

As part of this year’s Summer Sessions, Heavy Weather stormed into King Tut’s on Friday night, turning the intimate Glasgow venue into a furnace of noise, sweat and energy.
The rising band, already making waves on the Scottish circuit, proved they’re more than just a name to watch Heavy weather are a live force impossible to ignore.
Earlier in the night, Bambitos, No Bad News in Heaven and Heavy Skint delivered standout support slots, each bringing their own artistic expression to the stage.
From Bambitos’ sharp, driving energy to the layered intensity of No Bad News in Heaven, and the raw, unfiltered edge of Heavy Skint, every act added a unique spark that built the perfect atmosphere for the headliners to step into.

The anticipation in the room was tangible before Heavy Weather. A restless energy building with every minute. When they finally stepped on stage, the reaction was immediate.
The first chord cracked like thunder, setting the tone for a set that was equal parts ferocious and euphoric. Their sound was sharp and relentless, every note landing with precision but never feeling polished to the point of restraint.
The vocals carried both fury and tenderness. There was a sense of honesty in every lyric, a confessional edge that lifted the songs above mere performance. The crowd matched that intensity.

Packed shoulder to shoulder and the room seemed to pulse with the band’s momentum.
Each track bled into the next without pause, the energy sustained at a level that felt unstoppable.
By the end, King Tut’s belonged to them. The final notes dissolved into an erupting crowd with applause, the kind of response that comes when an audience knows they’ve witnessed something special.

This was more than just another amazing Summer Sessions gig—it was a statement. Heavy Weather are not simply playing shows; they’re setting out their place in Scotland’s music landscape. Urgent, unfiltered and unforgettable, they burned bright on Friday night