
A stripped back session in the AGT Music Room offered viewers a fresh look at a rising rock act better known for amplifiers, leather, and arena energy. Presented by Lavazza, the performance centered on an acoustic take of the original song “Loaded,†a track the band said it first wrote more than a decade ago.
The arrangement traded thunderous volume for crisp guitars and close harmonies, letting the song’s determination and self belief move to the front. Even without a full stage production, the group preserved a sense of momentum, turning the room into a compact showcase for melodic hard rock.
Before playing, the musicians briefly introduced “Loaded†as an early composition, underscoring how long the song has traveled with them. That context gave the performance extra weight, suggesting it was not just another set list selection but a statement about identity, persistence, and the long road behind their current visibility.
Its lyrics, as delivered in the session, revolved around extremes of fortune and struggle, with the singer recalling being both loaded and broke. Yet the repeated message was not defeat but devotion, especially in lines that framed rock music as the only path chosen and the one love that could not be erased.
That spirit ran through the rest of the song, which described learning without support, standing firm without understanding, and resisting the temptation to complain. The words emphasized choosing one’s direction, keeping belief intact, and walking forward despite pressure, turning a personal reflection into a broader anthem of resilience.
Instrumentally, the acoustic version still made room for flashes of virtuosity, including a featured guitar passage that drew cheers in the room. The transition from intimate singing to nimble lead work helped mirror the band’s larger identity, proving that its songs can survive outside the high volume environment where they were first built.

After the applause, the session shifted into a relaxed interview that revealed how the band first discovered the music that would shape its career. The answer began with a familiar classic, as the musicians said they stumbled onto “Hotel California†as children and quickly learned that mastering it carried serious status among neighborhood players.
That gateway song opened the door to a much louder universe, one filled with celebrated names from hard rock and heavy metal. They pointed to acts such as Iron Maiden, Bon Jovi, Guns N’ Roses, and Aerosmith as major influences, presenting their own sound as part of a lineage rooted strongly in the nineteen eighties.
Asked about dream collaborations, the group gave an answer that blended gratitude with ambition rather than fantasy alone. They noted they have already supported major international performers more than once, including two opening appearances for Guns N’ Roses, while also sharing bills with Mr. Big, Bullet for My Valentine, Scorpions, and Nazareth.
Those credits, while impressive, were presented not as proof of arrival but as milestones on a longer climb. The musicians made clear that they still see a significant journey ahead, a perspective that fits the humble persistence expressed in “Loaded†and helps explain why they continue to pursue ever larger stages.
The conversation then turned to the group’s experience on America’s Got Talent, which they described as one of the world’s biggest stages for exposure. In that telling, the decision to travel for the competition was driven less by novelty than by strategy, an effort to place the band before an audience far larger than the traditional club or festival circuit.
Reaching the quarterfinals, they said, only deepened that sense of purpose because it offered a second chance to be seen on an even bigger scale. Their comments framed the AGT run as an opportunity fulfilled, not simply because of competitive results, but because the platform amplified the band’s visibility and validated the decision to make the trip.
The Music Room setting helped underline that point by removing many of the distractions that accompany television spectacle and focusing attention on craft. In a series built around dramatic reveals and large production values, the acoustic segment worked almost like a newsroom profile, compressing history, influences, ambition, and performance into one compact document.
For viewers unfamiliar with the group, “Loaded†served as a concise introduction to its ethos, balancing vulnerability with confidence and melody with grit. For those who had followed the AGT appearances, the new arrangement offered proof that the act is not dependent on volume alone and can translate its message across different formats.
Taken together, the performance and interview painted a portrait of artists who remain deeply attached to the sounds that first inspired them while thinking carefully about the future. Their story linked childhood discovery, years of writing, major support slots, and a global television platform into a single narrative about staying true to a chosen road.
The song itself carried the language of self renewal, returning again and again to the idea that worry and regret should not control the outcome. By insisting there were no true defeats inside the story, only lessons and choices, the lyric turned hardship into evidence of growth, an interpretation that likely explains why the band continues to perform this older original in new contexts.
There was also an understated confidence in the way the musicians discussed success, acknowledging prestigious opportunities without letting them overshadow the work still to come. That balance between pride and perspective matched the acoustic presentation, which celebrated a hard won career path yet avoided excess, allowing the songwriting and history behind it to carry the emotional force for listeners in the room that day.
In the end, the session functioned as both performance and calling card, reminding audiences that rock can communicate clearly even at a lower volume. With an enduring original song, a set of formative influences, and gratitude for a major television platform, the band left the Music Room sounding reflective, seasoned, and ready for whatever larger audience comes next after this intimate but consequential appearance.
[Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yMZcYX3jO8s]