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Seether in Salt Lake City

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Seether
Utah First Credit Union Amphitheatre — West Valley City, UT

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 Salt Lake City in September 2021, hitting the USANA Amphitheatre with the kind of setlist that rewarded the people who'd been paying attention. They opened with "Gasoline" and spent the night working through the catalog in ways that went beyond the obvious—"Bruised and Bloodied" and "Words as Weapons" sat alongside the big ones like "Fine Again" and "Fake It." "Remedy" closed things out, which felt right for a band that's spent two decades turning angst into something you could actually grip. It was the kind of show where you felt like they meant it, even if the venue was outdoors and the sound was doing that weird thing it does in amphitheaters.

Salt Lake City's rock scene has always been harder to pin down than people expect. It's not a place where post-grunge and heavy alt-rock get treated like nostalgia—they're just music people still care about. Seether fits naturally into that landscape, where earnest heaviness and radio accessibility aren't seen as contradictions. The city's venue infrastructure supports touring acts at every level, and crowds here tend to show up ready to engage rather than just endure.

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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