Particularly across the past three years, a handful of fans at TX2 shows have turned into thousands, as Evan hears first-hand how his music has helped them through adversity. Despite his massive online presence and community he calls The X Movement, Evan suggests the most meaningful moments often happen at the merch booth.
“In Denver, there was a survivor of a shooting at a queer club who had bullet holes in their arms, and they told me they were playing our music at some of the queer club meetings they had for survivors,” recounts Evan. “They were talking about how it made them feel powerful. Every city, there’s some survivor of something who's like, ‘Dude, I needed your music,’ or some kid who’s like, ‘All I do is sit alone and listen to TX2.’ Sometimes the parent of the kid will start crying, and then I have to fight back tears.”
He might be the face and songwriting brains behind TX2, but Evan’s refusal to define the project as a band or solo project is emblematic of the open-ended entity it has become. Instead describing it as a “character”, he suggests that fans “can call [themselves] TX2” just like his guitarist and housemate Cam Rostami, bassist Courtney ‘Corky’ Howard and drummer Ethan Church.
Written about his partnership with Cam, 2024 single M.A.D. finds a home on End Of Us, set in a motel shootout at the end of a complex album storyline that, in brief, follows the resistance movement against a vampire apocalypse that has taken over the government.
“M.A.D. is the survivors’ shootout with Cam and I, the last moments before we’re taken away by the vampire guards,” explains Evan. “That’s a metaphor for Cam and I, up against all the odds in our career. Cam is my right-hand man. I don’t have a social life and much family right now, all I have is my band. There’s no purpose in winning and conquering the world if you do it by yourself, and that’s why it’s mutually assured destruction [M.A.D.].”