The band confirmed the tour won’t happen after the necessary support didn’t materialize. No replacement dates have been offered.
The band confirmed the tour won’t happen after the necessary support didn’t materialize. No replacement dates have been offered.
A handful of this week’s newly announced tours cut through the noise, from Yaeji’s return to the road to Sweeping Promises’ post-punk roadshow.
The tour runs November 5 to December 11, with a double-header at the 1,800-capacity venue signaling a steady, understated rise.
The mixtape that broke him into the mainstream gets a full run of North American dates this summer and fall, a decade after its release.
The four-piece will take a rowdy victory lap across three US legs this summer and fall, marking two decades since their self-titled arrival.
Over half of the UK’s small venues now operate at a loss. At The Great Escape, venue operators made clear that the sector’s survival hinges on collaboration and a levy on large spaces that remains largely unsigned.
After the first two Boston dates sold out during pre-sale, a third show was added at TD Garden. The remaining tickets on secondary markets already reflect the tour’s high demand.
At their first full show since 2016, Jemaine Clement and Bret McKenzie brought their deadpan musical comedy back to Los Angeles, flubs and all.
A five-night stand at the newly opened Olympia venue marks a rare extended engagement for the singer in the capital.
The Texas set included the unreleased “Only Takes a Moment” and the long-shelved “Broken Things,” signaling a tour less interested in the obvious.