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68 Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts
68 Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts

68Verified

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Live Photos of 68

68 at Chicago, IL in Cobra Lounge 2024
View All Photos

Concerts and tour dates

Past

SEP
17
2020
Maryland Heights, MO
Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
I Was There
SEP
15
2020
Tinley Park, IL
Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
I Was There
SEP
13
2020
Cuyahoga Falls, OH
Blossom Music Center
I Was There
SEP
12
2020
Noblesville, IN
Ruoff Home Mortgage Music Center
I Was There
SEP
10
2020
Clarkston, MI
DTE Music Energy Theatre
I Was There
SEP
09
2020
Toronto, Canada
Budweiser Stage
I Was There
SEP
06
2020
North Darien, NY
Darien Lake Amphitheater
I Was There
SEP
05
2020
Burgettstown, PA
S&T Bank Music Park
I Was There
SEP
03
2020
Brooklyn, NY
Barclay's Center
I Was There
SEP
02
2020
Holmdel, NJ
PNC Bank Arts Center
I Was There
SEP
01
2020
Mansfield, MA
Xfinity Center
I Was There
AUG
30
2020
Bristow, VA
Jiffy Lube Live
I Was There
AUG
29
2020
Camden, NJ
BB&T Pavilion
I Was There
JUL
09
2020
Withington, United Kingdom
2000trees Upcote Farm
I Was There
DEC
22
2019
Lancaster, PA
Chameleon Club
I Was There
DEC
21
2019
Rochester, NY
Montage Music Hall
I Was There
DEC
20
2019
Lakewood, OH
The Winchester Music Tavern
I Was There
DEC
19
2019
Lansing, MI
The Loft
I Was There
DEC
18
2019
Louisville, KY
Diamond Pub
I Was There
DEC
17
2019
Springfield, MO
Outland Ballroom
I Was There
DEC
15
2019
Oklahoma City, OK
OKC Limits
I Was There
DEC
14
2019
Lubbock, TX
Jakes Backroom
I Was There
DEC
13
2019
Colorado Springs, CO
Black Sheep
I Was There
DEC
12
2019
Lincoln, NE
Burbon Theater
I Was There
DEC
10
2019
Racine, WI
RT 20
I Was There
DEC
08
2019
Rockford, IL
The District
I Was There
DEC
07
2019
Peoria, IL
Crusens
I Was There
DEC
06
2019
Janesville, WI
Backbar
I Was There
DEC
05
2019
Detroit, MI
Smalls
I Was There
DEC
03
2019
Pittsburgh, PA
The Crafthouse Stage & Grill
I Was There
NOV
18
2019
Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation
Mod Club
I Was There
NOV
17
2019
Moscow, Russia
Gorod
I Was There
OCT
19
2019
Millville, NJ
Electric Halloween Festival
I Was There
OCT
18
2019
Richmond, VA
Canal Club
I Was There
OCT
17
2019
Greensboro, NC
Blind Tiger
I Was There
OCT
16
2019
West Columbia, SC
New Brookland Tavern
I Was There
OCT
15
2019
Atlanta, GA
The Drunken Unicorn
I Was There
OCT
14
2019
Nashville, TN
The End
I Was There
OCT
13
2019
Springfield, MO
Outland Ballroom
I Was There
OCT
12
2019
North Kansas City, MO
The Rino
I Was There
OCT
11
2019
Denver, CO
Hi-Dive
I Was There
OCT
09
2019
Seattle, WA
Funhouse
I Was There
OCT
08
2019
Portland, OR
Paris Theater
I Was There
OCT
07
2019
Redding, CA
The Dip
I Was There
OCT
06
2019
Sacramento, CA
Holy Diver
I Was There
OCT
05
2019
Fresno, CA
Full Circle Brewing Co
I Was There
OCT
04
2019
Las Vegas, NV
Backstage Bar & Billiards
I Was There
OCT
03
2019
Anaheim, CA
Chain Reaction
I Was There
OCT
02
2019
San Diego, CA
The Observatory North Park
I Was There
OCT
01
2019
Scottsdale, AZ
Pubrock
I Was There
Show More Dates

