Whitechapel - Headliners Music Hall (Louisville, KY)
Schedule
Wed, 13 May, 2026 at 08:00 pm
UTC-04:00Location
Headliners Music Hall | Louisville, KY
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WhitechapelWednesday, May 13
8:00 PM (7:00 PM Doors)
18 and over
Headliners Music Hall
Louisville, KY
Tickets are on sale Friday, January 30 at 10am đď¸--> https://tixr.com/e/159128
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WHITECHAPEL - Hymns in Dissonance: March 07, 2025 release
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Hymns in Dissonance, indeed: âNo holds barred; there is nothing nice about HID, from the riffs to the lyrics to the overall vibe of the album,â states guitarist Alex Wade. âWe attempted to write our heaviest album to date. We wanted to put out something that was shockingly menacing and brutal.â
âThe album follows the story of a cultist who is gathering worthy people to join his cult,â Wade furthers, âand there are moments in the storyline where the cult followers are singing an evil hymn to open a portal for the head cultist to enter.â The bandâs dynamic, brutal musicality serves as a soundtrack to the compelling lyrical story that vocalist Phil Bozeman vividly imagines.
âHymns in Dissonance is a mockery of the true nature of what hymns are,â Bozeman explains. âHymns are melodious and harmonious. Dissonance is the opposite of melody and harmony. Dissonance represents evil. The tracks on the record are the hymns, which represent the seven deadly sins, beginning from Track 3 to Track 10. Tracks one and two are the introduction.â
The lineupâs timely and terrifying vision was first unveiled in Fall 2024 with the single âA Visceral Retchâ inciting frenzied fans to call the song âa version of Whitechapel we have never heard before. Canât explain how absolutely goddamn brutal this song is. This is a total dream come true.â The title track is the LPâs second single.
Whitechapel, who formed in Knoxville, Tennessee, in 2006, has seen the core lineupâvocalist Phill Bozeman; guitarists Ben Savage, Zach Householder and Alex Wade; bassist Gabe Crispâintact since 2007, with the exception of the drummer Brandon Zackey, who has been playing with the band since 2022. While Hymns in Dissonance follows 2021âs Kin chronologically, the new album is actually somewhat of a sequel to This is Exile thematically, the three-word title Hymns in Dissonance representing that correlation.
Whitechapel started writing for the new album at Householderâs studio in June of 2023, following the bandâs headlining tour for The Valley. Whitechapel stuck to a strict weekday schedule, the structure allowing for maximum creativity and minimum burnout. Householder produced Hymns in Dissonance, which allowed the musicians to seamlessly switch gears from preproduction to recording the full album without skipping a beat. The guitarist shadowed producer Mark Lewis a lot over the last five Whitechapel albums and bringing that influence inside the band is a âfull circle moment for Householder and Whitechapel. âItâs cool that we can be self-sufficient and produce a record of this magnitude ourselves; not a lot of bands can say that.â
Every detail on HID matters. âWith song sequencing we like to try to make our albums as dynamic as possible,â Wade says. âWe like to give the records a roller-coaster effect toggling the energy of the tracks up and down to keep the listener interested.â It was likewise critical that the album art tied into the music in a visceral, provocative way, or has Bozeman put it, âsomething simple but unsettling with a very classic feel. But not over the top with too many things to look at.â Guitarist Savage mocked up ideas for an eerie mask that would represent the cult leader in the albumâs story. Whitechapel chose artist Rob Borbas, the European tattoo artist known as âGrind Design,â to create the cover. âHe specializes in dark/cryptic tattoos, and we felt he would be able to take Savageâs idea with the mask and bring it to life,â Whitechapel explains. âHe certainly met our expectations with a dark, evil, ominous piece that makes you question âwhat is that?â when you look at it. We wanted the cover to be mysterious until you know more about the story of the album and how the cover applies to it.â Hymns in Dissonance sees the band reinventing themselves, going darker, deeper and heavier. While the songs all stand powerfully on their own, the throughline Bozeman says that âmore than likely there will be a tour where we play the album from front to back.â
Longtime fans will detect hints of the past within the brutality. To wit: the riff-tastic âHate Cult Ritualâ is the only song on the album with Drop A tuning, the tuning the first three Whitechapel albums used. Additionally, the Hymns in Dissonance chapter in Bozemanâs life finds the frontman living through his âpast times,â or as he states, âthe music that brought me here. Brutal, dark, aggressive, heavy music. Death metal, black metal, speed metal, etc. I truly believe that your roots call you back at some point in your life and this is that point in my life.â
Vocally, the recording process allowed Bozeman to achieve all his goals. âRecording was on our time, so if I wasn't feeling it on a certain day, then Iâd just stop, reset and go again the following day. I honed in more on the progression of the screaming vocals that Iâm known for,â the singer says. âI really reworked my high vocals and tried some new different types of tones with my voice. Basically, a new-age feel to a classic sound.â
At this stage in the game, the name Whitechapel commands the ultimate respect. Already sitting on one of the most enviable catalogs in contemporary metal, in 2019 they dropped The Valley, highlighting a confident evolution in their sound and standing as a true landmark release that sets a new standard for the genre. With Bozeman exploring childhood trauma on 2019âs The Valley, it was their darkest release to-date. But with its 2021 successor, Kin, the story was darker still.
With those chapters of Bozemanâs life exorcised lyrically, Hymns in Dissonance mines a darkness thatâs not lyrically personal. And, says Wade, âI don't think HID follows Kin musically at all. If anything, it's the polar opposite. For this album it was fun to be able to just let loose and write ignorantly heavy music again. This album stands on its own,â Wade concludes. âPhil was able to create a fresh story to write about, which, in turn, helped us write music with a fresher sound.â
Lineup:
Phil Bozeman â Vocals
Ben Savage â Guitar
Zach Householder â Guitar
Alex Wade â Guitar
Gabe Crisp â Bass
Brandon Zackey â Drums
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Where is it happening?
Headliners Music Hall, 1386 Lexington Rd, Louisville, KY 40206-1927, United StatesEvent Location & Nearby Stays:
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