London Grammar have announced a brief UK arena tour for later this year – find all the details below.
The trio are set to release their fourth studio album ‘The Greatest Love’ on September 13 via Ministry Of Sound (pre-order here), and will head out on the road for their biggest shows to date in November.
“You asked, and we listened… 💙 UK arena tour incoming!! 🪰,” London Grammar wrote on social media today (July 3).
Three dates have been confirmed: the OVO Hydro in Glasgow (November 11), the AO Arena in Manchester (12) and The O2 in London (14).
These will follow the previously announced European gigs in Belgium, Amsterdam, Frankfurt and Berlin earlier that month.
Tickets for the forthcoming UK concerts go on general sale at 10am BST next Friday (July 12) – you’ll be able to buy yours here.
Alternatively, fans can access a pre-sale at the same time next Wednesday (10) by pre-ordering ‘The Greatest Love’ here before 3pm BST on Tuesday (9). Those who have already pre-ordered the album will automatically receive a code.
London Grammar’s 2024 UK arena dates are:
11 – OVO Hydro, Glasgow
12 – AO Arena, Manchester
14 – The O2, London
The news follows the group’s headline performance on the Park Stage at Glastonbury 2024 last Sunday (June 30). Later this month, London Grammar will top the bill at Latitude Festival alongside Kasabian and Duran Duran.
‘The Greatest Love’ – the follow-up to 2021’s ‘Californian Soil’ – has already been previewed with the singles ‘House’, ‘Kind Of Man’ and ‘Into Gold’.
Speaking to NME in April 2023, band member Dot Major teased that London Grammar were “definitely getting there” with their next full-length project. “We’re all really excited, because it’s been a little while – as it always is with us,” he explained.
This coincided with comments shared by guitarist Dan Rothman in July 2022, when he told NME that the trio had “been working on” their fourth album throughout the COVID-19 pandemic.
Similarly, London Grammar previously said in an interview with NME that their next LP could be their “best one yet”. At the time, frontwoman Hannah Reid said it would contain “a lot of deep, philosophical questions about life, relationships and love”.
Read the original article here