Stop Missing Shows

Yellowcard in Los Angeles

613 users on tonedeaf are tracking Yellowcard

Never miss another Yellowcard show near Los Angeles.

Yellowcard
Observatory Festival Grounds — Santa Ana, CA

Yellowcard formed in Jacksonville, Florida in 1997 and became one of the defining bands of early 2000s pop punk. Their 2003 album Ocean Avenue went platinum, driven by the infectious title track that basically soundtracked a generation's teenage years. The band's secret weapon was Ryan Key's clean vocals paired with violin—yeah, violin—courtesy of Sean Mackin, which gave them a melodic edge that stood out in a crowded scene. They released a steady stream of albums through the 2000s and 2010s, always leaning into earnest hooks and relatable lyrics about growing up and falling apart. After breaking up in 2017, they reunited in 2022, proving that some bands are just too good at what they do to stay dead. They've never been the heaviest or the smartest, but they knew how to write a chorus that gets stuck in your head for fifteen years.

Known for Ocean Avenue, Way Away, Cute Without the 'E' (Cut from the Team), Breathing, Lights and Sounds

Yellowcard's relationship with Los Angeles runs deep. The band returned to the city in December 2025, playing the Kia Forum with the kind of precision you'd expect from a group that's been doing this for decades. They opened with "Way Away" and moved through a carefully constructed setlist that balanced the obvious choices with deeper cuts—"Bedroom Posters" and "Empty Apartment" hit different in a room that size, songs that reveal why people actually cared about this band beyond the radio hits. "Ocean Avenue" closed things out, which felt inevitable and earned.

Los Angeles has always been the place where pop-punk could coexist with every other sound happening in a city that refuses to pick a lane. Yellowcard fit that sensibility perfectly—they brought emotional directness and actual musicianship to a genre that didn't always demand it. The city's venues have hosted countless bands trying to figure out what comes after the teenage years, and Yellowcard was smart enough to actually grow up while staying true to what made them matter.

Stay in Los Feliz, where you can walk tree-lined streets and catch views from Griffith Observatory. Dinner at Republique in the Arts District—refined French-inspired food in a restored factory space that feels more Paris than LA. Spend an afternoon at the Huntington Library in San Marino, a world-class art collection that justifies the drive. The city's recording studio history is everywhere; walk through Hollywood and you're literally surrounded by the spaces where hits were made. End the night at a jazz bar like The Fonda Theatre or catch live music on Sunset Boulevard.

Stop missing shows.

tonedeaf. reads your music library and emails you when artists you actually listen to have shows near Los Angeles. No app. No ads. No noise.

Sign Up Free