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Point One Tickets, Tour Dates and %{concertOrShowText}
Point One Tickets, Tour Dates and %{concertOrShowText}

Point One

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Circle Hat
$25.0 USD
Live Collage Sweatshirt
$45.0 USD
Rainbow T-Shirt
$30.0 USD
Circle Beanie
$20.0 USD

About Point One

Vocals: Lenny Hotrum
Guitar: Keith Wright
Bass: Darren Howard
Drums: Chase Culp

Great rock 'n' roll is the perfect combination of combustibility and compatibility. Consider the study in contradiction that is Seattle's pile driving Point One. They play unapologetically assaultive hard rock… with a brain and a conscience. They distill equal parts Metallica and Radiohead into their crushing compositions… hailing from an environment that prefers sedate indie-rock introspection.

It's fitting that vocalist Lenny Hotrum and bassist Darren Howard, the volatile quartet's principal songwriters, approach their craft from diametrically opposing standpoints, yet make it work.

"Len kind of brings the heavier element… you know, the detuning, the screaming and stuff," Howard reveals. "I try to bring more melody and more interesting chords, different styles, make things a little more cinematic sounding."

Celestial is more like it. Point One's third full-length, Unlucky Stars (following 2002's Stress Related Injuries and 2005's The Absence) careens recklessly from seething yet melodic anthems like "Cruel" to sleazy biker bar throwbacks like "Monochrome Mistress," yet boasts almost seamless continuity.

Longtime friends Hotrum, Howard, and drummer Chase Culp had plenty of time to perfect the band's alternately snotty and sincere disorder before guitarist Keith Wright joined the fold three years ago. Hotrum's unmistakable, hoarse war cry perfectly complemented Howard's artier sensibilities. Another portent of the perfect storm: the lyrical puree of Hotrum's spiritual yearning and Howard's more secular ruminations on women and friendship stoked a universal perspective that resonated in both confessional power rock ("Oxygen") and balls-out glam-slams ("Drama Queen").

"This is where Mötley Crüe and Guns N' Roses come into the picture for us," Hotrum notes. "They're a huge inspiration and those bands were obviously kick-ass, dirty, slutty rock ‘n' roll and that's missing [today]. That stuff doesn't really happen any more and we aspire to fill that void. That's our release and that's our fans' release."

Anybody who's seen Point One can attest that catharsis isn't pretty, onstage or in the pit. Even in a city bewitched by homegrown emo heroes like Death Cab for Cutie, Point One have nurtured a devoted fan base that not only rolls out homemade shirts and banners, but pays the ultimate tribute: inscribing tattoos of lyrics on their arms. The band is doing everything in their power to make them not regret it.

Striving for honesty and truth without pretension in their lyrics, Hotrum and Howard call it like they see it, detailing life's hardships without passing judgment or wallowing in self-pity. It's most evident on Unlucky Stars' title track, a churning pinball machine of hooks inspired by the band's recent experiences while recording in L.A. Such is the uncensored reflection Point One provide. Whatever styles come and go, they're constantly reinventing their already unique niche.

"The more trendy it is, the more temporary it is," Howard shrugs. "We're just trying to do something that—not to be too lofty—but something that will stand up a little over time, something that we genuinely like."
Show More
Genres:
Metal, Alt, Rock, Alternative
Band Members:
Darren Howard - Bass, Len Hotrum - Vocals, Keith Wright - Guitar, Chase Culp - Drums
Hometown:
Seattle, Washington

No upcoming shows
Send a request to Point One to play in your city
Request a Show

Bandsintown Merch

Circle Hat
$25.0 USD
Live Collage Sweatshirt
$45.0 USD
Rainbow T-Shirt
$30.0 USD
Circle Beanie
$20.0 USD

About Point One

Vocals: Lenny Hotrum
Guitar: Keith Wright
Bass: Darren Howard
Drums: Chase Culp

Great rock 'n' roll is the perfect combination of combustibility and compatibility. Consider the study in contradiction that is Seattle's pile driving Point One. They play unapologetically assaultive hard rock… with a brain and a conscience. They distill equal parts Metallica and Radiohead into their crushing compositions… hailing from an environment that prefers sedate indie-rock introspection.

It's fitting that vocalist Lenny Hotrum and bassist Darren Howard, the volatile quartet's principal songwriters, approach their craft from diametrically opposing standpoints, yet make it work.

"Len kind of brings the heavier element… you know, the detuning, the screaming and stuff," Howard reveals. "I try to bring more melody and more interesting chords, different styles, make things a little more cinematic sounding."

Celestial is more like it. Point One's third full-length, Unlucky Stars (following 2002's Stress Related Injuries and 2005's The Absence) careens recklessly from seething yet melodic anthems like "Cruel" to sleazy biker bar throwbacks like "Monochrome Mistress," yet boasts almost seamless continuity.

Longtime friends Hotrum, Howard, and drummer Chase Culp had plenty of time to perfect the band's alternately snotty and sincere disorder before guitarist Keith Wright joined the fold three years ago. Hotrum's unmistakable, hoarse war cry perfectly complemented Howard's artier sensibilities. Another portent of the perfect storm: the lyrical puree of Hotrum's spiritual yearning and Howard's more secular ruminations on women and friendship stoked a universal perspective that resonated in both confessional power rock ("Oxygen") and balls-out glam-slams ("Drama Queen").

"This is where Mötley Crüe and Guns N' Roses come into the picture for us," Hotrum notes. "They're a huge inspiration and those bands were obviously kick-ass, dirty, slutty rock ‘n' roll and that's missing [today]. That stuff doesn't really happen any more and we aspire to fill that void. That's our release and that's our fans' release."

Anybody who's seen Point One can attest that catharsis isn't pretty, onstage or in the pit. Even in a city bewitched by homegrown emo heroes like Death Cab for Cutie, Point One have nurtured a devoted fan base that not only rolls out homemade shirts and banners, but pays the ultimate tribute: inscribing tattoos of lyrics on their arms. The band is doing everything in their power to make them not regret it.

Striving for honesty and truth without pretension in their lyrics, Hotrum and Howard call it like they see it, detailing life's hardships without passing judgment or wallowing in self-pity. It's most evident on Unlucky Stars' title track, a churning pinball machine of hooks inspired by the band's recent experiences while recording in L.A. Such is the uncensored reflection Point One provide. Whatever styles come and go, they're constantly reinventing their already unique niche.

"The more trendy it is, the more temporary it is," Howard shrugs. "We're just trying to do something that—not to be too lofty—but something that will stand up a little over time, something that we genuinely like."
Show More
Genres:
Metal, Alt, Rock, Alternative
Band Members:
Darren Howard - Bass, Len Hotrum - Vocals, Keith Wright - Guitar, Chase Culp - Drums
Hometown:
Seattle, Washington

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