
Alternative and Indie
Basement Tickets
Concerts8 results
Concerts in Ireland
- 15/09/2025Monday 19:00DublinThe AcademyBasement
Venue
International Concerts
- 17/09/2025Wednesday 19:00Glasgow, GBGalvanizers SWG3Basement
Venue
- 18/09/2025Thursday 19:00Manchester, GBManchester New Century HallBasement - UK Tour '25Limited Availability
- 19/09/2025Friday 19:00London, GBO2 Forum Kentish TownBasement
- 21/09/2025Sunday 19:00Bristol, GBElectric BristolBasementOn partner site
Venue
- 21/09/2025Sunday 19:00Bristol, GBElectric BristolBasement - UK Tour '25Limited Availability
- 28/09/2025Sunday 18:30Amsterdam, NLMelkwegBasement
- 02/10/2025Until 05/10/2025Sacramento, CA, USDiscovery ParkAftershockOn partner site
Lineup
- Monster Energy Aftershock
- blink-182
- Deftones
- Korn
- Bring Me The Horizon
- Good Charlotte
- A Perfect Circle
- Bad Omens
- Rob Zombie
- Acid Bath
- Dream Theater
- Powerwolf
- Flyleaf
- Hatebreed
- Chiodos
- All Time Low
- Turnstile
- Gojira
- Marilyn Manson
- Taking Back Sunday
- Knocked Loose
- Chevelle
- Motionless In White
- Alkaline Trio
- Dillinger Escape Plan
- Slaughter To Prevail
- Black Veil Brides
- State Champs
- Hoobastank
- The Ataris
- Basement
- Failure
- Glare
- quannnic
- Bilmuri
- Saliva
- Nonpoint
- Return to Dust
- Story of the Year
- The Plot In You
- Sleep Theory
- All American Rejects
- Lamb of God
- Three Days Grace
- Mudvayne
- Hollywood Undead
- Bruce Dickinson
- Trivium
- In This Moment
- Mom Jeans.
- Kerry King
- Dayseeker
- Machine Head
- Bowling for Soup
- The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus
- Hot Milk
- Fear Factory
- Lacuna Coil
- Winds of Plague
- Kittie
- Memphis May Fire
- Scary Kids Scaring Kids
- Static-X
- Spineshank
- Dope
- Power Trip
- Testament
- Pop Evil
- Carcass
- High On Fire
- Cattle Decapitation
- Nails
- Snot
- Dry Kill Logic
- Exodus
- Alestorm
- Yngwie Malmsteen
- Death Angel
- Gloryhammer
- Forbidden
- August Burns Red
- Imminence
- Dying Fetus
- Demon Hunter
- Seven Hours After Violet
- Born of Osiris
- Hinder
- Crossfade
- Sick Puppies
- Rev Theory
- 12 Stones
- Of Mice & Men
- Trash Talk
- GWAR
- All Shall Perish
- Speed
- Spite
- THROWN
- Left To Suffer
- Get Scared
- Northlane
- Landmvrks
- Violent Vira
- Thornhill
- Scowl
- Dying Wish
- Xibalba
- Snuffed on Sight
- Spy
- DevilDriver
- Chimaira
- 3 Inches of Blood
- Six Feet Under
- Prong
Venue
About
It didn’t take long for the title of Basement’s debut record, 'I Wish I Could Stay Here', to seem like something of a misnomer. Just a year after the album’s release, it was already becoming clear that the group had no intention of staying there–whether that just meant their historic port town home of Ipswich in Suffolk, England; or the relative confines of the turn-of-the-century emo sound they’d already deftly mastered. The promising young band was setting their sights somewhere else as they prepared to make their landmark sophomore album, 'Colourmeinkindness'.
The record started to carry Basement to the brink of wider success, only to find the band announcing a hiatus months before it even came out–but a decade later the album’s clear influence, and Basement’s triumphant return, are proof of 'Colourmeinkindness’ era-defining impact.
