Converge Tickets, Tour Dates and %{concertOrShowText}

Converge Verified

Concerts and tour dates, converge merch.

converge band tour

Live Photos of Converge

Converge at Los Angeles, CA in Echoplex 2023

Latest Post

converge band tour

Fan Reviews

converge band tour

Fans Also Follow

About converge.

  • Moscow concerts Moscow concerts Moscow concerts See all Moscow concerts ( Change location ) Today · Next 7 days · Next 30 days
  • Most popular artists worldwide
  • Trending artists worldwide

Rihanna live.

  • Tourbox for artists

Search for events or artists

  • Sign up Log in

Show navigation

  • Get the app
  • Moscow concerts
  • Change location
  • Popular Artists
  • Live streams
  • Popular artists

Converge tour dates 2024

Converge is currently touring across 11 countries and has 11 upcoming concerts.

Their next tour date is at Cetatea Rasnov in Râșnov, after that they'll be at Dürer Kert in Budapest.

Currently touring across

  • 🇨🇭 Switzerland
  • 🇨🇷 Costa Rica
  • 🇨🇴 Colombia
  • 🇦🇷 Argentina

Converge live.

Upcoming concerts (11) See nearest concert

Rockstadt Extreme Fest

Sylak Open Air

Foro Veintiocho

Sala Metrónomo

Buffalo RiverWorks

Past concerts

Esplanade Annexe Studio

The Rock Pub - Bangkok's House of Rock

Hammersonic Festival

View all past concerts

Support across tour dates

Cancer Bats live.

Recent tour reviews

One of the best extreme band ever! One of the greates vocals of modern metal/hardcore music!

Pure emotions! Great Show! Perfect Sound! Great Club! Thanks again for the memories!

Cheerz from Bulgaria!

Report as inappropriate

alexandar-iliev’s profile image

Although metalcore is at the heart of what Massachusetts band Converge does, they also incorporate hardcore punk and heavy metal influences into their extreme sound. Considered to be one of the most innovative bands to emerge from the underground scene, they have a cult following that is growing all the time thanks to the high reputation of their live performance. With over twenty years experience, they are unmatched in musicianship even though the whole evening is pretty manic.

They have a huge selection of albums to curate tonight's setlist from and with a range of fans spanning back to their very beginnings to the ones who will have discovered Converge in recent years, making sure everybody is satisfied is no easy task. It would seem that it is not so much the tracks chosen but the manner in which they perform as the energetic crowd are behind them all night, head banging along, thrashing out to the instrumentals and of course moshing. Despite them being sweaty, bruised and tired by 'Jane Doe' they still cheer and stamp for an encore which the group obliges to with 'Bitter and Then Some' and 'Last Light'.

sean-ward’s profile image

Converge are the single most aggressive band I have witnessed live. The US hardcore veterans were more frantic and downright heavy than any death metal, thrash metal or metalcore band I have ever seen. Although they’re credited with spawning the metalcore scene, Converge’s racket is much nearer hardcore punk than the chugging, thrashy sound that is considered metalcore these days. In fact, they are probably one of the most important and most innovative hardcore bands of all time. The noise-makers have been going since 1990, releasing eight albums in that time, including the seminal Jane Doe –the benchmark for all experimental hardcore albums – and the recent masterpiece, All We Love We Leave Behind. I had the pleasure, if you can call it that, of seeing their demented live show in support of this last album in Belgium (of all places!) last year and they proved just why they’re considered one of the best live extreme rock bands ever; certainly the best of this era.

Frontman Jacob Bannon dominated the stage, prowling from side to side like a maniac, barking his near incomprehensible lyrics during the fast-paced punk moments, and growling in a death metal roar during the breakdowns or groovier, riff-laden sections. The guitar, bass and drums were intricate and intelligent, and I wouldn’t have expected anything less. The couple of cuts from Jane Doe were the ones that went down the best, with the crowd erupting into circle pits and the like. Incredible stuff! Long may they reign…

cliverozario’s profile image

  • Most popular charts
  • API information
  • Brand guidelines
  • Community guidelines
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies settings
  • Cookies policy

Get your tour dates seen everywhere.

EMP

  • But we really hope you love us.

Converge Announces Winter & Spring 2022 Tour Dates Featuring Full Of Hell, Uniform And Thou

'  data-srcset=

Anaya Bufkin

[READ FULL BIO]

  • Bon Jovi and ME
  • Win Upheaval Fest Tix
  • Album Release Calendar
  • Festival Guide
  • Heavy History

Loudwire

Converge Book March 2022 U.S. Tour

Groundbreaking metalcore band  Converge  are announcing a 2022 tour.  After their tour plans with  Meshuggah  were scrapped due to a " skin condition " on one of Meshuggah's members, Converge have regrouped.

They've planned a few dates over the month of March with Full of Hell, Uniform and Thou providing support. Check out the dates supporting 2021's Bloodmoon: 1 release. Converge's press release on the tour notes that "the order in which the support bands will appear will change every night— attendees should arrive to the shows early to ensure seeing every band."

Tickets for the run are now available here .

It will be exciting to see how Converge performs the metal opera of Bloodmoon live.

If you can't get out to see them on these East Coast/Midwest dates, May brings the Oblivion Access Festival in Austin  with Carcass  and many more, then Converge will be going on a European jaunt. They'll be hitting up Hellfest in France and the Roskilde Festival in Denmark over the summer, and are scheduled for the Damnation Festival in the U.K. in November.

Converge / Full of Hell / Uniform / Thou 2022 TOUR:

March 10 - Philadelphia, Pa. @ Underground Arts March 11 - Baltimore, Md. @ The Ottobar March 12 - Richmond, Va. @ The Broadberry March 13 - Asheville, N.C. @ The Orange Peel March 14 - Orlando, Fla. @ The Abbey March 15 - Tampa, Fla. @ The Orpheum Tampa March 17 - Atlanta, Ga. @ The Masquerade March 18 - Cincinnati, Ohio @ Legends March 19 - Chicago, Ill. @ The Bottom Lounge March 20 - Detroit, Mich. @ El Club

Your Guide To Rock + Metal Bands Touring in 2022

More from loudwire.

The 10 Best Metalcore Albums of 2004

Converge announce US tour dates for March 2022

The run, stacked with up-and-coming talent, fills the gap left by a postponed Meshuggah tour

Jacob Bannon of Converge. Credit: Medios y Media/Getty Images

Massachusetts hardcore outfit Converge have announced a 10-show run of North American tour dates, filling the gaps left by a postponed Meshuggah tour.

  • READ MORE: The bands shaping the future of heavy music

The latter band confirmed they’d be pushing back their winter run last month, with one of its members “undergoing medical treatment related to a skin condition on his hands”. Converge were due to appear as the tour’s lead support, but dropped off due to scheduling conflicts with the rescheduled dates.

With the month of March now cleared, they’ll be hitting the road for their own run of intimate headliners, kicking off in Philadelphia on Thursday March 10. They’ll roll through Baltimore, Richmond and Asheville over the weekend, before starting the new week in Orlando on Monday March 14, and Tampa on Tuesday 15.

After a single, daylong break, the run will pick back up on Thursday March 17 with a gig in Atlanta, before the Converge and their crew hit Cincinnati, Chicago and Detroit. Tickets for all shows are available from the band’s website .

Joining Converge for all dates of the run will be a trio of up-and-coming outfits all dealing in flavours of music primed for mosh pits: grindcore four-piece Full Of Hell, industrial metal troupe Uniform and sludge-metallers Thou. According to a press release, the playing order of the support acts will shuffle will each show. The band advise fans that “attendees should arrive to the shows early to ensure seeing every band”.

Converge released their 10th studio album, ‘Bloodmoon: I’ – a collaborative effort with goth-rocker Chelsea Wolfe , multi-instrumentalist Ben Chisholm and Cave In frontman Stephen Brodsky – digitally in November via Epitaph, with a vinyl release slated for June 24 via Deathwish.

Upon its announcement , the band explained that they began working on ‘Bloodmoon: I’ in late 2019. Early demos were spearheaded by Converge guitarist Kurt Ballou, producing the sessions from his own studio, God City, in the band’s batting grounds of Salem. As a result of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, however, the album was finished remotely.

Recommended

“We wanted to do something grander than the typical four-piece Converge music,” frontman Jacob Bannon said in a press release. “Our dynamics are pushing and pulling in all different directions on this record, and I find that to be creatively rewarding.”

Converge’s 2022 US tour dates are:

MARCH Thursday 10 – Philadelphia, Underground Arts Friday 11 – Baltimore, The Ottobar Saturday 12 – Richmond, The Broadberry Sunday 13 – Asheville, The Orange Peel Monday 14 – Orlando, The Abbey Tuesday 15 – Tampa, The Orpheum Tampa Thursday 17 – Atlanta, The Masquerade Friday 18 – Cincinnati, Legends Saturday 19 – Chicago, The Bottom Lounge Sunday 20 – Detroit, El Club

  • Related Topics

You May Also Like

Steve albini, 1962-2024: engineer who shaped rock’s most visceral moments, japanese rockers king gnu on new music, their first tour abroad, ‘jujutsu kaisen’ and more, lip critic – ‘hex dealer’ review: bold, energetic and blisteringly smart, ‘kingdom of the planet of the apes’ review: more maniacal monkeys in a middling sequel, borislav slavov on scoring ‘baldur’s gate 3’ and what’s next: “we’re just warming up”, more stories, serj tankian reveals system of a down auditioned a new singer in 2018 after he offered to quit the band, slipknot’s jim root says the band “didn’t even try” auditioning anyone besides eloy casagrande, eloy casagrande explains “complicated” decision to leave sepultura for slipknot, watch ministry perform songs that haven’t been played live in 40 years at cruel world festival, anthrax’s scott ian hits out at kerry king over slayer reunion: “thanks for making me look like a liar”, korn and adidas originals team up for second clothing collab.

