Latest news with #GivesYouHell


NBC News
5 days ago
- Entertainment
- NBC News
Forget stadiums. These rockers may be coming to a back yard near you
The All-American Rejects are bringing back the house party. The rock band, who topped the charts in the early 2000s such with hits as 'Move Along' and 'Gives You Hell,' is popping up, playing surprise shows in small venues across the country. So far, the concert spots have included a backyard near the University of Missouri in Columbia, a barn in Ames, Iowa, and a Minneapolis bowling alley. The band's frontman, Tyson Ritter, said the musicians 'wanted to get back to the spirit of what started this band.' Shortly before each surprise show, the location is sent to fans in the area who have signed up for the band's text messages. With concert ticket prices skyrocketing, it's a novel approach to making live music accessible to fans. The band's drummer, Chris Gaylor, said he hopes the shows make fans 'excited to go to a show again and see it's possible to see something without having to pay exorbitant money.' Videos of the shows have been flooding social media. Some, taking to TikTok, offering up their back yards for potential future shows. The non-traditional tour has been widely well-received, though police appeared to shut down one event in Missouri. 'This thing got bigger than our band,' Ritter said. 'This thing became something, I guess, in the last week that spoke to people, and hit a nerve.'


New York Post
26-05-2025
- Entertainment
- New York Post
All-American Rejects backyard concert shut down by cops
It ends tonight — or does it? The All-American Rejects' unorthodox concert in the backyard of a house near the University of Missouri in Columbia on May 18 was shut down by police. But one of the officers who's a fan of the band let them play one last song to wrap up the night. Advertisement 8 Mike Kennerty, Nick Wheeler, Tyson Ritter and Chris Gaylor attend the Allstate Party at the Playoff in Houston in January 2024. Getty Images for ESPN In a 10-minute video of the concert, the band were performing their 2005 hit 'Move Along' when bandleader Tyson Ritter told his bandmates and the crowd, 'Alright guys. Whoa, whoa whoa. We've gotta stop it.' 'The cops just shut us down,' Ritter, 41, added. 'Sorry, y'all. We just got kicked off campus.' Advertisement 8 The All-American Rejects perform in a Missouri college town on May 18. The All-American Rejects/Youtube 8 Police shut down an All-American Rejects backyard concert. The All-American Rejects/Youtube The crowd booed as the band stopped their performance and Ritter disappeared from the backyard. As the audience chanted 'f–k the police,' Ritter returned and told everyone, 'They said we can play one more f—ing song! We get one more song!' Advertisement After the crowd cheered, Ritter said, 'I haven't done this in a long time, but I'd really like to thank the local police for letting us f—ing keep carrying on.' 8 The All-American Rejects play one last song at the house party. The All-American Rejects/Youtube 8 Tyson Ritter performs at the Innings Festival 2025. WireImage 'Holy s–t. How often do you get a blessing from an officer?' Ritter continued. 'Well, I guess we've got one more song for you, and I'll give you 1 million guesses to guess which one. You might recognize it.' Advertisement The band then performed their 2008 hit 'Gives You Hell' for the final song of the night. 8 Tyson Ritter, Chris Gaylor, Mike Kennerty, and Nick Wheeler of The All-American Rejects at KIIS FM's 12th Annual Wango Tango 2009. Getty Images 'Thank you so much for coming out you guys,' Ritter told the crowd. 'Get home safely because the man let us keep playing. You take care, Columbia. Congrats on the graduations.' Mark Fitzgerald, the Columbia Police Department's assistant chief of police, told CNN that the band, their security staff and the crowd were 'very cooperative' with officials — despite that the concert was 'in violation of several local ordinances.' 8 The All-American Rejects perform at the Hollywood and Highland Courtyard in 2008. Getty Images Fitzgerald said that the officers who responded to the scene 'listened to a couple of songs' before the patrol sergeant told the band of the rules they were breaking. But the sergeant also informed the band that they could play one more song before they ended the concert. 'The Sergeant told me that he knew exactly who the band was and listened to them a lot while he was in college,' Fitzgerald shared. 'The Police Department would be happy to have the All-American Rejects return and play in Columbia, hopefully with the proper permits and approval.' Advertisement 8 Chris Gaylor, Mike Kennerty, Tyson Ritter and Nick Wheeler of The All-American Rejects in a portrait for the 2006 MTV Video Music Awards. WireImage The All-American Rejects — which includes Ritter, lead guitarist Nick Wheeler, rhythm guitarist Mike Kennerty and drummer Chris Gaylor — have been on a house party tour where they've stopped at several college towns to perform at backyard parties. They already visited the University of Southern California and the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay.


