With post hardcore heroes Touché Amoré set to make their long-awaited return to Australian stages in 2025, we're putting the spotlight on Militarie Gun who are on the tour across all dates.
This will mark Militarie Gun’s return to Australia following a run with Hockey Dad last year.
🗓️ Touché Amoré + Militarie Gun | 2025 Australian Tour
Thursday 10 July – The Triffid, Brisbane
RSVP HERE | TICKETS HERE
Friday 11 July – Mo’s Desert Clubhouse, Gold Coast
RSVP HERE | TICKETS HERE
Saturday 12 July – Hamilton Station Hotel, Newcastle
RSVP HERE | TICKETS HERE
Sunday 13 July – Manning Bar, Sydney
RSVP HERE | TICKETS HERE
Tuesday 15 July – Dicey Rileys, Wollongong
RSVP HERE | TICKETS HERE
Thursday 17 July – 170 Russell, Melbourne
RSVP HERE | TICKETS HERE
Friday 18 July – Lion Arts Factory, Adelaide
RSVP HERE | TICKETS HERE
Saturday 19 July – Lynott’s Lounge, Perth
RSVP HERE | TICKETS HERE
The L.A. band exploded onto the scene with 2023’s Life Under the Gun, a record that demolished genre walls and delivered anthem after anthem from the fuzzed-out Do It Faster to the raw and reflective Very High.
Produced by frontman Ian Shelton and Taylor Young (Nails, God’s Hate) and filled with infectious hooks and deeply felt lyrics, the album positioned them as a band that could land on a hardcore matinee bill or a festival with the Strokes and belong in both worlds.
The band doubled-down on the uncategorizable nature of their sound with the follow up EP Life Under The Sun, a re-imagined sampling and deconstruction of Life Under The Gun featuring notable guests Bully and Manchester Orchestra in 2024, with a trio of non-album singles, Gun Under the Gun (MFG), Thought You Were Waving and most recently Tall People Don’t Live Long (with Dazy) continuing to showcase their sonic malleability.
🔥 WATCH: Do It Faster – Militarie Gun
Their live show? Unrelenting. Commanded by the swaggering, magnetic presence of vocalist Ian Shelton, Militarie Gun tear through sets like they’re trying to out-run boredom and burn down apathy. With a sound that fuses early '90s alt-rock with hardcore ethos, their songs aren’t just loud they’re alive. Think Hüsker Dü meets Fugazi via Turnstile. And it's all filtered through a modern, no-bullshit lens.