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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250917T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250917T230000
DTSTAMP:20250720T000125Z
URL:https://www.jointherevolution.net/concerts/dark-angel-fall-2025-tour/
SUMMARY:DARK ANGEL EXTINCTION LEVEL EVENT NORTH AMERICA 2025
DESCRIPTION:DARK ANGEL \n\nRon Rinehart - vocals \n\nEric Meyer – guita
 r\, backing vocals \n\nLaura Chris\;ne – guitar\, backing vocals \n\nM
 ike Gonzalez – bass\, backing vocals \n\nGene Hoglan – drums\, guitar
 \, bass\, backing vocals \n\nThere was a \;me in the mid-‘80s when “t
 hrash” was the fastest\, heaviest\, most extreme form of metal.  That s
 aid\, a handful of bands thrashed a liKle harder and with more feral aband
 on than their peers.  Those chosen few inadvertently led the genre toward
 s an even more brutal style of music that gained  underground acceptance 
 a few years later – death metal.  \n\nBefore that cri\;cal point in \;
 me\, however\, ultra-thrash band Dark Angel stood on the precipice of  de
 vasta\;on and innova\;on. Too fast and noisy for some\, jawdropping and gr
 oundbreaking for others\,  Dark Angel led a prickly\, poisonous path beyo
 nd the evil riffs and whirlwind rhythms pioneered by Slayer.  And Dark An
 gel drummer and songwriter Gene Hoglan was right there at the center of th
 e storm (even  coaching Slayer’s Dave Lombardo how to play double-bass 
 beats for the breakthrough EP Haun%ng the  Chapel). \n\nForty years\, an
 d mul\;ple seismic shakeups later\, Dark Angel have returned with the spin
 e-shaKering Ex%nc%on Level Event\, their first album of original material 
 since 1991’s colossal Time Does Not Heal. “Musically\, lyrically\, and
  vocally\, I’m so stoked about this album\,” says Hoglan\, the veteran
  drummer-of all-trades and \;meclock behind almost too many influen\;al me
 tal groups to count – Testament\,  Dethklok\, Strapping Young Lad\, Fea
 r Factory\, and Death graduate tribute band\, Death To All. “I’m reall
 y  excited about Dark Angel right now\, and everyone who’s heard the ne
 w album is losing their minds. Every \;me I'd finish a song and send it ov
 er to the guys\, everybody was\, ‘Gene\, this is my favorite song!’  
 ‘No\, this is my favorite song!!’ ‘Dude\, this is totally my favorit
 e song!!!” That’s never a bad sign.” \n\nEx%nc%on Level Event featu
 res new guitarist Laura Chris\;ne\, and a new level of produc\;on\, thanks
  to the  advancements in technology since the late ‘80s and early ‘90
 s. Yet\, the album follows the twisted  barbed-wire path and innova\;ve a
 pproach of fan favorites\, Darkness Descends and Leave Scars\, which  rem
 ained landmark extreme thrash records decades aaer their release. That’s
  hardly a surprise since the  majority of the lineup for the album is the
  same as on the aforemen\;oned releases. \n\nThe \;tle track of “Ex\;nc
 \;on Level Event” was wriKen by guitarist Jim Durkin\, a decade ago\, lo
 ng before  he suffered from severe liver disease\, and\, to the surprise 
 of everyone\, passed away in 2023. “Jim Durkin  lea us with this badass
  tune\,” Hoglan says. “It is so Dark Angel and I'm just so excited abo
 ut it. We made  it the lead-off song on the record\, not as a tribute to 
 Jim or because of sen\;mental reasons – like\, here is  the song that J
 im lea us – but because it’s just a totally killer song. He wrote it t
 en years ago\, and by  today’s standards it’s s\;ll ball-crushing.”
  \n\nFast and aggressive\, “Ex\;nc\;on Level Event” is as fierce and 
 infec\;ous as Dark Angel’s best songs and  features the band’s herald
 ed bombas\;c riffs and vocal structures. Hoglan and guitarist Laura Chris\
 ;ne  wrote everything else on Ex%nc%on Level Event\, each song rivalling 
 the ferocity and musicality of the \;tle  track\; Chris\;ne co-wrote five
  songs\, and her wri\;ng style rubbed off on Hoglan. “Atavis\;c\,” for
  example\,\n\nis a full-on three-minute thrash metal barrage. “It’s pr
 imi\;ve\, it’s raw\, and it takes you right back to the  days of super-
 aggressive thrash metal\,” Hoglan says. \n\nOther songs are a liKle slo
 wer\, but no less incendiary. “Woke Up to Blood” is a tangled rollerco
 aster of  jagged riffs and syncopated beats\, the \;tle of which stemmed 
 from a dog aKack. “[Guitarist] Eric Meyer  came in with a big\, nasty c
 ut on his arm\,” Hoglan says. “We asked him\, ‘Eric\, what happened?
