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We Came As Romans Concert Tickets

We Came As Romans is a post-hardcore/metalcore band formed in 2005. Hailing from Troy, Michigan, We Came As Romans are pushing the envelope, combining influences such as the intertwined singing/screaming vocals of Underoath, the theatrical, orchestra-infused metal of Chiodos, the crushing breakdowns of The Devil Wears Prada and the positive lyrics of August Burns Red on their debut Equal Vision release, To Plant a Seed. Check our available We Came As Romans concert ticket inventory and get your tickets here at ConcertBank now. Sign up for an email alert to be notified the moment we have tickets!


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We Came As Romans Reviews

Avg. Customer Rating:
5.0 (based on 9 reviews)

Release Date: July 23 2013 Within the last six or seven years I've been heavily into music, I've lost touch with a lot of bands. It's like these bands are old friends that I've lost touch with. I used to hang out with them for a long time, then I met new friends (or bands) and listened to them a lot. The cycle has continued for a long time, but every so often, I'll run into these old bands again and "catch up" with them...
- absolutepunk.net
In the fall of 2009, I received a small envelope from Equal Vision Records containing an advance of To Plant A Seed, the debut album from a band they recently signed named We Came As Romans. I gave it a few listens and eventually tossed it aside, concluding that this was just more of the same tired metalcore we'd been getting lately and they'd fade away sooner rather than later...
- absolutepunk.net
Sound: We Came As Romans' full-length debut record To Plant A Seed in many ways follows in the footsteps of past tourmates The Devil Wears Prada, but the Michigan natives opt to take things up a notch more in an "epic" direction. Incorporating several synth sections that are meant to mimic orchestral sections, the 10 tracks heard on To Plant A Seed are larger than life and several times reach that coveted "wall of sound...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
Sound: From the opening track "Mis//Understanding" to the closing title track "Understanding What We've Grown To Be", We Came As Romans deliver a great sophomore follow up to their 2009 debut "To Plant A Seed". The production was done by veteran metalcore/post-hardcore producer Joey Sturgis. Traditional in Joey Sturgis' work, the drums are loud and clean, the guitars are beefy, and the vocals are topnotch...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
Release Date: September 13, 2011 It's got to be difficult to be a band like We Came As Romans, being lumped in with the post-screamo whatever-core scene, because if they only accomplished one thing with their sophomore album, it's a definite sense that they are not like their contemporaries. Sure, they may play music that sounds similar, with a comparable level of flair and panache, but there is an underlying sense of optimism to these songs--and not just the pretty parts...
- absolutepunk.net
Release Date: September 13, 2011 Within the past few years, We Came As Romans have really found their place within the heavy sing-scream-breakdown crowd. Not unlike bands such as Blessthefall, Of Mice & Men, and I See Stars, the Romans haven't changed up their formulas much from record to record - sticking to their prevalent synth, auto-tuned clean vocals, and gut wrenching screams...
- absolutepunk.net
Lyrically darker than To Plant a Seed (but still containing an overall message of postivity and hope), We Came as Romans' sophomore release, Understanding What We've Grown to Be, is about self-realisation, or, as guitarist/lyricist Joshua Moore told us, "realizing the person you are, and if that is the person you want to be or not. And about understanding where you want your life to go...
- www.musicreview.co.za
Let's cut to the proverbial chase: If you like We Came As Romans, you will like Understanding What We've Grown To Be. The album is a close cousin of WCAR's freshman effort, 2009's To Plant A Seed, from growler David Stephens' occasionally indecipherable, generally powerful grunting to Kyle Pavone's ultra-clean vocals, nearly robotic in nature (although the blatant Auto-Tuning has subsided a bit on Understanding)...
- www.altpress.com
Troy, Michigan six piece, We Came As Romans are back with their eagerly anticipated follow up to the brilliant, 'To Plant A Seed'. Weighing in at just under 50 minutes worth of music and spanning twelve tracks of synth ladled metalcore, 'Understanding What We've Grown To Be' follows on nicely from the band's debut without really displaying much in terms of progression...
- www.alterthepress.com
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