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New Years Day Tickets, Tour Dates and %{concertOrShowText}
New Years Day Tickets, Tour Dates and %{concertOrShowText}

New Years DayVerified

206,435 Followers
• 7 Upcoming Shows
7 Upcoming Shows
Never miss another New Years Day concert. Get alerts about tour announcements, concert tickets, and shows near you with a free Bandsintown account.
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No upcoming shows in your city
Send a request to New Years Day to play in your city
Request a Show

concerts and tour dates

Upcoming
Past

Latest Post

New Years Day
3 months ago
Hey Europe & UK! VIP upgrade tickets are available NOW 💋 We can't wait to see you all on this tour!

https://nydrock.com/live-1

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New Years Day's tour

Live Photos of New Years Day

New Years Day at Utrecht, Netherlands in TivoliVredenburg 2025
View All Photos

Fan Reviews

Sam
January 22nd 2025
amazing show, 10/10! got a kiss blown to me and a guitar pick flung at me which hit me in the forehead lmao (a lovely person behind me found it for me and gave it to me), core memory right there, especially after having waited 10 years to finally get to see these legends in person 🫶🏻
Utrecht, Netherlands@
TivoliVredenburg
Apryl
October 27th 2024
Best concert I've been to! New Years Day has an amazing stage presence, and they interact with their fans even while on stage. They even hang out at their merch booth sometimes after their set is done. Ash is the sweetest. She truly cares about her fans, and she is so personable. Definitely a band worth listening to and worth seeing live.
Liverpool, NY@
Sharkey's Bar and Grill
Luis
October 18th 2024
She was amazing!!! Please come back to Wichita ks when you come back to Wichita, you should definitely try to convince lacuna coil and Maria from In This Moment and evanescence to come up with a good tour with you you should call it the mother nature goddess tour lol that would be really coool
Wichita, KS@
The Cotillion Ballroom
View More Fan Reviews

About New Years Day

New album Unbreakable is out now: RED.lnk.to/Unbreakable

Appropriately enough for a band named New Years Day, their stunning new Unbreakable album signifies a new outlook—as well as a high-water mark for the Cali-bred lineup. Yet it was a rocky roadto Unbreakable, as singer Ash Costello explains: “If I had to look at my life like a timeline of colors, when I wrote our last album, Malevolence (2015), it was pitch, charcoal black. But in the last couple years, the band cut off toxic people, built a new business team, and we’re stronger than we’ve ever been. So when we went to make Unbreakable, I wanted the process to be fun, to reflect our renewed vibe and energy,” she says. “We set out to write the poppiest metal album, or the most metal pop album.”

On Unbreakable, that mission is accomplished. It’s a dozen intense, boundary-melding songs that may touch on metal or goth, but are ultimately undeniable modern rock ‘n’ roll tunes, no-holds-barred, done
the New Years Day way. The public got its first taste of Unbreakable in November 2018, with the booming, ultra-dynamic “Skeletons.” The song surpassed 1 million worldwide streams, the first proof that Unbreakable was going to be unbeatable. “Shut Up,” with ultra-melodic, breathy vocals and a hardcore message, plus the dark taunt and industrial grind of ‘Come For Me,” with its irresistible chorus, capture a young band in its creative prime, and a singer solidly in charge of her vision. Costello, raised in Anaheim, grew up worshiping the powerful voice and presence of another local girl:No Doubt’s Gwen Stefani. Like her childhood idol, Costello was singing in bands by high school. But it wasn’t until a few years into NYD’s career that everything gelled. “I feel like New Years Day was really born when our EP Epidemic (2014) came out; it was the first taste of who we really are,” Costello says. “Everything before that feels like a different band, and technically was. Then Malevolence came out, it was sort of our punch in the dick to the music industry, and we did our first
headlining tour in 2015.” Malevolence hit #45 on the Billboard 200, thanks to the radio hits "Defame Me" and “Kill Or Be Killed." In 2017, the band headlined the Vans Warped Tour; did a month-longfestival run with Halestorm; and appeared on the Punk Goes Pop compilation, covering Kehlani's "Gangsta" from the movie Suicide Squad.Unbreakable showcases a New Years Day stripped bare—literally. The “boys in the band” left behind their white face makeup, which all admit was somewhat of a “safety blanket.” Likewise, Costello stripped down her songwriting. “I used to think lyrics needed to have metaphorical veils and be super-dense and paint a picture but leave it up to the interpretation.” But for Unbreakable, she says with characteristic forthrightness: “I was, ‘fuck that, I’m literally going to say exactly what I want to say.’ Yeah, there’s some metaphorical stuff, but this is me moving into a more literal direction.”

