All Them Witches Tour Tickets | 2025

Nashville’s All Them Witches fuse heavy psych, blues-rock, and desert atmospherics into hypnotic jams and towering dynamics. Expect fuzz-drenched riffs, trancey grooves, and widescreen improvisations that make every show feel singular. Grab your All Them Witches concert tickets.
Tour Dates and Cities
What to Expect at a All Them Witches Tour Concert
All Them Witches gigs move from hushed, slow-burn builds to seismic climaxes, blending precision with free-flowing improvisation.
- Thunderous, fuzz-forward guitar tones anchored by deep, hypnotic bass grooves.
- Long-form songs that stretch and morph with improvised sections and fluid segues.
- Keys and Rhodes textures (and occasional violin) adding eerie, cinematic color.
- Setlists drawing across eras—from Lightning at the Door to Nothing as the Ideal and recent singles.
- Minimal stage banter; momentum-driven pacing that feels like one continuous suite.
- Dynamic contrasts: quiet incantations exploding into towering, stoner-psych crescendos.
- Occasional multi-night runs focused on full-album performances in select cities.
- Visuals that favor moody lighting and silhouette over big screens or pyrotechnics.
- Tasteful tempo shifts—from desert-blues swagger to kraut-tinged, motorik pulses.
- Extended codas on fan favorites that make each night’s version unique.
The Most Popular Songs of All Them Witches
- “When God Comes Back” (2013): swampy, sermon-like psych-blues that became an underground calling card from Lightning at the Door.
- “Am I Going Up?” (2017): vaporous melodies and space-rock drift, a centerpiece of Sleeping Through the War.
- “The Marriage of Coyote Woman” (2013): desert folklore and heavy riff cycles that bloom into an epic mid-set surge.
- “Diamond” (2018): a slow, cinematic burner from ATW with widescreen guitar lines.
- “41” (2020): brooding, riff-forward standout from Nothing as the Ideal cut at Abbey Road’s Studio Two.
- “Open Passageways” (2015): hushed harmonies and dusty Americana hues on Dying Surfer Meets His Maker.
- “Charles William” (2013): chant-like groove and stacked guitars that have become a fan-favorite live surge.
- “The Children of Coyote Woman” (2020): mythic storytelling and minor-key tension that lingers well after the last note.
- “1X1” (2019): a standalone single—heavier, darker, and tailor-made for the live room.
- “Workhorse” (2018): driving, riffy momentum from ATW that showcases the band’s tight, muscular swing.
The Most Popular All Them Witches Video
The Children of Coyote Woman (2020) is the band’s most-viewed official video, directed by drummer/visual artist Robby Staebler and starring pro skater Evan Smith. The clip reimagines the founding-of-Rome myth through a Southern lens, echoing themes woven into the song’s lyrics and the album Nothing as the Ideal. Released ahead of the Abbey Road–recorded LP, the video’s stark, folkloric imagery mirrors the track’s tense, ritual pulse and has become a visual touchstone for the band’s modern era.
All Them Witches Bio & Rise to Fame
All Them Witches — Nashville-born heavy-psych/blues-rock explorers with a reputation for immersive, improvisational shows.
- Origin: Nashville, Tennessee; formed in 2012 by Charles Michael Parks Jr., Ben McLeod, and Robby Staebler.
- Lineup: Charles Michael Parks Jr. (bass/vocals), Ben McLeod (guitar), Allan Van Cleave (keys/violin); Christian Powers joined on drums for touring in 2024.
- Genres: psychedelic rock, blues-rock, stoner/acid rock with neo-psychedelic overtones.
- Breakthrough: self-released Lightning at the Door (2013) built a cult following before a 2016 reissue.
- Label era: signed to New West Records in 2015 and issued Dying Surfer Meets His Maker the same year.
- Next steps: Sleeping Through the War (2017) and the self-titled ATW (2018) expanded their palette and audience.
- Abbey Road session: Nothing as the Ideal (2020) was tracked at Studio Two, yielding “The Children of Coyote Woman” and “41.”
- Singles series: their 2022 “Baker’s Dozen” project released new tracks monthly across the year.
- Live documents: releases include Live in Brussels (2016) and Live on the Internet (2021/2022).
Fascinating Insights About All Them Witches’s Tours
Across clubs, theaters, and festival bills, All Them Witches mix album-deep cuts with improvisations and special-format runs.
- In 2023 they staged a “three nights, three records” tour performing Lightning at the Door, Dying Surfer Meets His Maker, and Sleeping Through the War in full across consecutive nights.
- Those residencies hit intimate rooms like Chicago’s Empty Bottle, NYC’s Saint Vitus, SF’s Bottom of the Hill, Seattle’s Tractor Tavern, LA’s Troubadour, Austin’s Antone’s, and Denver’s Bluebird.
- They captured a 2020 livestream as the triple-LP/CD release Live on the Internet, showcasing extended, jam-forward arrangements.
- The 2020 studio album Nothing as the Ideal was recorded at Abbey Road’s Studio Two, a detail often highlighted around tour cycles for that material.
- In April 2024, founding drummer Robby Staebler departed; the band continued touring with Fortune Child’s Christian Powers on drums.
- The band’s 2022 “Baker’s Dozen” singles project (“Slow City,” “Acid Face,” and more) fed setlists on subsequent tours.
- KEXP’s in-studio sessions (most recently April 14, 2023) offer a reliable snapshot of their live dynamics between tour legs.
- Official channels and the Tour page announce rolling dates globally, from U.S. theater runs to European festival stops.
- Multi-night stands and full-album shows remain a signature format that deepens fan engagement city by city.
- Live releases like Live in Brussels (2016) and Live on the Internet document the band’s evolving stage chemistry.
All Them Witches Ticket Buying Tips
Plan ahead to secure the best locations and prices for All Them Witches’ atmospheric, high-demand club and theater shows.
- Follow the official Tour page and social feeds for on-sale times, venue upgrades, and added shows.
- Join venue/promoter email lists in nearby cities to snag presale codes and early inventory.
- Use interactive seat maps: front-center for immersion; raised tiers/balcony for balanced mix clarity.
- Consider weeknight dates, which can be less competitive and occasionally cheaper.
- Target GA floor if you prefer being close to the amps and dynamic crescendos.
- Review any VIP or early-entry offerings only via official outlets; avoid unverified sellers.
- If sold out, choose reputable resale with buyer guarantees and compare all-in prices (fees included).
- Check door and start times closely—ATW’s pacing rewards catching the first notes and transitions.
- Bundle parking or public transit options offered by the venue to streamline arrival and exit.
- Set price alerts around the primary on-sale to benchmark dynamic pricing vs. resale trends.
All Them Witches’s Concert Testimonials
Fans praise the band’s trance-like grooves, tectonic dynamics, and album-deep journeys.
- “Sounded like one seamless trip—massive crescendos, zero filler.” — Attendee, Chicago
- “Heavy, hypnotic, and somehow intimate in a big room.” — Attendee, London
- “The jams breathed and the riffs hit like a freight train.” — Attendee, Denver
- “Keys and violin textures turned the theater into a dreamscape.” — Attendee, Amsterdam
- “Three nights, three albums—each one felt totally different.” — Attendee, New York
- “They stretched favorites into new shapes without losing the hook.” — Attendee, Austin
- “Minimal chatter, maximum momentum—pure immersion.” — Attendee, Seattle
- “I left humming melodies and feeling the kick in my chest.” — Attendee, Los Angeles
- “A masterclass in tension-and-release.” — Attendee, Boston
- “The encore swell was worth the ticket alone.” — Attendee, Paris