Wed, October 14, 2026
Doors: 6:30 pm
Show: 8:00 pm
the anthem
Washington, DC
Super Excellent Seats are non-transferrable and day-of-show pick up only. No Alternate Pickup is available for Super Excellent Seats. Prior to doors, Super Excellent Seats can be picked up at the box office. After doors, Super Excellent Seats can be picked up at the entrance located at 900 Maine Ave. Any tickets suspected of being purchased for the sole purpose of reselling can be cancelled at the discretion of The Anthem / Ticketmaster, and buyers may be denied future ticket purchases for I.M.P. shows. Opening acts, door times, and set times are always subject to change.
Having already placed his indelible mark on modern music with Hüsker Dü and solo album Workbook, Bob Mould enlisted bassist David Barbe and drummer Malcolm Travis leading to the formation of SUGAR, who made their live debut in early 1992 at Athens, GA’s famed 40 Watt Club. Named by NME as its 1992 Album of the Year, SUGAR’s now-classic debut album, Copper Blue, immediately proved a sensation, earning worldwide acclaim and landmark status for the melodic strength and intensely cathartic popcraft of songs like “A Good Idea”, “Helpless”, and the alternative rock radio hit and MTV favorite, “If I Can’t Change Your Mind”.
With the wind at their back, SUGAR unleashed Beaster in 1993, making a momentous debut at #4 on Billboard’s Heatseekers chart. Though recorded during the same sessions that yielded Copper Blue, the six-song mini-album evinced a more visceral energy and dark melancholy than its predecessor, highlighted by such pulverising expressions of sacrilegious fury as “Judas Cradle” and “JC Auto”. 1994’s second full-length LP, File Under: Easy Listening once again made an explosive arrival, this time landing in the upper reaches of the overall Billboard 200. The album saw SUGAR pushing boundaries yet again on songs like the Americana-tinged “Believe What You’re Saying” and the incendiary “Gee Angel”, tackling a wider range of musical approaches without sacrificing their signature intensity and unrestrained power. Despite their successes, SUGAR called it a day following a Japanese tour in early 1995. A series of live recordings, reissues, and anthologies served to magnify the band’s legacy over the three decades since, confirming SUGAR as incontrovertible masters of high-volume guitar-fuelled rock for the ages.
The original members of SUGAR reconvened in June 2025 to record and the sessions yielded three singles “House Of Dead Memories”, “Long Live Love”, and “Keep Looping” – the first new SUGAR songs in over three decades. Their triumphant return was met with massive support. After announcing a run of live shows in New York and London for May 2026, which completely sold out, SUGAR has now embarked on the Love You Even Still World Tour, which includes a slew of sold-out dates and festival plays. Of their live show, The Guardian writes: “…the trio are back – and on the basis of this rapid-fire set, you hope they’ll stick around.”
Robbins is an independent music lifer. Starting out at the end of the 1980s playing bass in the final and longest-tenured lineup of DC hardcore mainstays Government Issue, he went on to gain prominence in the 90s as the singer/ guitarist of the prolific and widely-traveled indie rock band Jawbox. That band’s sound developed to become a template for most of J’s later work: passionate and tuneful vocals set to driven guitars that swing between melody and clashing dissonance, atop complex and driving rhythms, abrasive post punk and melodic guitar pop influences in an always uneasy alliance greater than the sum of its parts.
Releasing a slew of independent EPs and two full-length albums on DC’s iconic Dischord Records, Jawbox (like many of their peers from the music underground of the day) transitioned to the major label world in the mid-90s, going on to release two albums on Atlantic Records before disbanding. Returning – and rededicating himself – to the indie music world and its ethos, Robbins almost immediately formed a new band with former GI bandmate and drummer extraordinaire Peter Moffett: Burning Airlines, which released two albums and toured the US, Europe, and Japan.
Concurrently, however, Robbins had begun making a name in the studio as an in-demand producer/engineer for bands in a new wave of post-punk indie music, such as Texas is the Reason, the Promise Ring, Jets to Brazil, and Braid. By the early 2000s, after the breakup of Burning Airlines, recording and producing other bands was his primary focus – though he also made time for personal musical projects such as Channels and Office of Future Plans (both of which released albums on Dischord), and Report Suspicious Activity (where he returned to playing bass, and which released albums on Alternative Tentacles and Arctic Rodeo Records).
