Radiohead have unveiled plans for a powerful new global run of shows titled The Quiet Storm Tour, a concept-driven live experience set to unfold across major cities in 2026. Known for turning concerts into immersive art pieces, the band is reportedly building a show that blends haunting minimalism with overwhelming sonic crescendos. Early descriptions point to a performance built around tension and release — delicate arrangements, glitch visuals, deep bass swells, and explosive climaxes — crafted to pull audiences into a fully atmospheric journey rather than a traditional rock set.
The Quiet Storm Tour is expected to draw from across the band’s catalog, weaving together landmark tracks, reimagined arrangements, and rarely performed material. Production insiders hint at modular stage design, reactive lighting, and layered screen environments that shift with tempo and mood. Instead of a greatest-hits format, the structure is said to flow like a film — movements instead of segments — with seamless transitions and evolving soundscapes that change night to night.
Fan anticipation is already surging, with venues preparing for high-demand ticket releases and extended multi-night runs in select cities. The tour will reportedly focus on acoustically rich arenas and architecturally distinctive spaces to enhance the band’s detailed sound design. Special visual collaborators and experimental opening acts are rumored to be part of the bill, reinforcing the idea that each show will feel curated rather than repeated.
According to the announced schedule, The Quiet Storm Tour begins on April 18, 2026 in London, before moving through Manchester, Berlin, Amsterdam, Paris, Barcelona, New York, Chicago, Toronto, Los Angeles, Tokyo, Seoul, Sydney, and Melbourne, with additional dates expected to be added as demand grows worldwide.