Songs like “Shut Up” blend a musical vulnerability with tough lyrics, not an easy task. But thanks in part to doing covers—of Kehalni, Pantera and others—New Years Day discovered their own versatility and creativity. “We made those songs work for our band, and that was the first time I realized we could go that direction in our own writing, make the super-melodic and the dirty, ratchety stuff work together.
‘Shut Up’ was written in a day, which just doesn’t happen. I was going through some heavy personal stuff, and I was just, ‘don’t tell me what I want, shut up and give it to me!’”
If “Shut Up” was nearly instantaneous, “Come For Me” took a year to write. It’s truly a fight song-- “If you have a problem with me, I’ll put you on the guest list, come for me; we’ll fight it out,” offers up
Costello. But? “It also sounds dirty,” she laughs. “I’m just trying to write songs that strippers can strip to: a good beat and some sexy-ass lyrics!”
The dichotomy between Costello’s two sides—embodied in her red and black hair, and even her tattoos (one side inked, the other not) has coalesced in the songs on Unbreakable. But the painful part of the
creative journey to Unbreakable began long before “Skeletons” was written. Before writing “Skeletons” in 2018, NYD did an album’s worth of songs…. then threw them out. Literally.

“It wasn’t someone who else told us they didn’t like our record. It was US, the band, saying ‘THIS IS NOT IT,’” Costello recalls. New Years Day weren’t feeling that elusive “it” midway through the
process. Yet Costello “was trying to be hopeful and stick it out.” The turning point came in 2017 when NYD listened to their effort from start to finish with their old business team, and it didn’t feel good or right. So, in a moment of bravery— “a very scary moment,” NYD canned the record and their business affiliations. “I trust the universe,” says Costello. “And it took us where we needed to go. That door was meant to close that day. That group of songs are gone. But Unbreakable came out of it, and also our
new label and management. “It was about taking control of our art. We did, and everything good followed.”
A couple of those good things were writers/producers Mitch Marlow (All That Remains, In This Moment) and Scott Stevens (Halestorm, Shinedown). Each were writing with Costello, but she brought
the pair, who had never met, together. “Both became producers and ended up splitting the album, which is unheard of. But they were super passionate about me as an artist and the band, the record, and what
we have built,” Costello says. “They fit like puzzle pieces. Marlow brings the blood and guts, Stevens the melodies. “You put the two guys together, and I’m the person who embodies both sides, musically.
I’m a little horror, a little blood and guts, and a little ‘I love Mickey Mouse’ happy. It’s a little ugly, it’s a little pretty. Now the music is finally reflecting that. “The risk New Years Day’s took has earned them copious rewards, and those “pitch, charcoal” days—which were equally daunting times for guitarist Nikki Misery and bassist Frankie Sil—are in the
rear view. There were times when Costello felt she might not survive—”and it shows in Malevolence. But the past couple years, the communication among the band is incredible. We’ve got this shit. We’re
tight. We’ve lifted ourselves out of the dirt.” The reignited band unity and honesty boosted the creation of Unbreakable, resulting in an album that
tough critic Misery calls “groundbreaking.” There were the times when Costello would “call Nikki or Frankie, looking for a pep talk. I don’t ever want to be stagnant; I wanted to push myself vocally, in my writing, better melodies, everything. So I put the pressure on myself.”

Misery, in keeping with his rebellious punky energy, is a “tough love kind of person.” But he had his singer’s back. “He can pick me up. There aren’t a lot of people I’ll listen to in this world; I’ve learned so much on my own, school of hard knocks, but Nikki can tell me the truth and I’ll listen,” says
Costello. Ditto Frankie, who describes two his band mates as “best friends. It’s a Mick Jagger/Keith Richards sort of relationship; they have this insane chemistry.” With lead guitarist Austin Ingerman bringing his
multi-faceted musicality to NYD (he cites everyone from Randy Rhoads to Slash to Stevie Ray Vaughan as influences) the members of New Years Day finally feel “Unbreakable.” Bascially, title track says it all: “I stepped on broken glass / Walking through the past / Feeling every cut that crippled me / Been through it all before / Won’t go back anymore / I’ve gone too far … You can’t shatter me now / I’m Unbreakable.”
Show More
Genres:
Rock, Hard Rock
Band Members:
Nikki Misery, Austin Ingerman, Frankie Sil, Ash Costello
Hometown:
Anaheim, California

