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King Hannah Announce New Album ‘Big Swimmer’, Share New Single With Sharon Van Etten

Liverpool duo King Hannah have announced the follow-up to their 2022 debut LP I’m Not Sorry, I Was Just Being Me. It’s called Big Swimmer, and it arrivees May 31 via City Slang. Produced by Ali Chant, the album features Sharon Van Etten on two songs, including the title track, which is out today. Check out a video for it below, and scroll down for Big Swimmer‘s cover art and tracklist, as well as the band’s upcoming tour dates.

“I remember sitting at my desk and the song just came pouring out and the big swimmer metaphor instantly felt right; to never give up on whatever it is you’re swimming hard towards,” vocalist Hannah Merrick said in a statement. “But I like that it questions the listener too, that whenever you’re faced with something challenging, do you carry on swimming or do you jump out and grab our towel? There’s no right answer, but it feels empowering and necessary for the record.”

Revisit our Artist Spotlight interview with King Hannah.

Big Swimmer Cover Artwork:

Big Swimmer Tracklist:

1. Big Swimmer [feat. Sharon Van Etten]
2. New York, Let’s Do Nothing
3. The Mattress
4. Milk Boy (I Love You)
5. Suddenly, Your Hand
6. Somewhere Near El Paso
7. Lily Pad
8. Davey Says
9. Scully
10. This Wasn’t Intentional [feat. Sharon Van Etten]
11. John Prine On The Radio

King Hannah 2024 Tour Dates:

May 15 – 18 – Brighton, UK – The Great Escape
Aug 30 – Dorset, UK – End of the Road
Sep 5 – Berlin, DE – Lido
Sep 9 – Amsterdam, NL – Paradiso
Sep 12 – Paris, FR – La Maroquinerie
Sep 13 – Brussels, BE – AB Club: Brussels
Sep 25 – London, UK – Rich Mix

Jon McKiel Shares New Single ‘String’

The Baie Verte, New Brunswick singer-songwriter Jon McKiel has previewed his upcoming album Hex with a new single, ‘String’. Listen to it below.

Hex, the follow-up to 2020’s Bobby Joe Hope, will be out May 3 on You’ve Changed Records. It was performed and produced in close collaboration with JOYFULTALK’s Jay Crocker.

The Handmaid’s Tale Season 6: Latest News, Rumours & Release date

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The Handmaid’s Tale has already caught the audience’s attention with its superb cast, unique characters, and twisting storyline. The previous five seasons were great enough to win over audiences’ hearts, who are now waiting for the sixth season to hit screens and unravel some new aspects of the original storyline.

If you belong to the same group of people, look no further because you have landed on the right page. Keep reading, and the forthcoming content will illuminate all the rumoured news about The Handmaid’s Tale Season 6.

When will Handmaid’s Tale season 6 be out?

The most important and commonly asked question about the tale season is related to its Season 6 arrival. Whether it is the official platform or the fan pages on social media, viewers have witnessed asking a bunch of questions about the show launch.

Well, the filming started in late autumn of 2023. However, the SAG-AFTRA pushed that back for unknown reasons — mainly concerned with the technicalities. In February 2024, the head of Disney announced that The Handmaid’s Tale was coming on the screens in the summer of 2025.

This is about a 12-month window from now. However, no announcement was made about the deadline. Due to the uncertain situation, the production process might be delayed, causing delays in the release of season 6..

The Handmaid’s Tale Series Cast

Next, viewers are concerned about seeing the beloved faces to which they are attached by past seasons. The good news for those is that the significant cast of the old seasons, including Elisabeth Moss, Yvonne Strahovski, Madeline Brewer, Max Minghella, OT Fagbenle, and Ann Dowed, will be reprising their roles in the upcoming season.

However, no official announcement has been made in this regard to Season 6. At the same time, there is one significant change. The actress Alexis Bledel, who played Emily in the past seasons, has announced her leave from the upcoming season. 

Hence, the fans might have to adjust to the plot twist. Or a new actor within the same character will be introduced depending upon the maker’s choice. Again, an official announcement has yet to be made regarding the matter.

The fans would be witnessing a lot of changes over the season. So be prepared for new faces entering the venture and capturing your heart with their performances and unique storylines.

What will be the plot of The Handmaid’s Season 6?

At the end of season 5, viewers were in awe of three questions discussed as follows.

