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letdown.
33,607 Followers
• 19 Upcoming Shows
19 Upcoming Shows
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Show More Dates (19)
Latest Posts
letdown.
2 months ago
I'm coming to Minneapolis, Chicago, St. Louis, Columbus, Council Bluffs, Salt Lake City, Denver and Los Angeles (secret show) - COME HANG WITH US!!

View More Posts
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Another Day Another Letdown Shirt Pes...
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Let's Get Sendy Meme T-Shirt
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let them T-Shirt
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let Them Casual T-Shirt, let Them Shi...
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Semisun Let It Be Dais T-Shirts for W...
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letdown.'s tour
Live Photos of letdown.

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Fan Reviews

Anya
August 26th 2025
I had an absolute amazing time!! The lights were amazing the vocals were amazing and he is a super nice guy!!!
Columbus, OH@Woodlands Tavern

Lucille
August 25th 2025
Blake puts on one hell of a show and so did the two opening band. He's a really nice person and tries to talk to everyone.
St. Louis, MO@Off Broadway

August 25th 2025
The event was 10000/10 they were amazing!
The venue was good but they made us leave minutes after the show ending so that sucked we wanted to be able to talk to the performers and buy merch but we felt rushed out of the venue.
St. Louis, MO@Off Broadway
View More Fan Reviews
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About letdown.
Letdown. While everyone else was learning to garden or make bread from scratch in 2020, Blake Coddington was busy finding a new way to musically express himself. The Chicago-based rocker launched Letdown. (period included), a new project that features his powerful range of vocals and deeply personal lyrics over catchy guitar hooks and hypnotizing drum beats.
Or in Coddington’s words, “It’s just me crying about my problems.”
But while the songwriter — who could pass as Jason Momoa playing the lead role in a film about rock ‘n roll — may be a little facetious in the description of his own music, Coddington’s mental health struggles have served as a primary creative focus for Letdown. thus far. The Big Loud Rock artist is looking to share his experiences to let others know that they’re not alone in their own struggles, and he’s found a home already in large swathes of the internet.
“I write music not only as therapy for myself, but for others who feel they are spread too thin, falling short or just not good enough,” Coddington explains.
In just six months, Letdown. saw 500k followers on TikTok, more than 265k monthly listeners on Spotify, and nearly 100k on Instagram — and that’s before counting the 12+ million streams Coddington’s singles have picked up. Of course, the emotionally vulnerable rocker is fully aware that TikTok hasn’t exactly become a bastion of heavier music just yet, and his bearded and tattooed look stands out from the platform’s assortment of teenage pop stars and dance routines.
“I started posting on TikTok because I figured if all these guys doing pop music can do it, then I can at least put myself out there a little bit,” Coddington says. “I didn't expect much, but then I started going to bed every night and waking up with 50,000 or 100,000 new followers. The first video I posted did like 500,000 views in the first three hours, and I didn't know what to do with that because I came from a world where you make music, put it on YouTube to show to your friends, and 10 years later it has like 100 views.”