  • Today's news
  • Reviews and deals
  • Climate change
  • 2024 election
  • Fall allergies
  • Health news
  • Mental health
  • Sexual health
  • Family health
  • So mini ways
  • Unapologetically
  • Buying guides

Entertainment

  • How to Watch
  • My watchlist
  • Stock market
  • Biden economy
  • Personal finance
  • Stocks: most active
  • Stocks: gainers
  • Stocks: losers
  • Trending tickers
  • World indices
  • US Treasury bonds
  • Top mutual funds
  • Highest open interest
  • Highest implied volatility
  • Currency converter
  • Basic materials
  • Communication services
  • Consumer cyclical
  • Consumer defensive
  • Financial services
  • Industrials
  • Real estate
  • Mutual funds
  • Credit cards
  • Balance transfer cards
  • Cash back cards
  • Rewards cards
  • Travel cards
  • Online checking
  • High-yield savings
  • Money market
  • Home equity loan
  • Personal loans
  • Student loans
  • Options pit
  • Fantasy football
  • Pro Pick 'Em
  • College Pick 'Em
  • Fantasy baseball
  • Fantasy hockey
  • Fantasy basketball
  • Download the app
  • Daily fantasy
  • Scores and schedules
  • GameChannel
  • World Baseball Classic
  • Premier League
  • CONCACAF League
  • Champions League
  • Motorsports
  • Horse racing
  • Newsletters

New on Yahoo

  • Privacy Dashboard

Converge Announce 2022 US Tour with Full of Hell, Uniform, and Thou

The post Converge Announce 2022 US Tour with Full of Hell, Uniform, and Thou appeared first on Consequence .

Converge have announced a March 2022 US tour, and they’re bringing along heavy-hitting support acts Full of Hell , Uniform , and Thou .

As previously reported, Converge were forced to drop off their tour with Meshuggah after the dates were rescheduled. Instead, Converge will headline a stacked bill of underground talent for 10 concerts throughout March.

The trek kicks off March 10th in Philadelphia and wraps up on March 20th in Detroit, sticking mostly to the East Coast and Midwest. Get tickets via Ticketmaster .

Converge were supposed to be supporting Meshuggah during that span, but we’re certainly not complaining about the contingency plan. Due to the strength of the support acts, the order of the openers will change every night.

“Attendees should arrive to the shows early to ensure seeing every band,” reads Converge’s press release.

Full of Hell and Uniform will bring their industrial-inspired sonic assaults, each coming off the release of excellent full-length albums in 2021. Meanwhile, sludge metallers Thou remained quiet for most of the year following a pair of collaborative releases with Emma Ruth Rundle.

Editor's Pick

Converge and Chelsea Wolfe Announce New Collaborative Album, Share “Blood Moon”: Stream

As for Converge, the veteran band took a cue from Thou and teamed up with Chelsea Wolfe for the excellent Bloodmoon: I collab LP — one of our top heavy albums of 2021 .

See the full list of dates for Converge’s March tour below, and get tickets here .

Converge’s 2022 US Tour Dates with Full of Hell, Uniform, and Thou: 03/10 – Philadelphia, PA @ Underground Arts 03/11 – Baltimore, MD @ The Ottobar 03/12 – Richmond, VA @ The Broadberry 03/13 – Asheville, NC @ The Orange Peel 03/14 – Orlando, FL @ The Abbey 03/15 – Tampa, FL @ The Orpheum Tampa 03/17 – Atlanta, GA @ The Masquerade 03/18 – Cincinnati, OH @ Legends 03/19 – Chicago, IL @ The Bottom Lounge 03/20 – Detroit, MI @ El Club

Converge Announce 2022 US Tour with Full of Hell, Uniform, and Thou Jon Hadusek

Popular Posts

Richard Karn Announces NFT, Immediately Changes Mind

Peter Dante Has Meltdown After Restaurant Refuses Him Entry for Failing to Wear Mask

Miley Cyrus Rings in 2022 With a Wardrobe Malfunction

Harry Potter 20th Anniversary: Return to Hogwarts: The 5 Biggest Revelations of the Reunion Special

Daniel Craig Honored by Queen with Same Title as James Bond

David Koechner Arrested on New Year's Eve for DUI

Subscribe to Consequence of Sound’s email digest and get the latest breaking news in music, film, and television, tour updates, access to exclusive giveaways, and more straight to your inbox.

Recommended Stories

Dolphins owner stephen ross reportedly declined $10 billion for team, stadium and f1 race.

The value of the Dolphins and Formula One racing is enormous.

What scouts think of Bronny James' NBA prospects

The biggest question looming over the NBA draft combine this week: How will Bronny James do?

2024 NBA Mock Draft 7.0: Who will the Hawks take at No. 1? Our projections for every pick with lottery order now set

With the lottery order set, here's a look at Yahoo Sports' projections for both rounds of the 2024 NBA Draft.

NFL schedule release: Chiefs to host Ravens in 2024 season opener

Chiefs vs. Ravens on Sept. 5 will be a rematch of last season's AFC Championship Game.

Your favorite WNBA rookies didn’t make the cut. So what’s their path back to the league?

For rookies who were waived, the climb to their pro dreams is steeper, but the path ahead is well-worn with trail markers of established success.

The Spin: Making a call on 5 slumping fantasy baseball stars

All five of these hitters were drafted highly in fantasy baseball leagues. So far, they have not lived up to their ADPs — and that's an understatement. Scott Pianowski analyzes.

Utility stocks are on fire — here are Wall Street analysts' top picks

Utility stocks are outperforming the broader markets. Here's a look at three top picks from analysts.

Where does Jared Goff’s $212M extension leave Dak Prescott and Cowboys?

In one scenario, Dallas makes Prescott the highest paid player in NFL history. In another, the Cowboys decline that commitment, at which point another team will make him the top paid player in NFL history.

Former MLB infielder, Little League World Series star Sean Burroughs dies at 43

The seven-year major leaguer collapsed while coaching his son's Little League game on Thursday.

MLB Power Rankings: Phillies lead Dodgers, Braves as trio of NL contenders top this week's list

Here's a look at the rookies who have stood out on each team through the first quarter of the 2024 season.

Meshuggah Announce 2022 North American Tour with Converge

Meshuggah Nathaniel Shannon, Nathaniel Shannon

Need to stock up on Meshuggah vinyl? We have copies of classic albums like None , Contradictions Collapse and I available in our store. Shop for those and much more!

Meshuggah  are returning to North America. The Swedish extreme metallers have announced a U.S. tour with Converge  and Torche  that's going down in winter 2022.

The 19-date run kicks off in Silver Springs, MD, on February 23rd and hits major cities throughout the whole country — the East Coast, Midwest, California and South — before concluding in Atlanta on March 20th.

Earlier this year, Meshuggah confirmed  that they were in the studio working on the impending follow-up to 2016's The Violent Sleep of Reason . They also let fans know that founding guitarist Fredrik Thordendal has returned to the band full time after departing in 2017, and that he'll be performing on the upcoming material and this forthcoming tour. Therefore, there's a good chance that we'll be hearing some new Meshuggah songs at these bangin' shows with Converge and Torche.

Tickets go on sale this Friday July 2nd at 10 a.m. local time, and you can snag them here . Check out all the dates below. 

Meshuggah, Converge and Torche 2022 tour dates:  2/23 The Fillmore – Silver Spring MD 2/24 Franklin Music Hall – Philadelphia PA 2/25 Hammerstein Ballroom – New York, NY 2/26 The Palladium – Worcester, MA 2/28 Stage AE – Pittsburgh, PA 3/01 Express Live – Columbus, OH 3/02 Agora Theatre – Cleveland, OH 3/03 Royal Oak Music Theatre – Royal Oak, MI 3/05 Myth – Minneapolis, MN 3/06 Radius – Chicago, IL 3/08 Fillmore Auditorium – Denver, CO 3/10 The Warfield Theatre – San Francisco, CA 3/11 Riverside Municipal Auditorium – Riverside, CA 3/12 The Marquee – Tempe, AZ 3/13 Hollywood Palladium – Los Angeles, CA 3/16 TBA by July 12th – Dallas, TX  3/17 Warehouse Live Ballroom – Houston, TX 3/19 Hard Rock Live – Orlando, FL 3/20 Buckhead Theatre – Atlanta, GA

microsoftteams-image.png, Frazer Harrison/Getty Images and Aldara Zarraoa/WireImage

Hear SLIPKNOT and MESHUGGAH singers rage...

umbra vitae 2024 PROMO , Hillarie Jason

UMBRA VITAE: Hear CONVERGE, TWITCHING...

gojira bonnaroo GETTY 2019, FilmMagic/FilmMagic for Bonnaroo Arts And Music Festival

Gojira Announce New Fall Headline Tour Dates

Limp Bizkit Live Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for KROQ, Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for KROQ

Limp Bizkit Announce Summer North American Tour with Spiritbox

gwar-web-resize.jpeg

GWAR Announce 'Scumdogs' 30th Anniversary Tour With Napalm Death, Eyehategod

knocked loose cover-image-crop nick fancher, Nick Fancher

Knocked Loose Announce North American Tour with Gatecreeper

architects-web-crop-ed-mason-6.jpg, Ed Mason

Architects Announce North American Tour with Polyphia and Loathe

Judas Priest Live 2019 photo by Kevin Wilson, Kevin Wilson

Judas Priest Announce 50th Anniversary North American Tour

Glassjaw Live Press Photo 2021

Glassjaw Announce 20+ Year Anniversary Tour for Classic Albums

rob zombie dsc_7095.jpg

Rob Zombie, Mastodon, Chevelle to Headline Private Island Metal Festival and Cruise

Decibel Magazine

  • Decibel Hall of Fame
  • Justify Your Shitty Taste
  • Kill Screen
  • Decibel Flexi Series
  • Decibel Records
  • New Releases
  • Demo:listen
  • Decibel’s 20th Anniversary Show
  • Decibel Magazine Metal & Beer Fest: Philadelphia
  • Decibel Magazine Metal & Beer Fest: Denver
  • The Decibel Magazine Tour 2024
  • Decibel’s 200th Issue Show Extremely Ex-Stream
  • The Decibel Store
  • Back Issues
  • Exclusive Vinyl
  • Current Issue
  •  Search

Turning 20: The Making of Converge’s “Jane Doe”

converge band tour

Converge will perform their seminal metallic hardcore classic, Jane Doe , in its entirety at Decibel Magazine Metal & Beer Fest: Los Angles on Friday, December 10. Tickets for the exclusive performance are still available , but are moving fast (tickets for their Jane Doe set at the Philly edition of Metal & Beer Fest are already sold out)!

