The Last Dinner Party have added three shows to their upcoming UK and Ireland tour due to huge demand.
READ MORE: The Last Dinner Party live in London: baroque-pop maximalists seize the throne
The London five-piece announced details of their autumn tour in January, where they will be playing their biggest headline show to date at the Eventim Apollo. The tour will follow the band’s slew of North American dates this year in support of recently-shared debut album ‘Prelude To Ecstasy’.
Now, the band have added an extra set of dates due to overwhelming demand. A brand new show at Belfast’s Telegraph Building has been added, alongside further dates in Dublin and one more show at the Eventim Apollo.
“We are delighted to say that our autumn adventures will be taken to even dizzier heights of frenzy and experimental trousers with new tour dates in Belfast, Dublin and London,” the band wrote on X/Twitter.
Tickets are on sale at 8am tomorrow (February 9) – get yours here.
The Last Dinner Party’s tour dates for 2024 are:
SEPTEMBER
18 – The Telegraph Building, Belfast [NEW]
23 – O2 City Hall, Newcastle
24 – O2 Academy, Leeds
25 – Octagon Centre, Sheffield
27 – The LCR, UEA, Norwich
28 – The Engine Shed, Lincoln
29 – Tramshed, Cardiff
OCTOBER
1 – O2 Academy, Birmingham
2 – Rock City, Nottingham
4 – O2 Academy, Bristol
5 – O2 Guildhall, Southampton
7 – 3Olympia, Dublin
8 – 3Olympia, Dublin [NEW]
10 – O2 Academy, Glasgow
11 – O2 Victoria Warehouse, Manchester
12 – Mountford Hall, Liverpool
14 – Corn Exchange, Cambridge
16 – Eventim Apollo, London
17 – Eventim Apollo, London [NEW]
NME saw the band play at their Roundhouse gig last week, where we gave their performance four stars: “Tonight feels like a glimpse into the next era of The Last Dinner Party, for which they’ll be hitting stages with a whole album out in the world. Give it one more week, and crowds will be reciting every word right back at them.”
The band also recently released their debut album ‘Prelude To Ecstasy’, which NME gave a glowing four star review to: “Some may choose to posit the band’s success as an antidote to the intense scrutiny – about their rise, appearance and decision to make music without a ‘serious’ intention – they’ve received in their early career,” it read.
“But take all of that away, and you’re still left with fantastic songs that are easy to embrace and return to. It’s hard to miss all the things they’re doing right.”
In other news, The Last Dinner Party have hit back against industry plant allegations.
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