THE LAST DINNER PARTY ANNOUNCE NEW INSTORE SIGNINGS THIS MONTH

FANS HAVE ANOTHER CHANCE TO MEET THE RISING BAND AHEAD OF THEIR DEBUT ALBUM

Following the announcement of their forthcoming debut album, The Last Dinner Party are excited to announce details a further three intimate record store signings taking place this month.

Produced by James Ford in London, Prelude to Ecstasy – released on 2nd February via Island Records – will feature the groups breakthrough singles, Nothing Matters, Sinner, and My Lady Of Mercy.  The bands undeniably great songs and strong aesthetic have quickly transformed them from a new name in the scene to one of the most hyped bands of 2023.  The Last Dinner Party have just completed a run of sold out US tour dates, are embarking on tour this week supporting Hozier for a month across the UK and have just sold out London’s The Roundhouse on the 1st February, solidifying their live reputation and drawing great excitement for the intimate now sold out shows lined up for next years record store tour. However, a very limited number of priority entry album bundle tickets for appearances in Liverpool, Glasgow and Bangor have been released.

The Last Dinner Party on their debut album: “Ecstasy is a pendulum which swings between the extremes of human emotion, from the ecstasy of passion to the sublimity of pain, and it is this concept which binds our album together. This is an archeology of ourselves; you can exhume our collective and individual experiences and influences from within its fabric. We exorcised guitars for their solos, laid bare confessions directly from diary pages, and summoned an orchestra to bring our vision to life.

At the turn of the year, The Last Dinner Party was little more than a new name being shared amongst those that had caught them live. Great songs, strong aesthetic. Having spent much of 2022 writing those songs, road-testing them, and then taking them into the studio, it wasn’t until April when the band released the instantly more-ish, dark guitar-pop of Nothing Matters that seemingly everyone had now formed an opinion on them. It was an introduction that took the online world by storm, and yet behind all the excitement and narrative was a fantastically confident indie-rock song by a band doing it the old-fashioned way, out on the road.

Following a heady first-on performance to a packed crowd at the new Woodsies tent at Glastonbury, The Last Dinner Party released Sinner, another gloriously infectious, leftfield pop song that fuelled the fully-formed zeitgeist and set the band up for a Summer that replicated that success of Glastonbury with uncomfortably packed tents ensuing at the likes of Green Man, Reading & Leeds, Latitude and End of the Road (interspersed with support slots to the likes of Florence & The Machine, Lana Del Rey and First Aid Kit). It was a breakthrough Summer for one of the most talked about new British acts in years, delivering on all that early promise emphatically.

Photo Credit Joanna Bradtke

Concentrating on their own headline shows, the band skipped confidentally from venue to venue, playing to bigger rooms and on wider stages. Shows sold out and shows were upgraded. In London alone, the band have moved from sell-out dates at Moth Club to Camden Assembly, Oslo to two nights at EartH, and now move on to the 3000 capacity Roundhouse on the eve of album release which has already sold out. Crucially, it’s not just London where the band finds its early fans, but right across the UK and into America too, with all five debut shows selling out several weeks in advance.

The band often set a themed dress code for the shows, with many fans relishing the task of rising to the request and donning their finery for a night with their new heroes.

Listen to The Last Dinner Party’s latest single On Your Side

But this is no case of style over substance. The recent release of their third single, My Lady Of Mercy, an almost gothic, haunting rock song, and now with this atmospheric and anthemic ballad, On Your Side, the band’s songwriting is testament to all the buzz and excitement already accumulated. As it should be. Rather than wilt under the spotlight, they’ve arguably become a tighter, stronger unit because of it.

Prelude To Ecstasy is both the closing of that introductory chapter and the opening of the next. The Last Dinner Party? Believe the hype.

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