Lamb of God headlined a show at Moody Amphitheater in Austin, Tx on April 10th, 2026 with support from Kublai Khan TX, Fit For An Autopsy, and Sanguisugabogg on their Into Oblivion Tour!

At Moody Amphitheater, the night didn’t just feel heavy, it looked it. Dark clouds rolled in early, and by the time the first riffs hit, rain was already falling, turning the Into Oblivion Tour into something far more cinematic than expected.

What could’ve been a setback became part of the experience. The downpour soaked the crowd, blurred the lights, and amplified every breakdown. This wasn’t just a concert anymore, it felt more primal.

Opening the night, Sanguisugabogg delivered a no-frills, heavy assault. Their set was short, punishing, and deliberately unpolished, in the best way. Sludgy riffs and guttural vocals turned the early crowd into a churning pit before the room had time to breathe.

Setlist:

  • Rotted Entanglement
  • Face Ripped Off
  • Felony Abuse of a Corpse
  • Abhorrent Contraception
  • Dead as Shit

Fit for an Autopsy brought a different kind of weight.
Their set felt almost apocalyptic against the stormy backdrop. Their performance balanced atmosphere with precision, layering crushing breakdowns over bleak, expansive soundscapes. Songs like “Pandora” and “Far From Heaven” gave the night a sense of scale, elevating it from pure aggression to something darker and more cinematic. By the end of their set, the venue wasn’t just warmed up, it was primed for collapse.

Setlist:

  • Lower Purpose
  • It Comes for You
  • The Wretch
  • Hostage
  • Warfare
  • Pandora
  • Far from Heaven

Kublai Khan TX followed with something even more volatile. Representing Texas with undeniable pride, their set felt personal. Tracks like “The Hammer” and “Theory of Mind” hit like blunt force trauma, with frontman Matt Honeycutt barking every line like a command. The crowd didn’t just respond, they exploded. This was easily one of the most physical sets of the night.

Setlist:

  • Darwinism
  • Supreme Ruler
  • Low Tech
  • Antpile
  • Boomslang
  • The Hamer
  • The Mountain of Corsicana
  • Antpile 2
  • Self-Destruct
  • Mud
  • Swan Song
  • Theory of Mind

When Lamb of God took the stage, the storm peaked, and so did the energy. Opening with “Ruin” and “Laid to Rest,” the band immediately turned the soaked crowd into a churning, relentless force. Water sprayed with every movement in the pit, every stomp sending mud and chaos into the air.

Frontman Randy Blythe leaned fully into the moment, pacing the stage like a man possessed, rain pouring down as he screamed into the night. Blythe commanded the stage like a preacher at the end of the world. Stalking, swinging, and screaming with an intensity that blurred the line between performance and possession.

The newer material from Into Oblivion hit even harder in these conditions. The title track carried a suffocating weight, its slower, crushing pace echoing through the storm like a warning signal. Themes of collapse and unrest felt tangible, mirrored by the weather itself.

512” was one of the most emotionally charged moments of the night. The track hits harder live not just because of its crushing groove, but because of its real-life weight. The numbers referring to the prison cell number in Prague’s Pankrác Prison where Blythe was held. That history adds a layer of tension and authenticity that the crowd clearly feels, screaming every word back like a release.

Instrumentally, Lamb of God remained razor sharp despite the conditions. The guitars of Mark Morton and Willie Adler cut clean through the noise of rain and crowd alike, while the rhythm section anchored everything with unshakable precision. It’s one thing to sound tight indoors. It’s another to deliver that level of performance in the middle of a storm, and make it feel intentional.

Lamb of God concluded their set with “Redneck.” The ultimate closer and pure catharsis. In the rain, it became something chaotic and celebratory all at once. Mud flying, voices colliding, and zero energy left unspent. It wasn’t just a song, it was a full-venue eruption.

At Moody Amphitheater, the Into Oblivion Tour became something more than a stacked lineup. It became an experience defined by atmosphere, endurance, and sheer force. The rain didn’t ruin the show, it transformed it. And Lamb of God didn’t just headline the night, they owned the storm.

Setlist:

  • Ruin
  • Laid to Rest
  • Blood Junkie
  • Into Oblivion
  • Resurrection Man
  • Grace
  • Desolation
  • 512
  • Walk With Me in Hell
  • Parasocial Christ
  • Omerta
  • 11th Hour
  • Memento Mori
  • Sepsis
  • Redneck

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