Dead on a Sunday Tickets
Metro Music Hall | Salt Lake City, Utah
Salt Laaaaaake! How are we feeling out there, all our Sunday funday fans and sing-a-longers?? Who’s ready to Dance LIke Hell- who’s ready to make our Monday’s a LOT less lame right here in the middle of the city?? And SURE - OF COURSE we don’t wanna die, but we do wanna die on the dancefloor - right here with Dead On A Sunday!
Our FAVORITE way to spend a Monday night - right here at The Metro Music Hall! Right here on November 10th - Dead On a Sunday is bringing their BOBCORE IS DEAD Tour to the city for us ALL to remember why we Obsess over our favorite folk dudes whenever they allow us to. Right here at the Metro - right here for me, you and the crew!
Tickets are on sale NOW and starting at $35 for our night out with the dead crew. Pack your bags and a bottle of water - we’re partying at the cemetery!
Salt Lake City — who’s ready to go all black on a Monday night in November?! Like - eyeliner ready, beat up Doc Martens laced tight for the mosh pit, and a beautifully bleak barrage of music in the best way possible. On Monday, November 10th, we’re so excited to welcome Dead On A Sunday to Metro Music Hall for the Bobcore Is Dead Tour 2025 — a string of darkwave devotion shows sweeping the nation. The tour kicked off in Las Vegas (Nov 1), rolled through Los Angeles at The Roxy (Nov 2), San Francisco (Nov 5), Seattle (Nov 7), and now lands right here in Utah for another night of mayhem for all us here at the Metro - how lucky are we?? And right in the middle of it all? Salt Lake’s night of neon grief and communal gloom - as most November’s do for us. With NITE, Grizz CLL, and JESUSATANAS on support for the night — this lineup is black lipstick and basslines personified. And yeah, you may wanna make sure to get here early too.
Formed in Denver by frontman Ryan Policky and a rotating cast of analog romantics, Dead On A Sunday started as a DIY post-punk experiment that quickly found a home in the dark corners of the internet. Their early singles — “So What If It Kills Me” and “It’s You” — clocked millions of streams across Spotify and Apple Music, picked up placements on goth and industrial playlists, and even landed them opening slots with acts like Twin Tribes and Vandal Moon. By the time their debut LP Strange Days dropped, the band had already been praised by Post-Punk.com and Gothic Beauty Magazine for reviving a genre many thought was gone. And now, with their upcoming third record In Memoriam(dropping November 5th), they’re stepping into a whole new world — one that’s cinematic, cathartic, and dripping with synth-soaked sadness.
What sets Dead On A Sunday apart is how they bridge generations of sound: they take the introspection of The Cure, the grit of Nine Inch Nails, and the heartbreak of The Neighbourhood — then lace it all with digital anxiety and Gen Z melancholy. It’s elegant despair with a BPM. You’ll dance. You’ll cry. You’ll text your ex before the encore. This isn’t nostalgia — it’s resurrection.
Need we say more? Mark your calendars. Metro Music Hall, November 10th. The lights will be low, the smoke thick, and the room full of ghosts who feel too much. Just the way we like it. See y’all real soon.
