SOMBR Levels Up With Massive You Are the Reason Arena Tour

Fresh off his Coachella set (dubbed Sombrchella) that had critics scrambling for superlatives, SOMBR is scaling up again. The 20-year-old breakout has announced his You Are the Reason North American arena tour, a sprawling fall run that cements his transition from buzzy upstart to full-fledged headliner.

The 37-date trek kicks off July 22 in Mexico City before weaving through major markets and landing at Madison Square Garden on November 23 (his hometown). Along the way, he’ll hit iconic venues including Red Rocks Amphitheatre and Bridgestone Arena, backed by a rotating and notably eclectic slate of support: Interpol, The Last Dinner Party, Tom Odell, Dove Cameron, King Princess, The Hellp, Hannah Jadagu, and more.

The announcement lands just days after SOMBR’s much-hyped debut at the aforementioned Coachella, where he drew one of the weekend’s largest crowds. Mid-set, Billy Corgan joined him onstage for a performance of the The Smashing Pumpkins classic “1979,” a passing-of-the-torch cameo that critics seized on. Rolling Stone praised the set’s “undeniable rock star energy,” while the Los Angeles Times noted fans spilling “to the outer edges of the field.”

Timing-wise, SOMBR isn’t letting the momentum cool. His new single “Potential” drops April 16 alongside an official video, following the chart surge of “Homewrecker,” which marked another strong showing on the Billboard Global 200 and Hot 100. That run builds on the long tail of his 2025 breakout “Back to Friends,” a track that camped out on the charts for over a year and helped define his hybrid of indie-rock moodiness and arena-pop scale.

Tickets for the You Are the Reason tour go on artist presale April 14, with general on-sale beginning April 17. Between a packed festival calendar — Lollapalooza, Reading Festival, and Leeds Festival among them — and a fall arena sweep, SOMBR’s 2026 is shaping up less like a victory lap and more like a full-blown takeover, and we’re so here for it.


2026 FESTIVAL DATES
April 18—Coachella (Weekend Two)—Indio, CA
May 24—BottleRock Napa Valley—Napa, CA
July 30 – Lollapalooza Festival – Chicago, IL
August 1 – Osheaga Festival – Montreal, QC
August 11—Sziget Festival—Budapest, Hungary
August 13 – Syd For Solen – Denmark, Copenhagen
August 14—Øyafestivalen—Oslo, Norway
August 15 – Way Out West – Gothenburg, Sweden
August 16 – Flow – Helsinki, Finland
August 20 – Openair Gampel – Gampel, Switzerland
August 22 –  Lowlands – Biddingghuizen, Netherlands
August 23 – Pukkelpop – Hasselt – Belgium
August 26 – Rock En Seine – Paris, France
August 28 – Electric Picnic – Stradbally, Ireland
August 29—Reading Festival—Reading, UK
August 30 – Leeds Festival – Leeds, UK
September 1 – Superbloom – Munich, Germany
September 11 – Fono Festival – Quebec City, QC
September 12—Sommo Festival—New Glasgow, NS


