Vindicatour US 2026
BLACK VEIL BRIDES
Caskets, Archers, Holy Wars
Thursday, September 3, 2026 at 6:35pm
The Rave/Eagles Club
All Ages
Advance tickets start at $45.00. Day Of Show tickets may be higher.
All information subject to change. Please visit www.therave.com/bvb for any changes that may have been made since this listing was created.
(opening acts subject to change without notice)
Purchase tickets at eTix.com, or visit our box office at 2401 W. Wisconsin Avenue in Milwaukee.
Don't buy from 3rd party sites. Only buy tickets from TheRave.com, ElEaglesLive.com, eTix.com, or links provided by The Rave, ElEaglesLIVE or official band sites.
Black Veil Brides
blackveilbrides.net
www.facebook.com/Blackveilbrides
www.x.com/blackveilbrides
www.instagram.com/blackveilbrides
www.tiktok.com/@blackveilbrides
www.youtube.com/@blackveilbrides
Caskets
casketsofficial.com
www.facebook.com/casketsbandofficial
www.x.com/caskets_band
www.instagram.com/caskets_band
www.tiktok.com/@caskets_band
www.youtube.com/@caskets_band
Archers
archersband.com
www.facebook.com/ArchersOfficial
www.x.com/archersus
www.instagram.com/archersus
www.tiktok.com/@archersband
www.youtube.com/@ArchersTV
Holy Wars
holywarsmusic.com
www.facebook.com/HolyWarsMusic
www.x.com/holywarsmusic
www.instagram.com/holywarsmusic
www.tiktok.com/@holywarsmusic
www.youtube.com/@HolyWars
genre_page_link
The band is comprised of frontman Andy Biersack, guitarists Jake Pitts and Jinxx, bass player Ashley Purdy and drummer Christian “CC” Coma, but they were born out of Biersack’s imagination; he came up with the idea for the band and put them together, with everything from their name to their glam metal-influenced image being planned meticulously by the singer, who’s a few years younger than the rest of his bandmates. The group’s image is probably their defining characteristic - their dress code involves black leather pretty much exclusively and facial makeup is obligatory - but it’s something that they’ve begun to tone down as they entered the most recent stage of their career, one that saw them release their most successful record to date, “Wretched and Divine: The Story of the Wild Ones”.
That album, a concept record, saw the band lurch away from metal and towards the hard rock style that their hit single “Fallen Angels” had hinted at back in 2011. By naming their most recent record after themselves - “Black Veil Brides” dropped in October of 2011 - they’ve solidified the notion that this iteration of the band’s sound is the one that they ultimately want to define them, and their live shows have shifted accordingly; rather than being the unhinged punk rock affairs of old, they’re instead far more focused on musicianship and connection with the audience than ever before.
I know, from personal experience, just how dedicated the Black Veil Brides fanbase is; when I interviewed them whilst they were headlining the Kerrang! tour last year, they’d had to be rushed away from an afternoon signing session when hundreds of fans turned up and made the shop that was playing host to the event unsafe. The whole thing is the brainchild of frontman Andy Biersack, with their records tending to be complex, concept-driven affairs; sonically, meanwhile, they’ve been steered away from their metalcore beginnings towards a more commercially-viable hard rock/metal crossover. The strict leather and face paint policy that was in place in the early days seems to have fallen by the wayside, too, and live, there’s not a great deal of focus on the conceptual side of things; instead, the aim is to deliver a good old-fashioned rock show. Unsurprisingly, they really play to the crowd, encouraging mass singalongs on the likes of ‘Fallen Angels’ and ‘Knives and Pens’, whilst guitarists Jake Pitts and Jinxx are by no means shy of a solo. Their work rate is prodigious, too; after an extensive tour of the UK last December, they’re back for more of the same late this year, too, before they turn the focus to the next record - it might be your last chance to catch them for a while.