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Neck Deep have announced more Rain In July anniversary shows

Due to overwhelming demand, Neck Deep have announced three more intimate shows in celebration of the 10th anniversary of Rain In July and A History Of Bad Decisions.

Neck Deep have just announced three more intimate UK shows for later in the year.

In honour of the 10th anniversary of their beloved early releases Rain In July and A History Of Bad Decisions, the Wrexham pop-punks will now be heading to Leeds, Glasgow and Cardiff in October to celebrate with fans – this is on top of their previously-announced dates in Birmingham, Manchester and London (twice) this month.

Catch the 10 years of Rain In July shows at the following:

August

16 Birmingham The Asylum
17 Manchester Rebellion
18 London The Dome
19 London The Dome

October

15 Leeds Key Club
16 Glasgow Slay
17 Cardiff The Globe

Get your tickets here.

And hopefully there’ll be even more to come from Neck Deep in 2023, with Ben Barlow telling us in February of where things were at with their new album: “It’s coming along well! We’ve got a damn sight more of it written than people have heard, and it’s probably further along than people think. But we’re doing this record a little differently than we have done in the past. So instead of going and doing a full record in four-to-six weeks, and just being there and smashing it out, we’re kind of doing it in short little bursts out in LA, where we’re there for two weeks at a time trying to get a handful of songs, and sitting with those for a bit.

“There’s always a thing of six months after a record is out the artist is sat there going, ‘We should’ve changed that, we should’ve done that…’ We’re trying to alleviate that as much as possible, and give ourselves time to sit with the songs and see how they feel after a month. So while a lot of it’s done, we’re taking our time with it to just make sure that it’s the best we can be. I’m not gonna give any timelines here, but there will be pretty steady releases leading up to it!”

Read this: The story of pop-punk in 16 songs