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Waterparks

  • The Union Event Center 235 North 500 West Salt Lake City, Utah, 84116 United States (map)

LIVE NATION & POSTFONTAINE PRESENT:

WATERPARKS

with Loveless and Poptropicaslutz!

Doors: 6:00 pm | Show: 7:00pm

All Ages



For as much as Waterparks is a genre-busting collective of three friends who play
music, hang out, and constantly flip the script, Waterparks really represents a
bigger, dare we say, movement. The Houston trio— Awsten Knight [vocals, guitar],
Otto Wood [drums], and Geoff Wigington [guitar]—have unassumingly brought
vibrancy back to rock. (The only thing bolder than their melodies is whatever hair
dye Awsten opted for this week!) Their strange magnetic pull has attracted a
growing cohort of devoted fans who pack sold out shows, stream their songs like
crazy, and have even elevated them to multiple Billboard charts as they’ve also
headlined the Sad Summer Festival and accompanied My Chemical Romance on a
sold out arena tour.
However, the next era begins with the band’s fifth full-length and debut album for
Fueled By Ramen, INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, and even more adventures...
“Waterparks is so much fucking bigger than Otto, Geoff, and me,” muses Awsten.
“However, it wouldn’t be Waterparks without the fans at the shows. It wouldn’t be
Waterparks without the presence online. It wouldn’t be Waterparks without this
awesome community. There are so many people who are a big part of this. It has
completely evolved from where it started, and it feels massive to me. I’m lucky
enough to guide it.”
Waterparks might just be the biggest band of tomorrow. To understand why, you
have to go back to the beginning. Their 2011 formation cemented the union of
three distinct personalities. Raised somewhere in between the iPod generation and
the first wave of social media, Awsten, Otto, and Geoff occupied a singular creative
crossroads. A glance at Otto’s listening history would span the likes of Every Time I
Die and Balance & Composure, while Geoff found inspiration in crossover
juggernauts such as Linkin Park. Awsten’s tastes covered the gamut from Donald
Glover and One Direction, to Ke$ha (and everything else in between).
Following their launch, the group bubbled up with a famed one-off Houston
appearance on 2013’s Warped Tour—which they eventually shined on for its
entirety during 2016. It’s fitting they popped off on the same stage that also
supported category-defiant disruptors a la Eminem, Deftones, Katy Perry, and more
early on. With eye-catching, often meme-able music videos and a sound somewhere
between alternative, pop, electronic, and rock spiced up with a little hip-hop
attitude and even R&B vocal acrobatics, Waterparks fittingly defied categorization
themselves and ushered in a new era of “alternative,” living up to the definition of
the word for the 2020’s, speaking to not only music but also total cultural
immersion with fashion, unforgettable videos, and a boundary-breaking culture.