At the time, Coddington was working a dead-end job (that he hated) in Indiana, and Letdown. was just supposed to be a little creative and emotional outlet for his spare time. But after achieving his initial online success, music (and getting people to listen to it on platforms outside of just TikTok) became a much larger focus for the artist. Ten singles, a handful of music videos, and bigger streaming and social numbers than he ever thought he’d see later, Coddington is ready to take the next step in his musical journey and start bringing his music live to the fans who have stuck with him throughout the pandemic.
“Touring is the only thing I can think about these days,” Coddington says. “I lose sleep over it every night. I dream of playing music in front of people every day, so touring is hopefully going to be a big part of the next few years of my life. I just want to get on the damn road!”
Or in Coddington’s words, “It’s just me crying about my problems.”
But while the songwriter — who could pass as Jason Momoa playing the lead role in a film about rock ‘n roll — may be a little facetious in the description of his own music, Coddington’s mental health struggles have served as a primary creative focus for Letdown. thus far. The Big Loud Rock artist is looking to share his experiences to let others know that they’re not alone in their own struggles, and he’s found a home already in large swathes of the internet.
“I write music not only as therapy for myself, but for others who feel they are spread too thin, falling short or just not good enough,” Coddington explains.
In just six months, Letdown. saw 500k followers on TikTok, more than 265k monthly listeners on Spotify, and nearly 100k on Instagram — and that’s before counting the 12+ million streams Coddington’s singles have picked up. Of course, the emotionally vulnerable rocker is fully aware that TikTok hasn’t exactly become a bastion of heavier music just yet, and his bearded and tattooed look stands out from the platform’s assortment of teenage pop stars and dance routines.
“I started posting on TikTok because I figured if all these guys doing pop music can do it, then I can at least put myself out there a little bit,” Coddington says. “I didn't expect much, but then I started going to bed every night and waking up with 50,000 or 100,000 new followers. The first video I posted did like 500,000 views in the first three hours, and I didn't know what to do with that because I came from a world where you make music, put it on YouTube to show to your friends, and 10 years later it has like 100 views.”
At the time, Coddington was working a dead-end job (that he hated) in Indiana, and Letdown. was just supposed to be a little creative and emotional outlet for his spare time. But after achieving his initial online success, music (and getting people to listen to it on platforms outside of just TikTok) became a much larger focus for the artist. Ten singles, a handful of music videos, and bigger streaming and social numbers than he ever thought he’d see later, Coddington is ready to take the next step in his musical journey and start bringing his music live to the fans who have stuck with him throughout the pandemic.
“Touring is the only thing I can think about these days,” Coddington says. “I lose sleep over it every night. I dream of playing music in front of people every day, so touring is hopefully going to be a big part of the next few years of my life. I just want to get on the damn road!”
Show More
Band Members:
Blake Coddington - Vocals
concerts and tour dates
Upcoming
Past
concerts near you
all concerts & live streams
Show More Dates (19)
Latest Posts
letdown.
2 months ago
I'm coming to Minneapolis, Chicago, St. Louis, Columbus, Council Bluffs, Salt Lake City, Denver and Los Angeles (secret show) - COME HANG WITH US!!

