NECK DEEP announce 10 Year Anniversary UK Tour for ‘Life’s Not Out To Get You’

NECK DEEP announce 10 Year Anniversary UK Tour for ‘Life’s Not Out To Get You’

Photo by Nat Wood

Pop-punk legends, Neck Deep, will embark upon a 10 Year Anniversary UK Tour for second-album, ‘Life’s Not Out To Get You’, this December.

The band, who last week made a triumphant return with a brand new single, You Should See Me Now’, and main stage slots at Slam Dunk 2025, will play the following venues in December, with support coming from Boston Manor:

DECEMBER

14: LEEDS Academy

16: GLASGOW Barrowlands

17: MANCHESTER Academy

18: BIRMINGHAM O2 Institute

19: LONDON O2 Academy Brixton

Tickets on sale this Friday at 10am:

https://www.neckdeepuk.com/

Fuelled by resilience and rebellion, new single, ‘You Should See Me Now’, producd by the legendary Will Yip, captures everything the band are known and loved for — raw honesty, unrelenting drive and the defiant spirit that has continued to propel the band.

Speaking on the new single, frontman Ben Barlow says, “You Should See Me Now’ is a song about hard work, self-belief, the struggle through adversity and proving people wrong. As a band we’ve always been pretty humble and shied away from too much self-aggrandisement, but this felt like a good way of showing a little pride,  hopefully people can relate to that too. It was a song we’ve had in the bank for a long time and really should’ve been on the album in the first place, so it’s nice to have such a strong bonus track to be featured on something cool to be announced soon.”

NECK DEEP – ‘You Should See Me Now’

Their latest self-titled album encompasses everything Neck Deep have excelled at across their career, enhanced and dialed to eleven. From the bouncing bombast of “Dumbstruck, Dumbf**k” and the ripping intensity of “Sort Yourself Out,” to the poetic introspection of “They May Not Mean To (But They Do),” Neck Deep is an album that boasts asong for almost any occasion.

In the little over a decade since Neck Deep formed in the Barlow brothers’ spare room in Wrexham, Wales, a lot has changed. From the scrappy, naively hopeful beginnings that define the starting of so many teenage bands, the pop-punks have gone on to be one of British Rock music’s most successful global exports in recent memory: top 5 records in both the US and UK, global touring, viral hits and over a billion streams just some of the fruits of ten years spent mastering their craft.