 ’ and he  told us about how his wife’s dog aKacked him in the middle 
 of the night. He said\, ‘Dude\, I was lying in  bed asleep and then I w
 as just bleeding profusely. I woke up to blood.’ And I went\, ‘Hey\, w
 ait a minute. I  goKa write that down in the ‘notes’ sec\;on of my ph
 one real quick.” \n\nAnother track Gene describes as a “total onslaug
 ht” is “Terror Construct\,” which he wrote about the way the media a
 nd corpora\;ons team up to spread fear among the masses so they can con\;n
 ue to fill their  pockets. “There’s no ques\;on about it\,” Hoglan 
 says. “We are force-fed fear. It definitely comes at us  from all sides
  – the lea and the right – and it’s everywhere\, you can’t escape 
 it because it comes from all  angles. It’s terrible\, but that’s how 
 our society is gemng wired. People are forced to live in fear all the  \;
 me because\, for the networks and the big corpora\;ons\, fear means big mo
 ney. If you put fear into the  audience\, they stay glued to the televisi
 on and they watch all the commercials.” \n\nThe seeds of Ex%nc%on Level
  Event were planted in late 2013 between the \;me when Testament  stopped
  touring to work on their new record and Hoglan was scheduled to work on h
 is next major  project. \n\n“I finally had some \;me\, so I said to Ji
 m and vocalist Ron Rinehart\, ‘Hey\, I kinda have some \;me now.  Would
  you guys be interested in trying Dark Angel again?\,’ Hoglan recalls. 
 “Because every \;me I'm over  in Europe or some other country\, the pro
 moters of all these fes\;vals and journalists are always asking\,  ‘You
  ever want to bring Dark Angel back? Let us know. We’d love to get some 
 Dark Angel over here.’ Jim  and I had spoken about it\, and he said\, 
 ‘Hey\, it sounds like fun. Let’s see what we can do.’ That’s when 
 we  put a toe in the water to find out if this would even work.” \n\nT
 he band played a number of dates in Europe and South America. Then\, in la
 te 2014\, Hoglan and  founding guitarist Jim Durkin got together to write
  a bunch of riffs. Since Durkin had established a  lucra\;ve career outsi
 de the music industry and Hoglan was busy touring with Testament and worki
 ng  with Dethklok\, Death To All\, and other projects\, it was difficult 
 for the two long\;me Dark Angel members  to coordinate their schedules. 
 “It didn’t help that Jim was living in Los Angeles and I was in San Di
 ego\,”  Hoglan says. “But we did as much as we could\, and it was rea
 lly fun to be jamming again. And the thing  that put the cherry on top wa
 s that we’d all grown up as human beings a liKle bit. So\, we had really
  good  communica\;on. We weren't just a bunch of 20-year-old kids yelling
  at each other or gemng pissed off  over stupid things. It was just such 
 a fun vibe. And we've always been a family. We’ve always felt like one.
   So\, we were like\, ‘Hey\, let's book some more shows.” \n\nAaer t
 he first batch of wri\;ng sessions for Ex%nc%on Level Event\, Hoglan had t
 o put wri\;ng for Dark  Angel on hold un\;l late 2022. With other obliga\
 ;ons behind him\, Gene laser-focused on Dark Angel\,  listening back to t
 he jams he and Durkin made earlier\, and wri\;ng more than 10 new songs ov
 er the next  three months. With a full album of pummeling new songs\, Hog
 lan flew to Vancouver to track the album  at the Armory. There\, he and h
 is bandmates worked with Rob Shallcross and Mike Fraser\, and over a few 
  sessions\, Dark Angel had recorded everything but the vocals.\n\n“Mike 
 and I have worked on a number of occasions before\, da\;ng all the way bac
 k to the Strapping  Young Lad\, The New Black\, Hoglan says. “He mixed 
 all the last AC/DC records and some classic Aerosmith stuff. We laid down 
 all the drums and as soon as that was done we got right into the guitars. 
