Silverstein 10 Years of: “This is How the Wind Shifts” Tour

Thu Nov 23 2023

6:30 PM (Doors 6:30 PM)

The Opera House

735 Queen Street East Toronto, ON M4M 1H1

$46.48

All Ages

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For more information and show listings, visit Embrace Presents at www.embracepresents.com

This is an All Ages event.

Service fees include a $3.00 facility fee.

Net Capacity: 950

Embrace Presents
Silverstein 10 Years of: “This is How the Wind Shifts” Tour

  • Silverstein

    Silverstein

    Rock

    Few bands on their 22nd lap around the scene could claim to be in “just getting started” mode as much as punk stalwarts Silverstein.
     
    The release of their tenth studio album, Misery Made Me, finds the group spring boarding off the heights they’ve reached over the past handful of years; their latest album (2020’s A Beautiful Place To Drown) adding 80 Million streams to a mind-numbing career total of 500 Million; it collecting a nomination for Rock Album Of The Year at the esteemed Juno Awards; and its most recent headliner selling out nearly every date in elite rooms.
     
    In bringing Misery Made Me to life Silverstein have continued to build on their already-wide reaching impact. Immersing themselves in new technologies like TikTok, Discord, NFTs, the metaverse and Twitch (even holding public writing sessions with fans over the latter) during its formation, the band have confirmed their unique ability to adapt and connect in all cycles of their career.
     
    Interestingly, amid all the positivity and connectivity injected into its creation there comes a dark set of themes underpinning the album, as its title might suggest. Inspired by the past two years, Misery Made Me is a depiction of Silverstein – and world at large’s – collective turmoil, frustration, and anxiety.
     
    “I wanted to explore the meaning of ‘Misery’ as a main theme throughout the album,” says vocalist Shane Told. “Despite the mountains climbed and boulders pushed during recent years, we were confronted by the weight and misery of staying relatively in the same place for a long period of time. Finding peace in the reality of this misery became important. The record is about the acceptance of a new reality and adapting to it.”
     
    Ultimately, Misery Made Me finds the band trying to navigate the ever-worsening challenges of our modern world – angst, doomscrolling, and disassociation. It’s a record that is a product of the moment in time in which it was created yet doesn’t feel like it will date itself anytime soon, as many of its topics of loneliness, anxiety and isolation are eternal human struggles.
     
  • Stray From the Path

    Stray From the Path

    Metalcore

    Long Island, NY hardcore heavyweights Stray From The Path are back and they've announced their new album, Euthanasia. Due out September 9th via UNFD, Euthanasia is the darkest and heaviest work of the band's career, drawing on challenging circumstances to create a record that pulls no punches sonically or lyrically.

    To mark the announcement, Stray From The Path have shared their vicious new single, "III." The track follows early single "Guillotine," and utilizes the band's signature blend of groove-laden guitarwork, intricate-yet-pummeling drums, and socially-conscious lyricism--but now packing an ominously crushing chorus that demonstrates some of the brooding new atmospheric elements present on Euthanasia.

    The band discussed the new song, saying: "We've always used our songs as an outlet to speak against oppression. It's been close to 10 years, and now our third installment of the Badge & A Bullet series entitled 'III' has the same target. Policing in the United States has always been rooted in racism, hate & violence. Public funding for police departments has skyrocketed since the 1980s. The US now spends more than twice as much on police as it does social welfare programs. Many major cities spend over a third of their budgets on police. Despite the hundreds of billions of federal, state & local money poured into police departments & the corrections industry every year, there is little oversight. The outcomes have been fucking horseshit.

    "Over 1,000 people are killed every year by the police but despite comprising only 13% of the population, nearly half of all people killed by police are Black. Less than 1% of police officers who kill someone on the job are prosecuted. To be perfectly clear: there is no crime in this country where the punishment is execution on the spot extrajudicially by a cop. The idea of justice in this country is a fucking joke. The only protecting and serving the police do in this country is protecting the wealthy, the powerful & capitalist interests while subjugating the marginalized & the working class."

    Stray From The Path have been bringing their charged-up hardcore fury and politically outspoken lyricism to the masses for the better part of two decades, aiming to be the kind of band that can be a gateway to both heavy music and radical ideas. While the long-running group shows no signs of slowing down, Euthanasia was by no means an easy record to make. Stray From The Path found themselves in a fractured state due to the pandemic, an ocean of distance, and even a literal broken back, resulting in an album that reflects the grimmer personal and global circumstances.

    Produced/engineered by Will Putney (Knocked Loose, Body Count, Every Time I Die), Euthanasia is clearly the work of a more weathered and visceral era of Stray From The Path--the tremendous riffs and hip-hop-meets-hardcore vocal cadences are still there, but this time they're accompanied by an apocalyptic mood that draws the listener in and doesn't let go.

  • AVOID

    AVOID

    Metalcore

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Embrace Presents

Silverstein 10 Years of: “This is How the Wind Shifts” Tour

Thu Nov 23 2023 6:30 PM

(Doors 6:30 PM)

The Opera House Toronto ON
Silverstein 10 Years of: “This is How the Wind Shifts” Tour

$46.48 All Ages

For more information and show listings, visit Embrace Presents at www.embracepresents.com

This is an All Ages event.

Service fees include a $3.00 facility fee.

Net Capacity: 950

Please correct the information below.

Select ticket quantity.

Complete the security check.

Select Tickets

All Ages
limit 4 per person
General Admission info
$46.48 ($34.50 + $11.98 fees)

Delivery Method

ticketFast

Terms & Conditions