
Magnolia Park, Silly Goose, Pinknoise
All Ages
Tuesday, April 07, 2026
Doors: 6:30 pm // Show: 7:30 pm
There’s something different about a sold-out night at The Waiting Room, especially when the room is packed wall-to-wall before the first note even hits. That kind of energy doesn’t build. It’s already there, buzzing, waiting to explode. This tour exploded out the gate with their first stop in Houston, TX, making their stop in Omaha, NE during their first week of touring. Along for the ride this tour run are PINKNOISE and Silly Goose, two bands that have been tearing up the scene one track release, one show at a time.
That was the tone for the NIGHTS AFTER VAMP TOUR stop in Omaha.
Kicking the night off, PINKNOISE didn’t ease the crowd in, they threw gasoline on it. Their set felt chaotic in the best way: raw, loud, and unapologetically unhinged. PINKNOISE and front vocalist Kacey Foxx brought an electrifying performance enveloped in rage, power, and complete control. PINKNOISE is breaking into the rock and metal scene with collaborations from Magnolia Park, Wind Walkers, and SCATTERBRAIN. Kacey Foxx, a non-binary metal vocalist, was part of another project, NVRLESS, that started in 2021 with friend Jourdyn Shelby. In early 2022, they competed for a slot on WELCOME TO ROCKVILLE’s Unsigned Band competition. They came in swinging and swept the entire competition to open the festival’s main stage that weekend. This catapulted Foxx’s connection to the metal scene further PINKNOISE was created. Their most recent release, “RAIN,” features Wind Walkers. There’s a gritty, almost underground feel to what they do, like you’re watching something that could spiral out of control at any moment, and the crowd fed off every second of it.
Next up, Silly Goose shifted the atmosphere without losing intensity. Where PINKNOISE brought chaos, Silly Goose brought control, layering heavy emotion with polished aggression. entered the stage calm, cool, and collected. What was about to be delivered was anything but that. Silly Goose vocalist Jackson Foster was so full of energy that the only thing for him to do with that energy was decimate it everywhere. This fast-paced performance was exhilarating, noting that not a single person from the barricade to the back of the venue was still. Numerous mosh pits opened, even on command.
Jackson left the stage, and climbed onto the barricade to scream commands to the audience. He then had the audience split for a Wall of Death. As he demanded the crowd collide, he side-flipped off the barricade onto the sea of colliding bodies before taking a short crowd surf ride back to the stage. He also participated in a mosh pit.
Silly Goose is known to do off-the-wall stunts that are hard to ignore. In 2022, the band crashed the DWP festival, Welcome to Rockville, and put on a show in their parking lot. The owner of DWP, Danny Wimmer, was going to kick them out but was so impressed by the size of crowd they amassed and how awesome they sounded, he offered them a slot on a side stage at Louder than Life that same year. Silly Goose mentions Wimmer, in the track “Keys to the City.” For their track “Bad Behavior,” the band and a hoard of their fans hijacked the Atlanta transportation system to create the music video.
Their sound hit that sweet spot between vulnerability and power, and you could feel the room lock in. Heads were nodding, voices were rising, and by the end of their set, they had fully claimed the crowd.
By the time Magnolia Park took the stage, the room was already at a boiling point.

And they didn’t let it cool.
From the first note, Magnolia Park commanded the space like a band that knows exactly where they’re headed and how to bring everyone with them. Their blend of pop-punk hooks and modern alt-rock weight translated perfectly live, hitting with both precision and urgency. Every chorus felt massive, every breakdown landed hard, and the crowd responded like they were part of the set itself.
The band brought out visual displays to go along with the theme of their tour-VAMPS, inspired by anime and fantasy, narrating a journey through the fictional, vampire ridden city, Nocturne Nexus. The band brought so much energy to a room already reeking of it. The crowd became louder, more chaotic as the band emerged to start their set with the track Animal. They kept the crowd engaged and in their control for the entire set. PINKNOISE’s Kacey Foxx was brought to the stage to perform “CRAVE,” a performance that made the room erupt in cheers.
