WEST VALLEY CITY, Utah, Dec. 3, 2024 (Gephardt Daily) — San Diego band Pierce the Veil has announced a West Valley City stop on its upcoming I Can’t Hear You tour.
The band will play the Utah First Credit Union Amphitheatre, formerly known as the USANA Amphitheater, on June 20, 2025.
General tickets sales begin Friday, Dec. 6, through PierceTheVeil.net.
Supporting artists at the Utah show are scheduled to be Sleeping With Sirens and Beach Weather.
Rolling Stone magazine once described the style of the Platinum-selling band’s as “hyperactive, progressive post-hardcore.” Other genres used by fans trying to describe the band’s sound include rock, pop-punk, emo, metalcore, experimental rock and progressive rock.
Promoter Live Nation shared a statement from the band.
“We’re thrilled to announce the I CAN’T HEAR YOU WORLD TOUR. Nearly two decades in the making, this tour is a monument to everything we’ve built with our fans.
“These shows will honor our roots, spanning all five albums and the music that brought us here. We’re bringing to life the songs you’ve been waiting to hear in some of the most iconic venues in the world, including Madison Square Garden, The Forum, Red Rocks, and Wembley Arena. This will be our largest, loudest, and most unforgettable tour yet. PTV fans, it’s time to raise our voices like never before. Can you hear us now?”
The band will not only be playing songs off their most recent chart-topping album, 2023’s Jaws of Life, but also tracks from across the band’s five studio releases, taking fans back to the early days of A Flair for the Dramatic through 2010’s Billboard-charting Selfish Machines, Collide with the Sky which featured “King For A Day,” and the raw intensity of Misadventures,” the news release says.
“Whether you’re a longtime listener or new to Pierce The Veil, the setlist promises a journey from their evolution of their post-hardcore sound to a band that delivers a #1 radio hit, showcasing the same high-energy performances and emotional depth that have cemented them as icons of the genre.”