Live Review: Lamb of God + Kublai Khan TX + Fit For An Autopsy + Sanguisugabogg @ Coca-Cola Roxy, Atlanta - April 15, 2026
- Apr 17
- 3 min read

Some nights are built to escalate, and this one did exactly that. Four bands, each heavier than the last, all packed into the Coca-Cola Roxy on a Braves game night, which already had the area chaotic before doors even opened. Once inside though, it locked in quick. This wasn’t a casual crowd. People showed up early and stayed engaged the entire night, which says a lot when you’re starting this heavy right out of the gate.
Sanguisugabogg
Sanguisugabogg kicked things off right at 7:00, and they did exactly what an opener like this is supposed to do. No easing into it. Just straight into thick, nasty riffs that immediately grabbed attention. The room wasn’t even fully packed yet, but the people who were in already started moving.

It felt raw in the best way. Devin Swank stayed right in it with the crowd, and the band kept things tight without overcomplicating anything. Opening with “Rotted Entanglement” and closing on “Dead as Shit,” they kept it short and effective. By the time they walked off, the room was warmed up and ready for more.
Fit For An Autopsy
Fit For An Autopsy came in next and shifted the tone without losing any weight. Where the opener felt chaotic, this felt controlled. Everything was tighter, more deliberate, and you could feel the experience in how they built their set.

Joe Badolato came out swinging with “Lower Purpose,” and from there it just kept building. Tracks like “Warfare” and “Pandora” really stood out, not just for how heavy they hit, but how the crowd responded to them. By the time they closed with “Far From Heaven,” the pit was fully moving and the energy had clearly stepped up from where it started.
Kublai Khan TX
Kublai Khan TX took that energy and pushed it even further. From the second they opened with “Darwinism,” it was obvious this set was going to hit different. The sound was heavier, the delivery was more aggressive, and the crowd reacted instantly.

Matt Honeycutt controlled the room in a way that felt direct and intense without losing connection with the crowd. Songs like “The Mountain of Corsicana” and “Self-Destruct” kept the momentum going, and even with a quick restart during “Boomslang” because of a mic issue, nothing slowed down. Closing with “Theory of Mind” left the room exactly where it needed to be before the headliner. Loud, chaotic, and completely locked in.
Lamb of God
By the time Lamb of God hit the stage at 9:40, the crowd was already there. No warm-up needed. The curtain drop into “Ruin” set it off instantly, and from that point forward it never let up.

“Laid to Rest” hit exactly how you’d expect, and “Blood Junkie” got one of the biggest reactions of the night. What stood out though was how well the newer material fit into the set. “Into Oblivion” and “Parasocial Christ” didn’t feel like they slowed anything down. They held their own right alongside the older tracks.
The pacing of the set was dialed in. “512” brought a different kind of weight to the middle of the show, and you could feel that shift in the room before it ramped right back up. By the time “Walk With Me in Hell” and “Omerta” came around, the entire floor was moving, crowd surfers were constant, and security was working overtime just to keep things flowing.
Closing with “Sepsis” and “Redneck” left nothing on the table. It felt earned, not just loud for the sake of it. Lamb of God still knows how to build a set that keeps people engaged from start to finish, and this one didn’t miss.

Lamb of God Setlist – Coca-Cola Roxy, Atlanta (April 15, 2026)
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
Band Links
Lamb of God
Kublai Khan TX
Fit For An Autopsy
Sanguisugabogg
Final Thought
This was one of those lineups where every band did their job and pushed the next one harder. By the time Lamb of God closed it out, the crowd was all in, and it felt like the kind of show that reminds you why live metal still hits the way it does.
Photos © Chris Collett / No Flash Needed
Lamb of God
Kublai Khan TX
Fit For An Autopsy
Sanguisugabogg



















































































































