Electric Callboy in Boston –

The final night of Electric Callboy’s North American run at the MGM Music Hall at Fenway in Boston felt like a victory lap. From the second the lights dropped, the entire building had that “last show of the tour” energy. They were loose, loud, and ready to go completely off the rails in the best possible way. The crowd came prepared to party, and the band matched that intensity all night long. Between the massive singalongs, absurd dance breaks, and nonstop chaos of the setlist, it was a real ripper from start to finish.

Scene Queen

Scene Queen opened the night with a set that landed somewhere between entertaining and divisive. She definitely had confidence and personality, and parts of the crowd were clearly into the hyper-pop-meets-metalcore chaos, but overall it felt more like a warm-up than a game-changing opener. It was fine — fun in spots, awkward in others — but ultimately the night really started to hit another level once the next band took the stage.

Polaris

That next band was Polaris, and they absolutely crushed it. Their set brought a much heavier emotional and musical weight to the evening, and the crowd responded immediately. The riffs sounded massive in MGM Music Hall, the breakdowns hit hard, and the band carried themselves like a group fully capable of headlining rooms this size on their own. Even surrounded by the party atmosphere of the tour, Polaris managed to bring genuine intensity and urgency to the night without killing the vibe. They were easily one of the strongest openers I’ve seen in a while.

Electric Callboy

Then came Electric Callboy, and honestly, they were everything I wanted and more. The band exploded onto the stage with ridiculous energy and somehow maintained it for the entire set. Songs like “Tekkno Train,” “Hypa Hypa,” “Pump It,” and “MC Thunder” turned the venue into a full-blown dance party, while the synchronized visuals, goofy transitions, and tongue-in-cheek humor kept the whole thing feeling wildly fun instead of overproduced. The beauty of Electric Callboy is that they fully understand how absurd their music is, but they also execute everything with total precision. Every drop, every electronic layer, and every breakdown hit exactly the way it should.

What really made the night special, though, was the atmosphere inside the building. The vibe in the crowd was fantastic, with nonstop movement, constant smiles, and one of those rare concert environments where everyone seemed equally locked into having a good time. Being the last date of the tour clearly meant something to the band too, because they played like they had absolutely nothing left to save for tomorrow. By the end of the night, MGM Music Hall felt less like a venue and more like one giant rave with breakdowns. If this tour was meant to prove that Electric Callboy are one of the most entertaining live bands in heavy music right now, Boston was the perfect exclamation point.

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