether, Hoobastank and Hinder Rock Cellar Magazine · Feb 3, 2026
- Staind Announce 2026 Tour Celebrating Classic Album With 3 Special Guests Loudwire · Feb 3, 2026
- Staind Maps Break The Cycle 25th Anniversary Tour With Seether, Hoobastank & Hinder JamBase · Feb 3, 2026
- SEETHER Announces May 2025 U.S. Tour With MAMMOTH WVH, P.O.D. And NONPOINT BLABBERMOUTH.NET · Mar 10, 2025
- Seether announces spring tour supporting ‘The Surface Seems So Far’ album 98KUPD · Mar 10, 2025
Live Music in Phoenix
Phoenix's hard rock and metal scene has always had room for bands that straddle grunge and post-grunge sensibilities. Venues like Talking Stick attract touring acts that don't need arenas but draw serious crowds—the sweet spot for bands like Seether. The Arizona heat seems to amplify the aggression in these shows, and Phoenix audiences tend to be loyal to bands from the '90s and 2000s who actually stuck around instead of reforming for nostalgia checks.
Phoenix road trip to see Seether?
Stay in Arcadia, where tree-lined streets and restored Craftsman homes give you actual neighborhood texture instead of generic sprawl. Eat at Otro, where the cooking is precise without being pretentious. Hit the Heard Museum if you want to understand what Arizona actually is beneath the tourism layer. Hike Camelback Mountain early morning before the heat makes it punishing. Spend an afternoon at Taliesin West, Frank Lloyd Wright's winter home, which feels oddly fitting for a band that cares about emotional architecture. The whole city slows down at sunset in a way that makes Dashboard's introspection feel less like melancholy and more like clarity.
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