In the time between acquiring tickets and waiting for your chance to down bitters and then some during the New England legends’ landmark set, you can celebrate the 20th anniversary of the album and dig into the full Jane Doe Hall of Fame from our long sold-out January 2008 issue and Precious Metal Hall of Fame anthology. Previously unavailable online, the following story features lengthy interviews with every member of Converge who performed on the record.

Inside a Freeform Mathcore Maelstrom

Call it the face that launched a thousand metalcore graphic designers (into a rat-race of feverish mimicry). Call it the record that catapulted a certain Boston quartet (then quintet) into permanent cult status with a slew of face-ripping live staples (“Concubine,” “The Broken Vow” and “Bitter and Then Some”) and a soaring, epic title track. Call it Album of the Decade , like we did in 2009. Any way you break it down, Jane Doe was both a semi-melodic milestone (“Hell to Pay,” “Thaw,” the title track) and a discordant landmark (everything else), far and away the most crucial metallic hardcore record since fellow Massholes Cave In (who had since stepped bravely onto the major label playing field) unleashed Until Your Heart Stops three years earlier. Shit, it even had a song that was just drums and vocals (the 42-second apocalypse of “Phoenix in Flames”). It was feral, it was ferocious, it was fucking unstoppable. And it’s still all those things today.

It was also 2001, and change was everywhere. Bassist Nate Newton, formerly of Jesuit, had joined the band three years earlier and recorded on two split releases—1999’s The Poacher Diaries (with Agoraphobic Nosebleed) and 2000’s Deeper the Wound (with Japan’s Hellchild), the inaugural release from Converge vocalist Jake Bannon’s label, Deathwish, Inc.—but had yet to track a full-length with them. The band had also recently recruited local drum dervish Ben Koller, formerly of grind outfit Force Fed Glass, to replace skinsman Jon DiGiorgio. By the time the Jane Doe recording sessions—a three-month marathon spread across as many studios and helmed by Converge guitarist/producer Kurt Ballou—were complete, the band had kicked longtime second guitarist Aaron Dalbec (also of Bane) to the curb. On September 1, Ballou was laid off from his job as a medical engineer at Boston Scientific (“it was like the adult version of playing with Legos”), thus freeing Converge to expand considerably upon their annual one-month touring schedule. On September 4, Jane Doe was released to considerable critical and popular acclaim. On September 11, the day the band was to embark upon a two-week tour with Playing Enemy, the Twin Towers fell and the world changed forever. Converge—now a sleek and furious four-piece—drove into New York City under a blanket of ash, on the road to a silver future.

PART I: PHOENIX IN FLIGHT

What do you remember about the songwriting process for Jane Doe ?

Kurt Ballou: It was the first batch of song we wrote after Ben joined the band, so we definitely had a new perspective and a new energy and a new means of working. And Nate was also finally living in Boston—prior to that he was commuting up from Virginia. And we were all on the same page musically. We all had a lot of respect for each other as musicians and friends, so that was the first record we wrote that was really a collaborative process. I’d always been a control freak prior to that—in a way it was because of who I am, but in another way, it was also because I’d had to because I didn’t have people in the band who could contribute well until Jane Doe . Aaron was doing a lot of Bane stuff—they were really busy that year. They were doing a record and a ton of touring, so he wasn’t really around for much of the songwriting. It was pretty much just the four of us hacking through the songs together.

Aaron Dalbec : I was on the road a lot with Bane at the time, so I would come back to work on new songs with everyone, and when I would leave for Bane tour, I would be writing while I was on the road.

Nate Newton: I remember a lot of butting heads, between me and Kurt especially. That was the first record where I was really part of the songwriting process. I played on The Poacher Diaries and the split with Hellchild, and I had written a little bit on The Poacher Diaries , but that was a weird time, because Jon [DiGiorgio] was only in the band for a really short time on drums and we never really got acclimated to playing with him. I felt like a lot of those songs were just kinda hammered together really quickly. So Jane Doe was the first time I wrote full songs for Converge. And it was the first time Kurt had someone telling him, “Hey—I don’t like what you’re playing.” I don’t think there was much of a filter before, mostly because Converge wasn’t as busy of a band. One of my focuses was that I wanted to write songs—I didn’t want just a shitload of riffs piled on top of each other. I was really critical of what Kurt was writing, and ultimately I think that was a good thing for us—it taught all of us to be more critical of ourselves.

Ballou : The other big that happened with that record is that for “Minnesota,” the last song on The Poacher Diaries , I had invented a new tuning that I had used for all the lead guitar parts. I ended up being really inspired by that tuning and used a lot of it to write a lot of the Jane Doe stuff. It gave me a totally new perspective and new harmonic structures. All the happy accidents you have on guitar when you’re tuned one way—even though they might be physically similar—they sound completely different when you start tuning a different way.

Ben Koller: I remember being very impressed by Kurt’s demoing skills. He demoed all the music himself for the song “Jane Doe.” It’s just such an epic, memorable song and we didn’t deviate too much from that demo when we recorded it. I remember being very impressed by that demo. “Phoenix in Flames” was fun, too. I was half-joking one day at the studio, like, “We should just do a song that’s drums and vocals only.” I can’t believe we actually put that on the record. I love that song.

Jake Bannon : I can only speak for my own experiences with the album. Life wasn’t going all that well for me and I saw writing and rehearsals as an escape of sorts. I looked forward to that few hours a week more than anything at that time in my life. It was also an odd time for the band. Getting to practice wasn’t easy. It was a half-hour to an hour commute each way for all of us. Because of that physical distance, it didn’t feel like there was all that much communication between members. When we did get together to write, it felt like three of us—Ben, Kurt and myself—bonded a bit more than we did with Aaron. That growth between us as friends/family foreshadowed a great deal for all of us. As a band and as people, we were evolving.

converge band tour

How did you meet Ben?

Ballou: I recorded two of his previous bands. The first one was called Bastion—not too many people knew about them—and the second one was Force Fed Glass, and they were somewhat known. He and I started playing together in a thing called Blue/Green Heart that was kind of a short-lived side project. When Jon DiGiorgio, the previous Converge drummer, quit, it happened really suddenly. I think I actually found out about it at Blue/Green Heart practice. I was talking to Ben about it and we just started jamming some Converge songs. At the time, we weren’t really sure if he could do it because he couldn’t play double-bass, and at that time Converge had a lot of double-bass stuff. So originally he played as a fill-in and we tried out some other drummers, but it became pretty clear pretty quickly that Ben was the guy.

Newton: Ben joining the band made Converge who we are now. I have no doubt in my mind that we would’ve broken up if he hadn’t joined the band. His drumming is such a big part of the direction that we went with this band, because songwriting-wise, we were never able to do what we wanted to do. He’s got his own style, and it’s punk as fuck. We were so excited about him joining, and you can hear it in the record. There’s such a huge difference between that record and the ones that came before it. Sometimes when we’re onstage, I’ll turn around to watch him play and just think, “Fuck—you are so much better at your instrument than I am at mine.”

Jane Doe was your first recording with Ben on drums and your first full-length with Nate on bass. Did you feel invigorated by the relatively new lineup? Were you nervous about the potential results?

Bannon: Both of them brought a new energy to everything, and I am still grateful to them for that. For Converge, it was the first time that there was a “whole” band—or at least four of us—participating in the writing process. In the past, it was Kurt as the chief songwriter, and I handled everything else for the band. Though Kurt still was at the helm musically, with Jane Doe , Nate and Ben played significant roles in shaping the music to the album. I also contributed rough versions of the riffs in “Homewrecker” and “Phoenix in Flight” to the album. Though I am a terrible guitarist, Kurt managed to make sense of my mess and turn both of them into great songs. I know that all of us playing equal roles was an reinvigorating experience for me. I felt excited and I had a second wind of sorts creatively because of that.

Dalbec: I was not nervous about the lineup at all. We had been playing for awhile, and Ben was the first drummer since Damon [Bellorado] that really fit with us. As far as Nate, I loved playing with him. He is a great dude, and a great guitar/bass player. It added so much new energy to the band.

What were the recording sessions like?

Ballou : We did them at Q Division in Boston with Matt Ellard engineering. I guess I was producing—you don’t really have producers when you’re doing hardcore records. But I was the one who was there all the time presiding over stuff. Q Division has two studios and we booked our time in Studio A at a certain rate that was below their advertised rate. And then James Taylor came along and decided that he wanted Studio A during our time period. He was willing to pay the full rate, so they bumped us over to Studio B—which ended up being a blessing in disguise because even though Studio B is a little smaller, the room is a little brighter and the console is a lot more crisp-sounding. It’s a Trident ATB, which I actually have in my studio now—and part of the reason I have it is because of the drums we tracked on Jane Doe . But we went back over to Studio A after James Taylor left, and then we did the guitars, bass and some vocals at my studio in Norwood. We mixed it and did the rest of the vocals at Fort Apache in Cambridge.

