Darkest Hour Tickets
Darkest Hour’s members met in 1977. The bassist was encouraged to play by his mom. The lead singer used to fall asleep with a tapeplaying as a kid. Darkest Hour began singing at the local club Anyplace. The band was influenced by music of the '50s.
submitted their single to K101.1 and a DJ took a liking to it. All the members quit their day jobs to focus on their music.
Darkest Hour realized that their dream of making an actual life for themselves as musicians had come true after the band’s first fan club was started by Kathy Jasper in 1995. Starting out in Cleveland with a few dozen members, the club grew fast, eclipsing a couple thousand across the nation in under a year.
Members of Darkest Hour hope this next tour brings in more fans than ever. The group may have recently completed their newest project, but they are already thinking of their next move. The new record from Darkest Hour has taken the band in a very new direction, using more instruments than ever before.
Often times, critics commend Darkest Hour for their ability to energize the crowd at live shows. Ed Prather, a music critic from San Francisco, has always mentioned band’s immensely talented front man. Darkest Hour’s new release is receiving inspiring reviews from all the critics, including Ian Avondale, who first saw the band play in Buffalo.
Darkest Hour realizes that most fans like their previous songs, so they use material from previous records and the latest release. TheSeats.com has all the tour information a fan needs in one place, including Darkest Hour tickets, concert seating charts, and complete tour schedules.