During their encore, Magnolia Park initiated an all out dance party with their cover of “I2I” from the Disney’s The Goofy Movie. For three and a half minutes, the entire crowd was a bunch of kids. A couple notable tracks off their new album are “HIGH,” “SHADOW TALK”, and “SHALLOW.”
There’s a confidence in Magnolia Park’s performance that goes beyond just tight musicianship. It’s presence. It’s connection. It’s the ability to turn a packed room into something that feels personal, even when it’s shoulder-to-shoulder and pushing against the barricade. You could see it in the movement, constant crowd interaction, hands in the air, bodies colliding in controlled chaos. You could hear it in the voices, fans shouting lyrics back like they meant something. And in that space, they did.
By the end of the night, it wasn’t just another stop on a tour. It felt like a statement: Magnolia Park isn’t just riding momentum, they’re building something bigger, one sold-out room at a time.
Omaha showed up.
And Magnolia Park made sure it mattered.
Words by Adam Mikael, and David Ryan Clutter
Photos by David Ryan Clutter
Night After Vamp Tour 2026 remaining tour dates.
Apr 10 – Bloomington, IL – The Castle Theatre
Apr 11 – Madison, WI – Majestic Theatre
Apr 14 – Buffalo, NY – Buffalo Iron Works
Apr 15 – Montreal, QC – Le Studio TD
Apr 17 – Amityville, NY – Amityville Music Hall
Apr 18 – Asbury Park, NJ – House of Independents
Apr 19 – Worcester, MA – Palladium
Apr 21 – Washington, DC – Union Stage
Apr 24 – Birmingham, AL – Saturn
May 9 – Daytona Beach, FL – Welcome to Rockville 2026
May 13 – Nashville, TN – The Basement East
May 14 – Columbus, OH – Sonic Temple Festival

About MAGNOLIA PARK
Vocalist Joshua Roberts, guitarists Tristan Torres and Freddie Criales, drummer Joe Horsham and bassist Vincent Ernst – have never been ones to settle for subtlety. Since forming in 2018, the Orlando, Florida-based quintet have repeatedly proven themselves to be one of the most exciting and forward-thinking groups in the underground, spinning a chameleonic, genre-spanning sound that incorporates punk, hard rock, hip-hop and metalcore into a dizzying, multi-sensory experience.
Blazing onto the scene with an insatiable social media work ethic and prolific musical output, their popular Halloween mix-tapes, multi-part Eater EP series and full-length debut, Baku’s Revenge, cemented them not only as a playlist and For You Page favorite for millions of listeners around the world, but a must-see live act on tour with A Day To Remember, From Ashes To New and the inaugural Summer School tour (where they served as a headliner). They’ve also graced the stages of major festivals like Reading and Leeds, When We Were Young, Sonic Temple, Louder Than Life, Welcome To Rockville and Riot Fest, plus the revived Warped Tour stops in D.C., Long Beach and Orlando. Making their way back overseas, in 2026 the band have European performances slated at Download Fest, Rock Am Ring, Rock Im Park, and more.
The five-some have unleashed their most ambitious effort yet: VAMP (Epitaph Records), a neo-gothic concept album rich in world-building and gripping storytelling. Culling influence from the band’s favorite anime including the long-running Vampire Hunter D, along with inspiration from iconic works like Star Wars, Dracula and Joseph Cambell’s legendary monomyth, Vamp unravels an ominous journey through Nocturne Nexus, where rulers and rebels battle with the future hanging in the balance.
“The most exciting thing about this band is how everyone elevates everyone else,” Roberts says. “I’m just so glad that we’re all able to do that and come out with great music and great vibes and feel like we’ve accomplished something special. That’s the whole mission: to make sure that at the end of the journey, we’re better than we were in the beginning.”