Koller: I remember it being very laid back. It was a comfortable environment and there wasn’t a lot of pressure. I also remember James Taylor recording in one of the other studios and him being escorted in and out by his entourage. Why did he need to be escorted? Who cares about James Taylor anyway?

Newton: James Taylor was across the hall from us and he kept sending his engineer over to tell us to be quiet. “Mr. Taylor is trying to record vocal tracks and you guys are goofing off and being way too loud over here.” [ Laughs ] He had already knocked us into the smaller room, too—but that’s fine. I don’t really care.

Bannon: For me, it was the first time that we were in a more formal studio setting. Aside from the occasional weekend recording sessions at outside studios, we usually recorded on our own in some way. Even though the When Forever Comes Crashing album had Steve Austin at the helm, it was in a no-frills studio in a basement in Allston. At Q Division we had a engineers and assistants helping during the initial tracking. We had an English engineer who worked with Motörhead and George Michael giving us assistance and guidance. It all felt “important” and “special” to me. We were all working together and I really appreciated that.

Dalbec: I just remember it being the most well-organized recording we had ever done. We made sure all the songs were 100 percent before we recorded them. We had recorded the drums at Q Division, and we did most of the guitars and vocals at Kurt’s old studio in Norwood. That way we had more time to work on everything.

Newton: You know, I’ve never been a great bass player, and I’m well aware of that. But this was the first time that I was in a studio for a long period of time and someone was extremely critical of what I was doing. And I had a hell of a time recording some of those songs—like “Thaw.” That song is fuckin’ hard to play, and I would get really frustrated. But Kurt really pushed me, and I’m thankful for that, because I’ve learned a lot from playing with Kurt. He’s a great guitarist. And I’m not taking credit for anything because I’m just some douchebag who plays bass, but I will say that Kurt is so much better now then he was then. I’ve never really said this to him, and maybe it’ll make it to print and he’ll tear up a little bit, but I’m honored to play with him. I’m constantly blown away by the things he does. But I don’t say that when we’re writing songs, because I gotta show him who’s in charge. [ Laughs ] Which usually turns out to not be me.

Ballou: I did most of the guitars at my studio, which was in Norwood, MA, back then. It was really tough because I was recording myself and there was no one else in the studio, and everything for that record was done on two-inch [tape]. I sat with my shoes off and my feet up near the tape machine so every time I screwed up and had to punch in, I could work the tape machine with my toes while I played. And that machine would punch in, but it wouldn’t punch out—or when it did punch out, it made a click. So you had to wait for some silence to punch out or you had to play all the way to the end of the song. It was really, really laborious. I think Matt Ellard actually came down for a day or two to help me out with some of the more challenging punch-ins so I could be free to just play. Between starting recording and mastering, the whole process probably spanned three months. But it’s not like we were working the whole time. Jake lost his voice at one point and we had to wait a month to get another mix session. I remember I couldn’t stay for all the mix sessions because I was doing some Cave In recording—I think they were demos for RCA or something. After that we went to West West Side to master it with Alan Douches, and I think we actually banged that out in a day. Alan pushed it really hard. To this day when I see him, he still talks about how loud that record is and how people always come into his studio commenting on it or asking him to use it as a reference when mastering their record. So that’s cool to hear.

converge band tour

Bannon : Recording vocals was a surreal experience. Most of my tracking was done in the live room at Fort Apache. The studio used to host live recording sessions with audiences in the room, [so] it’s set up much like a venue. I was recording on an actual stage with no band behind me—I felt really exposed and isolated by that. I also recorded most of the vocals in the dark. Not sure why, really—I think I was just feeling shy, in a way. By doing that, I was able to just lose control and get all my negative emotion out of me on that stage, and on tape. I listen back now and I sound like a rabid animal in a lot of places. It’s definitely vicious. You can hear that real anger and emotion in there for sure.

PART II: FAULT AND FRACTURE

What was Aaron Dalbec’s involvement in Jane Doe and what were the circumstances surrounding his departure?

Newton: Ah, the big question… Well, Aaron was around for some of the writing process, but at that time, Bane was really taking off. They were way busier than Converge at that point. It got to the point where he was gone so much and we would have to turn down tours and show offers because he wasn’t around. Basically, if we wanted to continue as a band and do the things we wanted to do… Aaron just didn’t have time to be in Converge. To this day, I’m still not happy about the way everything went down, because I love Aaron and I think he’s a great dude.

Bannon : Aaron’s role in Jane Doe was quite minimal, as it was in all records. In retrospect, he was primarily a live guitarist more than anything. Though he would track on albums, his style of playing wasn’t that precise and didn’t come off well in a recorded setting. My memory isn’t the best, but the only song I remember him ever bringing to the table for Converge was “High Cost of Playing God,” which was released on the When Forever … album. He concentrated his writing for his band, Bane, which was much more fitting for him.

Koller : He wrote a couple riffs here and there, but he was pretty disconnected from the rest of us. We would have rehearsal without him from time to time—then he would come back from a Bane tour and he would have to relearn certain riffs. It really dragged us down. He just couldn’t devote his full attention to the band, and we wanted to push it to the next level.

Ballou: I’ll let him answer that however he wants to answer it. I mean, he had talked about leaving Converge before, and it was always Bane-related. Bane was his band and suits his taste in music. When he joined Converge, we were a different band and a much less active band. We didn’t really have the talents or tools to express ourselves how we wanted to. As we all progressed as musicians and songwriters, we progressed in different directions. I think Aaron was a little too stubborn to leave the band even though he knew it was right, so we kinda told him, “We’re gonna do this now, and we just don’t think you’re able to do this on the level that the rest of us wanna do it, and we don’t think you’re into this on the level the rest of us are into it, so it’s probably time for you to just focus on the band that you’re into.”

Dalbec: Well, pretty much the way it happened was I had just come back from recording Bane’s Give Blood record, and we got together to “talk” about our upcoming two-week tour when the record came out. At this point, it was about two or three weeks away. I got there and [was told] pretty much that I had to choose between Bane and Converge. Now, just for the record, Bane had never gotten in the way of Converge. It was always Converge first, then Bane. If Converge had a tour, Bane would not book anything—we would even wait for Converge to make plans before we would decide what to do.

As far as when I left the band, it was about two weeks before Jane Doe got released. So all the recording for Jane Doe had been long done.

converge band tour

Bannon : Matt Ellard, our engineer at the time, had Kurt play most—if not all—of the guitar tracks on the entire Jane Doe album. With that said, it was evident to the band and others around us, that [Aaron’s] role was becoming a larger issue that couldn’t be ignored. After playing an unannounced show with Isis in Cambridge, we called a meeting without Aaron and decided that it was best for him to step down from the band. The next day, the five of us, along with [Deathwish co-owner] Tre [McCarthy] and [former Converge roadie and current booking agent] Matt Pike, sat down and broke the news to him. After that, we did our first tour as a four-piece and loved it. We never had any drive to become a five-piece again.

Newton: Oh, man… the way we did this was so shitty. It was the night before we were leaving for tour and we had a band meeting. Everybody kinda sat down and explained stuff, and I think Kurt was the one who said, “Bane’s going this way, Converge is going that way. Bane is busy—it’s obvious that Bane is your band. A choice has gotta be made here, and we’re gonna make the choice for you. You’re in Bane.” We all knew that it had to be done—and I’m sure Aaron in his heart knew it, too—but it was really fuckin’ harsh. The whole situation fuckin’ sucked and I’m not happy about the way it went down, but it had to happen sooner or later. We could’ve waited, and maybe he would’ve made the same decision himself. Or maybe we could have posed the question to him. But it had to happen eventually. I’d say it worked out better for everyone in the long run.

Dalbec: I was not happy at all about leaving Converge. I had dedicated over eight years of my life to the band and gave as much as I could for that eight years, and helped build the band up to where it was at that point. I had worked through the thick and thin, through the times in the beginning when nobody gave a shit about us, but we still worked our asses off. So I was not too happy about it. Now looking back at it, though, for things to end the way they did, I am happier to not be a part of that. I mean, I was ready to leave for tour and kill it with Jane Doe coming out, and at the last minute before the record comes out, they tell me I have to choose between Bane or Converge—and to quote Kurt, “You need to choose between Bane and Converge, and I think you should pick Bane.” For someone to say that, there would be no way I would want to continue with them. Some people think I was stupid to say Bane, but when you are in that position, there is no other choice. I felt totally betrayed and let down.

Ballou: Dalbec only played one show on Jane Doe , but it was about a week before the album came out. We played a record release show upstairs at the Worcester Palladium—I think we had about 20 copies of the record. I remember because the record came out on September 4 of 2001 and we were supposed to start a tour with Playing Enemy on September 11, but we had a few shows cancelled because of the attacks. We drove through New York when it was still covered in dust. We were comfortable playing all the Jane Doe songs as a four-piece because we had pretty much practiced them all as a four-piece. But I remember we weren’t sure if we were going to continue as a four-piece or get another guitar player. After that tour, the benefits of the simplified lineup outweighed the benefits of a second guitar player. There’s more space onstage, more space in the van, more money to go around, and even though the stage sound might be a little less thick, a four-piece just seems more balanced. Live music can sound like shit, so you can hear the guitar more clearly if there’s just one. Some of the older songs ended up suffering, but when you’re the only guitar player, you can be a lot more expressive in your guitar playing without worrying about conflicting with someone else.

PART III: THAW

“Hell to Pay” stands out as very different from the rest of the record and very different for Converge at that time in general.

Newton: I guess it kinda was. I remember when I was learning that song—Kurt had written in it—it’s basically his Hoover “Warship” right there. I wasn’t that into it at the time, but in retrospect, it is pretty good. I did four bass tracks for that song. I had two amps and two basses and I played each amp with each bass.