 Everybody  came up and laid a liKle bit down and it was an amazing experi
 ence. Then\, all we had to do was get \;me  with Ron to do the vocals.”
  \n\nWhile Ex%nc%on Level Event is informed by all the playing and record
 ing experience Hoglan has gained  over the decades\, it’s deeply rooted
  in skull-bashing thrash and easily could have sloKed into the band’s  
 catalog aaer their fourth album 1991’s Time Does Not Heal. It’s more t
 han a tremendous comeback from  well-respected thrash pioneers\, it’s a
  new chapter for the band – despite the tragic death of founding  guita
 rist Jim Durkin in 2023 – and represents an authen\;c tribute to the fou
 nda\;ons of extreme thrash\,  while pumng a foot forward to a future wher
 e anything is possible. \n\n“One thing Dark Angel was really\, really g
 ood at was reinven\;ng ourselves from album to album\,” Hoglan  says. 
 “None of our four records ever sounded like each other\, and that's why 
 this album will fit perfectly  in with the rest of our catalog. It’s an
 other reinven\;on for Dark Angel\, but it’s s\;ll really\, really heavy.
 ”  \n\nNo one but Gene Hoglan could keep the heart of Dark Angel burni
 ng over the decade like an industrial  furnace. Even though he has ventur
 ed into mul\;ple styles of thrash\, extreme\, and experimental metal\,  h
 e will always cherish thrash\, the music form that launched his mul\;facet
 ed career. As a teenager\,  Hoglan was already a dedicated drummer and a 
 diehard headbanger who was a fixture of the LA metal  scene. Before he jo
 ined Dark Angel\, he was the ligh\;ng tech for Slayer and other undergroun
 d metal  bands and traveled with Slayer on their first tour. \n\nDurkin 
 and bassist Rob Yahn formed the band Shellshock in 1981 and recorded the d
 emo “Into the  Inferno” in 1983 before they were hit with a cease-and
 -desist from another band named Shellshock and  changed their moniker to 
 Dark Angel. Three demos later\, Dark Angel landed the song “Welcome to t
 he  Slaughter House” on Metal Massacre VI\, which also featured tracks 
 by Possessed\, the Obsessed\,  Hallow’s Eve\, Nasty Savage and others. 
 They followed their compila\;on with their first full-length We  Have Arr
 ived in 1985. Dark Angel con\;nued working on new material\, including the
  scorching “Merciless  Death\,” “Perish in Flames\,” and “The B
 urning of Sodom.” That’s when the Jack Schwartz\, the band’s  drumm
 er from 1983 to 1984\, lea and Hoglan happily took his place. \n\n“When
  I joined\, they were already a killer band and they were on the cusp of t
 hings\,” Hoglan said. “And  when I came in\, Jim finally had a partne
 r in musical crime. We both wanted everything to be really heavy  and bru
 tal. Like\, the sky’s the limit for heaviness. Even with Jack in the ban
 d\, the members of Dark Angel had five different direc\;ons they would've 
 liked to see the band go in. When I joined\, we finally had a  majority o
 f two guys who wanted the same thing. We wanted to be a smack to the jaw\,
  with music that  was as savage as we could make it. We wanted to cut hea
 ds off with our music.” \n\nDurkin and Hoglan wrote the vast majority o
 f the band’s second album Darkness Descends\, which  included the blazi
 ng \;tle track\, the face-scorcher “Death is Certain (Life is Not)\,” 
 and the eight-plus  minute epic “Black Prophecies.” And Hoglan’s de
 mon-crazed performances on “Merciless Death\,” “Perish  in Flames
 ” and “The Burning of Sodom” brought Dark Angel to a new level of br
 utality. \n\n“We were already bros\, we were pals\, so it was a preKy s
 eamless transi\;on for me to step in and work  with Jim to make the band 
 way heavier\,” says Hoglan. “Our vocalist had some outside interests t
 hat \n\ndidn’t blend with what we wanted to do\, so we really had to wo
 rk hard with him to get a great  performance. I wouldn’t call it coachi
 ng. It was more like threats and hazing from me and Jim. We were  preKy b
 rutal with him in the studio to get him to perform the songs with the righ
 t kind of savagery and  anger that they needed. But he definitely stepped
  it up. You can't say that We Have Arrived had the  same kind of vocals a
 s Darkness Descends.” \n\nIn search of new ventures\, Yahn lea Dark Ang
 el aaer he tracked the bass parts for Darkness Descends\,  which paved th