Fan Reviews

Tom
April 4th 2024
Good time. Intimate venue. Glad to finally see then head line. I'm not a big fan of the genre but I love these guys.
Winter Park, FL@
Conduit
Lec
April 1st 2024
Great live show. Josh’s voice was shot but he still gave it 100%. Nikko’s drummer is fuckin dope!
Baltimore, MD@
Metro Baltimore
Gabriel
March 30th 2024
So Josh was sick. Like really sick. He looked like death. And yet somehow played the entire set and was still amazing. Nicco kicked ass on the drums. ‘68 is a must see band. They are incredible live and really great people.
Cleveland, OH@
Grog Shop
View More Fan Reviews

About 68

In Humor and Sadness, the debut album from ’68, demonstrates the loud beauty of alarming simplicity. A guy bashing his drums, another dude wielding a guitar like a percussive, blunt weapon while howling into a mic somehow manages to sound bigger and brasher than the computerized bombast of every six-piece metal band. A splash of roots, a soulful yearning for mid century Americana and the fiery passion of post punk ferocity rampages over a record of earnestly forceful tracks like a runaway locomotive.

Josh Scogin wasn’t out of elementary school when the Flat Duo Jets laid their first album down on two tracks in a garage. But the scrappy band’s spirit of raw power, punchy delivery, tried-and-true rhythms and urgent sense of immediacy is alive and well in ’68.

Heralded by Alternative Press as one of 2014’s Most Anticipated Albums, In Humor and Sadness is a snapshot of a fiery new beginning for one of modern Metalcore’s most celebrated frontmen. Produced by longtime Scogin collaborator Matt Goldman (Underoath, Anberlin, The Devil Wears Prada), the first full offering from ’68 is a broad reaching slab of ambitious showmanship delivered with few tools and fewer pretensions. The scratchy disharmonic pop of Nirvana’s Bleach is in there, for sure. And while many associate the setup with The Black Keys, ’68 is more like Black Keys on crack.

“I wanted it to be as loud and obnoxious as it can be,” Scogin explains. “I want it to be in-your-face. I want people who hear us live to just be like, ‘There's no way this is just two dudes!’ That became sort of the subplot to our entire existence. ‘How much noise can two guys make?’ It’s obviously very minimalistic, but in other ways, it’s very big. I have as many amps onstage as a five piece band. Michael only has one cymbal and one tom on his kit, but he plays it like it’s some kind of big ‘80s metal drum setup. It’s minimalistic, but it’s also overkill. We get as much as we can from as little as we can.”

Like many pioneers, North Carolina’s the Flat Duo Jet’s blazed a trail for more commercially successful people. They played rootsy rockabilly but with a punk edge. Band leader Dexter Romweber’s solo work was a fist-pounding celebration of audacity and disruption, which influenced the likes of The White Stripes, among other bands.

“I got excited when I thought about the distress, the chaos that this two-piece arrangement would create – one guy having to provide all of these sounds, with a bunch of pedals, with certain chords wigging out and missing notes here and there,” he says with excitement. “That alone makes up for the chaos of having five people up there.”

That idea of less is more, of building something big from something small, persists today at the top of the charts with The Black Keys, just as it’s lived and breathed in the bass-player-less eclectic trio Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, the rule-breaking early ‘90s destruction of Washington D.C.’s Nation of Ulysses, and in the two man attack of ’68.

“Jon Spencer’s records always sound like he’s kind of winging it and I love that,” declares Scogin, letting out an affectionate laugh. “In my last band, that’s how we tried to make our last record feel. The excitement and imperfection is something I love to draw from.”

Before paring (and pairing) things down with friend and drummer Michael McClellan, Josh Scogin was the voice, founder and agitprop-style provocateur in The Chariot, who laid waste to convention across a brilliantly unhinged and defiantly unpolished catalog of Noisecore triumphs and dissonant art rock rage. Recorded live in the studio, overdub free, The Chariot’s first album set the tone for a decade to come, owing more to a band like Unsane than whatever passes for “scene.”