  • Will June and Nick be together in season 6?
  • Did June make it to safety at the end? Is she okay?
  • Will anyone in the group be able to bring down Gilead once and for all?

The rumoured answer to the second question is yes. June did make it to safety, and this season, she would be figuring out who she is and what she will be doing for the rest of her life. Hence, the audience can expect to learn more about June’s personality, goals, concerns, etc, in the series.

There might be some changes in the show’s direction because Bruce Miller is a big fan of spin-offs. However, think of loading less fan-favorite characters such as Moira and Rita under this change of direction.

 At the same time, expect to witness multiple flashbacks shedding light upon all the leashed and covered parts that were significantly not exposed by the makers to be used at the right time.

How will The Handmaid’s Tale Set Up Testaments

We have already discussed that Miller is a fan of spin-off series and likes to adopt the techniques into his creations. We can expect to see some plot points dealing with multiple characters at different places.

He said, “I don’t think that we are obliged by anything to tie up the entire plot of Gilead. Especially not because we have stopped the sequel from appearing in the Testaments. Hence, we have the opportunity to continue the story.”

Disney’s Craige told us about the deadline and that it might be an extension to the franchise as we have a very robust slate for which we are enthusiastic. Hence, the fans may have to wait longer for in-depth details.

Where to watch The Handmaid’s Tale Season 6?

No official announcements are made related to the availability status. However, as all the other seasons are available on Amazon Prime, we expect the season to be on the same platform.

Final Thoughts

The season of The Handmaid’s Tale has kept fans waiting for a while, making them inquire about the updates. So, find all the highlights about the upcoming Handmaid’s Tale season, the latest news, rumors, and release date on Our Culture.

Swamp Dogg Announces New Album Featuring Justin Vernon, Jenny Lewis, Margo Price, and More

Swamp Dogg has announced a new album, Blackgrass: From West Virginia to 125th St, which is set for release on May 31 via Oh Boy Records. Check out the new single ‘Mess Under That Dress’ below.

Blackgrass was produced by Ryan Olson, and it was recorded with a band that includes Noam Pikelny, Sierra Hull, Jerry Douglas, Chris Scruggs, Billy Contreras, and Kenny Vaughan. The record also features guest appearances from Margo Price, Vernon Reid, Jenny Lewis, Justin Vernon, and the Cactus Blossoms.

“Not a lot of people talk about the true origins of bluegrass music, but it came from Black people,” Swamp Dogg said in a statement. “The banjo, the washtub, all that stuff started with African Americans. We were playing it before it even had a name. I’m trying to touch on every kind of music I grew up loving and listening to. This is my way of letting people know that I’m not just a soul singer or whatever they think I am. I’m so much more.”

Blackgrass: From West Virginia to 125th St Cover Artwork:

Blackgrass: From West Virginia to 125th St Tracklist:

1. Mess Under That Dress
2. Ugly Man’s Wife
3. Curtains On The Window
4. Have A Good Time
5. To The Other Woman [feat. Margo Price]
6. Songs To Sing
7. Count The Days [feat. Jenny Lewis]
8. Gotta Have My Baby Back
9. Your Best Friend
10. This Is My Dream
11. Rise Up [feat. Vernon Reid]
12. Murder Ballad

Mustafa Signs to Jagjaguwar, Shares New Single ‘Imaan’

Mustafa, the Toronto musician formerly known as Mustafa the Poet, has signed to Jagjaguwar, marking the news with the single ‘Imaan’. Featuring guest vocals from Snoh Aalegra, the track comes with a music video co-directed by Mustafa and Nabil Elderkin, with creative direction from Ramy Youssef. Check it out below.

“‘Imaan’ is a love song between two people in search of God and purpose,” Mustafa explained in a statement. “It’s about longing for all that we don’t have evidence of. Two Muslims journeying through their love of borderless Western ideology and how it contradicts with the modesty & devotion in which they were raised.”

He continued: “‘Imaan’ sonically represents this tussle too – the Sudanese strings and Egyptian oud woven into the bed American folk chords and drums. This tapestry, this collision is the song, is the romance, is the person Mustafa is. How it’s never enough, or too much. The song sits in the grey that people of faith are afraid to live in, but identify with. It’s about the way faith swings beneath Mustafa and Imaan like a rope. How cultural tension and bias and racism can inform and dismember romance.”

‘Imaan’ will feature on Mustafa’s as-yet-unannounced debut album, alongside the previously shared ‘Name of God’.

