Everybody Scream Tour

2026 concert tour by Florence and the Machine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Everybody Scream Tour is a concert tour by English band Florence and the Machine, staged in support of their sixth studio album, Everybody Scream (2025). Set to visit Europe and North America, it began on 6 February 2026 in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and will conclude on 30 August 2026 in Reading, England. The show features songs from Everybody Scream and the band's previous albums exploring themes of grief, hope, and folklore. The band is supported by an ensemble staging folk-horror-inspired performances. The tour received positive reviews praising lead singer Florence Welch's performance and voice.

Location
  • Europe
  • North America
Associated albumEverybody Scream
Start date6 February 2026 (2026-02-06)
End date30 August 2026 (2026-08-30)
Quick facts Location, Associated album ...
Everybody Scream Tour
Tour by Florence and the Machine
Location
  • Europe
  • North America
Associated albumEverybody Scream
Start date6 February 2026 (2026-02-06)
End date30 August 2026 (2026-08-30)
No. of shows55
Supporting acts
Florence and the Machine concert chronology
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Background

"The closest I came to making life was the closest I came to death [..] And I felt like I had stepped through this door, and it was just full of women, screaming."

— Welch in an interview with The Guardian[1]

English band Florence and the Machine announced in August 2025 that they would released their sixth studio album, Everybody Scream, on 31 October 2025 and tour several countries in Europe to promote it, with Paris Paloma as the main supporting act and Dionne joining as the opening act for four dates in the United Kingdom..[2][3][4] The band's lead singer and songwriter, Florence Welch, conceived the album after suffering a miscarriage caused by an ectopic pregnancy while touring in 2023.[3][5] Welch visited a folk healer and began researching the history of witchcraft and its connection to midwifery.[1] She commented, "Modern medicine absolutely saved my life, but you can't go anywhere about birth without finding witchcraft and magic and medicine."[1] Everybody Scream's themes and inspirations include mysticism, folk horror, womanhood, partnership, ageing, and dying.[3] On the record, Welch also deals with "the limits of her body", the meaning of being "healed", and her struggles and sacrifices as a woman in the music industry.[1][3]

Tickets for the tour went on sale to the general public on 5 September 2025, while presale tickets became available on 3 September 2025.[3] In October 2025, the band announced the dates for the North American leg and a second European leg of the tour, with the latter primarily taking place at outdoor music festivals in the summer of 2026.[6][7][8] Rachel Chinouriri, Sofia Isella, CMAT, and Mannequin Pussy will alternate as the opening acts for the North American leg, while Chinouriri, Jacob Alon, and Self Esteem are set to be the supporting acts for the summer dates in Ireland and Scotland.[6][7] The tickets for the North American leg went on sale to the general public on 5 November 2025, while presale tickets became available on 3 November 2025.[9]

Synopsis

The stage is initially draped in a curtain illustrated with medicinal herbs and illuminated by an orange light.[5] A shifting spotlight shows the shadow of a woman "maybe being mauled", which The Times's Lisa Verrico compared to the shower scene from the horror film Psycho (1960).[10] When the curtain is raised, Welch appears wearing a floor-length gothic lace gown with a ruffled skirt and draped sleeves.[5][10][11] She performs barefoot center stage while the band stays in the shadows.[10][11] The set list includes mostly songs from Everybody Scream and some songs from the band's previous albums with similar themes related to grief, hope, and folklore.[5] The accompaniment shifts from a full band to "sometimes just drums and [...] synths, occasionally only acoustic guitar and [...] harp".[10] Welch often dances and runs on stage throughout the concert, accompanied by a performance group, named the Witch Choir, made up of four women.[5][10] The Witch Choir wear cloaks, petticoats, and heavy boots.[10] They act both as backup dancers and singers depending on the song.[10] The folk-horror-inspired dance performances were choreographed by Ryan Heffington.[5][11] The Independent's Blue Kirkhope compared the Witch Choir "twitch[ing], snap[ping], and fold[ing] into positions" to scenes from the folk horror film Suspiria (1977).[5]

Reception

Welch (pictured) received praise for her performance.

