From the moment the curtain dropped on Harry Styles’ 169-date, Billboard Boxscore-smashing Love On Tour in Reggio Emilia, Italy, in July 2023, speculation surrounding the British singer’s next move mounted. Would he truly step away at the peak of his powers? And, perhaps more dauntingly, how could he eclipse one of the defining touring achievements of the decade?
As Love On Tour expanded from North American arenas to stadiums across the U.K. and Europe, it capped the former One Direction member’s most commercially and culturally dominant era yet. Over the course of a near decade-long solo career, the success of his 2022 album Harry’s House, which scooped the Grammy for album of the year, was the exception, not the rule: Unlike earlier hits such as 2019’s “Watermelon Sugar,” which steadily built momentum throughout lockdown, lead single “As It Was” arrived as an instant global phenomenon.
What changed was that Styles evolved from a charismatic, if tentative, figure transitioning out of a boyband past into a supremely assured live performer, and Love On Tour became the stage for that transformation. By the end of the two-year trek, that reputation had become central to his identity as an artist: loose, spontaneous and visibly confident in holding an audience, adding a slinky, flirtatious edge to songs like “Adore You” or “Daylight” and leveraging them to full crowd-pleasing potential.
Three years on, and Styles stands at the cusp of the residency-style Together, Together Tour, which opened up at Amsterdam’s 56,000-capacity Johan Cruijff Arena on Saturday (May 16). In support of his Kiss All the Time. Disco Occasionally LP — Styles’ fourth consecutive chart-topping album on the Billboard 200 — the show is set to hit seven key global markets throughout 2026, including a mammoth 30-night run at New York City’s Madison Square Garden this fall.
Echoing the pared-back approach of March’s One Night Only Manchester performance, with a mid-show ‘Dance’ section staged in the round with minimal, pulsing production reminiscent of a Fred Again..–style setup, the new show translated that intimacy into a full-scale stadium experience. A richly-textured string section gave the more subdued moments of the setlist (“Matilda,” “Sign of the Times”) a warmer elasticity, and in comparison with the adrenalised rush of Love On Tour, much of the set was more restrained in its pacing and overall feel; not diminished as such, but matured.
As the lights dimmed, Simon & Garfunkel’s “Bridge Over Troubled Water” — the key inspiration for Kiss All the Time…‘s “Carla’s Song” — played while swirling, multicolored visuals took full effect across the giant video grid. Styles appeared seconds later, radiant in a red silk satin bomber — and it was on from there, a fervent, dizzying two-hour trip through his musical canon.
Here are the best moments from the night.
The Opening Rush
After the opening surge of “Are You Listening Yet?,” 2019’s “Golden” received one of the loudest reactions of the night, setting the tone for the next two hours. The crowd’s reaction, so instinctive and euphoric, gave emotional ballast to a fan favorite from Styles’ catalog: the first sing-along arrived before he even reached the hook, and he continued to let the crowd take the lead throughout the chorus.
“The whole reason we are on this tour — and that we made the last album [Kiss All The Time…] — is so that we can be together and have fun together,” Styles told us afterwards. “I challenge you to have as much fun as we can tonight.”
“Who’s Going Out Tonight?”
It sounded like an invitation, or maybe a dare. What transpired was that Styles was introducing “Fine Line,” or “a song for when you get home [from the club],” as he put it. Previously placed as a closer, the track — which arrived eight songs in — felt like a purposeful recalibration of the night’s energy, and in a live setting remains one of Styles’ most powerful moments, with a fresh orchestral arrangement deepening its emotional pull. Crucially, a minimal production set around soft, pastel-hued stage lights gave space for some of Styles’ most vulnerable lyrics to land with striking clarity.
A Burst of “Born Slippy”
Styles’ band reimagined Kiss All The Time… favorite with an unexpected, blink-and-you’d-miss-it twist by weaving in elements of Underworld’s “Born Slippy.” The arrangement opened up into a driving, trance-like pulse before snapping back into the original groove of “Taste Back,” turning the live version into something far more expansive and immersive than the studio track. Could Styles and co. lean further into that energy at a later show, and give us a full-blown rave moment?
“Coming Up Roses” Wins Again
Even the briefest glance at Reddit or Styles fan forums would tell you that the Jules Buckley-arranged baroque-pop ballad “Coming Up Roses,” lifted from Kiss All The Time…, is considered an all-timer among his audience — a reputation only cemented by a passionately received live rendition in Manchester earlier this year. Three months on, the track was delivered as the centerpiece of the Together Together set, with the crowd becoming part of the show by singing along to the studio version’s waltzing string solo.
Tens Across The Board
If there’s one thing Styles knows, it’s how to sell a song. When listening with headphones, dozens of playful little hooks, whispered phrases and vocal inflections get lost in the mix of “Dance No More” — did you hear a cry of “Fox!” the first time? — but on stage, even the smallest flourishes to life. An instinct for elevation rang true throughout that same song live: a taut rhythm section player enlarged its G funk-inspired melody and located new pockets of charm in what is a fairly tepid track on record. What’s more is that Styles spent much of its middle section skipping across a Rainbow Road-esque LED stage strip.
“Carla’s Song” x “Satellite”
Signed, sealed, delivered: this was a mashup tastefully done. These two sister tracks had their own dedicated moment in Amsterdam, with Styles incorporating the vocal refrain of the latter towards the end of “Carla’s Song.” Both already hold a shared musical DNA, sitting in a pocket of buoyant, forward-moving groove anchored by syncopated rhythm sections and a gospel-tinged sense of uplift. It offered an understated recognition, perhaps, that the two songs were always speaking the same rhythmic and emotional language.
Run for Fun
In pockets of the crowd, fans could be spotted wearing running gear or marathon bibs adorned with “Sted Sarandos” — in reference to how Styles ran the 2025 Berlin Marathon under this alias, a nod to Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos. Towards the end of closer “As It Was,” arms spread wide, Styles showed off his stride by running loops around the gargantuan stage; chased by the thousands of “Oh my God”-eliciting screams behind him, he eked out the song’s final surging chorus as he went along.