The Japanese House / May 2024 UK Tour

THE JAPANESE HOUSE 

 

UK TOUR // MAY 2024

IN THE END IT ALWAYS DOES LP // DIRTY HIT // OUT NOW

 

 

PHOTO CREDIT: JAY SEBA

THE JAPANESE HOUSE, aka Amber Bain, has announced her 2024 UK headline tour, set to take place in May in support of her critically acclaimed second studio album, In The End It Always Does, out now via Dirty Hit.

 

The dates will see The Japanese House play her biggest headline show to date at London Roundhouse as well as nights in Glasgow, Birmingham and Manchester, following the sold out UK and North America headline tours this year.

 

Early access tickets here. Presale tickets go on sale from 10am on WEDNESDAY 1 NOVEMBER and general tickets will be on sale from 10am on FRIDAY 3 NOVEMBER via thejapanesehouse.co.uk/tour

 

MAY

 

Tue           07             GLASGOW                                SWG3

Wed         08             BIRMINGHAM                         O2 Institute

Thu          09             LONDON                                    Roundhouse

Fri             10             MANCHESTER                         Albert Hall

 

 

 

 

It’s been almost a decade since Amber Bain’s break out in 2015, back when The Japanese House was a mysterious unidentified figure shrouded in reverb. These days, though, Bain’s sound and style is characteristically wide open with her vulnerabilities, thoughts and innermost feelings stitched into a tapestry of gorgeous, elevated pop music.

 

Much of In The End It Aways Does lives in the contradictory: beginnings and endings, obsession and mundanity, falling in love and falling apart. Written during a creative burst at the end of 2021, the album is primarily inspired by the events preceding it – including Bain’s first time moving to Margate, being in a throuple and the slow dissolution of those relationships. “[These two people] were together for six years and I met them, and we all fell in love at the same time – and then one of them left,” Bain remembers. “It was a ridiculously exciting start to a relationship. It was this high; and then suddenly I’m in this really domestic thing, and it’s not like there was other stuff going on – it was lockdown.” The album came together just as that chapter in her life was falling apart, with each song almost acting as a snapshot in time.

 

Four years after her widely celebrated debut Good At Falling, this album sees Bain lean even further into the pop realm – with help from Matty Healy and George Daniel from The 1975, Katie Gavin from MUNA and Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon among others. Bain credits Gavin especially with injecting her with creative energy and inspiration throughout.

 

The album also sees Bain work alongside producer and engineer Chloe Kraemer (Rex Orange County, Lava La Rue, Glass Animals), an experience she describes as “life changing” due to the unspoken, shared understanding between marginalised genders in a creative space. “I’d never worked with a woman or queer person in that way before,” says Bain. “It’s nice to have someone who completely understands your standpoint and shared experience. Also, I say ‘she’ in every song … so it’s important that someone understands that.”

 

LISTEN TO IN THE END IT ALWAYS DOES

 

Amber Bain has released music under the pseudonym The Japanese House since 2015 and shared her debut album Good At Falling in 2019. Since her emergence, The Japanese House has received industry-wide acclaim from The Guardian (“it feels like a refreshing splash of cold water on tear-stained cheeks”) Sunday Times Culture (“stunning”) Pitchfork, i-D, VICE, NME, GQ, Interview Magazine, BBC Radio One and more.

 

 

PRAISE FOR IN THE END IT ALWAYS DOES

It cools and shimmers its way through a delicious range of nuanced moods and subtly layered musical ideasTHE INDEPENDENT 5*

A record of uplifting joy stemming from life’s setbacks, heartbreaks and hurdlesDORK 5*

Amber Bain has an eye for the details that the rest of us forget the moment they are out of the field of visionTHE i 4*

If there’s one thing that the second Japanese House album reaffirms, it’s that the artist never surrenders any less than her whole self to the processNME 4*

A magnum opus of love, heartbreak and genuine pop perfectionCLASH 8/10

Some of Bain’s most sincere songwritingGIGWISE 8/10

 

 

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