Ballou : It was out of character for Converge, but not for our taste in music. You can hear in a lot of Converge records—going back to at least Petitioning the Empty Sky era, maybe even earlier—you can hear the Hoover influence, the Fugazi influence. You can hear me taking their ideas and trying to make them sound more metal. “Hell to Pay,” for example, is a combination of that and… I think I got into Jesus Lizard a few years before we did that record. So it was our way of doing that, but not trying so hard to make it metal. It gets a little doomy at the end. I think that song is one of the best vocal collaborations we’ve ever done, actually—definitely the best vocals I’ve ever done on a Converge song. Especially at the end, when it’s me, Nate and Jake switching off—it’s pretty cool.

It’s hard to imagine “Jane Doe” being anything other than the last song on that record. Did you know that it’d be the closer right away?

Newton: Yeah. It was like, “This is the one.” We were all really excited about it.

Dalbec: Yeah, when you listen to the record in all one piece it is very hard to imagine that song anywhere else on the record. When we were writing it, I knew it was going to be slow and brutal, but I was not too sure where on the record it would go. At the time, I had no idea what the lyrics would be like.

Ballou: I think we knew before we recorded it that it would be the closer. I can never remember how songs come to me. To me, songs are just gifts. I mean, I know they’re not given to me, but after I’m done writing them I usually have a hard time remembering how it came to me. I’m actually better at remembering what happened with stuff that other people write. With that song, I think I demoed it with a drum machine and showed it to the guys. It was much shorter at the time, and it didn’t have the ending. I remember thinking it might not even be a Converge song but they heard it and were like, “Oh, that’s awesome—we should use that.” So we did.

Do you have a favorite song on the album?

Ballou: I don’t know… “Hell to Pay” might be my favorite, actually. Or “Distance and Meaning”—two songs we never play. [ Laughs ] Stuff that sounds good live is not always what sounds good on record and stuff that’s fun to play live isn’t as much fun to listen to on a CD, unfortunately. I’ve kind of learned that throughout my entire musical experience, going back to playing jazz and classical on saxophone and clarinet when I was a kid.

Bannon : “Phoenix in Flight” gives me goose bumps. “Jane Doe” as well.

Dalbec: I really like “Fault and Fracture” and “Jane Doe.” [Those songs] just showed where the band was going, and it was totally new for us. I also really like “Homewrecker.”

Koller: Listening back to the record, I really like the song “Distance and Meaning.” It sounds very different than anything Converge had done previously. Some of the riffs were Huguenots riffs [a defunct Kurt Ballou side project] and I was a big fan of the Huguenots/SevenPercentSolution 10-inch… well, I liked the Huguenots side, at least.

Newton: I love “Jane Doe.” As far as the faster, more hardcore songs, I like “The Broken Vow”—and not just because I wrote it. [ Laughs ] It’s just a live staple, and it’s fun to play. I still really like “Thaw,” too.

Tre McCarthy, Kevin Baker from the Hope Conspiracy and “Secret C” have backing vocal credits. I’m assuming the last one is Caleb Scofield from Cave In.

Ballou: Yeah. He was under contract with RCA at the time. He didn’t think there would be any problem, but we thought it would be better not to take any chances. Isn’t his publishing company called Secret C? I think it might be. All those guys were on “The Broken Vow”—I think that was the only song they were on. On the last line, “I’ll take my love to the grave,” with each repetition of the riff, we’d add another person. So it’s Jake, me, Nate and then those guys, one at a time.

PART IV: UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE VICTIM

There’s obviously a distinctly female theme dominating the album artwork. What inspired it, and how does it tie into some of the lyrical concepts?

Bannon: At the time I was going through a great deal of negative in my life. When I was refining the lyrics, it was apparent that the album thematically dealt with that relationship disintegrating. The album was my lyrical purging of that experience. The artwork visually encapsulates that lyrical theme. The visuals attempted to capture the feeling of disintegration and rebirth. I spent a great deal of time on that—building figures out of texture and acrylic, scanning multiple layers of imagery, etc. I spent close to a month creating large mixed media pieces for each song on the album. I used a high-contrast approach to the artwork, as it was a style I was growing towards at the time. I felt that the cold iconographic feel was extremely fitting for the subject matter.

Was it your intention to obscure some of the lyrics in the layout, or did it just work out best that way, visually speaking?

Bannon: I wanted to incorporate them into the pieces themselves, so yes, it was intentional. I remember Equal Vision not being happy about it, as it broke from the standard that was set for the time. I don’t care much for rules.

Did Jake discuss the lyrical themes with the rest of you?

Newton: Not really. On every record, we just let Jake do his thing. We had a general idea, though. I actually thought of the name Jane Doe when were on our first European tour—I think I may have seen a pamphlet or a billboard about violence against women or some shit. I just thought it was a cool name. If I remember correctly, we talked a little bit about the idea of a nameless, faceless victim. Jake sorta took the ball and ran with it.

Dalbec: Jake never really discussed any of the artwork or lyrics with any of us. It was kind of always a surprise when the record was done.

Koller: Nate and Jake came up with the whole concept for the record, I guess. I don’t tend to get too involved with the art concepts. I just focus on the skins.

Ballou: He’s pretty private about that, and we don’t pry too much. He’s become more open with that over time, and at least with me, he’s gotten me more involved with phrasing and stuff. But circa Jane Doe , we just recorded his ideas the way he had it in his head and that’s just the way it was. There’s definitely a lot of mutual trust and admiration between us as songwriters. And whenever you have too many cooks in the kitchen, it tends to dilute the food. That’s how it is with a lot of modern metallic hardcore, too—there’s just too many ingredients in the mix. You’ve got your guy who screams, your guy who growls, and then you’ve got your melodic, Dashboard Confessional-style vocals here and there. I’ve always been opposed to that—I like to have a cohesive direction and a cohesive vision. So I don’t really get in Jake’s way too much and, in turn, he doesn’t get in our way, either.

About a year after the record came out, I was walking down Cahuenga Boulevard in Los Angeles with Juan Perez and saw a huge oil painting that someone had done of the Jane Doe cover. At first we thought it was Jake’s original, but we later found out that it wasn’t.

Bannon: Yeah, I heard about that. That painting was also a few blocks from our lawyer’s office in L.A. It was definitely a rendition of our cover, but it was meant to be an homage, not a lift, I guess. There have also been some other incidents. One high-end clothing company chose to use the image on a variety of t-shirts. They actually solicited my girlfriend’s old store to carry their items and she brought it to my attention. When our lawyer contacted them, they claimed they got the image from a poster they saw on a wall in Italy, to which I responded, “Yeah, our tour poster.” They later sent us their stock of apparel and I destroyed it. I’ve had that happen with other images I’ve made for other bands as well. The world is full of thieves. Since the release of the album, there have also been countless attempts at emulating that style of artwork. The attempts are both flattering and insulting. I feel that if you are putting that much effort into creating something to represent your band visually, you should do something original. Use your own artistic voice, not ours.

Newton: It’s interesting to me how the cover of that record—the Jane Doe face—has become almost iconic in the hardcore scene. It’s almost like the new Misfits skull or something—not that I’d compare us to that, but it blows my mind that we still sell a shitload of Jane Doe shirts. Go to a hardcore show and there’s a good chance you’ll see a kid wearing a Converge shirt, and there’s a good chance it’ll be a Jane Doe shirt. The face doesn’t call to mind anything specific, but at the same time, it’s a strong image that you can put meaning into. I think that’s what makes certain pieces of art powerful—you can look at it and put your own meaning into it. It seemed like during that time period, Jake and Aaron Turner really put the focus back on fine art back into album artwork—at least in this scene. It wasn’t just, “Here’s a picture of the band, here’s our lyrics, here’s our logo.”

PART V: PHOENIX IN FLAMES

Do you remember reading any reviews of the album when it came out?

Ballou: I remember we got Album of the Year in Terrorizer . I was pretty blown away that it was being received that way, actually. At that point in time, we were a band that had had some moderate success—people liked us, and we never really did support tours—we had been able to tour the U.S. a few times on our own as headliners. But I didn’t really feel like we had done a record that was a milestone in our genre. People consider Petitioning the Empty Sky that, but in general, the people who revered that record highly, I didn’t revere their taste in music all that highly, so it didn’t mean a lot to me. And it’s not even an album, really—that originally came out on seven-inch. And then we recorded extra songs and put it out on CD. There’s live tracks, too—it’s really just a collection of stuff.

Newton: I remember the Terrorizer review that came out before they gave us album of the year. I felt pretty good about the record, but when I read that I was like, “Whoa!” Not that Terrorizer is the be-all, end-all musical judgment, but I remember thinking of it as a magazine that tears everything to shreds. I think they gave us a 9.5—it was a pretty big compliment.

How did things change for Converge after Jane Doe came out?

Ballou: Jane Doe was the first record where people I really respected responded positively to it—people my age and older than us actually started to respect Converge. That meant a lot to me, because prior to that, I felt like we hadn’t really come into our own yet. People definitely treat you differently when you do something that they enjoy or respect musically. We got a lot of opportunities from the record label, booking agents were more interested in us, other bands were more interested in getting us to tour with them and other bands were interested in touring with us. And a lot more bands were interested in coming into my studio to record with me and getting Jake to design their records. On a personal level, doing something that resonated with people greatly affected my life outside of Converge in addition to inside Converge. Looking back on it, it was a major turning point in my professional life.

Newton: Definitely more people started coming to shows. It was definitely a gradual process, but it was happening. We suddenly got more attention from the metal community, too, and I think that had to do with the Terrorizer review. All of a sudden we were validated. People who had wanted nothing to do with us before all of a sudden thought we were great and wanted to go on tour with us. And because Terrorizer is based in the U.K., we noticed a vast difference when we went back to Europe. But honestly, I think Petitioning and When Forever Comes Crashing are more metal than Jane Doe —at least as far as blatantly playing metal riffs. The influence is certainly there on Jane Doe , but I feel like it’s a much more punk record.

