STARSET in Buffalo
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About STARSET
Starset is the brainchild of Dustin Bates, a project that blends electronic production with heavy instrumentation and theatrical presentation. Formed in 2007, the band built a following through a concept-driven approach where music ties into a larger narrative about technology, consciousness, and human connection. My Demons became their breakthrough, a track that balanced accessibility with the heavier elements their core audience came for. The band's approach treats albums like chapters in an ongoing story, with lyrics exploring themes of artificial intelligence and existential dread wrapped in surprisingly catchy melodies. Their live shows feature elaborate stage design and production that justifies the theatrical reputation, though it never overshadows the actual musicianship. Starset occupies an interesting middle ground—heavy enough for metal audiences, synth-forward enough to appeal beyond traditional metal circles.
Starset shows are precise, with Bates commanding the stage through subtle presence rather than theatrics. Crowds are attentive and mostly locked in, singing along to hooks. Production is genuinely elaborate without feeling like a distraction. Sets build momentum effectively.
Known for My Demons, Starlight, Monster, Satellite, Infected
STARSET in Buffalo News
- Breaking Benjamin Announces Upstate NY Tour Stop National Today · Feb 22, 2026
- Starset Announce Late Fall 2021 Tour Dates Loudwire · Jul 27, 2021
Live Music in Buffalo
Buffalo's rock scene has gotten harder and weirder in the best way. Between venues like Tralf and the Exchange, the city's been quietly building an audience for bands that blur genre lines—prog, metal, industrial, anything that doesn't play it safe. STARSET's sci-fi synth-rock theatrics should land well here, where people actually care about the ambitious stuff.
Buffalo road trip to see STARSET?
Stay in Allentown, where the neighborhood's Victorian architecture and walkable blocks of galleries, vintage shops, and bars feel genuinely lived-in. Dinner at Sear should be priority—chef Jeremy Boyle's locally-sourced approach is legitimately ambitious without the pretense. Catch the contemporary art at Albright-Knox (their recent renovations are worth your time), then spend an evening at one of the neighborhood's dive bars like The Owl that still feels like actual people hang there, not tourists.
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