Godspeed You! Black Emperor Postpone Remainder of U.S. Tour Due to Illness

Godspeed You! Black Emperor Postpone Remainder of U.S. Tour Due to Illness

Canadian post-rock collective Godspeed You! Black Emperor have announced the postponement of the remaining dates of their U.S. tour following illness within the camp.

The group’s label, Constellation Records, confirmed the news on social media on Sunday (Nov. 17), confirming that information regarding rescheduled dates will be forthcoming. The label also made a point to assuage fans’ fears, concluding with the phrase “Everything will be okay”.

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The affected shows include scheduled dates in Saxapahaw, NC; Washington, D.C.; Brooklyn, NY; Norwalk, CT; Boston, MA; and Philadelphia, PA from Nov. 17 to Nov. 24 inclusive. Currently, the band’s tour is set to recommence on Nov. 25 with a show in their hometown of Montréal.

News of the postponement comes just days after the band were forced to cancel dates Nashville, TN; Knoxville, TN; and Atlanta, GA due to a “band health situation”.

The group did return to the stage on Saturday (Nov. 16) with a show in Charleston, SC, though fan reviews indicated the band played a somewhat truncated set. A statement from Constellation Records indicates the canceled dates will hopefully be rescheduled for 2025.

Godspeed You! Black Emperor have been touring globally since February in support of their recently-released eighth album, “NO TITLE AS OF 13 FEBRUARY 2024 28,340 DEAD”. The record is the fourth to be released since the band’s 2010 reunion, having initially split in 2003 after nine years together.

Their first album post-reunion, 2012’s ‘Allelujah! Don’t Bend! Ascend!, became their highest-charting record in the U.S., reaching No. 45 on the Billboard 200, and also saw the band win the 2013 Polaris Prize.

In a statement following their win, the group explained that it would donate the entirety of their $30,000 Prize money to found and fund a program which will provide musical instruments to prisoners in Quebec, “if they need them.” The band also used the statement to criticize the corporate sponsorship of the Prize, in addition to its very existence within the “horrifying malaise” of the world.

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