November 23, 2025
Doors: 7:00 PM - Show: 8:00 PM
18+
Kinda Evil, The Milestones, Heavy Friends, TV Battle Stations
Bandito's Burrito Lounge
2905 Patterson Ave, Richmond, VA, 23221
Date & Time
Sunday, November 23, 2025
8:00 PM
Location
Bandito's Burrito Lounge
2905 Patterson Ave, Richmond, VA, 23221


KINDA EVIL:
(pictured 1st)
KINDA EVIL brews 70s-hard rock and 90s-stoner metal with an inky dash of ‘riot grrrl’ punk for searing songcraft and spellbinding shows. Appealing to listeners of The Dead Weather, Black Sabbath, Hole, and Queens of the Stone Age, KINDA EVIL severs the polarity of good and evil in a cauldron of high octane energy. Psychedelic vocals electrify tempo shifts while menacing riffs vaporize into foggy far-out ballads. Dark, potent, and bittersweet; we’re all a little evil.
Heavy Friends
(not pictured)
Under the first autumnal turn there is a cry that can only be heard if you stand completely still. Big rock comes down and crashes into a shape that can only be called Heavy Friends.

The Milestones
(pictured 2nd)
The Milestones were started by longtime friends Alex Wandres and CJ Metz in a dingy
Baltimore warehouse, where guitars would roar well into the night. As they emerged
from that seedy void of a practice space, often as the sun was getting ready to rise,
some kind of rugged, raucous, and righteous rock n roll came out with them.
Now joined by drummer Devin Ritts and Cedric Lee Wertman on bass, the band has
refined the rawness of their initial sound and sculpted it into their own brand of
infectious indie dance rock, rife with carefully crafted hooks over expansive guitar
soundscapes. If you're able to catch them live and witness the charisma that these 4
musicians share while they let loose on stage, you will understand they never lost the
explosive energy of those original late night jam sessions - that storm just keeps rollin'
on.

TV Battle Stations
(pictured 3rd)
TV Battle Stations is the collaboration of prolific rockers Ava Coles and Spencer Berry, creating fresh but familiar songs featuring loud and often twangy guitars and evocative melodies. Smoky heartache, silvery regret, textured instrumentation, and electric commentary compose the essence of the TVBS discography.