NEWLY ANNOUNCED NORTH AMERICAN YOU ARE THE REASON ARENA TOUR DATES
July 22 – Mexico City, MX – Pepsi Center **
July 26 – Morrison, CO – Red Rocks Amphitheater **
Sep 29 – Vancouver, BC – Rogers Arena +#
Oct 1 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena +§
Oct 2 – Portland, OR – Moda Center +§
Oct 6 – Sacramento, CA – Golden 1 Center +‡
Oct 7 – San Jose, CA – SAP Center +‡
Oct 9 – Anaheim, CA – Honda Center +‡
Oct 10 – Los Angeles, CA – The Kia Forum +‡
Oct 13 – San Diego, CA – Pechanga Arena +‡
Oct 14 – Glendale, AZ – Desert Diamond Arena +‡
Oct 16 – Oklahoma City, OK – Paycom Center +*
Oct 17 – Houston, TX – Toyota Center +*
Oct 18 – Dallas, TX – American Airlines Center +*
Oct 20 – Austin, TX – Moody Center +*
Oct 22 – Atlanta, GA – State Farm Arena +*
Oct 24 – Sunrise, FL – Amerant Bank Arena +*
Oct 25 – Orlando, FL – Kia Center +*
Oct 27 – Charlotte, NC – Spectrum Center +*
Oct 28 – Nashville, TN – Bridgestone Arena+* 
Oct 30 – St. Louis, MO – Enterprise Center =* 
Oct 31 – Kansas City, MO – T-Mobile Center =*
Nov 1 – Minneapolis, MN – Target Center =* 
Nov 3 – Milwaukee, WI – Fiserv Forum =*  
Nov 4 – Chicago, IL – United Center =*  
Nov 6 – Indianapolis, IN – Gainbridge Fieldhouse =^ 
Nov 7 – Detroit, MI – Little Caesars Arena =^ 
Sun Nov 8 – Columbus, OH – Nationwide Arena =^ 
Nov 10 – Washington, DC – Capital One Arena =^
Nov 12 – Pittsburgh, PA – PPG Paints Arena =^ 
Nov 13 – Cleveland, OH – Rocket Arena =^
Nov 14 – Buffalo, NY – KeyBank Center =^ 
Nov 16 – Toronto, ON – Scotiabank Arena =^ 
Nov 18 – Boston, MA – TD Garden =^ 
Nov 19 – Philadelphia, PA – Xfinity Mobile Arena =^ 
Nov 21 – Newark, NJ – Prudential Center =^ 
Nov 23 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden =^
Support
# Interpol

* The Last Dinner Party
‡Tom Odell
^ Dove Cameron
§ Balu Brigada
** King Princess
+ The Hellp
= Hannah Jadagu

From Knocked Loose to Yungblud: Here Are Our Top Songs of February 2026

From punishing riffs to moody alt-rock and punk swagger, February’s standout songs prove the month was anything but subtle. These are the tracks that were impossible to ignore, from sombr’s guilt-soaked indie-pop confession, to Knocked Loose tearing through feral hardcore with Denzel Curry, Genesis Owusu turning paranoia into propulsion, and Lana Del Rey drifting deeper into her mythic Americana. Check it.


01:

Knocked Loose – Hive Mind (ft. Denzel Curry)

This is Knocked Loose at their most feral. The Louisville hardcore band barrels through two minutes of serrated riffs, blast-beat drums, and Bryan Garris’ throat-shredding howl, all aimed squarely at the suffocating pressure to fall in line. Lyrically, it’s a rejection of herd mentality — a middle finger to trend-chasing culture and the social machinery that punishes anyone who steps out of formation. The real curveball comes when Denzel Curry storms in, matching the band’s intensity with a venomous verse that blurs the line between hardcore and hip-hop. The result is pure pit fuel: chaotic, confrontational, and built to detonate live. The music video, filmed at the David Armstrong Extreme Park in Louisville — a graffitied skatepark near the iconic Louisville Slugger Field — is pure cinema. This is Knocked Loose not just at their most feral, but their finest.


02:

YUNGBLUD – Suburban Requiem

YUNGBLUD is trading his usual anarchic swagger for something more cinematic and bruised. This track, the closer on the all-new Idols (Complete), out now, swells with moody guitars and widescreen alt-rock drama as he sketches a portrait of small-town stagnation — empty streets, restless youth, and the creeping sense that life is happening somewhere else. But instead of pure nihilism, YUNGBLUD leans into melancholy catharsis, turning suburban malaise into a sing-along anthem for anyone who’s ever dreamed of escape. It’s big, emotional rock music built for raised lighters and late-night drives.


03:

sombr – Homewrecker

Sombr’s “Homewrecker” turns romantic guilt into glossy indie-pop theater. Over a funky guitar groove and polished pop production, the 20-year-old songwriter pleads his case to someone already taken. The tension between restraint and temptation fuels the track’s hooky chorus and aching vocals, a mix that’s become Sombr’s calling card as one of alt-pop’s fastest-rising voices. His performance of Homewrecker at the BRIT Awards has been tagged as unforgettable, even if him being attached on stage was… staged. It’s one thing to drop a massive debut album that has you on top of the world, but it’s another to quickly follow that up with another successful hit single. Sophmore slump… not here.


