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Sticky Fingers in San Francisco

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Sticky Fingers
The Masonic — San Francisco, CA

Sticky Fingers are an Australian indie rock band that emerged from Brisbane in the early 2010s with a sound that sits somewhere between garage rock grit and indie pop hooks. They built a cult following through relentless touring and a string of tightly-wound songs that blend fuzzy guitars with almost casual vocal delivery. Australia became their breakthrough track, landing them international attention and becoming the song everyone knows them for—it's got the kind of addictive quality that makes it both a radio staple and the obvious setlist closer. Their albums tend toward rawer production that emphasizes the band's chemistry rather than polish. What keeps them interesting is their refusal to get bigger than the songs themselves. Gold and Rum Pum Pum show their range between slowburn tension and more straightforward rock momentum. They've never quite become a household name outside their core audience, which honestly suits them fine. Their appeal is to people who prefer their rock music a little rough around the edges.

Sticky Fingers shows feel less polished and more lived-in than you'd expect. The crowd is usually singing along harder than the band is, especially on Australia. They're the kind of act where people drift in and out but everyone knows when to lock in. Sets can feel a bit loose but rarely boring.

Known for Australia, Rum Pum Pum, Gold, Statues, These Miles

Sticky Fingers pulled up to Rickshaw Stop in October 2016 and delivered a setlist that felt like a conversation with longtime fans. They dove into album cuts like 'Freddy Crabs' and 'Bootleg Rascal' alongside more introspective moments—'Sad Songs' and 'Our Town' gave the night a reflective edge. The Australian psych-rockers clearly understood their San Francisco audience, mixing the woozy groove of 'Rum Rage' with the sprawling psychedelia of 'Dreamland' before closing out with 'Lazerhead.' It was the kind of show that suggested a genuine connection to the Bay Area.

San Francisco's rock scene has always had a soft spot for angular, guitar-driven bands that don't fit neatly anywhere. From the post-punk undercurrent to the current crop of psych-adjacent indie acts, there's an audience here that appreciates bands who sound like they're working something out in real time. Sticky Fingers' scratchy, urgent approach should find sympathetic ears.

Stay in Hayes Valley or the Mission—both neighborhoods have the kind of restaurants and bars that make a weekend feel deliberate rather than touristy. Head to State Bird Provisions for dinner if you can get in; it's precise and inventive without being pretentious. Spend a day in Muir Woods or hiking around Twin Peaks for actual views of the city. The de Young Museum in Golden Gate Park is worth a couple hours if the weather holds. Hit up a coffee place on Valencia Street in the Mission just to sit and watch the neighborhood move around you.

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