JINJER Review from Buckhead Theatre

This Jinjer review covers the June 18, 2026 show at Buckhead Theatre in Atlanta, GA, with support from Entheos and Crystal Lake.
Jinjer brought their North American Duél Tour 2026 to Buckhead Theatre on Thursday night, turning the Atlanta stop into a full night of modern metal, technical precision, and heavy crowd movement. With Crystal Lake opening the show and Entheos setting the stage before Jinjer, the lineup gave the room two different versions of intensity before the headliner even hit the first note.
Buckhead Theatre’s mix of historic character and close-quarters layout gave the show the right kind of setting. It is a room that can still feel personal even when the floor is packed, and for a band like Jinjer, that made the heavier moments feel even more direct.

Crystal Lake opened the night at 7:00 p.m. and wasted no time getting the room moving. The Japanese metalcore band came out hard with “Everblack,” setting a fast pace that carried through the rest of their set.
With touring vocalist Myke Terry up front, Crystal Lake balanced sharp, aggressive vocals with the kind of big hooks that kept the set from becoming one-note. The band’s pacing stayed tight, moving through rapid shifts without losing the crowd. Songs like “Bludgod,” “Neversleep,” “Hail to the Fire,” and “The Weight of Sound” gave the opening set a strong mix of newer material and heavy momentum.

Entheos followed with a set that leaned into a different kind of heaviness. Where Crystal Lake hit with immediate metalcore force, Entheos brought a more technical and progressive attack. Vocalist Chaney Crabb commanded the stage with a mix of gutturals, screams, and cleaner textures, while the band moved through complex arrangements with serious control.
The set pulled from the band’s more recent material, including “All for Nothing,” “Empty of the Inside,” “I Am the Void,” “Life in Slow Motion,” and “The Sinking Sun.” It was heavy, but it was not just heavy for the sake of it. Entheos brought atmosphere and precision together in a way that gave the middle of the night its own identity.

By the time Jinjer took the stage shortly before 9:15 p.m., Buckhead Theatre was fully ready. The Ukrainian progressive metal band opened with “Duél,” the title track from their latest album, and immediately set the tone for a set built around sharp grooves, quick turns, and the kind of controlled chaos that has made them one of the most respected bands in modern metal.
Tatiana Shmayluk remains the center of Jinjer’s live impact. Her ability to move from clean melodies into full-force growls is still one of the band’s defining features, but the show was never just about one voice. Guitarist Roman Ibramkhalilov, bassist Eugene Abdukhanov, and drummer Vladislav Ulasevich gave every shift in the set real weight, locking into the band’s rhythmic changes without making the songs feel overworked.

The early run of “Green Serpent,” “Fast Draw,” “Vortex,” “Disclosure!,” and “Tantrum” showed how well Jinjer can move between newer material and the band’s established sound. The songs never felt like disconnected moments. Each one built on the last, giving the set a steady sense of pressure as the room pushed along with them.
The middle of the night brought some of the biggest fan reactions, especially with “Teacher, Teacher!,” “Judgement (& Punishment),” “I Speak Astronomy,” and “Perennial.” Those songs showed the range that has always made Jinjer stand out. The band can be technical without feeling cold, heavy without becoming predictable, and melodic without losing the edge that brought the crowd there in the first place.
The final stretch kept that momentum moving through “Someone’s Daughter,” “Rogue,” and “Pisces,” with the crowd staying locked in as the set moved toward its close. Jinjer’s strength live is not just the musicianship, even though there is plenty of that. It is the way the band turns complicated songs into something that still feels physical in the room.
The night closed with a single-song encore, “Sit Stay Roll Over,” giving the Atlanta crowd one final hit of the band’s older material before the lights came up. By then, Jinjer had delivered a set that felt heavy, focused, and fully in control, with Entheos and Crystal Lake making the entire bill feel complete from top to bottom.

Setlist | Atlanta, GA – June 18, 2026
Duél
Green Serpent
Fast Draw
Vortex
Disclosure!
Tantrum
Teacher, Teacher!
Kafka
Judgement (& Punishment)
Hedonist
I Speak Astronomy
Perennial
Someone’s Daughter
Rogue
Pisces
Sit Stay Roll Over
Stay Connected
JINJER
Entheos
Crystal Lake
For more Atlanta concert reviews, visit the Atlanta Music Press concert review archive.
JINJER
Entheos
Crystal Lake
All Photos © Chris Collett / Atlanta Music Press.
For more Atlanta concert reviews, visit the Atlanta Music Press concert review archive.
For more coverage from this venue, check out our Buckhead Theatre concert reviews page.















































