ULRIKA SPACEK ANNOUNCE 2026 NORTH AMERICA HEADLINE TOUR NEW ALBUM EXPO OUT FEBRUARY 6TH VIA FULL TIME HOBBY LISTEN TO SINGLES “BUILD A BOX THEN BREAK IT” & “SQUARE ROOT OF NONE” |
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Ulrika Spacek by Anya Broido |
Ulrika Spacek recently announced their highly anticipated new album, EXPO, due out February 6th, 2026 via Full Time Hobby. Today, the band have announced a run of 2026 North American headline dates, kicking off in late March and wrapping up in Los Angeles in April. The band’s formidable live show has already built them a cult following, check out last year’s incredible KEXP performance. Tickets are on-sale this Friday, Dec 5th at 12pm local time HERE. Lead single “Build a Box Then Break It,” released last month, serves as a sort of mission statement, expanding their art-rock sound into a liminal space between analogue and electronic, and capturing the album’s focus on our fractured experience of reality, reflected not through eyes but through screens ad infinitum. The album's labyrinthian second single, “Square Root of None,” was about “throwing ideas at a wall” during a biting Stockholm winter; one of the rare opportunities that Ulrika Spacek were in the same room together. Ulrika Spacek has always been a symbol of collective art. Despite a range of day jobs (experimental physicists, graphic designers, music producers) the collective pursuit is there in the shared dream logic of the music: the off-kilter melodies, jagged guitars and cirrus cloud atmospherics. Whether it is Oysterland, the self-curated night the band began to platform artists of other disciplines in live music spaces; Total Refreshment Centre, the East London studio acclaimed producer [caroline, Thurston Moore, Spiritualized] / bassist Syd Kemp runs which connects the dots between the jazz scene and like-minded experimental artists; or their creative bleed as musicians and producers with Crack Cloud and the aforementioned artists, the band’s existence is inseparable from its community. WATCH “BUILD A BOX THEN BREAK IT” OFFICIAL VIDEOS |
TOUR DATES March 20th - Baltimore, MD @ Metro Gallery March 21st - New York, NY @ Mercury Lounge March 22nd - Troy, NY @ No Fun March 24th - Montreal, QC @ La Sala Rossa March 25th - Toronto, ON @ The Cave March 27th - Chicago, IL @ Empty Bottle March 28th - Milwaukee, WI @ Cactus Club March 30th - Denver, CO @ Hi-Dive March 31st - Salt Lake City, UT @ DLC April 2nd - Seattle, WA @ Baba Yaga April 3rd - Vancouver, BC @ The Pearl April 4th - Portland, OR @ The Get Down April 7th - San Francisco, CA @ Rickshaw Stop April 8th - Los Angeles, CA @ Zebulon |
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(download) Rather than their previous works which looked within, EXPO holds a mirror up to the world and captures a warped reflection. The songs were written this way because they were touched by the strange lands and minds of America on tour; because Rhys was awaiting the birth of his daughter and started to wonder about what kind of future she could inherit. Though their foundations are in the art-rock world - and though they are inspired by electronic elements more than ever - Ulrika Spacek are interested in the glitch that exists between the two. Their music reckons with human warmth and digital isolation, equal parts welcoming and altogether alienating. In many ways, the band express the tension which defines modern life. “Our music has always been a collage – a bit patchwork, sonically – but what makes this album a landmark for us is that we went one step further and made our own sound bank and essentially sampled ourselves,” the band says. They create their own doppelgängers in a world of almost-real, where the band appear as if in a hall of mirrors. Digital drums are sampled and layered upon real drums, and the effect is almost like birth in reverse - pulled from the ether and returned back to the tangible world. EXPO serves as a triumph, governed by laws of its own. The organic wrestles with digital; ecstatic and danceable across musical languages. If art is to be exhibited, then Ulrika Spacek will ensure that it is art they make together; that even as the world becomes inhospitable to community, that their intentions are an act of resistance. “We make decisions for the greater good,” they state, “and we are greater than the sum of our parts.” |
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Tracklist: 01 Intro 02 Picto 03 I Could Just Do It 05 This Time I'm Present 06 Showroom Poetry 07 Expo 09 Weights & Measures 10 A Modern Low 11 Incomplete Symphony Connect with Ulrika Spacek: |



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