Veronica Everheart Held her Album Release Show at a Muay Thai Gym – With Live Fighting
We were asked to remove our shoes. Without my boots, I discovered that jumping on the rubber gym mat in socks was oddly fun, and I was ready to dance.
Guys in undone collared shirts started a loose mosh to opener ideasforconversation's analog dance set, followed by Star’s Revenge's alt-rock set. Their hook, “Me and my friends we fuck around," fit the feeling. No expectations – only pure fun.
As the band played on, the lights lifted and two gloved men entered the ring: we were about to witness the first fight. The crowd danced and cheered to the guys duking it out, punching and kicking and spinning around one another.
Then Veronica Everheart took the stage. Veronica’s voice oscillated between mellow and fiery as she sang her raw, witty lyrics. In the track "22 & Counting," she recalls a "white boy in Dimes Square," who gets off on his "Substack and Marlboros."
Veronica played acoustic guitar, and Juni mastered distortions and samples. Her sound pulls from Joni Mitchell, LCD Soundsystem, Nine Inch Nails, and The Velvet Underground. Juni identified it as “post-alternative, digital singer-songwriter."
The question, of course, was how a Muay Thai gym became the venue for the show.
Veronica Everheart was uninterested in following the standard venue-selection route after three years working on the album. “I wanted something memorable, especially in New York, where everything demands your attention,” said Veronica.
Juni is a Muay Thai fighter who trains at DiamondHeart. After an unsatisfying meeting discussing a venue, he went to practice. “I was looking around, and I was like, ‘What the fuck? Why don’t we just do it here?”
The gym, 3rd Space, and the band’s record label, Pack Records, brought the vision to life. But an empty gym wasn’t satisfactory: “It would have to have live fights,” said Veronica.
The fighters didn’t need convincing to do the show. “People who do Muay Thai – they are obsessed with it. They’ll take any opportunity,” said Juni. "They were just down for the love of the game.”
It’s that devotion to one's craft that carried Veronica Everheart through the production of “Lighter in the Morning.”
“This album, to us, is what happens when two people completely give their entire lives to an endeavor,” said Juni. Veronica still lived in her home state of Arizona when the duo began the project. For two years, she flew to NYC multiple times a year for 5-day recording stints lasting 17 hours a day. Juni said that the album was born "by some grace of God.”
“Lighter in the Morning (2/2),” released this month, completed the album they introduced in 2024 with its first iteration. Dividing the project was more about a lack of money and time than a preference. Regardless, having learned from the first half, the split defined two distinct eras.
There was a feeling of playfulness in the gym that Friday night. The musicians, fighters, and the shoeless crowd shared the feeling that they were part of something impossible to replicate.
Veronica Everheart’s album and its release show were a one-two punch.

































