Sunday, April 12th, 2026

THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA: FLOWERS TOUR

Four Year Strong, Split Chain, I Promised The World

Doors: 6:00 PM / Show: 7:00 PM 18 & Over
THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA: FLOWERS TOUR

Event Info

Venue Information:
Brooklyn Bowl Nashville
925 3rd Avenue North
Nashville, Tennessee 37201
This ticket is valid for standing room only, general admission. ADA accommodations are available day of show. All support acts are subject to change without notice. Any change in showtimes or other important information will be relayed to ticket-buyers via email. ALL SALES ARE FINAL Tickets purchased in person, subject to $3.00 processing charge (in addition to cc fee, if applicable). *Advertised times are for show times - check Brooklyn Bowl Nashville website for most up-to-date hours of operation*"

This event is 18+, unless accompanied by a parent or legal guardian. A physical, valid government-issued photo ID is required for entry. No refunds will be issued for failure to produce proper identification. Want to have the total VIP experience? Upgrade your ticket today by reserving a bowling lane or VIP Box by visiting the VIP Upgrade tab on our website.

Artist Info

The Devil Wears Prada

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The Devil Wears Prada have always explored life’s extremes in their music. They’ve never shied away from staring down darkness, dealing with depression, making sense of confusion, soothing anxiety, or grappling with faith, existence, and death. At the same time, they’ve mirrored life’s ups and downs by alternating between crushing heaviness and heart-wrenching melodies. After over two decades of making music, their union as bandmates—but more importantly as friends—is stronger than ever. All of this time and experience ultimately empowered the group—Mike Hranica [vocals], Jeremy DePoyster [guitar, vocals], Kyle Sipress [guitar], Jonathan Gering [keys, synths, programming, percussion], and Giuseppe Capolupo [drums]—to make a statement on their ninth full-length offering, Flowers [Solid State]. Matching bold themes with equally bold songs, they process grief, weather struggle, and not only heal together, but creatively blossom like never before. However, they still never stop asking questions and simultaneously pushing heavy music forward. “Music has provided so much for us,” Mike declares. “However, we wake up and wonder what it all means like a lot of people do. We’ve lived a less than typical life, and it lends itself to this line of questioning.” “The album is a story of trying to understand why you still deal with darkness and demons even after you’ve gotten everything you thought you wanted,” Jeremy elaborates. “Those things don’t make you happy though, so you’re journeying forward. Eventually, you settle into this quest we’re all on. The record isn’t an answer for what to do. We just said these feelings out loud, so maybe your emotions are validated as a listener.” The Devil Wears Prada have always been there for audiences. Among a string of seminal releases, Revolver readers named With Roots Above and Branches Below [2009] one of the “5 Greatest Metalcore Albums,” the Zombie EP [2010] and Dead Throne [2011] each debuted in the Top 10 of the Billboard 200, and 2021’s ZII marked their sixth straight Top 5 entry on the Billboard Top Hard Rock Albums Chart. They have also tallied nearly a half-a-billion streams—unprecedented for most acts this heavy. The group elevated to another stratosphere with Color Decay [2022], selling out their biggest shows worldwide and receiving some of the highest praise of their career. Beyond acclaim from New Noise Magazine, KERRANG!, OUTBURN, Loudwire, and Hysteria, Metal Hammer went as far as to rave, “Color Decay might just be their finest hour.” During 2024, the musicians decamped to a VRBO in Rodgers, AR for three weeks where they constructed the foundation for the LP with Jon again at the helm as producer. Following their time “in this heavenly corner of Arkansas,” Jon, Jeremy, and Mike took a handful of trips to Los Angeles. Putting the finishing touches on recording, the guys collaborated with Tyler Smyth [I Prevail, Falling In Reverse], Austin Coupe [Lø Spirit, Moodring], Colin Brittain [Linkin Park, Papa Roach], Fit For A King’s Bobby Lynge, and Marshall Gallagher of Teenage Wrist. They also enlisted Color Decay collaborator Sam Guaiana as an engineer and tapped Zakk Cervini [Bring Me The Horizon, Spiritbox] for mixing and mastering. 