Konradsen Unveil New Single ‘I.O.U.’

Norwegian duo Konradsen have released another single from their new album, Michael’s Book on Bears. ‘I.O.U’ follows the previously unveiled ‘Out in the Backyard’, ‘Michael’, ‘Scandinavian Dynamite’, and ‘Dološ Viessu’. Listen below.

“This song questions the individualism we live in,” the band said in a statement. “I believe it’s healthy if the choices we make in life are not only about ourselves, but also our children and the places we come from. We are joined on this one by members of the Senja gospel choir from Eirik’s hometown in Northern Norway.”

Michael’s Book on Bears comes out March 8 via 777 Music.

SeeYouSpaceCowboy Announce New Album ‘Coup De Gráce’, Share New Songs

San Diego post-hardcore outfit SeeYouSpaceCowboy have announced the follow-up to 2021’s The Romance of Affliction. It’s called Coup De Gráce, and it lands on April 19 via Pure Noise Records. The 12-track LP includes the previously released singles ‘Chewing the Scenery’ and the nothing, nowhere collaboration ‘Rhythm and Rapture’, and they’ve now shared two new cuts, ‘Respite for a Tragic Tale’ (featuring iRis.EXE) and ‘Silhouettes in Motion’. They both come with a video from director Hannah Gray. Check it out below and scroll down for the album cover and tracklist.

“This album was a chance for us to refine some of the melodic elements we had recently introduced to the band while also playing around with all things and bringing back reinvented version of past parts of our identity,” frontwoman Connie Sgarbossa explained in a statement. “The hope is that we made something that mixes the innate emotion of post-hardcore with the cathartic essence of dancing and allure of cabaret/burlesque in a package reflecting the tale of a city on fire and it’s all to tragic individuals and their indulgence and woes.”

She added:

The record started as a visual idea, because when it came to lyrics, I didn’t know what the fuck to write at first. I’m not a drug addict junkie anymore, so I’m not going to write another album like The Romance Of Affliction—I can’t, and I don’t want to. So my mind wandered to things that I love, like Frank Miller’s Sin City graphic novels, where there are all these stories interlaced within a city. That led me to think about noir and neo-noir, and then pulp comics and novels from the ’40s and ’50s, which started to make it all come together lyrically and thematically, where each different song can be a different tale of the city.”

I hope that people can look at this as a complete expression—not just ‘Oh, this song has a good breakdown’, but at the whole story, the whole setting, the visuals of it all and the way the music all ties in. I hope they see the creativity of that and the risk we’ve taken by embedding Cowboy with more weirdo outside influences that you usually wouldn’t see from a band like us. It’s like a full, unified creative venture, and something we put a lot of work into, so I hope they appreciate the weirdness of it. I feel like a lot of times people hear clean singing and more melody from a heavy band and think they’re selling out. But no—we’re actually technically weirder on this record than we’ve ever been.

Coup De Gráce Cover Artwork:

Coup De Gráce Tracklist:

1. Allow Us To Set The Scene
2. Subtle Whispers To Take Your Breath Away
3. And The Two Slipped Into Shadows
4. Red Wine And Discontent
5. Lubricant Like Kerosene [feat. Kim Dracula]
6. Respite For A Tragic Tale [feat. iRis.EXE]
7. Silhouettes In Motion
8. To The Dance Floor For Shelter [feat. Courtney Laplante]
9. Rhythm And Rapture [feat. nothing,nowhere.]
10. Sister With a Gun
11. Chewing The Scenery
12. Curtain Call

S. Raekwon Announces New Album ‘Steven’, Unveils New Song

Steven Raekwon Reynolds, the NYC-based singer-songwriter who records as S. Raekwon, has announced a new album. Steven, which follows his 2021 debut album Where I’m at Now and the 2022 EP I Like It When You Smile, is out May 3 via Father/Daughter Records. Check out the new single ‘Old Thing’  below.

“I recorded this album last summer in a living room in Southern Illinois with my longtime friend and drummer Mario Malachi,” Raekwon explained in a statement. “The two of us sat opposite each other around a few microphones, building songs from single takes. I wanted to capture a more raw and direct sound reflective of our live show.”

Steven is the sound of me holding a mirror up to and reflecting on who I am: the good, the bad, the ugly,” he continued. “It’s about trying to understand the multitudes within me. Through these songs I found that I’m not alone in sometimes feeling like I don’t deserve the love that I am given. And learning to accept that love when it’s earned.”

