General sale tickets for the huge show go live this Friday (February 17)
The 1975 have announced their biggest ever UK headline show at London’s Finsbury Park this summer – find all the details below and buy tickets here.
The band will perform at the 40,000 plus capacity show on Sunday, July 2, 2023, alongside a huge line-up of other acts including Cigarettes After Sex, Bleachers, The Japanese House and American Football, with “many more” still to be announced.
The announcement comes after the band, who have just wrapped their UK ‘At Their Very Best’ tour, teased yesterday (February 12) that details of their “biggest UK show” would be arriving this week.

Skratch N’ Sniff Radio’s New Years Eve Special Airs Wednesday with exclusive content from Sublime, Metallica, 311, Five Finger Death Punch and more
As the clock ticks toward midnight, Skratch N’ Sniff Radio is turning New Year’s Eve into a three-hour detonation — a full-throttle celebration of rock,

How Ice Nine Kills Turn Restriction Into Cinema: Blood, Celluloid, and the Algorithm
Ice Nine Kills don’t make music videos so much as short films—violent, darkly funny, and meticulously staged mini-movies that owe as much to VHS-era horror

The Best Rock & Metal Records of 2025
In a year where rock and metal felt more restless, more adventurous, and more defiantly alive than they have in a decade, 2025 delivered a

Sublime Closed 2025 the Hard Way — And Jakob Nowell Never Let It Show
The water was black, cold, and crowded with bodies when Jakob Nowell felt his leg extend just a little too straight. Just moments earlier, fresh

MEGADETH Release New Single/Video “Let There Be Shred!”
As anticipation continues to build for MEGADETH’s final studio album—out January 23, 2026 via DAVE MUSTAINE’s Tradecraft imprint in partnership with Frontiers Label Group’s new BLKIIBLK label)—the metal titans have

How Tye Trujillo from OTTTO Helped Bring Metal Back to the Mainstream on Stranger Things
When Stranger Things detonated Metallica’s “Master of Puppets” into the cultural bloodstream, it didn’t just spark nostalgia—it reignited a global conversation about heavy music. Behind