Capulet Fest 2024 was meant to be three summer days of “rock and metalcore mayhem” at a 13,000-capacity speedway in Thompson, Connecticut, in June. Boasting more than 50 bands including Impending Doom and Nothing More, two stages, loads of camping, booze and food zones, a VIP meet-and-greet lounge, and much more. The full experience cost $700.

“Witness history in the making,” ran the festival slogan. “Come, let us defy the stars.”

More from Spin:

THE YEAR IN MUSIC, 2024: EDM

THE YEAR IN MUSIC, 2024: Thing of the Year

THE YEAR IN MUSIC, 2024: Please Go Home (We’ve Had Enough of These People)

But the day before the show, the organizers shifted venue to a theater in Hartford, fifty miles away, a capacity drop from 13,000 to 1,200. Many fans still turned up to Webster Theater for the Friday June 28 start, finding a shrinking bill at the shrunken venue. Bands including It Dies Today would not perform as advertised, yet the ailing “festival” limped on.

Until day 2, when, right as LiveKill ripped into its second song, the theater shut the whole thing down, later issuing a statement that bills were not getting paid. Bands, vendors, and fans were understandably apoplectic, venting up a storm on local news and social media, and launching a Victims of Capulet Fest 2024 Facebook group. Ominously, Connecticut Attorney General William Tong said that “nothing makes me more angry than seeing people in our state getting ripped off,” and announced an investigation.

Piss off thousands of metal fans at your peril. Clipping from the Record-Journal of Meriden, Connecticut.

READ THE REST OF THE YEAR IN MUSIC!

2024: an overview

Don’t call it a comeback (but it is)

Musicians of the year

Thing of the year

Please go home (we’ve had enough of these people)

Albums of the year

Songs of the year

Breakout artists of the year

The year of the CD

10 albums you should have heard but didn’t

The year in EDM

To see our running list of the top 100 greatest rock stars of all time, click here.