The Vaccines have announced new UK tour dates for this autumn.
The dates follow a run of arena shows alongside Kings of Leon over the summer, and will see the indie-rockers play venues across Bexhill-on-Sea, London, Norwich, Lincoln, Coventry, Middlesbrough, Scarborough, Wolverhampton, Bournemouth, Cardiff and Bath between October 22 and November 4.
The dates are in support of the band’s latest album, ‘Pick-Up Full Of Pink Carnations’, which arrived in January. Tickets go on general sale here at 10am next Friday (August 2).
In a three-star review of the record, NME wrote that while “it might not offer anything new”, the band are “good at what they do, even if it’s nothing particularly groundbreaking.”
we’re so excited to announce our autumn tour 2024!
you can register NOW to give yourself the best chance at securing presale tickets, live via our AAA pass next Wednesday at 10am.
head to the link in our bio to get your vaccines AAA pass if you haven’t yet downloaded… pic.twitter.com/CJW7oCljmk
— The Vaccines (@thevaccines) July 26, 2024
The Vaccines tour 2024 dates:
October
22 – Bexhill, De La Warr Pavillion
23 – London, Roundhouse
25 – Norwich, UEA
26 – Lincoln, Engine Shed
27 – Coventry, HMV Empire
29 – Middlesbrough Town Hall
30 – Scarborough, The Spa
31 – Wolverhampton, University of Wolverhampton at The Wulfrun Hall
November
02 – Bournemouth, O2 Academy
03 – Cardiff, Great Hall
04 – Bath Forum
Last year, The Vaccines spoke to NME about the “hopeful and euphoric” ten-track offering, with frontman Justin Young saying the record felt “nostalgic” to them.
“Something I’ve said about our music so many times is there’s euphoria and melancholia in equal measure,” he said. “I don’t think this is a sad or depressing record – I actually think it’s quite hopeful and euphoric – but I do think it has these melancholic undertones.”
He continued: “It’s more cohesive than most [of our] records in terms of songs, but sound as well. It feels like we achieved what we set out to achieve.
“There’s this brief love affair that you get to have with the album you’ve made between finishing it and everybody else hearing it, and before people telling you it’s not pretty enough or clever enough, or whatever it may be. I’ve really enjoyed that period – I’ve played the album to death and it’s given me a lot of joy, so hopefully it’ll give other people joy too.”
You can view the original article HERE.