20 years deep into their career together, their creativity has surged to life on Flowers though, representing perhaps their most significant creative leap forward yet. Fans immediately reacted too as The Devil Wears Prada heralded the album with “Ritual” and “For You,” reeling in tens of millions of streams and stoking anticipation. They properly introduce Flowers with the dual-single “Where The Flowers Never Grow” and “Wave.” The former’s bright keyboard melody blossoms out of a frenetic beat, while a thick riff buzzes underneath the bridge. Illuminated by a flurry of flickering keys and guitar, raw emotion spills from the irresistible refrain, “I fall back to what I know, that same place where the flowers never grow.” They’re using “happy” sounds to pacify pain. “The ‘place where the flowers never grow’ is an analogy for where you go when you’re alone,” reveals Jeremy. “For us, it could be sitting still alone and wondering why we can’t find happiness. You’ve got to find peace in the mediocrity instead of striving for it externally.” As “Wave” ebbs and flows, ethereal guitar accompanies a gentle vocal accented by sparse keys. Breathy delivery carries the open-hearted hook over soft strings. Mike says, “We like to map out our lives, but you’ve got to be able to relinquish control.” It serves as a reminder to let life lead you where it will. “I try to be positive and think, ‘Ride the wave, man,’,” smiles Jeremy. “I believe there’s a true path you’re supposed to be on. If you fight against, it can be hard.” Pulsating keys give way to an upbeat drum gallop on “So Low.” This forward motion breaks on a plea, “I wish that somebody could tell me why the highs feel so low. I only feel alive when I lose control.” It recognizes a toxic personality trait, wrestling with the need for attention. “To me, ‘So Low’ is almost fighting the mundane, setting it all on fire, and blowing it up to get a reaction,” notes Mike. Ominous bass rumbles straight through “Everybody Knows” until a clean electric guitar uplifts another chant, “I can’t get back. Gotta find another path. Maybe this will finally take home.” “It’s sort of a continuation of ‘Chemical’,” Jeremy reveals. “You’ve had too many drinks. You try keeping it together, but your anxiety is making you feel like everybody knows you’re out of control.” The airy hum of “Eyes” instantly transfixes as the verses wrestle with existential questions. The tension overflows through a scream, “Give me eyes.” “For Jeremy and me, ‘Eyes’ removes the veil of what we personally believe and religion,” Mike states. “I was raised in a very ordinary Christian home, but we aren’t a Christian band. We’re speaking on the concept.” Then, there’s “All Out.” Laser-precise riffing thrashes and burns, tumbling beneath the undertow of the breakdown at full speed. Unpredictable rhythms track the manic jumps from melodic vocals to guttural growls. “Lyrically, it’s about seeing a friend choose selfishness over the relationship,” Mike comments. “It’s got a bit of the past and the present, musically.” Flowers is The Devil Wears Prada at their most honest, heartfelt, and here in the moment. “We’re no different than you are,” Jeremy reminds. “We’re all in this together, and we’re all going to get through it together.” “The fact we’re still here after twenty years is amazing,” marvels Mike. “Once the record’s over, you sort of accept this is where we are, this is where we landed, and this is where we’re meant to be.” BOILER The Devil Wears Prada have always explored life’s extremes in their music. They’ve never shied away from staring down darkness, dealing with depression, making sense of confusion, soothing anxiety, or grappling with faith, existence, and death. At the same time, they’ve mirrored life’s ups and downs by alternating between crushing heaviness and heart-wrenching melodies. It’s been that way since the beginning. Among a string of seminal releases, Revolver readers named With Roots Above and Branches Below [2009] one of the “5 Greatest Metalcore Albums,” the Zombie EP [2010] and Dead Throne [2011] each debuted in the Top 10 of the Billboard 200, and 2021’s ZII marked their sixth straight Top 5 entry on the Billboard Top Hard Rock Albums Chart. They have also tallied nearly a half-a-billion streams—unprecedented for most acts this heavy. The group elevated to another stratosphere with Color Decay [2022], selling out their biggest shows worldwide and receiving some of the highest praise of their career. Beyond acclaim from New Noise Magazine, KERRANG!, OUTBURN, Loudwire, and Hysteria, Metal Hammer went as far as to rave, “Color Decay might just be their finest hour.” After over two decades of making music, their union as bandmates—but more importantly as friends—is stronger than ever. All of this time and experience ultimately empowered the group—Mike Hranica [vocals], Jeremy DePoyster [guitar, vocals], Kyle Sipress [guitar], Jonathan Gering [keys, synths, programming, percussion], and Giuseppe Capolupo [drums]—to make a statement on their ninth full-length offering, Flowers [Solid State]. Matching bold themes with equally bold songs, they process grief, weather struggle, and not only heal together, but creatively blossom like never before. Flowers is The Devil Wears Prada at their most honest, heartfelt, and here in the moment.

