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Waterparks Announce Additional UK Dates For 2020 Tour

After the Manchester and London dates sold out super-quick, Waterparks have added more shows to their UK tour.

With their original London and Manchester tour dates selling out in minutes this morning, Waterparks have added two more shows to their Fandom Tour due to high demand.

The Houston trio will now be playing extra shows at the Manchester Academy 2 and London Electric Ballroom early next year, supporting the release of their new album Fandom on October 11. Grab your tickets now (and fast) via the Kerrang! Ticket Store.

Read this next: Awsten Knight: The 10 songs that changed my life

Catch Waterparks live at the following:

January 2020

24 Dublin Academy
25 Belfast Waterfront Studio
26 Glasgow SWG3
27 Birmingham Institute
29 Manchester Academy 2
30 Manchester Academy 2

February 2020

1 London Electric Ballroom
2 London Electric Ballroom
4 Koln Luxor
5 Munich Feirerwerk
7 Amsterdam Melkweg
8 Hamburg Logo
9 Copenhagen Pumpehuset
11 Oslo Parkteateret
12 Stockholm Klubben

Read this next: 5 huge pop-punk albums we can expect in 2019

With Fandom on the way, frontman Awsten Knight recently told Kerrang! about the band's signing to Hopeless Records, and how the label have allowed them to remain in complete creative control on their forthcoming third album.

“Hopeless said, ‘Hey, can we come and hear stuff?’ And I was so apprehensive, because it’s a weird thing for someone to come in and hear something that’s unfinished,” Awsten said. “I didn’t want anyone to say it wasn’t ready, because it’s like, ‘No shit!’ But people from Hopeless came in and were listening and going, ‘Holy fuck!’ I explained what I wanted to do and how I wanted this album to be: I want every song to be the best fucking song, and I want them to be able to all live in different worlds. Like if we’re referring to playlists or anything like that, I want every one of these songs to be able to just live on its own in a completely different fan base, you know what I mean? That’s the idea behind this. There’s one song that could have been considered a little bit pop-punk, and I was like, ‘Fuck this!’ So we just changed it up. We get on all the playlists that are like, ‘Pop-Punk Forever!’ and I’m just like, ‘Meh, I guess…’ I just want every song to be able to live comfortably with completely different sets of people. That’s a cool, conscious thing that I’m really excited about.”

He also revealed how inspiration for writing music can come from literally anywhere – even movies or TV shows.

“While we’re making albums I try not to listen to any other bands, just because it’s so easy to accidentally fall into somebody else’s lane, and I never, ever want to do that,” Awsten explained. “It’s funny that you mention movies being influential because there’s at least three songs that come to mind right now that feel like a movie score (laughs). But it’s cool – it’s like taking a movie score and then putting a song into it. I don’t want to get too in-depth yet, but you can probably find most genres, or at least pieces of genres, in these songs.”