Avatar reveal two Fall Tours, Fossil Named After the Band – News

Avatar reveal two Fall Tours, Fossil Named After the Band

The heavy metal ‘n’ roll, dark, madcap visionaries collectively known as Avatar are having a banner year in 2023, with lots of firsts! They’ve achieved their first #1 single “The Dirt I’m Buried In” from their magnum opus and ninth album, Dance Devil Dance, produced and mixed by Jay Ruston which was released in February 2023. The track has surged itself to #1 on Mediabase’s Active Rock Chart. On Billboard’s Mainstream Rock Chart, the single rises to #1 on its 31st week, making it the longest trek to #1 in 20 years! Watch “The Dirt I’m Buried In” here.

“If you told the 16 year old me that we would hit the top of the US radio charts, I’d ask you what you’re smoking. If you then would proceed to tell me that a fossil would be named after us, I’d ask you what you’re smoking, and if you could share. Hitting the charts was never a priority, but now that we’re here, I’m grateful. It shows the reach of what we’re doing, and it is baffling. The fossil shows something else. That to me is a sign of people truly making our music a part of their lives. It’s a true honor. A beautiful gift. All we can say is thank you. We fully intend to keep earning your participation, over and over again,” says Eckerström.

Another first — Avatar have been immortalized as a fossil from Southern Sweden; discovered by Dr. Ben Thuy, a​​ paleontologist at the Luxembourg Natural History Museum. This fossil is now known as Ophiocoma avatar. Read below to learn a little more about the Avatar fossil.

Some 80 million years ago, when dinosaurs roamed our planet, southern Sweden was located at the shores of a subtropical sea. One particular location, the old quarries at Ivö Klack, exposes an exceptional palaeo-environment that is only rarely preserved in the fossil record: a rocky shore with oyster-encrusted boulders. The mud that accumulated between these boulders millions of years ago contains the fossil remains of the animals that lived in and around the rocky shore. One of these animals is the brittle star named after Avatar: Ophiocoma avatar. 

Brittle star skeletons tend to fall apart very quickly after death. As a result, most brittle-star fossils consist of tiny skeletal fragments that are collected with the sieve. The original fossil of Ophiocoma avatar is a fragment from the arm skeleton that carried the long arm spines.

The Avatar brittle star belongs to a genus that nowadays lives along tropical and subtropical shores. They are known to hide under rocks and in crevasses at daytime and emerge at night to collect food particles with their spiny arms. A remarkable feature of living Ophiocoma species is that many of them are capable of sight, without even having eyes or a brain! They can literally see with their entire body surface, and some even change color between day and night as part of a sunglass effect. Whether the Avatar brittle star exhibited the same features is impossible to determine based on fossils alone. What we can say, however, is that Ophiocoma avatar is by far the oldest known representative of this exciting group of brittle stars.

The name Ophiocoma avatar, is valid for eternity. Avatar is now a part of the Earth’s history, of the palaeontological heritage of Sweden, and has gained a small piece of immortality.

The band will return to the road this fall for their headline “Chimp Mosh Pit Tour” and will be supporting Ice Nine Kills and In This Moment for their “Kiss of Death” Tour. All dates are below, including key festival appearances. Get tickets here.

Chimp Mosh Pit Tour Dates w/Orbit Culture and Native Howl:9/10/23: Alton, VA — Blue Ridge Rock Fest +9/12/23: Quebec City, QC — Imperial Bell 9/13/23: Montreal, QC — Olympia 9/14/23: Toronto, ON — Phoenix 9/15/23: Grand Rapids, MI — The Intersection9/16/23: Des Moines, IA — Wooly’s 9/17/23: Bloomington, IL — The Castle 9/19/23: Houston, TX — Rise *9/20/23: Oklahoma City, OK — Diamond Ballroom 9/22/23: Louisville, KY — Louder Than Life +9/23/23: St. Louis, MO — Delmar Hall9/24/23: Nashville, TN — Brooklyn Bowl9/25/23: Fayetteville, AR — JJ’s Live 9/26/23: Wichita, KS — Cotillion 9/28/23: Fargo, ND — Fargo Brewing Company 9/29/23: Winnipeg, MB — Burton Cummings Theater 9/30/23: Saskatoon, SK — Coors 10/1/23: Calgary, AB — Palace Theater 10/2/23: Edmonton, AB — Midway Music Hall10/4/23: Vancouver, BC — Commodore Ballroom10/5/23: Spokane, WA — Knitting Factory 10/6/23: Eugene, OR — McDonald Theater10/7/23: Sacramento, CA — Aftershock +10/8/23: San Louis Obispo, CA — Fremont Theater11/26/23: Albany, NY – Empire Live ^+ Festivals^ No Orbit Culture or Native Howl

Kiss Of Death Tour Dates w/ In This Moment, Ice Nine Kills, and New Years Day:11/3/23: Gary, IN — Hard Rock Live11/4/23: Maplewood, MN — Myth Live *11/5/23: Kansas City, MO — Uptown Theater *11/7/23: Indianapolis, IN — Blue Ribbon Pavilion 11/8/23: Cincinnati, OH — The Andrew J Brady Music Center11/9/23: Milwaukee, WI — Eagles Ballroom11/11/23: Green Bay, WI — Epic Events Center *11/12/23: Louisville, KY — The Louisville Palace Theatre *11/14/23: Greenville, SC — Bon Secours Arena11/16/23: Estero, FL — Hertz Arena11/17/23: Jacksonville, FL — Daily’s Place11/18/23: Orlando, FL — Orlando Amphitheater11/20/23: Atlanta, GA — Coca Cola Roxy11/21/23: Greensboro, NC — Greensboro Coliseum Complex11/22/23: Reading, PA — Santander Arena11/24/23: Wallingford, CT — Oakdale Theatre11/25/23: Bangor, ME — Cross Insurance Center11/27/23: New York, NY — Hammerstein Ballroom11/28/23: Washington, DC — The Anthem11/30/23: Norfolk, VA — Chartway Arena12/1/23: Johnstown, PA — 1st Summit Arena12/2/23: Wheeling, WV — Webanco Arena*No Avatar

Line-up:
Johannes Eckerström – vocals
Jonas Jarlsby – guitar
Tim Öhrström – guitar 
Henrik Sandelin – bass 
John Alfredsson – drums

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