Help for Heroes Tickets
The members of Help for Heroes grew up together. The bassist was heavily influenced by his dad's love for music. Help for Heroes began singing at the college club Hypocrite. The band begged the local radio station to play their songs.
Help for Heroes’s first album did not sell well, but received critical acclaim. The second album was a hit and the band was saved from being released by the record company. The group plays plenty of arenas, but would rather play in the smaller bars in which they started.
Help for Heroes accepted that they had a real chance to become a headlining national act when the band’s first fan club was started by Carol Dostal in 1983. The fan club may have just started out with a few members that followed the band when the played in small clubs, but it quickly grew to thousands after the group released its first album and started touring nationally.
Help for Heroes hope this next tour brings in more fans than ever. The band is in the start of the tour promoting for their new project. The new album from Help for Heroes has been heavily influenced by The Beatles.
Generally, critics commend Help for Heroes for their playfulness with the crowd during live performances. Dallas music critic Ted Cochrane has always commented on band’s amazing rhythms. Help for Heroes’s latest release is receiving tremendous reviews from notable music critics like Scott Foster and Cypher Sheffield.
The band is sure to schedule a show at Elation in Washington, D.C. every time they tour because they used to play there all the time before they made it big. TheSeats.com has all the tour information a fan needs in one place, including Help for Heroes tickets, concert seating charts, and complete tour schedules.