Steven Cover Artwork:

Steven Tracklist:

1. Steven’s Smile
2. Old Thing
3. Winner’s & Losers
4. The Fight
5. The Camel
6. If There’s No God…
7. Does the Song Still Sound the Same?
8. It’s Nothing
9. What Love Makes You Do
10. Katherine’s Song

Artist Spotlight: Julien Chang

Julien Chang is a singer-songwriter, producer, and multi-instrumentalist from Baltimore, Maryland. While studying classical and jazz music throughout high school, he built a home studio in his parents’ basement from the money he earned from his grocery shop job, where he recorded his first album, 2018’s Jules. Along with its 2022 follow-up, The Sale, it saw Chang developing a sound that was both dreamlike and eclectic, playful yet mature in its musical exploration. Shortly after The Sale came out, and six months after leaving Princeton and returning to Baltimore, Chang made the just-released Home for the Moment EP, a collection of four introspective tracks that dwell on this in-between stage in the musician’s life, harnessing feelings of stuckness and confusion as an opportunity for pause and further experimentation. The EP doesn’t exactly resolve itself, but it has a strange way of turning opaque memories and observations into something tangible and intriguing, making peace – something like home – with their lack of cohesion.

We caught up with Julien Chang for the latest edition of our Artist Spotlight series to talk about his relationship with home, learning patience, the process behind his new EP, and more.


Listening to Home for the Moment and then revisiting The Sale, I was struck by that line on the album’s opening track, ‘Heart Holiday’: “Home/ Your complex relationship.” Seeing as that theme carries onto the EP, I was wondering if you could talk about what comes to mind when you think about Baltimore and growing up there.

In a way, it’s the only place I’ve really lived. I went to school in the suburbs of New Jersey, but even that was during the COVID years, right in the middle of that, so I was in Baltimore for a lot of that time as well. Baltimore – it’s like the David Foster Wallace about the two younger fish swimming past the older fish, and the older fish is like, “How’s the water?” And the younger fish are like, “What is water?” It’s hard to know what about my experience is proper to Baltimore specifically, because Baltimore, in a way, has been my whole life. But I do think even the brief time that I’ve spent in other places has almost been more illuminating for what it’s really like to be in Baltimore than the time I’ve spent living in Baltimore itself. One of the things that is so inspiring about Baltimore is that it’s a good place to be serious about art because it’s so cheap to live. Obviously that didn’t affect me as much when I was growing up, living with my parents, but it did affect the culture that I was surrounded by, which were working adult artists, and also young aspiring artists – I went to Baltimore School for the Arts, a public arts high school. I think there’s a willingness to take risks and experiment in that way because the financial stakes are not as high aas they are in some other places. But I think you really feel that spirit of experimentation at the shows a lot.

How did being away from Baltimore make you see it in a different light?

I studied German literature and philosophy in college, and Freud has this piece about the uncanny; the root is unheimlich, and heim is the root from which we get our word home. But heim, in German, signifies both familiarity and obscurity, so heim could be like heimlish, which is comfortable, homely, but it’s also the root of geheim, which means secret. And then, of course, unheimlish is this double negation – what is familiar becomes strange, and what is strange becomes familiar suddenly. Leaving home kind of induces that double negation. Home is like a site of familiarity, but then you don’t really regard that familiarity as strange until you leave it and come back. I definitely feel that, but the feeling of strangenes is not aversion. It’s kind of a reappreciation.

You studied classical and jazz music in school, which coincided with you delving into other genres while making your own songs. What was inspiring to you about straddling those worlds?

At the time, it seemed very natural that I would move between all those worlds. At this high school, it was a classical music program, but then there were jazz classes as well. I was in a small jazz group, and we played a lot. But also, it’s just like any other high school, so people are listening to pop music, indie music, rap, whatever, so all those things seemed very related. The first music that I made were beats for rappers – high school classmates, a bunch of them were rappers – so it felt kind of natural to traverse those things. I remember when I was making beats, I guess this is when I was 14 or 15, I would hear rock and roll – Pink Floyd and Tame Impala were the first more rock-focused things that I really got into – I would listen to music that I liked that wasn’t rap music, and I’d think, “Maybe I can sample these things.” And then one day it was like, “Wait, I don’t have to sample it, I could just make it.” And then I remember thinking, “If I like this other kind of music, why don’t just make that other kind of music?” And then that opened up a lot of things.