04:

Genesis Owusu – STAMPEDE

Genesis Owusu turns paranoia into propulsion once again on the all-new heater “STAMPEDE.” The Ghanaian-Australian shapeshifter builds the track on a twitchy, bass-heavy groove that feels like it could collapse at any second, while his vocals swing between sneering rap cadences and manic punk urgency. Lyrically, he’s staring down mob mentality — the kind of cultural pile-on that moves fast, loud, and without much thought. The result is equal parts dance-floor burner and social critique, a reminder that Owusu thrives in the chaos where funk, hip-hop, and post-punk collide. This single, following on the heels of two other solo standouts, “DEATH CULT ZOMBIE” and “PIRATE RADIO,” is setting the stage for a massive follow-up album to 2023’s incredible STRUGGLER.


05:

Wage War – SONG OF THE SWAMP

Wage War are back and diving headfirst into Southern-fried heaviness. The Florida metalcore outfit layers churning downtuned riffs and stomping grooves that feel tailor-made for festival pits, while Briton Bond’s vocals swing between throat-ripping screams and arena-ready hooks. There’s a sense of menace baked into the track’s murky atmosphere — part swamp-metal swagger, part modern metalcore precision — as the band leans into their heaviest instincts without sacrificing the massive chorus that’s long been their trademark. It Calls Me by Name, their new EP featuring “five tracks shaped by Florida” and their “signature sound amplified and pushed further into metal than [they’ve] ever taken it,” is out April 17th.


06:

Lana Del Rey – White Feather Hawk Tail Deer Hunter

Her first single since April 2025’s back-to-back hits “Bluebird” and “Henry, come on,” “White Feather Hawk Tail Deer Hunter” finds Lana Del Rey drifting deeper into her mythic Americana. The track unfolds slowly, wrapped in dusky piano chords and hazy strings, as Del Rey sketches images of wilderness, longing, and spiritual solitude with her signature cinematic melancholy. Like much of her recent work, the song trades pop immediacy for atmosphere — letting the lyrics linger like fragments of a half-remembered dream. The result is another haunting entry in her ever-expanding catalog of poetic, West Coast gothic ballads. Presumably, this means the delayed and yet-to-be titled album is coming soon?


07:

Mitski – I’ll Change for You

On “I’ll Change for You,” Mitski leans into the kind of heartbreak most artists try to dress up — the pathetic, late-night kind where pride disappears and the only thing left is longing. Built on a breezy, almost bossa-nova-tinged groove, the song pairs warm instrumentation with lyrics that spiral into quiet desperation as Mitski pleads for a lost lover to take her back. It’s classic Mitski — tender, self-aware, and uncomfortably honest about the humiliations that come with love. Her new album Nothing’s About to Happen to Me is receiving positive reviews across the board, and this song, the album’s second single, is already a standout.


08:

Dead Pony – Eat My Dust!

Dead Pony are hitting the gas and not looking back. The Glasgow outfit fuses their punchy pop-rock roots with a new snarling metalcore twist on “Eat My Dust!,” while vocalist Anna Shields delivers the song’s killer chorus with the kind of swagger that turns frustration into fuel. It’s a breakaway anthem at heart — loud, defiant, and built on the thrill of leaving whatever’s dragging you down in the rearview mirror. Excited to see where this new direction takes the band.


09:

Social Distortion – Born To Kill

Social D is back… right when the world needed them. Returning to their gritty, leather-jacket roots on “Born To Kill,” and delivering a tight, no-frills punk anthem that bristles with menace and swagger. Mike Ness’ gravelly vocals carry tales of rebellion and fatalism over stripped-down riffs that clang like street-side sirens. It’s classic Social Distortion: lean, direct, and unapologetically tough, a reminder that punk isn’t just music — it’s an attitude, and some instincts can’t be tamed.


10:

Terror – Still Suffer

Hardcore lifers Terror have spent more than two decades preaching resilience through volume, and “Still Suffer” hits with the same bruising conviction. Their first song in four years and first on Flatspot barrels out of the gate with breakneck riffs and Scott Vogel’s unmistakable bark, channeling the band’s classic mix of frustration and perseverance. Lyrically it’s blunt and unfiltered — a reminder that survival doesn’t mean the pain disappears, only that you keep pushing through it. In under two minutes, Terror deliver exactly what they’ve always done best: no frills, no compromise, just pure hardcore momentum.