Robbins is still highly active and maintains his primary focus as a producer/ engineer in his Baltimore studio, the Magpie Cage, recording bands of many styles, from all around the world – from stoner rock icons like Clutch, and The Sword, to Americana songsmiths June Star, epic rockers Daria (Angers FR) and the garage/afro-beat hybrid Des Demonas, to name a few. Since 2013 or so, Robbins’ main creative outlet as a songwriter/singer/musician has been writing and releasing music on solo records. Two so far: Un-Becoming (2019) and Basilisk (2024), both on Dischord Records.
Getting older has not meant slowing down; especially in the upside-down world we currently inhabit, it has only made the need to create more urgent. Robbins’ current writing is driven partly by a desire to write songs that can survive in all sorts of different arrangements, from solo acoustic (recent years have brought solo acoustic tours , including strings of dates in 2022 and 2024 supporting Bob Mould), to electronic, to rock band bashing away at top volume. “Un-Becoming” and “Basilisk” are solo records, with a broad sonic palette, but the sound of a rock band is still at their core, and collaboration is still key.
Robbins (band) has varied in lineups, often including cellist/guitarist Gordon Withers and Robbins’ former Channels and Office of Future Plans bandmate Darren Zentek on drums. In 2024 the band coalesced into its current touring form as a power trio, with (War on Women founder/guitarist) Brooks Harlan on bass – a fixture in this role since Office of Future Plans formed in 2010 – and Peter Moffett (who also drummed on Un-Becoming) once again behind the kit. This lineup toured like crazy in 2024, including headlining tours around the US, festival appearances at The Fest (FL) and Caterwaul Festival in Minneapolis, and California dates supporting Sunny Day Real Estate.
Robbins (band) has already begun recording for a third full-length, and is looking forward to shows in France and Spain in April 2025 with dear friends Daria (Angers, FR), and a late Spring East Coast/Midwest run supporting Bob Mould Band on the “Here We Go Crazy” tour.
Releasing a slew of independent EPs and two full-length albums on DC’s iconic Dischord Records, Jawbox (like many of their peers from the music underground of the day) transitioned to the major label world in the mid-90s, going on to release two albums on Atlantic Records before disbanding. Returning – and rededicating himself – to the indie music world and its ethos, Robbins almost immediately formed a new band with former GI bandmate and drummer extraordinaire Peter Moffett: Burning Airlines, which released two albums and toured the US, Europe, and Japan.
Concurrently, however, Robbins had begun making a name in the studio as an in-demand producer/engineer for bands in a new wave of post-punk indie music, such as Texas is the Reason, the Promise Ring, Jets to Brazil, and Braid. By the early 2000s, after the breakup of Burning Airlines, recording and producing other bands was his primary focus – though he also made time for personal musical projects such as Channels and Office of Future Plans (both of which released albums on Dischord), and Report Suspicious Activity (where he returned to playing bass, and which released albums on Alternative Tentacles and Arctic Rodeo Records).
Robbins is still highly active and maintains his primary focus as a producer/ engineer in his Baltimore studio, the Magpie Cage, recording bands of many styles, from all around the world – from stoner rock icons like Clutch, and The Sword, to Americana songsmiths June Star, epic rockers Daria (Angers FR) and the garage/afro-beat hybrid Des Demonas, to name a few. Since 2013 or so, Robbins’ main creative outlet as a songwriter/singer/musician has been writing and releasing music on solo records. Two so far: Un-Becoming (2019) and Basilisk (2024), both on Dischord Records.
Getting older has not meant slowing down; especially in the upside-down world we currently inhabit, it has only made the need to create more urgent. Robbins’ current writing is driven partly by a desire to write songs that can survive in all sorts of different arrangements, from solo acoustic (recent years have brought solo acoustic tours , including strings of dates in 2022 and 2024 supporting Bob Mould), to electronic, to rock band bashing away at top volume. “Un-Becoming” and “Basilisk” are solo records, with a broad sonic palette, but the sound of a rock band is still at their core, and collaboration is still key.
Venue Information:
The Anthem
901 Wharf St SW
Washington, DC, 20024
theanthemdc.com