Ahead of the start of the Everybody Scream Tour, Pitchfork named it one of the most anticipated tours of 2026, describing the band's live performances as "a place for emotional liberation and musical catharsis" featuring "collective scream-alongs, hopeful manifestations, and a resounding belief that good will trump evil".[12]

Journalists' responses to the concert and Welch's performance in Glasgow were positive. Kirkhope praised Welch's "gale-force" and "enchanting" voice and gave the show five out of five stars, describing it as "less a concert than a communal ceremony" with "Welch and the audience bound together in a shared act of catharsis".[5] Verrico said that "Florence and the Machine [had] never been less than spectacular live" and described Welch as "more relaxed" compared to the band's previous tours, remarking that "Everybody Scream [...] suggested that the singer [had] finally got to grips with fame".[10] The Guardian's Katie Hawthorne praised Welch's commanding performance and "transfixing" voice and gave the "high-drama" concert four out of five stars, but remarked that it "threaten[ed] to overwhelm" with the Witch Choir's intense performance.[11]

Set list

This set list is from the concert in Paris on 22 February 2026.[13] It does not represent all concerts throughout the tour.

  1. "Everybody Scream"
  2. "Witch Dance"
  3. "Shake It Out"
  4. "Seven Devils
  5. "Big God"
  6. "Daffodil"
  7. "Which Witch"
  8. "Cosmic Love"
  9. "Spectrum (Say My Name)"
  10. "Never Let Me Go"
  11. "Hunger"
  12. "Buckle"
  13. "King"
  14. "The Old Religion"
  15. "Howl"
  16. "Heaven Is Here"
  17. "Sympathy Magic"
Encore
  1. "One of the Greats"
  2. "Dog Days Are Over"
  3. "Free"
  4. "And Love"

Notes

Tour dates

More information Date, City ...
List of 2026 concerts, showing date, city, country, venue and opening acts[3][4][6][7][8]
Date City Country Venue Opening act(s)
6 February Belfast Northern Ireland SSE Arena Paris Paloma
8 February Birmingham England bp pulse LIVE
9 February Glasgow Scotland OVO Hydro
11 February Newcastle England Utilita Arena Newcastle
13 February Liverpool M&S Bank Arena Dionne
Paris Paloma
14 February Sheffield Utilita Arena Sheffield
16 February London The O2 Arena Paris Paloma
17 February Dionne
Paris Paloma
20 February Manchester Co-op Live
22 February Paris France Accor Arena Paris Paloma
23 February Antwerp Belgium AFAS Dome
25 February Amsterdam Netherlands Ziggo Dome
26 February Cologne Germany Lanxess Arena
2 March Vienna Austria Wiener Stadthalle
4 March Munich Germany Olympiahalle
5 March Prague Czech Republic The O2 Prague
7 March Kraków Poland Tauron Arena
9 March Berlin Germany Uber Arena
8 April Minneapolis United States Target Center Rachel Chinouriri
10 April Rosemont Allstate Arena
11 April
13 April Detroit Little Caesars Arena
15 April Montreal Canada Bell Centre
16 April Toronto Scotiabank Arena
18 April Washington, D.C. United States Capital One Arena Sofia Isella
19 April Boston TD Garden
21 April New York City Madison Square Garden
22 April
24 April Brooklyn Barclays Center
25 April Philadelphia Xfinity Mobile Arena
28 April Tampa Benchmark International Arena CMAT
29 April Miami Kaseya Center
1 May Atlanta State Farm Arena
2 May Nashville, Tennessee Bridgestone Arena
4 May Austin Moody Center
5 May Houston Toyota Center
7 May Fort Worth Dickies Arena
9 May Glendale Desert Diamond Arena Mannequin Pussy
12 May Seattle Climate Pledge Arena
13 May Portland Moda Center
15 May San Francisco Chase Center
19 May Los Angeles Kia Forum
20 May
27 June Limerick Ireland Thomond Park Rachel Chinouriri
28 June Dublin Marlay Park
3 July[a] Milan Italy Hippodrome of San Siro[18] N/a
3–5 July[b] Ewijk Netherlands Groene Heuvels [nl][19]
9 July[c] Madrid Spain Iberdrola Music[20]
11 July[d] Lisbon Portugal Passeio Marítimo de Algés[21]
14 July[e] Athens Greece Telekom Center Athens
11–15 August[f] Budapest Hungary Óbuda Island[22]
14–16 August[g] Helsinki Finland Suvilahti[23]
24 August[h] Edinburgh Scotland Royal Highland Centre Jacob Alon
Self Esteem
28 August Leeds England Bramham Park N/a
30 August Reading England Richfield Avenue
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Notes

  1. As part of the music festival I-Days.[8]
  2. As part of the music festival Down the Rabbit Hole.[8]
  3. As part of the music festival Mad Cool.[8]
  4. As part of the music festival NOS Alive.[8]
  5. As part of the music festival Ejekt Festival.[8]
  6. As part of the music festival Sziget Festival.[8]
  7. As part of the music festival Flow Festival.[8]
  8. As part of the music festival Edinburgh Summer Sessions.[7]

References

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