Four Year Strong

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When it was time for Four Year Strong to prep what would become their sixth album, analysis paralysis, they were truly, finally, stumped. Vocalist/guitarists Dan O’Connor and Alan Day showed up to producer Will Putney’s studio on day one of recording without a single finished song, in stark contrast to the 40-some ideas they brought to the table for 2020’s Brain Pain.
The two spent those early days in a bedroom at Putney’s house talking about, and listening to, music, desperate for a spark of inspiration. They found it by looking back: at what made Brain Pain a success and even the genesis of Four Year Strong as a band as they rode their trademark sound – pop-punk energy, dextrous riffage and caustic hardcore spirit – to the top of the underground in the late aughts. Within a month, they’d completed nearly 80% of the album, like the ominous, metal-meets-industrial “aftermath / afterthought.” They melded combustible
hardcore rhythms with ‘90s alt-rock melodic bliss (“uncooked”), dabbled in rough-around-the-edges reggae (“out of touch”) and swerved between vibe-heavy synths and thunderous breakdowns (“STFIL”).
The result is an album that expands their classic sound in exciting ways – but through it all, it’s unmistakably them: O’Connor and Day’s distinctive vocals atop the airtight rhythm section prowess drummer Jake Massucco and bassist Joe Weiss provide. This deep into their career, there’s really nothing that doesn’t sound like Four Year Strong with these four involved.

Split Chain

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Hailing from Bristol, UK, Split Chain has rapidly cemented itself as one of the UK’s most electrifying new rock bands. Blending shoegaze textures with the raw energy of hardcore and the anthemic hooks of alternative rock, the band has pioneered a raucous brand of ‘nu-gaze’ that has resonated deeply with fans worldwide. Since forming in 2023, Split Chain has already racked up over 15 million streams, toured alongside their heroes in the UK and USA, and played some of the
UK’s most revered festivals, including Download, Outbreak, and 2000 Trees.
The five-piece—comprising vocalist Bert Martinez-Cowles, guitarists Oli Bowles and Jake Reid, bassist Tom Davies, and drummer Aaron Black—has built its reputation on authenticity, explosive live performances, and a DIY ethos that remains at the heart of everything they do. Their visceral sound and aesthetic pull influence from a broad spectrum of genres, from pop-punk and grunge to
black metal and nu-metal, giving them the unique ability to slot seamlessly onto diverse tour lineups. Whether sharing the stage with hardcore sparks GEL, beloved grunge-gazers Superheaven, post-hardcore legends Thursday or alternative rock stalwarts like Boston Manor, Split Chain thrives in any setting.
Their uncompromising vision and undeniable momentum led to their signing with the legendary Epitaph Records, placing them among the ranks of some of their biggest influences. With only a handful of singles out in the world, Split Chain is now gearing up for their highly anticipated debut album, slated for release in July 2025. With a sound that balances aggression and melody, a relentless drive to push boundaries, and a rapidly growing fanbase, Split Chain is not just a band to watch—they’re a band redefining the future of alternative music. With their sights set on global touring in support of their debut album, there’s no limit to how high they can climb. The chain does what it wants—and right now, it’s unstoppable.

I Promised The World

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