 e way for Mike Gonzalez. The vocalist’s decision to quit less than a wee
 k before the band  was scheduled to launch a tour for Darkness Descends l
 ed to a far more complicated situa\;on. “He  started gemng into some th
 ings that didn’t blend well with the band’s touring schedule\,” Hogl
 an  explains.  \n\n“Meanwhile\, Darkness Descends was blowing up and 
 we were scheduled to tour with Possessed in early  ’87. So\, Jim Drabos
 \, a friend of ours from a band called Death Force stepped in to grab the 
 mic for us\,  and he did a great job.” \n\nImpressed by how quickly an
 d easily Drabos vibed with the rest of the band\, Dark Angel asked him to
   step onboard. Hoglan was already wri\;ng songs for the next album and w
 as hoping the singer he was  working with would embrace the opportunity t
 o take part. However\, he wasn’t interested in singing on a  new album 
 or even playing any more shows.  \n\n“It was kind of strange\,” says
  Hoglan. “He said\, ‘Thank you very much\, guys. It was always my drea
 m to  tour the United States. I just did it\, and now I'm gonna quit the 
 music industry. My dream was just  fulfilled\, and now I’m done.’”
   \n\nFor the next 10 months\, Dark Angel searched long and hard for a n
 ew vocalist. Frustrated\, they tried to  make the band work again with 
 “the old vocalist\,” but aaer a few shows together\, it was clear that
  they  needed fresh blood. They audi\;oned many singers but couldn’t fi
 nd one who would fit the band. As it  turned out\, the perfect match was 
 Ron Rinehart\, a guy Hoglan had seen before singing in the LA band  Messi
 ahs. Hoglan and Durkin thought Rinehart was a great vocalist\, but weren
 ’t impressed by his band\, which lacked the ferocity he sought in a voca
 list. Jim reached out to Rinehart anyway to ask him to  audi\;on for Dark
  Angel\, and as soon as the band started playing\, Rinehart picked up the 
 mic and started  to roar. \n\n“Jim went\, ‘Man\, I wish we had this 
 guy all along\,’” recalls Hoglan. “I felt the same way 'cause Ron wa
 s so  enthusias\;c\, so into it. He was the polar opposite of our other v
 ocalists. He had a good work ethic. He  was ready to put the \;me in. He 
 was a cool guy\, and he had a great look. So\, we threw Ron right into the
   mix and started recording.” \n\nThe first Dark Angel album to featur
 e Rinehart\, Leave Scars upped the ante on Darkness Descends\,  featuring
  more complex rhythmic shias and longer songs\, while retaining the speed-
 thrash lacera\;ons that pushed the band into the next level of extreme met
 al. Within the nightmarish firestorms lie  welcome experimenta\;ons\, suc
 h as the creepy “Worms\,” the cinema\;c instrumental “Cauteriza\;on
 ” and  a wild take on Led Zeppelin’s “Immigrant Song.” But while 
 the album was full of strong material\, the lo-fi  produc\;on marred the 
 overall sonic impact a bit. \n\n“We were all used to hearing bad-soundi
 ng thrash records\, and that’s okay when you’re first star\;ng out\, 
  but when you’re on your third record you goKen step up the produc\;on\,
  and that didn’t happen\,” says \n\nHoglan. We should have had a more
  cohesive sound happening and we take all the blame for the sound  of Lea
 ve Scars. And that’s why we brought in Terry Date for our next album\, T
 ime Does Not Heal. We  said\, let’s just mi\;gate the issues and work w
 ith someone great. That way\, we know it’s gonna sound  killer.” \n\
 nDark Angel released Time Does Not Heal\, in 1991\, and along with the upg
 rade in produc\;on came a  revised approach to songwri\;ng. The band prov
 ed it could s\;ll lock it’s foot to the gas pedal on the \;tle  track\,
  “Trauma and Catharsis” and “The New Preiesthood.” But “Pain’s
  Inven\;on\, Madness” and “Act of  Contri\;on” are slower and more 
 melodic\, giving Rinehart more of a chance to belt out actual notes  inst
 ead of just bark. Too busy with outside projects at the \;me of its releas
 e\, Durkin sat out the album  cycle\, leaving Hoglan to tackle more rhyth
 m guitar and almost all of the songwri\;ng. He was joined by  the new gui
 tarist BreK Eriksen\, who contributed to the songwri\;ng\, but ul\;mately 
 lea before the band  finished touring. \n\n“Time Does Not Heal was a d
 ifferent kind of album for us par\;ally because Jim lea\, and we got BreK.
