A concertgoer says they were assaulted and stripped of clothing after the Baltimore hardcore band instructed the audience to single them out.
Hardcore shows operate on a volatile contract. A Baltimore band’s set in Toronto last weekend tested where that contract breaks.
During End It’s performance, a person near the stage wore a banana costume — the kind of odd, harmless gesture that usually earns a nod. Instead, vocalist Akil Godsey allegedly told the crowd to attack the fan. The attendee later posted: “I was an unwilling participant, attacked and clothing removed at the direction of a band I paid to see… What would you do?”
End It have built a reputation on confrontational live energy, deliberately eroding the line between stage and pit. But the instruction to turn collective physicality against one specific person — and to strip them — shifts the premise. It moves from shared risk to targeted degradation.
The incident surfaces at a moment when hardcore is renegotiating its relationship to safety, consent, and crowd violence. Pit etiquette has always been imperfect, but singling out a spectator for ridicule and assault under the band’s command isn’t chaos. It’s orchestration.
End It have not issued a public statement. The question now isn’t what the genre permits — it’s what the people making the music decide to be responsible for.
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