Scogin was the original singer for Norma Jean and left an influential imprint on the burgeoning Metalcore of the late 90s that persists today, despite having fronted the band for just one of six albums. Whether it’s the genre-defining heft of Norma Jean’s first album or the five records and stage destroying shows of The Chariot, there’s a single constant at the heart of Josh Scogin’s career: a familiarity with the unfamiliar.

A new Metalcore band would be a safe third act for the subculture lifer, but Scogin isn’t comfortable unless he’s making himself (and his audience) uncomfortable. “I definitely wanted to flip the script a bit,” he freely confesses. “I’ve always wanted to play guitar and sing in a band, ever since I left Norma Jean. I needed the freedom of not having a guitar onstage, but now having done that for several years, I wanted the challenge.”

Creative problem solving has long been the name of the game for Scogin, whether he was hand stamping ALL 30,000 CDs for The Chariot’s Wars and Rumors of Wars album or figuring out how to pull off his ’68 song title concept in the digital age of iTunes. Each song on In Humor and Sadness was to be titled with simply a single letter, which when put together vertically on the back of a vinyl LP or compact disc, would spell out a word. However, it's problematic to name more than one song with the same letter, which would have been necessary to spell out what he intended.

’68 is the forward thinking progress of an artist who finds satisfaction in the expression of dissatisfaction. There’s progression in this regression. Tear apart all of the elements that have enveloped a singer’s performance, strap a guitar on the guy and set him loose with nothing but a beat behind him? It’s a recipe for inventive, fanciful mayhem.

After a raucous debut at South By Southwest, a full US tour supporting Chiodos and many more road gigs on the horizon, Scogin and McClellan are propelled by the excitement that comes along with the knowledge that ‘68 is truly just getting started.

“We’ve just broken the tip of the iceberg. We’re really just exploring all the different things we can do,” Scogin promises. “I’ll get more pedals, we’re try different auxiliary instruments, whatever – the goal is to challenge ourselves and challenge an audience.”
Show More
Genres:
Rock, Grunge, Alternative
Band Members:
Nikko Yamada, Josh Scogin
Hometown:
Atlanta, Georgia

