Amyl And The Sniffers have always felt like a band best understood in motion — loud, unfiltered, and just a little bit unhinged. Now, the Australian punk juggernauts are bottling that chaos with Live At Ally Pally 2025, a new concert film documenting their biggest headline show to date at London’s historic Alexandra Palace.
The film premieres on YouTube this Wednesday, December 17 at 1 a.m. EST, capturing what The Standard called a “thundering” 90-minute set that turned the grand old venue into a pressure cooker of sweat, volume, and collective release. From the opening surge to the final collapse, the Ally Pally performance cements Amyl And The Sniffers as a live band operating at full throttle — and fully in control.
Running through fan-favorite anthems like “Jerkin’,” “Tiny Bikini,” and “Doing In Me Head,” the show showcases the band’s knack for turning blunt-force punk into something communal and strangely cathartic. As Clunk Magazine put it, the band “completely owned the stage,” pulling the crowd into a full-body experience that blurred the line between performer and audience. Punk or not, it’s hard not to get swept up.
The concert film arrives at the tail end of a massive year for Amyl And The Sniffers. In 2024, the band earned their first-ever GRAMMY nomination for Best Rock Performance with the ferocious “U Should Not Be Doing That” from Cartoon Darkness, while also racking up major wins at the ARIA Awards and completing a run of sold-out shows across the globe. Momentum-wise, they’re closer to liftoff than cooldown.
Directed by award-winning filmmaker John Angus Stewart, Live At Ally Pally 2025 leans into the band’s raw physicality while keeping a sharp eye on what happens between the songs. Stewart’s camera catches frontwoman Amy Taylor’s snarling charisma, the band’s relentless pacing, and moments of onstage advocacy that underline Amyl And The Sniffers’ long-standing commitment to climate action and social awareness. It’s punk as both spectacle and statement.
For North American fans, the timing couldn’t be better. The band recently announced a slate of June 2026 tour dates, including stops at Red Rocks, Bonnaroo, and major rooms across the U.S. and Canada — proof that the chaos on display at Ally Pally is about to go global again.
Live At Ally Pally 2025 premieres on YouTube December 17. Turn it up, clear some space, and prepare to get knocked around — even if you’re watching from your couch.