When it came to making full bodies of work, were there points were you had to conceptualize that kind of fluidity and eclecticism in a different way?

I think definitely for The Sale. My first record was very much just play. It would have these ideas that I would get from anything, classical music or jazz music or pop music, it could be a rhythmic pattern or a bass line – I’d hear that in somebody else’s song and I’d be like, “I wanna try that out with my own stuff.” That was how I did my first album, and then the second album was definitely the first time that I felt like I had to hold myself to a kind of standard of conceptual rigor, and that also coincided with my time studying in college. It definitely became complicated in that way for the second record.

Assuming that rigidity was also very much present in an academic context, was it still important for you to retain that element of playfulness in some way?

Yeah, I would say retaining the play was vital. To be totally candid, I didn’t do that enough on the last record. It’s something that I’m trying to get back to. But that’s totally vital. I mean, that’s the lifeblood of music, which is something to be felt – and thought about, but to be felt, really.

What is the feeling you get from those albums now? Are you more aware of how things shifted from one record to the next?

Looking back on making those two records, I have the advantage from the position I am now of knowing how things turned out; knowing how whatever I was developing musically, conceptually, in Jules, developed into The Sale, and how it developed into where I am now. I have that kind of oversight, but also, it’s almost like the further you get from a memory, you have a clearer historical idea of what these moments meant in the progression of your life, but also, you have a murkier feeling of those actual moments. Especially for this EP, I wrote it after returning from college and and moving back to Baltimore, so I think lot of it was about slackening up the authoritative oversight of my past, and instead trying to embody the other kind of memory, which is actually remembering what it felt like to live in this or that time of my life. Being back in Baltimore after having grown up there, you can’t help but really feel it, feel those memories, because they’re attached to places and people.

Were there specific feelings related to your past or present that you were unpacking at the time, even if they didn’t make it onto the EP in a tangible way, that were important in making it?

I think one of the prevailing feelings of the EP is a kind of restlessness, a restlessness of being in a place to which my childhood and early adulthood belongs, but being presently at a point in my life where I’m ready to start something new – that restlessness of being in between.

It’s interesting that restlessness is a key part of it, because I feel like it’s also musically a patient EP, and there’s this theme of taking things slow. One of my favorite lines is from ‘Looking at People’: “Loving is slowness and slowest is care.” Why was that idea on your mind, and was it something that extended to your musical process in any way?

Yeah, learning patience was huge. The past almost two years since I left school, taking things slow – you’re right, it’s everywhere on the EP, even more than I realized. I’m thinking of another line on ‘Imago’, which is, “Hesitation is a weapon of the weak.” I’ve played that for other people and they’re like, “Yeah, hesitation is bad because it’s weak.” But that’s not what I’m saying – what I’m saying is that if you’re in a position of vulnerability, in a position of weakness, then actually hesitation is something that you can use to your advantage, something that can protect you. That was the main point, learning to be okay with hesitation or indecision. I mean, if you live this middle-class, American upbringing – you go to elementary school, middle school, high school, and then college – the first 22 years of your life, it’s all set out. You might even have some success in those 22 years, but it doesn’t really matter, because once you finish, it’s the first time that you actually have to confront yourself seriously.

There’s this great essay by Siegfried Kracauer that’s called ‘Those Who Wait’. In the midst of confusion and waywardness, there’s this desire and instinct to latch onto something, to have some closure and some resolution. I think a lot of times, doing that actually ends up being a self-deception, and actually the authentic path would be to endure the discomfort of not having a resolute path, just being patient with that. Waiting, taking things slowly, hesitating – I think all these things are really looked down upon these days, but they’re kind of necessary. Until a year ago, my attitude towards everything was full steam ahead, but the most important things really take time. Music takes time – music literally takes time, it’s a temporal art – but being patient is necessary to have any relationship with music.

Do you see Home for the Moment as a kind of transitional project, and was there a freedom in it not having to completely define what your next musical chapter will be?

It was the result of a feeling of freedom, and in consequence, I think it allowed for some freedom. The way you put it was really close to how it was – I didn’t make these things under the self-impression that I would be like redefining myself or determining the new path. I made this just because I wanted to kind of gauge where I was. I remember when I was studying jazz, all these famous jazz records during the twentieth century, a lot of times the record would be made in like a week – the group would get together in the studio and they would perform a set, and then the record would just be a statement of where they were at that point in their life. I liked that idea, and I and I made this EP in a week. A certain feeling of freedom is required for that, but it also opens up the kind of freedom that you’re talking about, which comes afterwards.

