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Haim Announce 2025 North American and U.K. ‘I Quit’ Tour Dates

The Haim sisters will hit the road in support of their long-awaited fourth album, I Quit.

HAIM

HAIM

Lea Garn

As Haim ready the release of their long-awaited fourth album, the trio of siblings have dropped an extensive run of North American and U.K. tour dates.

The Haim sisters officially confirmed the title of their upcoming album only a week ago during a show at The Bellwether theater in Los Angeles on April 23. The show itself was their first full show in nearly two years, with the trio revealing that I Quit will be their moniker of their fourth LP.


The follow-up to 2020’s Women in Music Pt. III, the upcoming record will officially arrive on June 20, and has so far been previewed by way of singles “Relationships,” “Everybody’s Trying to Figure Me Out,” and the newly-released “Down to Be Wrong.”

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As the countdown to the record’s release slowly ticks away, Haim have now unveiled a run of tour dates to occupy them during the latter half of the year.

Launching their upcoming tour plans with festival dates across the U.K, Europe, and Japan over the summer, the I Quit tour will see the trio embark upon a 23-date tour of the U.S. and Canada between September and October, before returning to the U.K. that same month with a six date run of shows.

In a recent interview ini.d. magazine, self-proclaimed “serial monogamist” Danielle said the new album is the first they’ve made without the involvement of her longtime boyfriend, producer Ariel Rechtshaid, and that she’s single for the first time since 2011. “Being single now, I’m just trying to embrace it, because I’m… I feel like I’m the age where I need to embrace it,” she said.

Alana said that the album is “the closest we’ve ever gotten to how we wanted to sound,” with Danielle diplomatically adding that working again with another longtime collaborator Rostam was “very quick, kinetic with him, which I really love as an artist… Maybe before, it wasn’t that way, it was kind of a more… longer, searching, labored situation.”

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Haim – 2025 I Quit Tour Dates

Sept. 4 – TD Pavilion at the Mann, Philadelphia, PA
Sept. 5 – The Stage at Suffolk Downs, Boston, MA
Sept. 6 – Scotiabank Arena, Toronto, ON
Sept. 8 – Madison Square Garden, New York, NY
Sept. 9 – Westville Music Bowl, New Haven, CT
Sept. 10 – Merriweather Post Pavilion, Columbia, MD
Sept. 12 – United Center, Chicago, IL
Sept. 13 – The Rave, Milwaukee, WI
Sept. 14 – The Armory, Minneapolis, MN
Sept. 17 – Edgefield, Portland, OR
Sept. 18 – WAMU Theater, Seattle, WA
Sept. 20 – Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Centre, Vancouver, BC
Sept. 23 – Mesa Amphitheatre, Phoenix, AZ
Sept. 25 – The Bomb Factory, Dallas, TX
Sept. 26 – Moody Center, Austin, TX
Sept. 28 – White Oak Music Hall- Lawn, Houston, TX
Sept. 30 – The Pinnacle, Nashville, TN
Oct. 3 – Fiddler’s Green Amphitheatre, Denver, CO
Oct. 4 – The Great Saltair, Salt Lake City, UT
Oct. 7 – Bill Graham Civic Auditorium, San Francisco, CA
Oct. 9 – Kia Forum, Los Angeles, CA
Oct. 10 – The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park, San Diego, CA
Oct. 11 – Santa Barbara Bowl, Santa Barbara, CA
Oct. 24 – Motorpoint Arena, Nottingham, UK
Oct. 25 – Utilita Arena, Cardiff, UK
Oct. 26 – Brighton Centre, Brighton, UK
Oct. 28 – The O2, London, UK
Oct. 30 – AO Arena, Manchester, UK
Oct. 31 – OVO Hydro, Glasgow, UK

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This article first appeared on Billboard U.S.

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Quebec to Impose Quotas For French-Language Content On Streaming Platforms
Photo by Kenny Eliason on Unsplash
Streaming

Quebec to Impose Quotas For French-Language Content On Streaming Platforms

Bill 109 could impose big changes for streaming services to improve the discoverability of French-language content in Quebec.

Quebec may soon be getting stricter language regulations on streaming services.

Quebec Culture Minister Mathieu Lacombe tabled a new bill on Wednesday (May 21) that aims to add more French-language content to major streaming platforms, as well as increasing its discoverability and accessibility by establishing quotas. The bill will directly impact platforms that offer media content such as music, TV, video and audiobooks, including giants like Netflix and Spotify.

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