Avalanche Party

The Boileroom, Guildford.

Avalanche Party

Under 18s must be accompanied by an adult. We cannot issue refunds to under 18s who are not accompanied by an adult.

Ticket type Cost (face value)? Quantity
GENERAL ADMISSION £13.70 (£12.00)

Handling and delivery fees may apply to your order  

More information about Avalanche Party tickets

Blitzing together their distinctive styles (Waterfield’s hard-hitting, bouncing-bomb drumming; Thorpe’s expressive avant-rock pyrotechnics; Joe Bell’s athletic basslines; Adkins’ intoxicating synth), Avalanche Party create a noise that blends and twists their individual influences into shapes that defy any neat label.

Newly signed to AMK, the alternative music imprint of Kartel Music Group, Avalanche Party’s second album Der Traum Über Alles is set for release in February 2025. If you were to sit the LP down on the psychoanalyst’s couch, its themes of bloodlust, subversion and incineration might suggest a heavy payload of pent-up aggression being detonated. The record’s first half in particular feels like a sonic exorcism: a 21st century occult primal scream that shifts from the frenzied New Wave of ‘Nureyev Said it Best’ and ‘Shake the Slack’ to the exhilarating war-drum deliverance of ‘Serious Dance Music’ and ‘Collateral Damage’. Der Traum Über Alles sledgehammers and it seduces: the elegant ‘Ecstasy’ has a tenderness that gradually veers into instability, as if Bell is committing himself to a lover at the end of days, while closer ‘Noise Between Us’ has all the fatalistic grandeur of Berlin-era Bowie as the band tempts us towards the void: ‘Into the edge, my love/Falling overboard.’

“One of the most exciting rock & roll bands in the UK right now” – BBC RADIO 1

“A tsunami of mega-riffs and ear drum popping bass lines. Definitely don’t wear your Sunday best to one of their raucous gigs” – NME

“An absolute tour de force, their boundless energy and breathtaking performances truly sets them apart. By far one of the most thrilling bands you will see in the UK” – Louder Than War