Thom Yorke has officially unveiled his most intimate and haunting journey yet: The Final Frequency Tour. Announced as his last solo tour, the project feels less like a standard run of concerts and more like a farewell transmission to the world. Yorke’s solo work has always lived in the space between fragility and futurism, and this tour promises to bring that atmosphere to life in a way only he can. Fans can expect a blend of piano-driven confessions, electronic pulse, and the raw emotional gravity that has defined his career beyond Radiohead.
What makes The Final Frequency Tour so powerful is its sense of finality without bitterness. It isn’t framed as an ending in sorrow, but as a closing chapter written with intention. Yorke has described the tour as “one last signal through the noise,” and that ethos is reflected in its minimalist concept—dark stages, immersive visuals, and performances that feel like whispered secrets rather than stadium spectacles. Each show is expected to unfold like a living album, where songs breathe, mutate, and dissolve into one another.
The tour will travel across continents, reaching both legendary arenas and carefully chosen theaters that emphasize intimacy. Cities such as London, Paris, Berlin, Tokyo, New York, Los Angeles, Toronto, São Paulo, and Sydney are all on the route, creating a global map of farewell moments. Rather than overwhelming scale, the focus is on connection—bringing fans face-to-face with the man behind decades of emotional soundscapes. It’s not about spectacle; it’s about presence.
Longtime listeners will hear echoes from across Yorke’s entire solo catalog, alongside reimagined pieces that blur the line between past and present. Tracks from The Eraser, Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes, Anima, and beyond will be reshaped into something new, guided by live electronics and Yorke’s unmistakable voice. Each night promises to feel unique, as if the music itself is deciding how it wants to say goodbye.
Dates and cities for The Final Frequency Tour begin in London on March 3, 2026, followed by Paris on March 7, Berlin on March 12, New York on March 20, Los Angeles on March 25, Toronto on March 29, São Paulo on April 6, Tokyo on April 15, and concluding in Sydney on April 23, 2026. These performances mark not just a tour, but a closing signal from one of modern music’s most elusive visionaries.