Home Music Sum 41 announce UK and European leg of farewell enviornment tour

Sum 41 announce UK and European leg of farewell enviornment tour


Sum 41 have introduced a handful of 2024 UK and European exhibits for his or her ultimate enviornment tour. Try extra particulars under.

The Canadian rock band – comprised of Deryck Whibley, Dave Baksh, Jason “Cone” McCaslin, Tom Thacker and Frank Zummo – have added a string of UK and EU exhibits to their farewell ‘Tour Of The Setting Sum’, which can kick off within the Netherlands on October 21.

They’ll additionally make stops in Paris, Budapest and Vienna. The UK leg will take them to Leeds, Cardiff, Glasgow, Manchester and Nottingham, earlier than wrapping up at London’s OVO Wembley Enviornment on October 31.

Tickets for the UK & EU leg of the tour go on sale at 10am this Friday (June 28) and can be found to buy right here.

The tour started this 12 months on March 1 in Jakarta, Indonesia, and can finish of their house province of Ontario, Canada with the band’s ultimate efficiency going down in Toronto on January, 30 2025. For the UK leg, Sum 41 will likely be supported by The Bronx, and Neck Deep will be a part of for the EU exhibits.

“We’re actually excited to announce exhibits within the UK and Europe later this 12 months,” stated frontman Deryck Whibley. “This varieties one other leg of our last-ever exhibits and our followers abroad have been unimaginable to us through the years, so we will’t wait to placed on on the very best present of our lives and exit on a excessive.”

Sum 41’s 2024 UK and European tour dates are:

October
21 – Den Bosch Brabanthallen, ‘s-Hertogenbosch, NL 
23 – ING Enviornment, Brussels, BEL 
24 – Caen Zenith, Caen, FR 
26 – First Direct Enviornment, Leeds, UK 
27 – Hydro, Glasgow, UK
28 – Co-op Reside Enviornment, Manchester, UK 
30 – Motorpoint Enviornment, Nottingham, UK 
31 – OVO Wembley Enviornment, London, UK 

November
2 – Utilita Enviornment, Cardiff, UK

9 – Atlas Enviornment, Łódź, POL 
10 – Prague O2 CZECH
12 – MVM dome, Budapest, HUN 
13 – Stadhalle, Vienna, AUS 
16 – Unipol, Bologna, IT
17 – Pallazzo Dello Sport, Rome, IT 
21 – Geneva Enviornment, Geneva, CH 
23 – La Défense Enviornment, Paris, France 

Earlier this 12 months, the band introduced they might be breaking apart after the discharge of their eighth studio album ‘Heaven :x: Hell‘, and the following world tour that included a ultimate look at Obtain Competition final week, and a efficiency at Mad Cool Competition in Madrid subsequent month.

“Being in Sum 41 since 1996 introduced us a few of the greatest moments of our lives,” they wrote in an X submit asserting their disbanding. “We’re perpetually grateful to our followers each previous and new, who’ve supported us in each method. It’s laborious to articulate the love and respect we’ve got for all of you and we needed you to listen to it from us first.”

In December 2023, Whibley spoke to NME in regards to the band’s choice to cease making music. “I really feel actually good about this album, which is why I felt it needs to be the final one. We didn’t know we’d be splitting up after we have been making it, however I’ve been making data and touring with this band since I used to be 15,” he stated. “I’ve had this sense for a very long time now that I wish to do one thing completely different and it simply looks like the suitable time. This album looks like the proper method to exit.”

He added: “Over the previous few years, the touring has always been getting greater and the band is at our greatest. My worry is that if I begin to lose the thrill, we’ll simply fade away. I care an excessive amount of in regards to the followers and what we’ve constructed as a band to let that occur, simply because it’s a great paycheque.”

This month, Whibley shared his need to reunite with Sum 41’s former frontman Jon Marshall who left the group after solely a 12 months in 1997. In an interview with the Each day Star, he revealed that ‘Johnny Libertine’, a monitor from their newest album, ‘Heaven :x: Hell’, was written about Marshall, who he known as “probably the most punk-rock man I’ve ever recognized”.

In a three-star overview for ‘Heaven :x: Hell’, NME‘s Rishi Shah wrote: “Actually a melting pot of soundscapes cherry-picked from their profession, ‘Heaven :x: Hell’ is a becoming final hurrah for a band who sealed their place in historical past way back.”



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*