Julian Casablancas and The Voidz have announced a one-off London show for 2025 – you can find all the details below.
The band are due to play at The Troxy in the capital on Saturday March 8 in support of their third and latest album, 2024’s ‘Like All Before You’.
This will follow a newly confirmed appearance at Les InRocks Festival in Paris on Wednesday March 5. The Voidz are scheduled to perform at Le Centquatre in the French Capital.
Tickets for the upcoming London gig go on general sale at 11am GMT this Friday (December 6) – you’ll be able to buy yours here. Alternatively, fans can access a pre-sale at the same time tomorrow (December 5) by signing up here.
The Voidz’ performances in London and Paris next year have been billed as “two nights of chaos and transcendence” in a press release.
“These upcoming shows promise to deliver The Voidz’s signature blend of unrelenting energy, genre-defying soundscapes, and mesmerising performances that have become a hallmark of their live experience,” it adds.
Both concerts will feature a yet-to-be-announced special guest. You can see the official posters for the shows above.
The Voidz last took to the stage in London in November 2018, per Setlist.FM. It came after they released their second album ‘Virtue’ earlier that year.
In October, The Voidz played a run of dates in Los Angeles and New York City before appearing as the musical guests on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. During an interview on the US talk show, Casablancas discussed working with Charli XCX on her ‘Brat’ remix album.
“That was very serendipitous,” he told Fallon of appearing on a re-working of ‘Mean Girls’. “I actually can’t believe how fast it happened, I feel like it was a few weeks ago that she asked me, and I was in LA. I sang, I spent a day doing stuff.”
Meanwhile, Casablancas recently admitted that The Strokes’ classic single ‘Last Nite’ was “pretty dead to [him]” now. He had explained previously that he’d “kind of stepped away a little bit” from his “very cool day job” in The Strokes.
Speaking to NME earlier this year, Casablancas opened up about the political nature of his earlier songs with the NYC band.
“In ‘New York City Cops’ and ‘Soma’ there were political themes,” he told us. “‘Political’ is a bad word because you think of the Tories and the Republicans – that’s not really what I mean. I’m talking about the ideas and values of human beings and how to philosophically combat the gears of power and the people who control things.”