USA Today
22-05-2025
- Entertainment
- USA Today
All-American Rejects singer answers burning questions about those viral pop-up shows
All-American Rejects singer answers burning questions about those viral pop-up shows Show Caption Hide Caption Watch as All-American Rejects perform surprise show Less than 30 hours after the show was announced, hundreds attended the All-American Rejects' surprise show in Green Bay, Wisconsin. It was after a 2022 performance in Las Vegas that the All-American Rejects realized it might be time for a comeback. Frontman and bassist Tyson Ritter acknowledges the band responsible for guitar-chiming emo-pop earworms 'Swing Swing,' 'Move Along,' 'Gives You Hell' didn't really take their gig at the When We Were Young festival too seriously. Ritter and bandmates Nick Wheeler (lead guitar), Mike Kennerty (rhythm guitar) and Chris Gaylor (drums) all dressed as Elvis Presley. They were playing opposite topline artists Paramore and Death Cab for Cutie. Yet 30,000 fans crammed in front of their secondary stage singing not just the ingrained hits, but deep album cuts as well. 'I was crying,' Ritter, 41, says. 'We all left with collective goosebumps of, maybe we should do this again.' And they are. For the past week, AAR have stormed barns, bowling alleys and backyards – places suggested by fans on their Instagram – for a series of free pop-up concerts. Notice is short, but response has been overwhelming. Crowds are filled with millennials who appreciated their spiky pop the first time and college kids eager to experience a viral tsunami. The band recently released 'Sandbox,' the first single from their first album in almost 14 years and will tour more conventionally starting Aug. 10 as openers on the Jonas Brothers' stadium tour. A few hours before storming Nashville with a secret location concert, a humble Ritter talked about the 'comet' the band has been on and why he is beside himself 'with gratitude' before ultimately declaring, 'I guess I have a horseshoe up my (rear-end) right now.' More: Kendrick Lamar: Not like anyone else Question: So how did this idea to play in backyards and barns originate? Answer: We did a show in LA that was the kind that you have to do when promoting new music. It left a sour taste in our mouths and in this giant gorilla of an industry we're clawing our way back into, we decided to put on a show the next day. Our manager had the idea to have the local college radio station host us. We gave a five-hour heads up that we were playing a kid's house at University of Southern California and we start playing and there were 40s (alcohol cans) hoisted in the air and people crowd surfing. I looked into some of their eyes and I saw a rite of passage moment was happening. That they're going, 'I saw pictures of my parents doing this, but I never got to.' The only culture most of them had was EDM and that environment is so different from rock. We were lifting that veil for kids. And then you kept on going? My wife (Elina) is due on June 11 and we saw a hole in the calendar this month and said, let's do this again. It was really the brainchild of our manager (Megan Kraemer). She's 29 and has inspired such energy in the band. The first show was in Green Bay and it started this wildfire. Honestly, we're in the Icarus moment. You seem really excited about everything happening. It feels incredible and indescribable right now. It's from this hope to have something to say again as a band and present to an audience we didn't resonate with anywhere but radio and MTV. We never had the culture that a lot of bands of our time did, like Blink-182 with fashion and skate culture. So to be able to put out new music and find our footing as a band with this activation, I'm so beside myself with gratitude. We've always been the 'songs that have that band' and now we can be 'that band that has those songs.' There is a lot of online discussion from the generation that grew up with you that the band returning is a comfort in an exhausting world. Do you feel that way? No, I mean anything you do with intention, especially writing music, you're asking for a failed experience. If we would have planned this any more than the sketch that it was designed in, it would have felt really false. We're just holding onto a comet right now. What are the biggest and smallest crowds you've played for so far? The biggest was 5,000 in Ames, Iowa, and the smallest was probably Chicago. We were in a backyard where the capacity was 120 so I walked over to the neighbor and said, 'I want to buy 45 minutes in your yard, what will it cost?' He was shaking me down (laughs). He wanted $750. I said how about $500 and after haggling we landed on $600 and got about 400 people to fit. It was a suburban area so it was people coming from the backyards around us, sitting on porches. Everything has been so cinematic. You also got a visit from the police during the house party in Columbia, Missouri. (Laughs) Oh yeah, that was great. We had heard that the police there were really firm with the college kids and when five cop cars showed up my manager had this face of doom. I walked offstage and our guitarist did this (gives a thumbs-down with both hands) and everyone booed so loudly that I said to the police, 'If you want everyone to get out of here peacefully, let us finish.' One cop was like, 'We didn't know it was YOU!' I said 'thank you, officer,' and we did 'Gives You Hell' and got out! But it's that kind of positive energy that is following us. More: Bono talks revealing film, new U2 music: 'It's time to face the future and dance' What are the criteria for where you're going to play once you get the