Radiohead have announced a re-sale date after tickets to their upcoming UK and European tour sold out.
READ MORE:Â Jonny Greenwood tells us about The Smileâs âCutoutsâ and the âfun and naturalâ Radiohead reunion
The band are due to make their long-awaited return to the stage this November for a run of 20 arena concerts across five cities. Itâll mark their first performances together since 2018.
Kicking off in Madrid, the upcoming trek will also include concerts in Bologna, Copenhagen, Berlin and London. Thom Yorke and coâs return to the UK capital will see them host a four-night residency at The O2 in Greenwich on November 21, 22, 24 and 25.
The only way to secure tickets for the shows was by registering via Radioheadâs official website, with the band allocating the greatest share of tickets to those living near the venues.
Fans who registered were then waiting to discover if they would receive a special âunlock codeâ, which would give them the chance to buy up to four tickets for a show at one location of their choosing. You can find a full breakdown on how much tickets cost here.
General sale began yesterday (September 12), and tickets to all shows promptly sold out.
Now, the band have announced an âofficial resaleâ for those who werenât able to get tickets. Taking to their Instagram stories shortly after tickets sold out, they wrote: âA few more tickets may be released to registered fans at a later date.
âPlease donât be tempted to buy from third party ticketing platforms,â they continued. âThose tickets are not real.â
The official resale will begin on October 13.
Radioheadâs 2025 UK and European tour dates are:Â
NOVEMBER
4, 5, 7, 8 â Movistar Arena, Madrid, Spain
14, 15, 17, 18 â Unipol Arena, Bologna, Italy
21, 22, 24, 25 â The O2, London, UK
DECEMBER
1, 2, 4, 5 â Royal Arena, Copenhagen, Denmark
8, 9, 11, 12 â Uber Arena, Berlin, Germany
Upon announcing the gigs, drummer Philip Selway said: âLast year, we got together to rehearse, just for the hell of it. After a seven-year pause, it felt really good to play the songs again and reconnect with a musical identity that has become lodged deep inside all five of us.
âIt also made us want to play some shows together, so we hope you can make it to one of the upcoming dates. For now, it will just be these ones but who knows where this will all lead.â
Radiohead began teasing their 2025 shows last week, when a series of flyers popped up in the cities theyâll be visiting.
The bandâs most recent live performance was held on August 1, 2018 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia. It marked the end of their âA Moon Shaped Poolâ tour in support of their 2017 album of the same name â which they have yet to follow up.
This March, it was reported that they had âplaced holds in select European cities for a run of residency gigsâ this year. This came shortly after Radiohead sparked rumours of new music after forming a new legal entity called RHEUK25 LLP.
Thom Yorke on stage with Radiohead in new book âHow To Disappear Completelyâ. Credit: Colin Greenwood
Bassist Colin Greenwood revealed last year that Radiohead âdid some rehearsalsâ over the summer. However, he later told NME that âit doesnât mean a tour is imminentâ. He added: âI think weâre still a band where people might want to know what might happen next. Weâre very lucky to have that.â
Elsewhere, Jonny Greenwood told us that the rehearsals were âfun and naturalâ, but explained that there were âno plansâ for new material. âWeâve [got] lots of individual projects going on at the moment,â he explained.
Frontman Yorke, meanwhile, said around the same time that he âreally doesnât give a fuckâ if fans wanted Radiohead to return. The singer, who has been busy with The Smile in recent years, admitted in August that he was âstill strugglingâ to be creative following the COVID-19 pandemic. He was speaking upon the launch of Radioheadâs new exhibition, âThis Is What You Getâ.
In other news, the band have revisited some âarchiveâ recordings from the âHail To The Thiefâ era for a new live album. This year, Yorke brought the 2003 record to the stage with his Hamlet Hail To The Thief production.
Meanwhile, the pro-Palestine BDS (Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions) movement has called for a boycott of Radioheadâs 2025 tour. The campaign group have said the group have âyet to apologiseâ for a show in Tel Aviv in 2017, and has criticised Jonny Greenwoodâs past performances with Israeli musician Dudu Tassa.