Bannon: I try not to pay attention to outside opinion to our band, so I’m not really sure. My goal with the album was the same as any other—to create something that our band could collectively be moved by, challenged by and proud of. Jane Doe was that for all of us, so that’s the only real success that matters for me.

Jane Doe was your last album on Equal Vision. Were you already planning on moving to Epitaph at that point?

Ballou: No, we were planning on doing one more with EVR. They definitely ride a lot of fences between being a hardcore label and a rock label, and we couldn’t really get behind any of the stuff they had on the label. We did a few Equal Vision showcase kinda shows, and we just wanted to align ourselves with something that fit the spirit of Converge—not necessarily the sound of Converge, but what we were about. We still like the EVR guys and we get along, but we just felt like we didn’t have a lot in common with [their roster]. There were assorted tensions with them, but Epitaph approached us—we didn’t approach them. So we got this opportunity to work with a label that’s run by really good people who come from a DIY punk background and who still have those ideals. They run a successful business, but they still have that punk ethic that they had when they were younger—they still put art ahead of profit. Their basic philosophy is to work with established artists that are credible and have long-lasting success rather than seeking out the next big thing and jumping on it. I mean, they’ve made a few of those kinds of signings in recent history, but in general, I mean… they’re working with Nick Cave and Tom Waits—they’ve got a classic catalog.

Bannon: We were under the assumption that it was our last album for the label, but we didn’t pay much attention to that. Our goal was just to write and record the best album that we could at the time. The creative end of what we are takes precedent over any business nonsense. After the album was released and we did our first world touring in support of the album, we started discussing what we wanted to do next as a band. That is when we first started experiencing turbulence with Equal Vision. Our experience with Equal Vision was certainly not all negative. In hindsight, I feel that we simply grew apart from one another. Their direction and our own didn’t follow the same road of understanding. It was best that it ended when it did.

Newton: To be honest with you, a lot of it I don’t even know. I sort of treated it like, “Hey—whatever, man. I just play bass.” But I do remember thinking at that point that EVR was kind of getting away from hardcore. But it’s kinda weird, I guess. If we had stayed on EVR, I probably would’ve been fine with it. I mean, it’s a record label—who cares? But when the idea of signing to Epitaph came up, we were definitely really excited about it. They put out Tom Waits and Solomon Burke all this cool shit. Obviously, Epitaph has put out some duds that I don’t want to have anything to do with, but for every record they put out that I hate, they put out two that it’s obvious they put out because they think it’s good.

Do you think of Jane Doe any differently now than you did when you recorded it?

Newton: Yes and no—no in the sense that I don’t really dwell on stuff that we’ve already done. We did a record, we toured on it, and I’m onto the next shit. I’m proud of everything I’ve done, but I don’t sit around thinking, “Yeah—I wrote Jane Doe !” In that respect, it feels like it’s just something else we did. It’s history to me. But at the same time, I feel differently about it now that I’m able to step back and see how that record might’ve affected the hardcore scene in general.

Bannon: Not really. Each new album you write and release becomes the most relevant, so it’s not on my immediate radar— No Heroes is. But I am still excited by what the album accomplished creatively.

Koller: I like our new record No Heroes more than Jane Doe now. Maybe it’s because the songs are fresher and more energetic live, or I’m just older and my tastes have changed. I like how salty and heavy No Heroes is. It gets me pumped up and makes me want to punch concrete walls.

Dalbec: I still think it’s a great record, but after what happened I can not look at it the same way.

Ballou: Every time we do a record now, I always have to prepare myself for kids and reviewers to say it’s not as good as Jane Doe . Whenever any band does a landmark kinda thing, they’ll never get past it. Metallica’s never gonna do another Master of Puppets , you know? Slayer’s never gonna do another Reign in Blood —or Pantera and Vulgar Display of Power . So I don’t let that stuff affect me too much. Every once in a while I’ll read something or someone will say something to me that will make me feel like I’ve peaked, but when we were doing Jane Doe , we definitely weren’t of the mindset that we’d peaked. We weren’t chasing our own shadow. Which is pretty much how we work now, but it’s always in the back of your head. Not “Are we still good enough?” But “Are people gonna think we’re still good enough?” I don’t want my music to ever be driven by people’s opinion of it, but, you know, it’s hard to go about life completely independent of other people’s opinions of you. So it was nice to be in a situation, with Jane Doe , where I didn’t have to think about that at all.

In retrospect, is there anything you’d change about the album?

Bannon: No, nothing.

Koller: No, because the imperfections and rough edges are what gives the record so much character. A lot of my playing was really spur-of-the-moment and improvisational, and what I play live for those songs now is so much different than what’s on the record.

Newton: Oh, yeah. I’d rewrite a couple of the songs, for sure—like “Fault and Fracture,” definitely. It has parts that don’t need to be there and parts that are too long—same with “Heaven in Her Arms.” And I don’t like how the record sounds overall—it’s so compressed and metal. It sounds like it’s cutting into your ears. I guess that’s what some people love about it, but to me it sounds robotic. I like records with dynamics, where it goes from quiet to loud, where you can hear the guy breathing in the background when it gets quiet. But this record seems like it’s one volume—really loud and in your face—all the way across the board. At the time, I thought it was pretty cool, because there wasn’t another hardcore record that sounded like it. But in retrospect, I’m not very happy with how it sounds. And you can really hardly hear the bass on most of the songs—which is OK, I guess, ’cause I wasn’t happy with my bass tone. Overall, I think the songs on You Fail Me and No Heroes are much better, and I love the recordings on those records. Pound for pound, I think both of those records are better than Jane Doe .

It’s the time and place syndrome, though. People heard this record at a certain point in their lives and equate it with certain memories, so it holds a special place for them. For us, it’s the record where we really started to change as a band. We came out of our shells and said, “This is what we’re capable of.” With certain bands, it’s always one record that sticks with people. Like Entombed’s Wolverine Blues —that was the record where Entombed started to change, and it grabbed people’s attention. And there’s no other record like that record. So I can understand why people say that about Jane Doe , but it’s not my favorite record, personally.

Ballou : I wouldn’t make it so loud. [ Laughs ] No, I don’t know if I really would. But from an engineering perspective, I had to listen to Jane Doe while I was engineering and mixing No Heroes , because I had to make sure the new record sounded as least as good as that. And in the minds of some of the people in my band and some of our listeners, sounding as good also means that it needs to be as loud. Every stereo I’ve seen has a volume knob, but for some reason, people seem to demand that their records be obscenely loud. There’s not really much more space on a CD to make it louder than Jane Doe , so it’s getting challenging to make records that have as much or more impact from a sonic perspective. Other than that, I don’t particularly care for the chorus of “Fault and Fracture,” but there’s really nothing on the record that gives me idiot shivers. Prior to Jane Doe , there’s stuff in every song that we did that gave me idiot shivers.

Related Stories

converge band tour

Scott Burns Book Signing Session Times Announced at Metal & Beer Fest Philly

April 10, 2024

Meet legendary death metal engineer Scott Burns at Metal & Beer Fest: Philly on April 12-13 to sign copies The Scott Burns Sessions: A Life in Death Metal 1987 – 1997 , with author David E. Gelhke at the Decibel merch table!

converge band tour

DEICIDE Teams Up with Craft Beer Masters 3 Floyds; ‘The Light Defeated Stout’ To Debut at Decibel Magazine Metal & Beer Fest!

March 14, 2024

Our Metal & Beer Fest exclusive Deicide beer is an American style stout with the ABV coming in at 6.66%.

converge band tour

ONE MONTH AWAY! Metal & Beer Fest Philly! “Metal & Beer” Tickets ALMOST SOLD OUT!

March 12, 2024

Exclusive special sets from Deicide , Biohazard , Dying Fetus and Crowbar headline the rapidly-approaching Metal & Beer Fest Philly 2024!

  • Consequence

Upcoming Converge Festivals Appearances

Upcoming converge concerts near me.

new england hardcore fest 2024

New England Metal & Hardcore Fest 2024 Lineup: Killswitch Engage and Slaughter to Prevail

The fest takes place September 21st and 22nd in Worcester, Massachusetts.

April 2, 2024

converge 2023 tour

Converge Announce Fall 2023 North American Tour

With support from Deaf Club, Elizabeth Colour Wheel, and Entry.

July 13, 2023

converge bloodmoon boston nyc

Converge and Chelsea Wolfe Announce First-Ever US "Bloodmoon" Shows

The concerts take place April 9th and 10th in Boston and New York City, respectively.

February 1, 2022

converge 2022 us tour

Converge Announce 2022 US Tour with Full of Hell, Uniform, and Thou

The stacked tour package will hit 10 cities in March.

January 7, 2022

Meshuggah 2022 tour

Meshuggah Reschedule 2022 US Tour Due to Health Issue Within Band

Converge are dropping off the bill due to a conflict with the new itinerary, but Torche are still on board.

December 21, 2021

oblivion access 2022 lineup

Oblivion Access 2022 Lineup: Blonde Redhead, Carcass, Converge, and More

The underground music fest is set for May 12-15th in Austin, Texas.

November 18, 2021

converge band tour

Converge and Chelsea Wolfe Announce New Collaborative Album, Share "Blood Moon": Stream

Bloodmoon: I is set for release on November 19th.

September 28, 2021

Decibel Music Fest LA 2021

Decibel Metal & Beer Fest 2021 Los Angeles Lineup: Converge, Cave In, Sacred Reich, Deadguy, and More

Converge and Cave In will each perform full albums.

August 3, 2021

Meshuggah Announce 2022 US Tour with Converge and Torche

The three bands will embark on the month-long tour in late February.

