Cannons with the Deep Beats and Slow Builds in Minnesota
Going first Cannons brought their signature hazy, late night aesthetic to Minnesota with a performance that felt less like a traditional concert and more like stepping into a living, breathing dreamscape.
The atmosphere was unmistakably Cannons moody, immersive, and effortlessly cool. Known for their blend of dream pop and indie electronic textures.
Her airy, almost hypnotic delivery floated above the instrumentals with precision and control, never overpowering the mix but instead gliding through it. Her voice carries the same cool detachment heard on record an understated strength that defines Cannon.
What stood out most about the Minnesota performance wasn’t explosive crowd interaction or dramatic stage presence it was consistency in mood. Cannons don’t chase chaos, they build a steady emotional current. The crowd responded accordingly, swaying more than jumping, locked into the band’s slow burning energy.
Overall, Cannons delivered a polished, immersive set that stayed true to who they are. It wasn’t about spectacle it was about feeling. In a live music landscape often driven by excess, their restraint is exactly what makes them stand out.
Where Cannons leaned into atmosphere earlier in the night, Bob Moses flipped that energy on its head. They brought a hybrid performance style that lives somewhere between a DJ set and a full live band, and it showed immediately. The bass hit harder, the pacing tightened, and the crowd shifted from swaying to fully moving. A mixture of live music and edm which is rare and very hard to pull off.
From the jump, the sound felt bigger and more physical. Deep basslines and steady percussion gave the set a pulse you could feel in your chest. Instead of rushing into drops, they built their tracks slowly, layering sounds until everything clicked into place.
There wasn’t much in terms of flashy visuals or crowd interaction, but that felt more intentional and with purpose. Bob Moses kept the focus on the music, letting the atmosphere do the work. For some, that minimalism might feel a bit restrained, but in this setting, it made the experience more immersive.
Overall, Bob Moses delivered a set that was steady, controlled, and deeply engaging. If Cannons created the mood, Bob Moses gave it weight turning the night into something you didn’t just hear, but felt.