No upcoming shows in your city
Send a request to New Years Day to play in your city
Request a Show

concerts and tour dates

Upcoming
Past

Latest Post

New Years Day
3 months ago
Hey Europe & UK! VIP upgrade tickets are available NOW 💋 We can't wait to see you all on this tour!

https://nydrock.com/live-1

Live Photos of New Years Day

New Years Day at Utrecht, Netherlands in TivoliVredenburg 2025
View All Photos

Merch (ad)

Happy New Year Day Eve Party Firework...
$21.99
Happy New Year 2025 Disco Ball Pink C...
$15.99
Trump Make New Year Great Again Happy...
$17.99
Happy New Year Shirt for Women: 2025 ...
$20.99
Hello New Year Shirt Womens New Years...
$22.38
Women's Happy New Year T-Shirt Casual...
$17.99
New Year 2025 Happy New Years Eve Day...
$15.99
Happy New Year New Years Eve Party Wo...
$16.89
Happy New Year 2025 Gnomes Family Par...
$15.99
This is My New Years Day Pajama Shirt...
$18.99
New Years Day's tour

Fan Reviews

Sam
January 22nd 2025
amazing show, 10/10! got a kiss blown to me and a guitar pick flung at me which hit me in the forehead lmao (a lovely person behind me found it for me and gave it to me), core memory right there, especially after having waited 10 years to finally get to see these legends in person 🫶🏻
Utrecht, Netherlands@
TivoliVredenburg
Apryl
October 27th 2024
Best concert I've been to! New Years Day has an amazing stage presence, and they interact with their fans even while on stage. They even hang out at their merch booth sometimes after their set is done. Ash is the sweetest. She truly cares about her fans, and she is so personable. Definitely a band worth listening to and worth seeing live.
Liverpool, NY@
Sharkey's Bar and Grill
Luis
October 18th 2024
She was amazing!!! Please come back to Wichita ks when you come back to Wichita, you should definitely try to convince lacuna coil and Maria from In This Moment and evanescence to come up with a good tour with you you should call it the mother nature goddess tour lol that would be really coool
Wichita, KS@
The Cotillion Ballroom
View More Fan Reviews

About New Years Day

New album Unbreakable is out now: RED.lnk.to/Unbreakable

Appropriately enough for a band named New Years Day, their stunning new Unbreakable album signifies a new outlook—as well as a high-water mark for the Cali-bred lineup. Yet it was a rocky roadto Unbreakable, as singer Ash Costello explains: “If I had to look at my life like a timeline of colors, when I wrote our last album, Malevolence (2015), it was pitch, charcoal black. But in the last couple years, the band cut off toxic people, built a new business team, and we’re stronger than we’ve ever been. So when we went to make Unbreakable, I wanted the process to be fun, to reflect our renewed vibe and energy,” she says. “We set out to write the poppiest metal album, or the most metal pop album.”

On Unbreakable, that mission is accomplished. It’s a dozen intense, boundary-melding songs that may touch on metal or goth, but are ultimately undeniable modern rock ‘n’ roll tunes, no-holds-barred, done
the New Years Day way. The public got its first taste of Unbreakable in November 2018, with the booming, ultra-dynamic “Skeletons.” The song surpassed 1 million worldwide streams, the first proof that Unbreakable was going to be unbeatable. “Shut Up,” with ultra-melodic, breathy vocals and a hardcore message, plus the dark taunt and industrial grind of ‘Come For Me,” with its irresistible chorus, capture a young band in its creative prime, and a singer solidly in charge of her vision. Costello, raised in Anaheim, grew up worshiping the powerful voice and presence of another local girl:No Doubt’s Gwen Stefani. Like her childhood idol, Costello was singing in bands by high school. But it wasn’t until a few years into NYD’s career that everything gelled. “I feel like New Years Day was really born when our EP Epidemic (2014) came out; it was the first taste of who we really are,” Costello says. “Everything before that feels like a different band, and technically was. Then Malevolence came out, it was sort of our punch in the dick to the music industry, and we did our first
headlining tour in 2015.” Malevolence hit #45 on the Billboard 200, thanks to the radio hits "Defame Me" and “Kill Or Be Killed." In 2017, the band headlined the Vans Warped Tour; did a month-longfestival run with Halestorm; and appeared on the Punk Goes Pop compilation, covering Kehlani's "Gangsta" from the movie Suicide Squad.Unbreakable showcases a New Years Day stripped bare—literally. The “boys in the band” left behind their white face makeup, which all admit was somewhat of a “safety blanket.” Likewise, Costello stripped down her songwriting. “I used to think lyrics needed to have metaphorical veils and be super-dense and paint a picture but leave it up to the interpretation.” But for Unbreakable, she says with characteristic forthrightness: “I was, ‘fuck that, I’m literally going to say exactly what I want to say.’ Yeah, there’s some metaphorical stuff, but this is me moving into a more literal direction.”