requests on Instagram? The bigger the yard, the better. The more removed from town, the better. Roller skating rinks are welcome. I really want to play a roller skating rink. I can picture (the skating move) shooting the duck while doing 'Gives You Hell.' The new video for 'Sandbox' is such campy fun. Where did you get the idea for murderous puppets? We're DIY right now. We're not on a major label so we're boot strapping it all. My manager found (director) Joseph Kahn's info on LinkedIn. He's done videos for everyone (Britney Spears, Imagine Dragons, Backstreet Boys) and he pitched an idea that really resonated with the single. The song is about a war on a playground and … needed to be paired with something that speaks to childhood innocence and he said, 'How about murderous puppets?' When is the full album due? January. Since it's such a DIY thing, every chance to release a song is a microphone. So we'll release a new song every few weeks until the Jonas Brothers tour. So how did that pairing come about? I met them at an activation in New Jersey and was really taken aback by their professionalism and hard work. I think they played eight shows that day for their fans and I knew they were fans of ours, but I went in kind of blind and quickly realized, these guys are top shelf. Playing stadiums will be a big swing from playing house parties. Do you think you'll have to do much physical preparation? Playing a backyard stage is a perfect size. MetLife (Stadium) in August … (laughs). Keeping up with the Jonas Brothers, man, I'm going to have to jump on a treadmill. We'll be traveling with ointments. Which is probably a little different than your tours back in the day. Yeah, back then we were sleeping in vans and our bones were made of rubber.


USA Today
21-05-2025
- Entertainment
- USA Today
All American Rejects singer answers burning questions about those viral pop-up shows
All American Rejects singer answers burning questions about those viral pop-up shows Show Caption Hide Caption Watch as All-American Rejects perform surprise show Less than 30 hours after the show was announced, hundreds attended the All-American Rejects' surprise show in Green Bay, Wisconsin. It was after a 2022 performance in Las Vegas that the All-American Rejects realized it might be time for a comeback. Frontman and bassist Tyson Ritter acknowledges the band responsible for guitar-chiming emo-pop earworms 'Swing Swing,' 'Move Along,' 'Gives You Hell' didn't really take their gig at the When We Were Young festival too seriously. Ritter and bandmates Nick Wheeler (lead guitar), Mike Kennerty (rhythm guitar) and Chris Gaylor (drums) all dressed as Elvis Presley. They were playing opposite topline artists Paramore and Death Cab for Cutie. Yet 30,000 fans crammed in front of their secondary stage singing not just the ingrained hits, but deep album cuts as well. 'I was crying,' Ritter, 41, says. 'We all left with collective goosebumps of, maybe we should do this again.' And they are. For the past week, AAR have stormed barns, bowling alleys and backyards – places suggested by fans on their Instagram – for a series of pop-up concerts. Notice is short, but response has been overwhelming. Crowds are filled with millennials who appreciated their spiky pop the first time and college kids eager to experience a viral tsunami. The band recently released 'Sandbox,' the first single from their first album in almost 14 years and will tour more conventionally starting Aug. 10 as openers on the Jonas Brothers' stadium tour. A few hours before storming Nashville with a secret location concert, a humble Ritter talked about the 'comet' the band has been on and why he is beside himself 'with gratitude' before ultimately declaring, 'I guess I have a horseshoe up my (rear-end) right now.' More: Kendrick Lamar: Not like anyone else Question: So how did this idea to play in backyards and barns originate? Answer: We did a show in LA that was the kind that you have to do when promoting new music. It left a sour taste in our mouths and in this giant gorilla of an industry we're clawing our way back into, we decided to put on a show the next day. Our manager had the idea to have the local college radio station host us. We gave a five-hour heads up that we were playing a kid's house at University of Southern California and we start playing and there were 40s (alcohol cans) hoisted in the air and people crowd surfing. I looked into some of their eyes and I saw a rite of passage moment was happening. That they're going, 'I saw pictures of my parents doing this, but I never got to.' The only culture most of them had was EDM and that environment is so different from rock. We were lifting that veil for kids. And then you kept on going? My wife is due on June 11 and we saw a hole in the calendar this month and I said, let's do this again. It was really her brainchild. She's 29 and has inspired such energy in the band. The first show was in Green Bay and it started this wildfire. Honestly, we're in the Icarus moment. You seem really excited about everything happening. It feels incredible and indescribable right now. It's from this hope to have something to say again as a band and present to an audience we didn't resonate with anywhere but radio and MTV. We never had the culture that a lot of bands of our time did, like Blink-182 with fashion and skate culture. So to be able to put out new music and find our footing as a band with this activation, I'm so beside myself with gratitude. We've always been the 'songs that have that band' and now we can be 'that band that has those songs.' There is a lot of online discussion from the generation that grew up with