About
Sullivan King is a US-based artist who creates music combining heavy metal and EDM in order to create his unique and very emotional style of music. Born Keaton Prescott in LA, he was brought up in the company of rock and metal groups playing guitars from a very young age. At the same time, he got interested in electronic sounds and the energy of EDM events. Instead of making his choice, Sullivan decided to blend those two genres in his own special way and thus created a new genre which made him stand out among other artists in the worldwide bass music community.
In terms of his professional activities, Sullivan King is engaged in several roles simultaneously. Being a vocalist, he gives energetic and emotional performances more related to metalcore/post-hardcore artists rather than to DJs. His screams, melodies, and lyrics add a lot of personal meaning to his music. As a guitarist, he introduces live riffing, solo, and breakdown with an electric guitar in the middle of a DJ set. Being a producer and songwriter, he produces most of his songs himself, combining metal songwriting and production skills with the build-and-drop structure specific to bass music. That is why fans of Sullivan King eagerly await each new release of his songs.
Early Life & Career Beginnings
Sullivan King (real name: Keaton Prescott) is a product of his environment, hailing from Los Angeles, California, a city with a huge influence on both rock and electronic music. LA was his home and with it came a constant stream of concerts, studios and musicians: a fertile ground for his idea of what a career in music could be like. His childhood wasn’t spent isolated in one genre, but rather, exposed to a wide mix of sounds, from heavy metal bands blaring through speakers to electronic dance music echoing from clubs and festivals around the city. This environment provided the fertile ground for the hybrid style that would eventually define his identity as an artist and also set in motion the groundwork for the intense Sullivan King shows he would eventually take on tour.
Prescott showed an interest in music from an early age, particularly the guitar. Like many rock and metal fans he began by learning riffs from bands such as Metallica, Pantera and Avenged Sevenfold, teaching himself technique and stage presence by copying his heroes. He practiced for hours, mastering palm-muted chugs, high soaring solos and aggressive rhythms. As a teenager he joined and formed small local bands playing at school events, small venues and informal backyard shows. These initial gigs taught him how to work with other musicians, handle live sound problems, and play to a crowd. At the same time, he started experimenting with basic recording software on his computer, trying to get a feel for how tracks were layered, processed and mixed. From there, he slowly began exploring the idea of merging live metal fury with electronic sound design, a combination that would become the hallmark of what fans experience at a typical Sullivan King concert.
Musical Style & Influences
Sullivan King’s musical style is best described as a bridge between heavy rock/metal and modern electronic dance music but also features elements of pop, rock, and alternative. At its heart, his sound is a mix of distorted, aggressive electric guitars and live drums, with huge EDM drops, bass-heavy sound design and festival-ready buildups. He borrows catchy hooks, clear song structures (verse, pre-chorus, chorus) and easy-to-sing melodies from pop. He covers darker harmonies, powerful riffs and emotionally charged lyrics from rock and alternative. It’s like a rock band and a DJ sharing one body, with breakdowns that could be classic metal and choruses that explode like a mainstage EDM anthem, a contrast that defines many core Sullivan King songs for his fans.
Vocally, Sullivan King is one of a kind, blending the intensity of a rock frontman with the emotional range of a pop vocalist. His voice ranges from clean, melodic lines to gritty shouts and screams, often within the same song. This range enables him to keep up with the energy of both heavy breakdowns and soaring EDM drops. He often sings in a mid-to-high register, giving the choruses a sense of urgency and desperation, and his harsher vocals increase the feeling of anger or rebellion. Cracks, growls and imperfections become part of his signature, and his voice sounds raw and human, not overly polished, making studio recordings as immediate as a live show. It’s this combination of guitar tone, aggressive drops, and his unique vocal timbre that make discovering new Sullivan King songs so exciting for longtime fans; they can usually spot a Sullivan King track within seconds.
Career Development & Creative Path
Sullivan King’s career path is one of genre-blending, steady-hustling, savvy use of new music platforms. He started out as a metal guitarist and vocalist, before moving into the electronic scene, putting out early dubstep and heavy bass tracks on smaller labels and SoundCloud. These early releases didn’t chart, but they established an identifiable sound: chugging guitar riffs, screamed vocals and aggressive drops. His breakthrough came when the EDM scene was more open to “rockstep” and metal-infused bass music. His hybrid style showed that it could appeal to both headbanging and traditional EDM fans, with tracks like “Don’t Forget Me” with Kayzo, and later “Someone Else” with Excision, helping him leap from niche favorite to a regular name on festival bills, and those milestones now sit next to packed Sullivan King tour dates around the globe.
Concerts & Tours
Sullivan King has built his reputation on more than just studio releases, his explosive live shows are a blend of the energy of a metal concert and the immersive production of an EDM festival. He performs live as both a DJ and a live musician, tearing up guitar solos over heavy bass drops and screaming vocals that make every set a full-band experience, even when he’s solo on stage. His tours feature custom visuals, synchronized lighting, and breakdowns built for massive mosh pits and walls of death, bringing rock’s raw chaos into the rave world. Fans don’t just watch, they headbang, crowd-surf, and scream along, making his concerts feel more like a metal club show inside a festival mainstage, and this high-octane energy keeps Sullivan King concert tickets in particularly high demand.
Over the years Sullivan King has toured clubs, theatres and arenas across North America and Europe and beyond. In 2024 and 2025 he continued to play iconic venues including XS Nightclub and Encore Beach Club at the Wynn Las Vegas complex in Las Vegas, The Pyrle in Greensboro and Skydeck at Assembly Food Hall in Nashville. In early March, he brought his hybrid metal-EDM show to Europe, playing Klub Hydrozagadka in Warsaw, Cassiopeia in Berlin and Hafenklang in Hamburg, exposing new audiences to his intense crossover sound. Each city gets a slightly different set list, but certain anthems – like his collabs with Excision or heavy guitar-driven singles – almost always make it into the show because fans demand them, which is why people often plan well in advance to secure Sullivan King tickets.
Achievements & Awards
Sullivan King’s achievements have been built on one core premise since the very start of his career: that heavy, guitar-driven music and modern bass music can not only co-exist, but thrive together globally. One of the clearest indicators of this influence is his performance in the stream. He has racked up millions of streams on platforms like Spotify and Apple Music, with fan-favourites like “Bend Your Mind”, “Someone Else” and his collabs with artists like Excision, Subtronics and Kayzo regularly hitting multi-million-play figures. This mix of metal, dubstep and EDM, which used to be considered a “niche” combination, has proven successful on streaming platforms, proving his experiment has become a mainstream movement and helping to sustain demand for Sullivan King tickets worldwide.
Sullivan King’s Spotify monthly listener count has reached high six figures and beyond during peak touring and festival seasons, thanks to his placement on major editorial playlists focused on bass music, rock-influenced EDM, and festival bangers. His releases have also been featured on Apple Music charts and genre playlists, exposing him to rock fans who are curious about electronic music and ravers who might have never listened to metal. The fact that his music plays on such a wide range of playlists matters, because it shows that it’s not just a cult hit — it’s got real commercial legs across a range of audiences and territories.