No upcoming shows
Send a request to 68 to play in your city
Request a Show

Live Photos of 68

68 at Chicago, IL in Cobra Lounge 2024
View All Photos

Bandsintown Merch

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

Concerts and tour dates

Past

SEP
17
2020
Maryland Heights, MO
Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
I Was There
SEP
15
2020
Tinley Park, IL
Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
I Was There
SEP
13
2020
Cuyahoga Falls, OH
Blossom Music Center
I Was There
SEP
12
2020
Noblesville, IN
Ruoff Home Mortgage Music Center
I Was There
SEP
10
2020
Clarkston, MI
DTE Music Energy Theatre
I Was There
SEP
09
2020
Toronto, Canada
Budweiser Stage
I Was There
SEP
06
2020
North Darien, NY
Darien Lake Amphitheater
I Was There
SEP
05
2020
Burgettstown, PA
S&T Bank Music Park
I Was There
SEP
03
2020
Brooklyn, NY
Barclay's Center
I Was There
SEP
02
2020
Holmdel, NJ
PNC Bank Arts Center
I Was There
SEP
01
2020
Mansfield, MA
Xfinity Center
I Was There
AUG
30
2020
Bristow, VA
Jiffy Lube Live
I Was There
AUG
29
2020
Camden, NJ
BB&T Pavilion
I Was There
JUL
09
2020
Withington, United Kingdom
2000trees Upcote Farm
I Was There
DEC
22
2019
Lancaster, PA
Chameleon Club
I Was There
DEC
21
2019
Rochester, NY
Montage Music Hall
I Was There
DEC
20
2019
Lakewood, OH
The Winchester Music Tavern
I Was There
DEC
19
2019
Lansing, MI
The Loft
I Was There
DEC
18
2019
Louisville, KY
Diamond Pub
I Was There
DEC
17
2019
Springfield, MO
Outland Ballroom
I Was There
DEC
15
2019
Oklahoma City, OK
OKC Limits
I Was There
DEC
14
2019
Lubbock, TX
Jakes Backroom
I Was There
DEC
13
2019
Colorado Springs, CO
Black Sheep
I Was There
DEC
12
2019
Lincoln, NE
Burbon Theater
I Was There
DEC
10
2019
Racine, WI
RT 20
I Was There
DEC
08
2019
Rockford, IL
The District
I Was There
DEC
07
2019
Peoria, IL
Crusens
I Was There
DEC
06
2019
Janesville, WI
Backbar
I Was There
DEC
05
2019
Detroit, MI
Smalls
I Was There
DEC
03
2019
Pittsburgh, PA
The Crafthouse Stage & Grill
I Was There
NOV
18
2019
Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation
Mod Club
I Was There
NOV
17
2019
Moscow, Russia
Gorod
I Was There
OCT
19
2019
Millville, NJ
Electric Halloween Festival
I Was There
OCT
18
2019
Richmond, VA
Canal Club
I Was There
OCT
17
2019
Greensboro, NC
Blind Tiger
I Was There
OCT
16
2019
West Columbia, SC
New Brookland Tavern
I Was There
OCT
15
2019
Atlanta, GA
The Drunken Unicorn
I Was There
OCT
14
2019
Nashville, TN
The End
I Was There
OCT
13
2019
Springfield, MO
Outland Ballroom
I Was There
OCT
12
2019
North Kansas City, MO
The Rino
I Was There
OCT
11
2019
Denver, CO
Hi-Dive
I Was There
OCT
09
2019
Seattle, WA
Funhouse
I Was There
OCT
08
2019
Portland, OR
Paris Theater
I Was There
OCT
07
2019
Redding, CA
The Dip
I Was There
OCT
06
2019
Sacramento, CA
Holy Diver
I Was There
OCT
05
2019
Fresno, CA
Full Circle Brewing Co
I Was There
OCT
04
2019
Las Vegas, NV
Backstage Bar & Billiards
I Was There
OCT
03
2019
Anaheim, CA
Chain Reaction
I Was There
OCT
02
2019
San Diego, CA
The Observatory North Park
I Was There
OCT
01
2019
Scottsdale, AZ
Pubrock
I Was There
Show More Dates

Fan Reviews

Tom
April 4th 2024
Good time. Intimate venue. Glad to finally see then head line. I'm not a big fan of the genre but I love these guys.
Winter Park, FL@
Conduit
Lec
April 1st 2024
Great live show. Josh’s voice was shot but he still gave it 100%. Nikko’s drummer is fuckin dope!
Baltimore, MD@
Metro Baltimore
Gabriel
March 30th 2024
So Josh was sick. Like really sick. He looked like death. And yet somehow played the entire set and was still amazing. Nicco kicked ass on the drums. ‘68 is a must see band. They are incredible live and really great people.
Cleveland, OH@
Grog Shop
View More Fan Reviews

About 68

In Humor and Sadness, the debut album from ’68, demonstrates the loud beauty of alarming simplicity. A guy bashing his drums, another dude wielding a guitar like a percussive, blunt weapon while howling into a mic somehow manages to sound bigger and brasher than the computerized bombast of every six-piece metal band. A splash of roots, a soulful yearning for mid century Americana and the fiery passion of post punk ferocity rampages over a record of earnestly forceful tracks like a runaway locomotive.

Josh Scogin wasn’t out of elementary school when the Flat Duo Jets laid their first album down on two tracks in a garage. But the scrappy band’s spirit of raw power, punchy delivery, tried-and-true rhythms and urgent sense of immediacy is alive and well in ’68.

Heralded by Alternative Press as one of 2014’s Most Anticipated Albums, In Humor and Sadness is a snapshot of a fiery new beginning for one of modern Metalcore’s most celebrated frontmen. Produced by longtime Scogin collaborator Matt Goldman (Underoath, Anberlin, The Devil Wears Prada), the first full offering from ’68 is a broad reaching slab of ambitious showmanship delivered with few tools and fewer pretensions. The scratchy disharmonic pop of Nirvana’s Bleach is in there, for sure. And while many associate the setup with The Black Keys, ’68 is more like Black Keys on crack.