   Before\, Jim and I each wrote about 50 percent of the songs\, and now I
 ’m suddenly doing 65 or 70  percent of the wri\;ng\, which added more r
 hythm changes and complexity because I get bored easily.  But also\, I di
 d not know how to self-edit songs back then\, which is why they were so lo
 ng.” \n\nBy the \;me the band finished touring for Time Does Not Heal s
 peed-thrash was no longer the most  extreme game in town\, having been re
 placed by death metal. Fans who had latched onto Dark Angel  because they
  were the bridge to the next heaviest thing\, stepped off the bridge and e
 mbraced bands like Death\, Morbid Angel\, Deicide\, and Napalm Death for a
 n even more punishing aural assault than that of  Dark Angel. \n\n“Bef
 ore death metal came along\, thrash metal was the heaviest thing around\,
 ” Hoglan recalls. “Everyone  was like\, ‘Oh my God\, this is so psy
 cho\;c and heavy. Nothing’s gonna get heavier than this! Oh\, wait…’
   And all of a sudden you’ve got Morbid Angel\, Death\, Obituary\, Cann
 ibal Corpse -- all these kick-ass death  metal bands that definitely took
  the spotlight away from a lot of thrash bands.  \n\n“Kids went\, ‘H
 ey\, thrash metal is not so extreme anymore. Check out grindcore. Check ou
 t death metal!’  And all these thrash bands were kind of lea in the dus
 t. So Dark Angel kind of dissolved for a while\, and I  got into this mor
 e extreme death metal stuff. But I always knew speed wasn’t everything a
 nd that thrash  would come back because everything happens in cycles. And
  if there’s one cool thing I heard straight  \n\nfrom the horse’s mo
 uths over the last 30-something years\, it’s that Dark Angel had a major
  influence on  all the death metal bands\, the grindcore bands\, and the 
 black metal bands. And it feels good to know I  played a role in all of t
 hat.” \n\nAs Hoglan says\, music – especially metal – is a cyclical
  style of music\, and about 20 years aaer the dawn  of thrash\, the old-s
 chool fans started turning their cousins\, nephews\, sons and daughters to
  the music  and suddenly The Big Four were big business\, Testament\, Exo
 dus and others were major tour aKrac\;ons\,  and Dark Angel were back in 
 demand. The band officially reformed in the 2010s and played select shows 
 in 2014\, 2015\, 2018\, and 2019.  \n\nDurkin took the stage with the ba
 nd\, and everyone had a blast playing influen\;al speed-thrash songs for 
  newcomers and old-school fans alike. But while Durkin was dedicated to th
 e band\, there was a point  where he started dealing with personal issues
  and he made it clear that he would always be there in \n\nspirit\, but t
 here would be \;mes he wouldn’t be able to perform. He handpicked Laura 
 Chris\;ne (Warface\, Meldrum\, Nukem\, Zimmer’s Hole) to fill in for him
  when the band returned to the road in  2022. \n\n“I was not part of t
 hat decision one iota\,” Hoglan says. “I found out later that back in 
 2018 when we  played a show in Oakland\, California at the California Dea
 th Fest. At the end of the night Jim took Laura  aside. I was in an eleva
 tor going up to say goodnight to everybody and Jim steps in the elevator a
 nd  announces to Laura\, ‘Tonight was my last Dark Angel show\, and I w
 ant you to be my replacement.’ Laura  was looking at me\, and then at h
 im\, and then she says\, ‘Hey\, I'm honored but did you guys talk about
   this?’ I said\, ‘This is the first I’m hearing about any of this.
