UNKLE have announced their ‘Rōnin Live’ 2024 UK tour which is set to commence later this autumn.
Kicking off at Project House in Leeds on October 15, the outfit are set to showcase “the latest evolution of their artistry, promising fans a truly unique concert experience featuring recent recordings, remixes, and reinterpretations” (via a press release). They will make stops in Glasgow, Liverpool, Manchester and Birmingham before wrapping up at Here@Outernet in London on October 21.
Tickets are set to go on general sale this Friday (July 12). Visit here to purchase tickets and check out a full list of tour dates below.
UNKLE’s ‘Rōnin Live’ 2024 UK tour dates are:
OCTOBER
15 – Leeds, Project House
16 – Glasgow, Saint Luke’s
17 – Liverpool, Arts Club
18 – Manchester, Gorilla
19 – Birmingham, Zumhof
21 – London, Here@Outernet
Speaking about the tour in a press release, UNKLE’s James Lavelle said: “With the Rōnin Tour, the UNKLE live experience is reimagined within the context of a club environment rather than a traditional live show. This allows us to be creative and experimental in many different ways.
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“The Rōnin shows are layered, collaged and sampled to create a seamless UNKLE soundtrack experience, drawing influences from the past, present and future of UNKLE. The project started as a DJ-based performance and we aimed to push the limits of what we thought DJing was at the time, incorporating visual elements along with the music. We want people to dance, celebrate and have a great time.”
Previously speaking to NME back in 2021 about ‘Rōnin I’, Lavelle said: “You get this light out of the darkness in club music. It was important, looking at the songs, that some of the lyrics and what they meant could be put into a different context. I like the idea that, as a journey, the records are still lyrically trying to communicate things that I feel are quite appropriate right now, even though a lot of songs were recorded before COVID.”
He continued: “Before COVID there was still this sense of a lot of uncertainty and unrest and political extremes. You do feel like there’s BC and AC, Before COVID and After COVID. Before COVID felt so narcissistically over the top and a very greedy period of time, so a lot of the songs had connection with those feelings. Yet when you put them into a different context with COVID, there was still this feeling of that sort of sentiment being important now.”