The Dare has added UK and European dates to his forthcoming 2025 tour.
READ MORE:Â The Dare â âWhatâs Wrong With New York?â review: an effective if uninventive throwback
Ahead of his UK and Europe sojourn this November, which is now sold out, the musician has announced his return to the region in March next year, continuing his support of debut album âWhatâs Wrong With New York?â.
Arriving via Polydor/Republic Records on September 6, the artist â real name Harrison Patrick Smith â kicked off his first-ever North American headline tour the same month, including a sold-out show at New Yorkâs Webster Hall.
The Dareâs March 2025 run will include headline shows across Bristol, Manchester, Dublin and Glasgow in the UK. Tickets will be available for presale on Thursday (October 31) at 10am BST, and general sale on Friday (November 1) at 10am BST here.
The pre-sale code can be retrieved by texting âtourâ to +13322415071 via Whatsapp. See the full list of tour dates below.
The tour dates for The Dareâs UK and Europe 2025 are:
MARCH
10 â Melkweg, Amsterdam, Netherlands
11 â Orangerie, Brussels, Belgium
12 â Le Trianon, Paris, France
14 â Santeria, Milan, Italy
16 â Marble Factory, Bristol, UK
18 â Vicar Street, Dublin, Ireland
19 â New Century, Manchester, UK
21 â QMU, Glasgow, UK
The Dare recorded âWhatâs Wrong With New York?â over the last year between his home and his studio in New York. It features his huge lead single âGirlsâ, as well as other singles including âYouâre Invited,â âPerfumeâ and âGood Time.â
It also came with a star-studded list of collaborations, including appearances from the likes of Dylan Brady, Emile Haynie, Romil Hemnani, Chris Greatti, Isaac Eiger and more.
Before the release, Smith reached his first UK Number One with the Charli xcx and Billie Eilish remix of âGuessâ, which he produced for the deluxe edition of âBratâ.
The Dare. Credit: Richard Kern
âWhatâs Wrong With New York?â was given a three-star review by NME, with Jordan Bassett writing: âItâs tempting to tell Smith that Murphy wants his shtick back (along with his suit), but the pastiche is often effective, at least.â
âHis defiantly dumb breakthrough track âGirlsâ is one of the best singles of 2006 and âMovementâ builds to a crunching, multi-layered cacophony that demonstrates greater musical sophistication than heâs often given credit for,â it added.
âStill, thereâs something a little depressing about music thatâs this nakedly backwards-facing. Beneath the hedonism, anxiety thrums through âWhatâs Wrong with New York?â â hence, perhaps, Smithâs dream of his teeth falling out â and heâs clearly captured a wish to return to a time before Covid, before fake news, before bots and pile-ons and information overload. But youâd be better off just listening to LCD.â