Songs like “Shut Up” blend a musical vulnerability with tough lyrics, not an easy task. But thanks in part to doing covers—of Kehalni, Pantera and others—New Years Day discovered their own versatility and creativity. “We made those songs work for our band, and that was the first time I realized we could go that direction in our own writing, make the super-melodic and the dirty, ratchety stuff work together.
‘Shut Up’ was written in a day, which just doesn’t happen. I was going through some heavy personal stuff, and I was just, ‘don’t tell me what I want, shut up and give it to me!’”
If “Shut Up” was nearly instantaneous, “Come For Me” took a year to write. It’s truly a fight song-- “If you have a problem with me, I’ll put you on the guest list, come for me; we’ll fight it out,” offers up
Costello. But? “It also sounds dirty,” she laughs. “I’m just trying to write songs that strippers can strip to: a good beat and some sexy-ass lyrics!”
The dichotomy between Costello’s two sides—embodied in her red and black hair, and even her tattoos (one side inked, the other not) has coalesced in the songs on Unbreakable. But the painful part of the
creative journey to Unbreakable began long before “Skeletons” was written. Before writing “Skeletons” in 2018, NYD did an album’s worth of songs…. then threw them out. Literally.

“It wasn’t someone who else told us they didn’t like our record. It was US, the band, saying ‘THIS IS NOT IT,’” Costello recalls. New Years Day weren’t feeling that elusive “it” midway through the
process. Yet Costello “was trying to be hopeful and stick it out.” The turning point came in 2017 when NYD listened to their effort from start to finish with their old business team, and it didn’t feel good or right. So, in a moment of bravery— “a very scary moment,” NYD canned the record and their business affiliations. “I trust the universe,” says Costello. “And it took us where we needed to go. That door was meant to close that day. That group of songs are gone. But Unbreakable came out of it, and also our
new label and management. “It was about taking control of our art. We did, and everything good followed.”
A couple of those good things were writers/producers Mitch Marlow (All That Remains, In This Moment) and Scott Stevens (Halestorm, Shinedown). Each were writing with Costello, but she brought
the pair, who had never met, together. “Both became producers and ended up splitting the album, which is unheard of. But they were super passionate about me as an artist and the band, the record, and what
we have built,” Costello says. “They fit like puzzle pieces. Marlow brings the blood and guts, Stevens the melodies. “You put the two guys together, and I’m the person who embodies both sides, musically.
I’m a little horror, a little blood and guts, and a little ‘I love Mickey Mouse’ happy. It’s a little ugly, it’s a little pretty. Now the music is finally reflecting that. “The risk New Years Day’s took has earned them copious rewards, and those “pitch, charcoal” days—which were equally daunting times for guitarist Nikki Misery and bassist Frankie Sil—are in the
rear view. There were times when Costello felt she might not survive—”and it shows in Malevolence. But the past couple years, the communication among the band is incredible. We’ve got this shit. We’re
tight. We’ve lifted ourselves out of the dirt.” The reignited band unity and honesty boosted the creation of Unbreakable, resulting in an album that
tough critic Misery calls “groundbreaking.” There were the times when Costello would “call Nikki or Frankie, looking for a pep talk. I don’t ever want to be stagnant; I wanted to push myself vocally, in my writing, better melodies, everything. So I put the pressure on myself.”

Misery, in keeping with his rebellious punky energy, is a “tough love kind of person.” But he had his singer’s back. “He can pick me up. There aren’t a lot of people I’ll listen to in this world; I’ve learned so much on my own, school of hard knocks, but Nikki can tell me the truth and I’ll listen,” says
Costello. Ditto Frankie, who describes two his band mates as “best friends. It’s a Mick Jagger/Keith Richards sort of relationship; they have this insane chemistry.” With lead guitarist Austin Ingerman bringing his
multi-faceted musicality to NYD (he cites everyone from Randy Rhoads to Slash to Stevie Ray Vaughan as influences) the members of New Years Day finally feel “Unbreakable.” Bascially, title track says it all: “I stepped on broken glass / Walking through the past / Feeling every cut that crippled me / Been through it all before / Won’t go back anymore / I’ve gone too far … You can’t shatter me now / I’m Unbreakable.”
Show More
Genres:
Rock, Hard Rock
Band Members:
Nikki Misery, Austin Ingerman, Frankie Sil, Ash Costello
Hometown:
Anaheim, California

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