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Amyl & The Sniffers reschedule London Alexandra Palace show

Published 18 hours ago2 minute read

Amyl & The Sniffers have rescheduled their huge live show in London. Find all the details below.

The Melbourne punk band were scheduled to hit the stage at Alexandra Palace on November 15 for their biggest headline gig yet. It’ll come in support of their third and latest studio album, last year’s ‘Cartoon Darkness’.

However, the group will now be performing in the capital slightly earlier than planned.

Sharing a statement on social media, Amyl & The Sniffers said: “London, due to a scheduling issue, we are moving the date of our Ally Pally show forward a few weeks to Saturday October 25.

“We are so excited for this show, it will be our biggest headline to date. If you have a ticket you will be notified, and tickets automatically transferred, but if you can’t make the new date and need a refund, reach out to your ticket provider.”

They continued: “We apologise to those who have bought tickets who might be inconvenienced – hoping you all have time to adjust your plans.”

Amyl & The Sniffers signed off by promising that the support acts for the big gig would be revealed “soon”. Check out the update in the post below, and find any remaining tickets here.

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This summer will see the Aussie outfit perform on the Other Stage at Glastonbury 2025, open for Fontaines D.C. in London’s Finsbury Park, and make appearances at Reading & Leeds.

They’ll also make stops at numerous European Festivals, including Pinkpop, Hurricane, Rock Werchter and NOS Alive.

Speaking to NME last October, frontwoman Amy Taylor opened up about finding her political voice in recent years. “I was intimidated by politics,” she explained.

“I didn’t grow up around it that much. I finished high school, but barely. It’s really easy to feel kind of ashamed of yourself for not being sure how to get your foot in it, or to get the confidence to speak out about stuff.”

The singer told NME she was wary of “isolating” those who are politically unengaged, but said she stands against right-wingers opposed to “basic social caring” on the basis that it’s ‘woke’: “A lot of people are anti-people and they’re actually the snowflakes.”

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