 ’ And Jim goes\, ‘Well\, you're my favorite  guitarist and if I'm not
  gonna play any shows with the band\, I want you to replace me.’ “As \
 ;me went on\,  it wasn’t Jim's last show with the band. He came back an
 d played more shows. But for whatever reason\,  at that moment\, right th
 en and there\, he had decided\, this is it for me. He later relented and L
 aura was  great about it. She said\, “This band should be with Jim Durk
 in. He's the founding member.” \n\nThe rest of the band were aware Durk
 in had some health issues\, but they didn’t seem incapacita\;ng. It  se
 emed like he just didn’t want to tour anymore\, and the decision was mad
 e that\, with his blessings\,  Laura would take his spot on the stage wit
 h the caveat that he could return at any \;me. \n\n“We did a fes\;val i
 n April of 2023\, in Texas called Hell's Heroes. It was to be Laura’s fi
 rst show with the  band. As go-\;me rapidly approached\, Laura rehearsed 
 with Dark Angel\, but she also reached out to  Durkin to reiterate that h
 e was Dark Angel’s lead guitarist\, not her. “She reached out to him r
 ight before  the gig\, and said\, ‘Jim\, I just want you to know that I
 'm merely just stepping into your shoes for this gig. If  you decide thre
 e days before the show that you want to jump in and play the show\, that
 ’s great. I’m all  for it.’ And he explained to her\, ‘Look\, tha
 t’s not gonna happen.’” \n\nAt the \;me\, Durkin was suffering from
  liver problems that were far more serious than anyone in the  band knew.
  They were completely shocked and uKerly unprepared when they found out he
  died from  liver disease on March 8\, 2023. \n\n“We knew he had a cou
 ple of medical issues\, but we didn’t expect him to be taken from us –
  any of us\,”  Hoglan says. “We knew Jim had something that was going
  to keep him from playing shows with us\, but  we did not know that it wa
 s something that was gonna take his life. We had no idea. That's why it wa
 s so  crushing to hear that our brother passed. Because even though he mi
 ght not have been a part of the live  por\;on of Dark Angel at that point
 \, we were s\;ll wri\;ng together. He told me\, ‘I might not be playing 
 live  with the band as much as I used to\, but I s\;ll wanna write.’ An
 d I was fine with that.”  \n\nHoglan is pleased that the \;tle track o
 f Ex%nc%on Level Event isn’t just 100 percent Durkin\, it’s  complete
 ly unrelen\;ng\, burs\;ng with speed\, excitement\, and Durkin’s knife-s
 lash riffs. Beyond that\,  Hoglan insists that the rest of the songs on t
 he album – which he and Chris\;ne composed before the full  band contri
 buted their input in the studio – are heavily inspired by Durkin’s spi
 rit and performance style. \n\n“Before the end of everything\, I told J
 im\, ‘Yeah\, let’s keep wri\;ng together\,’” explains Hoglan. “I
 t didn’t  happen\, and I ended up with just one full song from Jim. But
  Jim’s presence is felt all over the record  because Jim’s songwri\;n
 g was a really big influence for me. I had only played guitar for a couple
  years  before I got into Dark Angel\, and being around Jim day aaer day\
 , year upon year\, had a huge impact on  my songwri\;ng and I have Jim to
  thank for that.”\n\nHaving passed away two years ago\, Durkin’s sudde
 n death is s\;ll trauma\;c for Dark Angel and especially  Hoglan. At the 
 same \;me\, he takes biKersweet pride in knowing that Jim’s playing and 
 performances live on through him and Dark Angel\, not only when the band p
 lays his old riffs\, but also in the con\;nued  influence Durkin has on t
 he band’s new songs. \n\n“One of the last things I told him was\, “
 Jim\, dude\, you’re my original guitar hero\,” Hoglan recalls. “My 
  en\;re guitar style is based on your style because you are who I really l
 earned how to play guitar from.”  So\, my guitar approach with Dark Ang
 el is Jim Durkin's approach. When I write for the band\, I’m  thinking\
 , ‘What would Jim do here?’ That’s why his presence is massively all
  over this new record. Every  single song. I wanted to make it to where p
 eople are like\, “Yeah\, Jim wrote that riff. Oh\, there's another  Jim
  riff” because Jim wrote all the best riffs in the band\, forever.”
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.jointherevolution.net/wp-content/upl
 oads/2025/07/Static_Social-Instagram_1080x1350_DarkAngel_2025_Regional_Rev
 olutionLive_0917.jpg
CATEGORIES:All Ages,Concerts
LOCATION:Revolution Live\, 100 SW 3rd Ave.\, Fort Lauderdale\, FL\, 33312\,
  United States
GEO:26.121358;-80.1461974
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=100 SW 3rd Ave.\, Fort Laud
 erdale\, FL\, 33312\, United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=100;X-TITLE=Revolution 
 Live:geo:26.121358,-80.1461974
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