Relient K Live 99%
It was “Deathbed.” All eleven minutes of it. The crowd swayed, lighters and cell phones held high. Matt watched a girl next to him wipe tears from her cheeks. He didn’t judge her. He was blinking hard himself. The song built and built, a cathedral of sound about grace and failure and the end of the line, until it finally crashed into that beautiful, fragile piano outro.
The sweat on the back of Matt’s neck had nothing to do with the Ohio humidity and everything to do with the five minutes he’d been waiting for the lights to drop. relient k live
They came back for the encore. Two encores, actually. They closed with “Sadie Hawkins Dance,” and the floor turned into a mosh pit of pure, unadulterated joy. Matt lost a shoe. He didn’t care. He was crowd-surfing—twice—and the second time, he looked up at the rafters, at the lights, at the blur of smiling faces below, and he laughed. It was “Deathbed
BAM.
A roar went up, so loud it felt physical. The stage was dark for a heartbeat, then a single, clean guitar chord sliced through the noise. A spotlight hit Matt Thiessen at center stage, messy hair, Telecaster slung low. He didn’t say hello. He just grinned, looked at drummer Dave Douglas, and counted off. He didn’t judge her
“They’re gonna play everything ,” Matt yelled back.
And for the next six months, until the next concert came along, it was.