On the whole, the EP is quite intimate and roomy, but I love how at the end of the final song, the arrangement opens up and there’s this swirling conclusion. How did you envision that as the EP’s conclusion?

It’s funny, because when I made the EP, ‘Home for the Moment’, which is the first song on the EP, was recorded last. The first song that I wrote and recorded for the EP was ‘Looking at People’, which is maybe the most structured and expansive. And then as I was writing and recording, it gradually became smaller, more focused, and more intimate, until you get to ‘Home for the Moment’, which is really the kernel of the whole thing. But the way it’s organized now for the release is kind of the opposite – it starts at this essence and then grows outward. I like the idea of that as an indication of where things are going.

You mentioned just having moved to New York. Could you share something that excites you about the new environment you’re in?

The apartment that I’m staying in is just a couple blocks away from Times Square, which is crazy and chaotic and loud. I’ve been in a couple of situations where I will have just eaten lunch and I’ll be completely at peace, and then I’ll go for a walk and will inevitably at some point have to walk through Times Square, which is just chaos. But I will have the distinct sensation of being completely almost invisible, anonymous, just moving through this landscape of all these things, tourists with selfie sticks and stuff, and being able to just look around and be an almost disinterested but fascinated observer of the world – when you’re expected to be someone, you can’t have this disinterested, fascinated, wonderful kind of like feeling.

I played a show here in New York at Webster Hall for my tour in November 2022. The venue is huge, it was the biggest show I had ever played – the show wasn’t sold out or anything, but there were a lot of people. After the show, we packed up the van, and instead of going back to where I was staying, I just went on a walk, and I ended up  going into this dollar pizza place, and it was really crowded. Everybody was drunk, gossiping or whatever, and I was just trying to get a slice of pizza. The transition of going from being on stage in front of however many, 500 people, to then being in this small dollar pizza place, but being completely invisible, was so amazing. There’s a kind of freedom with that. I’ve been feeling that in New York, and that’s exciting to me.


This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity and length.

Julien Chang’s Home for the Moment is out now via Transgressive.

Kim Gordon Shares Video for New Single ‘Psychedelic Orgasm’

Kim Gordon has shared ‘Psychedelic Orgasm’, the latest offering from her new album The Collective ahead of its release this Friday (March 8). Following previous cuts ‘BYE BYE’ and ‘I’m a Man’, the track arrives with a music video directed by Vice Cooler. Check it out below.

Gordon has today also announced additional UK, European, and North American tour dates; find the full itinerary below, too.

Kim Gordon 2024 Tour Dates:

Mar 21 – Burlington, VT – Higher Ground
Mar 22 – Washington, DC – Black Cat
Mar 23 – Queens, NY – Knockdown Center
Mar 27 – Los Angeles, CA – The Regent Theater
Mar 29 – Ventura, CA – Music Hall
Mar 30 – San Francisco, CA – Fillmore
Jun 7 – Minneapolis, MN – Fine Line
Jun 8 – Chicago, IL – Beyond the Gate @ Bohemian National Cemetery
Jun 9 – Detroit, MI – El Club
Jun 10 – Toronto, ON – Axis Club
Jun 12 – Hudson, NY – Basilica Hudson
Jun 14 – Philadelphia, PA – Union Transfer
Jun 15 – Pittsburgh, PA – Mr. Smalls Theatre
Jun 17 – Louisville, KY – Headliners Music Hall
Jun 18 – Asheville, NC – The Grey Eagle
Jun 19 – Atlanta, GA – Terminal West
Jun 21 – Carrboro, NC – Cat’s Cradle
Jun 22 – Vienna, VA – Out and About Festival
Jun 25 – London, UK – Koko
Jun 26 – Birmingham, UK – O2 Institute2 Birmingham
Jun 28 – Graz, AZ – Elevate Festival
Jul 1 – Munich, DE – Muffatwerk
Jul 2 – Prague, CZ – Meet Factory
Jul 3 – Gdynia, PL – Open’er Festival
Jul 5 – Roskilde, DK – Roskilde Festival
Jul 28 – Naeba, JP – Fuji Rock Festival