Back in the summer of 2012, however, Basement found themselves on the west coast of America for the first time, beginning to record their hotly anticipated new album. But the band had arrived slightly unprepared; guitarist Ronan Crix claims the band only had half the songs written for the soon-to-be massive album. His bandmate and other guitarist, Alex Henery, claimed it was “the most chaotic process we have ever gone about writing a record.” Henery recalls that the band managed to “work as hard and as quickly” as they could to finish writing the other half of the album, including staying up until 4 a.m. their first night in the studio. But the hectic pace and intense focus paid off, resulting in an ambitious musical evolution that drew together the threads of modern punk and emo with past widescreen guitar rock to create something that felt urgent and new.
'Colourmeinkindness' found Basement pulling from not only one of emo’s zeniths–early Sunny Day Real Estate–but also channeling heavy and sometimes hazy ‘90s alt-rock, with hints of behemoths like Pixies, Silverchair, and Catherine Wheel shaping the sound. Vocalist Andrew Fisher fit that grunge mold of a maudlin-but-thoughtful protagonist, ruminating on toxic relationships, personal desolation, and desperate longing, with slivers of optimism occasionally peeking through. From the dynamic one-two punch of churning opener “Whole” into the balladic doom of “Covet”, to the sneering grunge of “Black” and gentle ease of “Comfort”, Basement effortlessly moved between sounds and styles while keeping the underlying energy of their roots in punk and hardcore.
Upon its release, 'Colourmeinkindness' quickly won over fans old and new, but the members of Basement had already committed themselves to exploring other avenues in their lives and after a few impressive record release shows, the group went on hiatus. When they eventually returned the ripples of 'Colourmeinkindness' were already clear: A thriving scene had begun to crop up around Basement’s like-minded peers. Bands such as Balance and Composure, Superheaven, and Title Fight were reviving alt-rock radio for the YouTube generation and moving from being VFW staples to playing sizable venues. Post-hardcore, shoegaze, and grunge were becoming prevalent influences amongst new punk and emo bands. Newer acts were forming with a nod very much towards that ‘90s rock/emo crossover sound that Colourmeinkindess had captured so astonishingly well.
With 'Colourmeinkindess' Basement had begun to signal a sea change that would shape the next decade of big-room guitar music in a major way. Now the album’s 10th anniversary expanded reissue offers a chance to rediscover the record along with new material. The release includes alternate versions and stripped-back arrangements of many of the album’s tracks, recalling the iconic MTV Unplugged’s from the likes of Oasis or Nirvana. It’s an alternative view of the same era 'Colourmeinkindness' drew from, and one that provides new tonal perspective and insight into a defining moment for Basement and the path they would unexpectedly send a subgenre on over the following 10 years.
Setlists
- 1.Earl Grey
- 2.Whole
- 3.Crickets Throw Their Voice
- 4.Bad Apple
- 5.Fading
- 6.Spoiled
- 7.For You the Moon
- 8.Aquasun
- 9.Yoke
- 10.Pine
- 11.Are You the One
- 12.Promise Everything
- 13.Covet
- 1.Whole
- 2.Earl Grey
- 3.Spoiled
- 4.For You the Moon
- 5.Fading
- 6.Aquasun
- 7.Are You the One
- 8.New unreleased song
- 9.Pine
- 10.Promise Everything
- 11.Covet
- 1.Whole
- 2.Earl Grey
- 3.Spoiled
- 4.For You the Moon
- 5.Fading
- 6.Aquasun
- 7.Are You the One
- 8.New unreleased song
- 9.Pine
- 10.Promise Everything
- 11.Covet
- 1.Whole
- 2.Earl Grey
- 3.Spoiled
- 4.For You the Moon
- 5.Fading
- 6.Aquasun
- 7.Are You the One
- 8.Written as new song on setlist
- 9.Pine
- 10.Promise Everything
- 11.Covet
- 1.Whole
- 2.Earl Grey
- 3.Spoiled
- 4.For You the Moon
- 5.Fading
- 6.Aquasun
- 7.Are You the One
- 8.Written as new song on setlist
- 9.Pine
- 10.Promise Everything
- 11.Covet