DINOSAUR JR. & SNAIL MAIL ANNOUNCE
2025 SUMMER TOUR
SUPPORT INCLUDES EASY ACTION
THE ANDREW J BRADY MUSIC CENTER®
FRIDAY, JULY 25
Tickets On Sale Friday, February 14 at 10am
Cincinnati, OH (2/11/25) – Legendary alt-rock pioneers Dinosaur Jr. and indie sensation Snail Mail are teaming up for a 2025 summer tour, and they’re making a stop at The Andrew J Brady Music Center® on Friday, July 25. Support for the tour includes Easy Action.
Tickets will go on sale to the public beginning at 10am on Friday, February 14 at Ticketmaster.com and BradyMusicCenter.com.
Dinosaur Jr. was founded in 1984 and the group emerged among the most highly regarded in alternative rock. By reintroducing volume and attack in his songs, Mascis shed the strict limitations of early 1980s hardcore, becoming an influence on the burgeoning grunge movement. Mascis’ body of work continues to inspire a generation of guitar players and songwriters today.
When the original line up of Mascis, Lou Barlow on bass and drummer Murph re-formed in 2005 for select live dates it was apparent that the years apart had not eroded any of their vitality. Restoring the sound established by the opening hat-trick gambit of Dinosaur, You’re Living All Over Me, and Bug, 2007’s Beyond continued the band’s march into rock greatness by making old ears smile and new ears bleed afresh. The original lineup has now released five studio albums since their reunion, most recently 2021’s “Sweep It Into Space” on Jagjaguwar Records.
ABOUT SNAIL MAIL
On her 2018 debut album Lush, seventeen-year-old Lindsey Jordan sang “I’m in full control / I’m not lost / Even when it’s love / Even when it’s not”. Her natural ability to be many things at once resonated with a lot of people. The contradiction of confidence and vulnerability, power and delicacy, had the impact of a wrecking ball when put to tape. It was an impressive and unequivocal career-making moment for Jordan.
On Valentine, Lindsey solidifies and defines this trajectory in a blaze of glory. In 10 songs, written over 2019-2020 by Jordan alone, we are taken on an adrenalizing odyssey of genuine originality in an era in which “indie” music has been reduced to gentle, homogenous pop composed mostly by ghost writers. Made with careful precision, Valentine shows an artist who has chosen to take her time. The reference points are broad and psychically stirring, while the lyrics build masterfully on the foundation set by Jordan’s first record to deliver a deeper understanding of heartbreak.