View More Posts
Live Photos of letdown.

View All Photos
Merch (ad)

OnlyGifts The Relative Letdown T-Shir...
$16.99

Let Them Shirt, Let Them Shirts for W...
$14.99

Another Day Another Letdown Shirt Pes...
$17.99

G Gradual Sleeveless Golf Shirts for ...
$19.99

Let's Get Sendy Meme T-Shirt
$15.99

Whisper Words Of Wisdom Let-It Be Tsh...
$19.95

Whisper Words of Wisdom Let It Be T S...
$12.99

let them T-Shirt
$16.99

let Them Casual T-Shirt, let Them Shi...
$9.99

Semisun Let It Be Dais T-Shirts for W...
$14.99
letdown.'s tour
Fan Reviews

Anya
August 26th 2025
I had an absolute amazing time!! The lights were amazing the vocals were amazing and he is a super nice guy!!!
Columbus, OH@Woodlands Tavern

Lucille
August 25th 2025
Blake puts on one hell of a show and so did the two opening band. He's a really nice person and tries to talk to everyone.
St. Louis, MO@Off Broadway

August 25th 2025
The event was 10000/10 they were amazing!
The venue was good but they made us leave minutes after the show ending so that sucked we wanted to be able to talk to the performers and buy merch but we felt rushed out of the venue.
St. Louis, MO@Off Broadway
View More Fan Reviews
About letdown.
Letdown. While everyone else was learning to garden or make bread from scratch in 2020, Blake Coddington was busy finding a new way to musically express himself. The Chicago-based rocker launched Letdown. (period included), a new project that features his powerful range of vocals and deeply personal lyrics over catchy guitar hooks and hypnotizing drum beats.
Or in Coddington’s words, “It’s just me crying about my problems.”
But while the songwriter — who could pass as Jason Momoa playing the lead role in a film about rock ‘n roll — may be a little facetious in the description of his own music, Coddington’s mental health struggles have served as a primary creative focus for Letdown. thus far. The Big Loud Rock artist is looking to share his experiences to let others know that they’re not alone in their own struggles, and he’s found a home already in large swathes of the internet.
“I write music not only as therapy for myself, but for others who feel they are spread too thin, falling short or just not good enough,” Coddington explains.
In just six months, Letdown. saw 500k followers on TikTok, more than 265k monthly listeners on Spotify, and nearly 100k on Instagram — and that’s before counting the 12+ million streams Coddington’s singles have picked up. Of course, the emotionally vulnerable rocker is fully aware that TikTok hasn’t exactly become a bastion of heavier music just yet, and his bearded and tattooed look stands out from the platform’s assortment of teenage pop stars and dance routines.
“I started posting on TikTok because I figured if all these guys doing pop music can do it, then I can at least put myself out there a little bit,” Coddington says. “I didn't expect much, but then I started going to bed every night and waking up with 50,000 or 100,000 new followers. The first video I posted did like 500,000 views in the first three hours, and I didn't know what to do with that because I came from a world where you make music, put it on YouTube to show to your friends, and 10 years later it has like 100 views.”
At the time, Coddington was working a dead-end job (that he hated) in Indiana, and Letdown. was just supposed to be a little creative and emotional outlet for his spare time. But after achieving his initial online success, music (and getting people to listen to it on platforms outside of just TikTok) became a much larger focus for the artist. Ten singles, a handful of music videos, and bigger streaming and social numbers than he ever thought he’d see later, Coddington is ready to take the next step in his musical journey and start bringing his music live to the fans who have stuck with him throughout the pandemic.
“Touring is the only thing I can think about these days,” Coddington says. “I lose sleep over it every night. I dream of playing music in front of people every day, so touring is hopefully going to be a big part of the next few years of my life. I just want to get on the damn road!”
Or in Coddington’s words, “It’s just me crying about my problems.”
But while the songwriter — who could pass as Jason Momoa playing the lead role in a film about rock ‘n roll — may be a little facetious in the description of his own music, Coddington’s mental health struggles have served as a primary creative focus for Letdown. thus far. The Big Loud Rock artist is looking to share his experiences to let others know that they’re not alone in their own struggles, and he’s found a home already in large swathes of the internet.
“I write music not only as therapy for myself, but for others who feel they are spread too thin, falling short or just not good enough,” Coddington explains.
In just six months, Letdown. saw 500k followers on TikTok, more than 265k monthly listeners on Spotify, and nearly 100k on Instagram — and that’s before counting the 12+ million streams Coddington’s singles have picked up. Of course, the emotionally vulnerable rocker is fully aware that TikTok hasn’t exactly become a bastion of heavier music just yet, and his bearded and tattooed look stands out from the platform’s assortment of teenage pop stars and dance routines.
“I started posting on TikTok because I figured if all these guys doing pop music can do it, then I can at least put myself out there a little bit,” Coddington says. “I didn't expect much, but then I started going to bed every night and waking up with 50,000 or 100,000 new followers. The first video I posted did like 500,000 views in the first three hours, and I didn't know what to do with that because I came from a world where you make music, put it on YouTube to show to your friends, and 10 years later it has like 100 views.”
At the time, Coddington was working a dead-end job (that he hated) in Indiana, and Letdown. was just supposed to be a little creative and emotional outlet for his spare time. But after achieving his initial online success, music (and getting people to listen to it on platforms outside of just TikTok) became a much larger focus for the artist. Ten singles, a handful of music videos, and bigger streaming and social numbers than he ever thought he’d see later, Coddington is ready to take the next step in his musical journey and start bringing his music live to the fans who have stuck with him throughout the pandemic.
“Touring is the only thing I can think about these days,” Coddington says. “I lose sleep over it every night. I dream of playing music in front of people every day, so touring is hopefully going to be a big part of the next few years of my life. I just want to get on the damn road!”
Show More
Band Members:
Blake Coddington - Vocals
Fans Also Follow
Bad Omens
544K Followers
Follow
I Prevail
809K Followers
Follow
Sueco
104K Followers
Follow
VOILÀ
33K Followers
Follow
YUNGBLUD
516K Followers
Follow
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