you that the band returning is a comfort in an exhausting world. Do you feel that way? No, I mean anything you do with intention, especially writing music, you're asking for a failed experience. If we would have planned this any more than the sketch that it was designed in, it would have felt really false. We're just holding onto a comet right now. What are the biggest and smallest crowds you've played for so far? The biggest was 5,000 in Ames, Iowa, and the smallest was probably Chicago. We were in a backyard where the capacity was 120 so I walked over to the neighbor and said, 'I want to buy 45 minutes in your yard, what will it cost?' He was shaking me down (laughs). He wanted $750. I said how about $500 and after haggling we landed on $600 and got about 400 people to fit. It was a suburban area so it was people coming from the backyards around us, sitting on porches. Everything has been so cinematic. You also got a visit from the police during the house party in Columbia, Missouri. (Laughs) Oh yeah, that was great. We had heard that the police there were really firm with the college kids and when five cop cars showed up my manager had this face of doom. I walked offstage and our guitarist did this (gives a thumbs-down with both hands) and everyone booed so loudly that I said to the police, 'If you want everyone to get out of here peacefully, let us finish.' One cop was like, 'We didn't know it was YOU!' I said 'thank you, officer,' and we did 'Gives You Hell' and got out! But it's that kind of positive energy that is following us. More: Bono talks revealing film, new U2 music: 'It's time to face the future and dance' What are the criteria for where you're going to play once you get the requests on Instagram? The bigger the yard, the better. The more removed from town, the better. Roller skating rinks are welcome. I really want to play a roller skating rink. I can picture (the skating move) shooting the duck while doing 'Gives You Hell.' The new video for 'Sandbox' is such campy fun. Where did you get the idea for murderous puppets? We're DIY right now. We're not on a major label so we're boot strapping it all. My manager found (director) Joseph Kahn's info on LinkedIn. He's done videos for everyone (Britney Spears, Imagine Dragons, Backstreet Boys) and he pitched an idea that really resonated with the single. The song is about a war on a playground and … needed to be paired with something that speaks to childhood innocence and he said, 'How about murderous puppets?' When is the full album due? January. Since it's such a DIY thing, every chance to release a song is a microphone. So we'll release a new song every few weeks until the Jonas Brothers tour. So how did that pairing come about? I met them at an activation in New Jersey and was really taken aback by their professionalism and hard work. I think they played eight shows that day for their fans and I knew they were fans of ours, but I went in kind of blind and quickly realized, these guys are top shelf. Playing stadiums will be a big swing from playing house parties. Do you think you'll have to do much physical preparation? Playing a backyard stage is a perfect size. MetLife (Stadium) in August … (laughs). Keeping up with the Jonas Brothers, man, I'm going to have to jump on a treadmill. We'll be traveling with ointments. Which is probably a little different than your tours back in the day. Yeah, back then we were sleeping in vans and our bones were made of rubber.
Yahoo
04-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
All-American Rejects to headline 50th annual Penn State festival
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (WTAJ) — Penn State's Movin' On music festival is returning in May for its 50th year, and along with it comes several popular artists and a limited edition ice cream flavor. The Movin' On festival will take place on May 2 at the Intramural (IM) Fields. This year's festival will feature the headline performer All-American Rejects with famous songs like 'Dirty Little Secret' and 'Gives You Hell.' Other artists include Pusha T, Baby Tate, Claire Rosinkranz and Battle 2025 winner Fez. The festival will continue to be free of charge and is an 18+ festival for all Penn State students. Attendees will be required to have a Penn State ID or government-issued ID. The festival has a specific bag policy and provides parking at several locations. You can learn more about those on the Movin' On festival website. 16th annual run to raise money for Special Olympics Pennsylvania Taking the stage first will be the winner of Battle, a competition where Penn State student performers vie for the opening slot at the festival. Fez, who was the 2025 winner, is a dynamic band blending diverse influences into their signature 'scuba rock' sound. Next, Claire Rosinkranz, presented by the Student Programming Association, will take the stage. Following these acts, Baby Tate will take the stage. Baby Tate is an Atlanta-based rapper, singer, songwriter, and producer. Following that performance, Grammy-nominated Pusha T will take to the stage. Lastly, All-American Rejects will cap off the night. Items that will not be allowed at the festival: No smoking, drugs or alcohol Noisemakers and laser pointers Umbrellas Chairs and camping equipment No professional cameras Pets Weapons of any kind As the festival is celebrating 50 years the Berkey Creamery has announced a temporary flavor to coincide with the milestone. 'Mooovin` On 50th Anniversary Cookies & Cream' will be available from April 4 to May 4. More information about the festival can be found on the Movin' On website. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.