June 29, 2021

converge band tour

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Converge announce first Converge Bloodmoon UK/Europe tour

Converge Bloodmoon have shared details of their summer UK/EU tour

Chelsea Wolfe and Converge

Off the back of their highly acclaimed album, Bloodmoon: I last year, Converge have announced their first UK/EU tour with Chelsea Wolfe under their collaborative project title Converge Bloodmoon.

Metal Hammer described the release as an "album that needed to be made: a chest tighteningly exciting and thoroughly atypical piece of work from a band who have not just redefined themselves, but also the entire heavy metal landscape. Again.”

Comprised of Jacob Bannon, Kurt Ballou, Nate Newton, Ben Koller, Chelsea Wolfe, Stephen Brodsky and Ben Chisholm, the supergroup will be making their way across the pond this summer, with the tour starting with an appearance at Hellfest in France on June 25.

They'll continue on to London, Manchester, Haarlem and Berlin before finishing up at Roskilde Festival on July 2.

Tickets will go on sale on March 14 at 11am CET / 10am UK time.

The Bloodmoon collaboration first came together in 2006 at Roadburn festival. The seven-piece performed reworked Converge material under the name Blood Moon. Despite the supergroup finding that they worked well together, they could not begin an official collab until years later when their schedules allowed.

Check out the tour dates below:

Metal Hammer Newsletter

Sign up below to get the latest from Metal Hammer, plus exclusive special offers, direct to your inbox!

Jun 25: Clisson Hellfest, FR Jun 27: Wiesbaden Schlachthof, DE Jun 28: London Alexandra Palace Theatre, UK Jun 29: Manchester Albert Hall, UK Jun 30: Haarlem Philharmonie, NL Jul 01: Berlin Astra, DE Jul 02: Roskilde Roskilde Festival, DK

Liz Scarlett

Liz works on keeping the Louder sites up to date with the latest news from the world of rock and metal. Prior to joining Louder as a full time staff writer, she completed a Diploma with the National Council for the Training of Journalists and received a First Class Honours Degree in Popular Music Journalism. She enjoys writing about anything from neo-glam rock to stoner, doom and progressive metal, and loves celebrating women in music.

“You can just see the decline”: The time that Creed bassist Brian Marshall went to war with Pearl Jam

“She continues to be a beacon in the darkness”: Garbage’s Shirley Manson on why Patti Smith is one of her heroes

“We needed a female vocal and Katy Perry was hanging around the studio. She came in, did it… then she got big!”: the greatest P.O.D. collaborations, in their own words

Most Popular

converge band tour

Converge announce Southeast Asia Tour 2024

converge

Converge has shared details for a Southeast Asia run scheduled for May after the band wraps up their Latin America tour in April.

Tickets available here .

CONVERGE Upcoming Shows: 04/20 Mexico City, México 04/21 San José, Costa Rica 04/23 Bogotá, Colombia 04/25 Santiago, Chile 04/27 São Paulo, Brazil 05/05 Jakarta, Indonesia 05/07 Bangkok, Thailand 05/09 Singapore 05/10 Marikina, Phillippines Tix & Info: https://t.co/ScB15CxKO7 pic.twitter.com/8SX0BA89jb — Converge (@Convergecult) February 20, 2024

Image

05/05 Jakarta, Indonesia @ Hammersonic Festival 05/07 Bangkok, Thailand @ The Rock Pub 05/09 Singapore @ Esplande Annexe Studio 05/10 Marikina, Philippines @ The East Side

52 Comments

Related news.

Lambgoat's Favorite Albums of Q1 2024

Related Links

Top news this week.

Rockville: Gen Y, Fred Durst reconcile, rock out in festival-defining Limp Bizkit set

converge band tour

DAYTONA BEACH — Fred Durst basked in front of a mammoth, Day 2-closing crowd on the Apex Stage at Welcome to Rockville on Friday night at Daytona International Speedway.

The spokesman and the eventual fall guy for a generation, he stood before a congregation of people that allowed him to be the scapegoat, largely failing him in the years and decades since the peak of his band, Limp Bizkit, and the nu metal movement in the late '90s and early 2000s.

Whether or not Durst asked for the lofty perch he once held — and if Friday’s raucous masses are any indication, still holds among a certain age demographic — is certainly a curious case study.

On one hand, Limp Bizkit is a band that released a song called, “My Generation”. If you’re unfamiliar, think the stuttering anthem of The Who but with a lot more “F” bombs thrown in. Like it or not, it hinted at a band prepared to represent something more.

LIVE UPDATES: It's Day 3 of Welcome to Rockville in Daytona Beach

Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.

But on the other hand, as cocky and brazen as he ever was, Durst seemingly never took himself that seriously. During Limp Bizkit’s rocket ride to the top, he often spit unspecific and borderline nonsensical lyrics over hip-hop beats and hard-hitting drops. Drops that landed like anvils on Friday night, by the way.

He rapped about wanting a Pepsi, titled one of the band’s biggest hits after a nickname for a vagina and doubling down, used a slang term for an anus in the band’s subsequent album title.

Even when considering the band’s name, one must wonder about the anatomical innuendo and the juvenile sense of humor therein.

And yet, Durst was thrust to the forefront anyway and became the perceived embodiment of a country full of twitchy teenagers. A generation that grew up alongside the internet, one that was suddenly handed a bigger and more diverse platform from which to speak than any before but struggled to come up with the right thing to say.

Sometimes his lyrics mirrored that sentiment. “What the hell, what you want me to say?” he posits, leading up to the explosive chorus of the hit song, “Nookie.”

ROCKVILLE 2024 LINEUP: Daily schedule stage by stage. Who's playing when, where?

So, Limp Bizkit and so many bands of the era expressed a directionless anger. Their songs became an outlet of escape for teenagers and young adults suddenly tasked with the responsibility of the limitless worldwide web, an ever-heightening political divide and water that all-of-the-sudden cost $4 a bottle. A group saddled with more opportunities and yet, more obligation and one eager to express its frustration with carrying the weighty burden no one had asked for.

And yet, when it all reached a destructive tipping point at Woodstock ’99, Durst found himself alone in the crosshairs.

It was rehashed again in the HBO documentary, “Woodstock ’99: Peace, Love and Rage”, released in 2021 where a connection is attempted between Durst’s words and actions on stage and the destruction and fires off it. In particular, the now iconic performance of the track, “Break Stuff” , complete with the bridge lyrics, “If my day keeps going this way I just might, break your (expletive) face tonight,” was a major talking point.

Frankly, it’s a tired and lazy take. As if Limp Bizkit was the only act at Woodstock ’99 with songs containing violent lyrics. As if a songwriter who penned a track called, “Hot Dog”, which served as a vessel for little more than a test of how many expletives could be squeezed into one song, should’ve ever been shouldered with answering for the actions of a nation’s disgruntled, overstimulated youth.

And yet, as the years passed and the shunning of nu metal by critics and the disowning of it by some of the very fans that once championed the movement became more en vogue, Durst and his band were relegated to history. Those very voices that once screamed his lyrics and chanted his name grew more and more silenced.

As a 39-year-old member of Gen Y myself, one that paid to see Limp Bizkit as an 18-year-old in 2003, Friday night was a reminder of how we stood by and allowed Fred Durst to die the death of a rock and roll martyr. How we convinced ourselves that our music was the problem. That somehow, we needed to apologize for the soundtrack of our youth.  

And then the opening two barre chords of Friday's performance rang out into the Daytona Beach night.

It’s hard to imagine there will be a performer more comfortable in his own skin this week than Durst was on Friday.

Gone was the oversized T-shirts and aggressive backwards red cap of yesteryear. Instead, an older, grayer, more relaxed Durst hit the stage in Dad Chic, decked out in a blaze-orange bucket hat, a green vest and floral-printed, frayed shorts. He moved and spoke with all the swagger he once had with a twinge of perspective and sincerity as well.

He held court as only he can, bringing a couple from the crowd on stage for a live gender reveal, pulling guest performers on stage like Jelly Roll and rapper Riff Raff and then calling on a few kids in the crowd for the set’s closing number.

He made inappropriate jokes, talked sports, life in Florida and you know what? It was good to see him. And it was fairly apparent from the beginning of the band’s set, the feeling was mutual.

Limp Bizkit bookended its set with the same song, giving the crowd and likely the decades worth of critics a double dose of “Break Stuff.” The ultimate and final literal and figurative curse word at those who've shunned the song and blamed it for the violence that seemingly ended Woodstock forever.

But what’s really being broken, with every set the band plays? The stigma and the wall built between most middle-aged Americans and the rock star that we let go to the whipping post for us all.  

Welcome back, Fred. I hope you stay a while.

an image, when javascript is unavailable

  • Manage Account

ENHYPEN Announce Documentary Focused on ENGENE Fan Community ‘FANMADE: ENHYPEN’

The film from Reese Witherspoon's Hello Sunshine shingle will follow five female fans as they co-create new material with the group.

  • Share this article on Facebook
  • Share this article on Twitter
  • Share this article on Flipboard
  • Share this article on Pinit
  • + additional share options added
  • Share this article on Reddit
  • Share this article on Linkedin
  • Share this article on Whatsapp
  • Share this article on Email
  • Print this article
  • Share this article on Comment
  • Share this article on Tumblr

ENHYPEN

See latest videos, charts and news

Travis Barker Celebrates Kourtney Kardashian on Mother's Day: 'Our Children Are So Lucky'

Trending on billboard.

The parallel band and fan paths of the new film will converge at the Galaxy Fanmade concert event, which took place on Tuesday night (May 7) at the AT&T Performing Arts Center in Dallas.

In a statement released with the news, Hello Sunshine’s head of unscripted Sara Rea said that the relationship between ENHYPEN and their fans makes for a particularly unique documentary creative experience. “The K-pop ecosphere embodies inclusivity in a way that is both inspiring and rich for storytelling. This heartfelt and joyful documentary showcases the beauty of coming together in a way that the world needs right now,” she said. “While we are accustomed to artists surprising audiences during their shows, watching these fans create unexpected and thoughtful experiences for the band is something we’ve never seen before.”

Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox

Want to know what everyone in the music business is talking about?

Get in the know on.

Billboard is a part of Penske Media Corporation. © 2024 Billboard Media, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

optional screen reader

Charts expand charts menu.

  • Billboard Hot 100™
  • Billboard 200™
  • Hits Of The World™
  • TikTok Billboard Top 50
  • Song Breaker
  • Year-End Charts
  • Decade-End Charts

Music Expand music menu

  • R&B/Hip-Hop

Videos Expand videos menu

Culture expand culture menu, media expand media menu, business expand business menu.

  • Business News
  • Record Labels
  • View All Pro

Pro Tools Expand pro-tools menu

  • Songwriters & Producers
  • Artist Index
  • Royalty Calculator
  • Market Watch
  • Industry Events Calendar

Billboard Español Expand billboard-espanol menu

  • Cultura y Entretenimiento

Get Up Anthems by Tres Expand get-up-anthems-by-tres menu

Honda music expand honda-music menu.

Quantcast

IMAGES

  1. Punk band Converge gains new fans after addressing rants on internet service

    converge band tour

  2. ArtStation

    converge band tour

  3. Converge Announce New 'The Dusk In Us' Album, Their First in Five Years

    converge band tour

  4. Converge Release New EP Beautiful Ruin: Listen

    converge band tour

  5. Punk band Converge gets complaints from Filipinos over internet woes

    converge band tour

  6. Converge band page on Truepunk

    converge band tour

VIDEO

  1. Converge being the best band ever for 3 minutes 31 seconds

  2. Converge live

  3. Converge

  4. Bizarre Love Triangle: New Order 2023 Tour

  5. Converge-Jane Doe (ending) theme by Eddie Wiseman Tokosh

  6. Converge

COMMENTS

  1. CONVERGE

    Kings Road. Deathwish Inc. Bandcamp. New Album 'Bloodmoon:I' Out Now On Epitaph Records.

  2. Converge Tickets, Tour Dates & Concerts 2025 & 2024

    Converge started as a band whose sound was strongly rooted in hardcore punk and Slayer theme riffs. They were quick to hone their focus and by 1991 they were cutting demos on a 4-track recorder and playing live concerts. The group released a total of four demos before putting out their first feature length album "Halo in a Haystack ...

  3. Converge Concerts & Live Tour Dates: 2024-2025 Tickets

    Got pushed. Dive of stage a few times. Converge is at the top of their game. Find tickets for Converge concerts near you. Browse 2024 tour dates, venue details, concert reviews, photos, and more at Bandsintown.

  4. Converge (band)

    Converge's first headlining tour in support of the album started in April 2010 with Coalesce, Harvey Milk, Gaza, Lewd Acts and Black Breath. Converge began the European part of their world tour in July 2010 with Kylesa, Gaza and Kvelertak. In July 2010 the band released a limited-edition 7-inch vinyl single, On My Shield. It was released in ...

  5. CONVERGE announce 2023 West Coast tour dates

    Tickets for the West Coast shows will go on sale July 14th. Check out Converge's full schedule of 2023 North American dates below. You can snag limited-edition Converge colored vinyl at Revolver' s shop. Converge 2023 Tour Dates: September 29 Los Angeles, CA @ Echoplex *. September 30 San Francisco, CA @ Neck of the Woods *.

  6. Converge Announce Fall 2023 North American Tour

    Below you can see a full list of Converge's 2023 tour dates, including the summer UK/European run. Get tickets to the North American shows here and the international gigs here. Converge's 2023 Tour Dates: 08/10 - Karlsruhe, DE @ P8. 08/11 - Kortrijk, BE @ Alcatraz. 08/12 - Bremen, DE @ Tivoli *.

  7. Converge Announce 2022 US Tour with Full of Hell, Uniform, Thou

    As for Converge, the veteran band took a cue from Thou and teamed up with Chelsea Wolfe for the excellent Bloodmoon: I collab LP — one of our top heavy albums of 2021. See the full list of dates for Converge's March tour below, and get tickets here. Converge's 2022 US Tour Dates with Full of Hell, Uniform, and Thou:

  8. Converge Full Tour Schedule 2022 & 2023, Tour Dates & Concerts

    Converge tour dates 2023. Converge is currently touring across 1 country and has 1 upcoming concert. The final concert of the tour will be at Depot Mayfield in Manchester. Currently touring across. ... Converge are the single most aggressive band I have witnessed live. The US hardcore veterans were more frantic and downright heavy than any ...

  9. Converge Announces Winter & Spring 2022 Tour Dates Featuring Full Of

    Punk rock fans get excited because Converge has just announced a new tour! The hardcore punk band Converge will headline several shows in the United States this year in the winter and spring ...

  10. Converge Tickets, 2024 Concert Tour Dates

    Find Converge tour schedule, concert details, reviews and photos. Buy Converge tickets from the official Ticketmaster.com site. Find Converge tour schedule, concert details, reviews and photos. ... the way that the band interacts with the crowd is incredible and the gratitude from the band for their fans is amazing so they put on an incredible ...

  11. Converge Announce Winter/Spring Tour With Full of Hell

    Converge's latest album is last year's Bloodmoon: I, the debut full-length from the band's expanded lineup with Chelsea Wolfe, Stephen Brodsky and Ben Chisholm, but the New England hardcore stalwarts will be stripping back to their core quartet for a string of U.S. headlining shows this winter and spring.Like-minded forward-thinking extremists Full of Hell, Uniform and Thou are set to join ...

  12. Converge Book March 2022 U.S. Tour

    Groundbreaking metalcore band Converge are announcing a 2022 tour. After their tour plans with Meshuggah were scrapped due to a "skin condition" on one of Meshuggah's members, Converge have regrouped.

  13. Converge announce US tour dates for March 2022

    Converge's 2022 US tour dates are: MARCH. Thursday 10 - Philadelphia, Underground Arts. Friday 11 - Baltimore, The Ottobar. Saturday 12 - Richmond, The Broadberry. Sunday 13 - Asheville ...

  14. Converge Announce 2022 US Tour with Full of Hell, Uniform, and Thou

    See the full list of dates for Converge's March tour below, and get tickets here. Converge's 2022 US Tour Dates with Full of Hell, Uniform, and Thou: 03/10 - Philadelphia, PA @ Underground Arts

  15. Converge announce tour with Full of Hell, Uniform, and Thou

    Converge have announced a headlining March tour with truly amazing support coming from Full of Hell, Uniform, and Thou.The band says "the order in which the support bands will appear will change ...

  16. Meshuggah Announce 2022 North American Tour with Converge

    Tickets go on sale this Friday July 2nd at 10 a.m. local time, and you can snag them here. Check out all the dates below. Meshuggah, Converge and Torche 2022 tour dates: 2/23 The Fillmore - Silver Spring MD. 2/24 Franklin Music Hall - Philadelphia PA. 2/25 Hammerstein Ballroom - New York, NY. 2/26 The Palladium - Worcester, MA.

  17. Turning 20: The Making of Converge's "Jane Doe"

    Converge will perform their seminal metallic hardcore classic, Jane Doe, in its entirety at Decibel Magazine Metal & Beer Fest: Los Angles on Friday, December 10.Tickets for the exclusive performance are still available, but are moving fast (tickets for their Jane Doe set at the Philly edition of Metal & Beer Fest are already sold out)!. In the time between acquiring tickets and waiting for ...

  18. Converge

    Converge. 267,509 likes · 468 talking about this. convergecult.com | twitter.com/convergecult | instagram.com/converge

  19. Converge

    Get the latest news on Converge, including song releases, album announcements, tour dates, festival appearances, and more. ... Meshuggah Reschedule 2022 US Tour Due to Health Issue Within Band. Converge are dropping off the bill due to a conflict with the new itinerary, but Torche are still on board. December 21, 2021.

  20. Converge Drop 2024 Latin American Tour Dates

    Beloved hardcore heroes Converge just dropped dates for an April run in Latin America next year. The tour will start April 20 in Mexico City, MX and end in São Paulo, BR on April 27, hitting a few dates on their short run. 04/20 Mexico City, MX @ Foro Veintiocho. 04/21 San José, CR @ Casa Rojas. 04/23 Bogotá, CK @ Zona 16.

  21. Converge announce first Converge Bloodmoon UK/EU tour

    By Liz Scarlett. ( Metal Hammer ) published 11 March 2022. Converge Bloodmoon have shared details of their summer UK/EU tour. (Image credit: Emily Birds) Off the back of their highly acclaimed album, Bloodmoon: I last year, Converge have announced their first UK/EU tour with Chelsea Wolfe under their collaborative project title Converge Bloodmoon.

  22. Converge announce Southeast Asia Tour 2024

    Converge has shared details for a Southeast Asia run scheduled for May after the band wraps up their Latin America tour in April. Tickets available here. CONVERGE Upcoming Shows: 04/20 Mexico City, México. 04/21 San José, Costa Rica. 04/23 Bogotá, Colombia. 04/25 Santiago, Chile.

  23. Limp Bizkit tour, Welcome to Rockville, Gen Y converge in Day 2 closer

    Rockville: Gen Y, Fred Durst reconcile, rock out in festival-defining Limp Bizkit set. DAYTONA BEACH — Fred Durst basked in front of a mammoth, Day 2-closing crowd on the Apex Stage at Welcome ...

  24. ENHYPEN Announce Fan-Focused Doucmentary 'FANMADE: ENHYPEN'

    The parallel band and fan paths of the new film will converge at the Galaxy Fanmade concert event, which took place on Tuesday night (May 7) at the AT&T Performing Arts Center in Dallas.