They reached unprecedented heights with 2021’s Greatest Hits. Don’t let that title
fool you—it didn’t collect their best-performing songs at a discounted price, but it
did showcase their best material to date. As such, it cracked the Billboard Top 200
and landed in the Top 10 of the Top Alternative Albums Chart and Top Rock Albums
Chart. In the wake of its release, they impressively eclipsed half-a-billion streams
thus far. In addition to coverage from Rolling Stone, MTV, Kerrang!, and Alternative
Press, they graced the covers of V Magazine and Upset Magazine (who also
awarded the record a “five-out-of-five star” perfect score). Perhaps, NME summed it
up best though, “Instead of celebrating the past, ‘Greatest Hits’ is opening the door
to what comes next.” Along the way, they sold out various headline tours. 2022 saw
the band sign to Fueled By Ramen and turn the page on a new chapter in 2023 with
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.
“Whereas I saw Greatest Hits as a dark indoor album, I see this body of work as a
light outdoor album,” he reveals. “There’s a bright vibe with very high energy to it.
So much of what we do is about how it’s going to be experienced by the
community. We did a lot of programming on the last record. I wanted to get more
tactile and touch shit now,” he laughs. “I needed to hold a guitar and have the
strings vibrating on my fingers.”
That brings us to the first single “FUNERAL GREY.” Powered by four different guitars
(including a toy guitar for the main riff), the track swings like a wrecking ball from a
buoyant verse into a distortion-lifted hyper-hypnotic hook, “She wore a sweater in
summer weather. She wore a sweater. It was FUNERAL GREY!”
“This is—and I fucking hate the term—more love-driven,” he confesses. “It’s a
reintroduction, and it’s more about other people than just me. When I wrote the
song, I was walking around [collaborator] Julian [Bunetta]’s neighborhood. I was
laughing, because it looked so haunted—like something out of an M. Night
Shyamalan movie. I thought, ‘If this was an Instagram filter, it would be ‘Funeral
Grey’.’ It’s got a dark title, but I love how bright it sounds. To me, that’s
Waterparks.”
On its heels, they served up the introspective, infectious, and irresistible single
“SELF-SABOTAGE.” Like listening to an internal dialogue, airy verses culminate with
a self-effacing query, “What the fuck is wrong with me?” Meanwhile, snappy guitars
and fuzzy electronics underline the manically catchy hook highlighted by Awsten’s
wild sky-high register. It’s yet another illustration of the boys’ uncanny knack for the
unpredictable. Speaking of “FUCK ABOUT IT” [feat. blackbear] only further
showcased their progression with its sticky hooks and artful vibe curation as it
initially reeled in over 10 million streams (and counting).
Following “ST*RFUCKER,” INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY really kicks into high gear with
“REAL SUPER DARK.” Its heavy catharsis manifests through jarring electronics,
guttural screams, and an unexpectedly catchy chant. Meanwhile, “BRAINWASHED”
depicts the ups and downs of infatuation against a soundtrack of handclaps and a
sunny guitar riff that wouldn’t be out of place in your favorite turn-of-the-century
summer comedy. Awsten groans, “My day’s fucked until you wanna text back,”
before trying to break the spell, “Now, I’m having the same thoughts, can’t stop

thinking you’ve got me brainwashed...why do I think you’re so cool?” The ride
comes to a close with “A NIGHT ON EARTH.” A rush of hyperpop-style production
barely relents long enough for the singer to proclaim, “Now Jesus hates my guts. It’s
getting personal,” before one last blast of apocalyptically catchy melody.
There’s something for everyone here. As always, INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY is meant
for the people comprising this greater movement—like everything Waterparks do.
“When you listen to us, I just want you to feel good,” Awsten leaves off. “It’s bouncy
shit. Even if it’s aggressive, it’s enthusiastic. There’s a lot of energy behind this. I try
to make music that tingles people’s fucking brains, which is what my favorite music
does for me.”
BOILER
For as much as Waterparks is a genre-busting collective of three friends who play
music, hang out, and constantly flip the script, Waterparks really represents a
bigger, dare we say, movement. The Houston trio— Awsten Knight [vocals, guitar],
Otto Wood [drums], and Geoff Wigington [guitar]—have unassumingly brought
vibrancy back to rock. Their strange magnetic pull has attracted a growing cohort of
devoted fans who pack sold out shows, stream their songs like crazy, and have
even elevated them to multiple Billboard charts as they’ve also headlined the Sad
Summer Festival and accompanied My Chemical Romance on a sold out arena tour.
Waterparks might just be the biggest band of tomorrow. They reached
unprecedented heights with 2021’s Greatest Hits. Don’t let that title fool you—it
didn’t collect their best-performing songs at a discounted price, but it did showcase
their best material to date. As such, it cracked the Billboard Top 200 and landed in
the Top 10 of the Top Alternative Albums Chart and Top Rock Albums Chart. In its
wake, they impressively eclipsed half-a-billion streams thus far. In addition to
coverage from Rolling Stone, MTV, Kerrang!, and Alternative Press, they graced the
cover of V Magazine and Upset Magazine (who also awarded the record a “five-out-
of-five star” perfect score). Perhaps, NME summed it up best though, “Instead of
celebrating the past, ‘Greatest Hits’ is opening the door to what comes next.” Along
the way, they sold out various headline tours. Now, they kickstart a new era with
their fifth full-length and debut album for Fueled By Ramen, INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY, and even more adventures. As always, INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY is
meant for the people comprising this greater movement—like everything
Waterparks do.


Earlier Event: February 20
Silversun Pickups
Later Event: March 9
Chelsea Cutler