“I wanted it to be as loud and obnoxious as it can be,” Scogin explains. “I want it to be in-your-face. I want people who hear us live to just be like, ‘There's no way this is just two dudes!’ That became sort of the subplot to our entire existence. ‘How much noise can two guys make?’ It’s obviously very minimalistic, but in other ways, it’s very big. I have as many amps onstage as a five piece band. Michael only has one cymbal and one tom on his kit, but he plays it like it’s some kind of big ‘80s metal drum setup. It’s minimalistic, but it’s also overkill. We get as much as we can from as little as we can.”

Like many pioneers, North Carolina’s the Flat Duo Jet’s blazed a trail for more commercially successful people. They played rootsy rockabilly but with a punk edge. Band leader Dexter Romweber’s solo work was a fist-pounding celebration of audacity and disruption, which influenced the likes of The White Stripes, among other bands.

“I got excited when I thought about the distress, the chaos that this two-piece arrangement would create – one guy having to provide all of these sounds, with a bunch of pedals, with certain chords wigging out and missing notes here and there,” he says with excitement. “That alone makes up for the chaos of having five people up there.”

That idea of less is more, of building something big from something small, persists today at the top of the charts with The Black Keys, just as it’s lived and breathed in the bass-player-less eclectic trio Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, the rule-breaking early ‘90s destruction of Washington D.C.’s Nation of Ulysses, and in the two man attack of ’68.

“Jon Spencer’s records always sound like he’s kind of winging it and I love that,” declares Scogin, letting out an affectionate laugh. “In my last band, that’s how we tried to make our last record feel. The excitement and imperfection is something I love to draw from.”

Before paring (and pairing) things down with friend and drummer Michael McClellan, Josh Scogin was the voice, founder and agitprop-style provocateur in The Chariot, who laid waste to convention across a brilliantly unhinged and defiantly unpolished catalog of Noisecore triumphs and dissonant art rock rage. Recorded live in the studio, overdub free, The Chariot’s first album set the tone for a decade to come, owing more to a band like Unsane than whatever passes for “scene.”

Scogin was the original singer for Norma Jean and left an influential imprint on the burgeoning Metalcore of the late 90s that persists today, despite having fronted the band for just one of six albums. Whether it’s the genre-defining heft of Norma Jean’s first album or the five records and stage destroying shows of The Chariot, there’s a single constant at the heart of Josh Scogin’s career: a familiarity with the unfamiliar.

A new Metalcore band would be a safe third act for the subculture lifer, but Scogin isn’t comfortable unless he’s making himself (and his audience) uncomfortable. “I definitely wanted to flip the script a bit,” he freely confesses. “I’ve always wanted to play guitar and sing in a band, ever since I left Norma Jean. I needed the freedom of not having a guitar onstage, but now having done that for several years, I wanted the challenge.”

Creative problem solving has long been the name of the game for Scogin, whether he was hand stamping ALL 30,000 CDs for The Chariot’s Wars and Rumors of Wars album or figuring out how to pull off his ’68 song title concept in the digital age of iTunes. Each song on In Humor and Sadness was to be titled with simply a single letter, which when put together vertically on the back of a vinyl LP or compact disc, would spell out a word. However, it's problematic to name more than one song with the same letter, which would have been necessary to spell out what he intended.

’68 is the forward thinking progress of an artist who finds satisfaction in the expression of dissatisfaction. There’s progression in this regression. Tear apart all of the elements that have enveloped a singer’s performance, strap a guitar on the guy and set him loose with nothing but a beat behind him? It’s a recipe for inventive, fanciful mayhem.

After a raucous debut at South By Southwest, a full US tour supporting Chiodos and many more road gigs on the horizon, Scogin and McClellan are propelled by the excitement that comes along with the knowledge that ‘68 is truly just getting started.

“We’ve just broken the tip of the iceberg. We’re really just exploring all the different things we can do,” Scogin promises. “I’ll get more pedals, we’re try different auxiliary instruments, whatever – the goal is to challenge ourselves and challenge an audience.”
Show More
Genres:
Rock, Grunge, Alternative
Band Members:
Nikko Yamada, Josh Scogin
Hometown:
Atlanta, Georgia

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