Lola Young Goes On A New North America Tour In November

Lola Young Goes On A New North America Tour In November

Things are about to get beautifully chaotic. Lola Young, the magnetic vocalist, has officially announced her return to North America with a 17-date tour set to kick off this fall.

So, the announcement dropped Monday (June 2) via Young’s Instagram. “It’s happening… I’m coming back to North America…for pre-sale access. Enter ur details in the link in my bio. general sale on friday – 10am local. Can’t wait to be back in the room with you all.”

The Messy North American Tour launches on November 1 in Toronto. That’s right before weaving through major cities like New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Nashville, etc. Thus, it will come to an end on December 6 in Los Angeles. It’s a bold run that signals her rising stardom and increasingly global pull.

Yet, before Lola Young goes on tour, she will have shows across Europe this summer. Her EU run includes a coveted Glastonbury slot and two high-profile opening gigs for Billie Eilish in Paris. Thus, this speaks volumes about her presence in the music industry.

Lola Young and North America Tour

The ticket rollout begins with the artist’s local pre-sale on June 3 at 10 a.m. It is followed by Live Nation’s pre-sale on Thursday. So, the general sale opens Friday at 10 a.m. local time.

Lola Young has been riding high off the success of her 2024 project, ThisWasn’t Meant for You Anyway. The project was a searing, unfiltered body of work that catapulted her into mainstream consciousness. Its standout track, “Messy,” produced by Manuka, peaked at No. 14 on the Billboard Hot 100 while also topping the Alternative Airplay chart in March and climbing to No. 1 on Pop Airplay in May.

With her voice cut from the same cloth as soul legends and her lyrics bleeding with Gen Z honesty, Lola Young isn’t just arriving. She’s cementing herself as one of the most compelling artists in music today.

Tickets are expected to move fast, and with momentum like this, it’s safe to say the Messy era is far from over.