Underoath Announces New Album, Video, and 2025 tour
Underoath, the iconic and genre-defining band, has once again shattered expectations with their forthcoming album, The Place After This One, to be released March 28, 2025 via MNRK Heavy. Renowned for their ability to transform chaos into harmony and aggression into anthemic survival, the Florida-based group delivers a record that promises to redefine heavy music and expand their already massive audience. With two RIAA certified gold albums, three Grammy nominations, and a legacy of uncompromising authenticity, Underoath is back â and theyâre louder, bolder, and more essential than ever, while continuing to push boundaries in ways that few bands dare.
The Place After This One marks a truly momentous occasion in the band’s history. It is a stunning document and a remarkable collection of songs, signaling a renaissance period in the beloved actâs storied career. The album showcases where theyâre from, and more importantly, where they’re headed. It’s a masterpiece, from musicians at the top of their game. Sonically, its references are varied and complex, and is a distillation of everything theyâve accomplished thus far: a crystalline vision blending hard rock, electronic experimentation, guttural screams, and anthemic, call-to-arms choruses.
Discussing the new album, guitarist Tim McTague says âThe Place After This One is a multi-faceted idea. The fact that we grew up so sheltered and spiritual, and are trying to reconcile how we grew up against what we see now in the new age. Underoath, albeit intact and the same, is simultaneously so different. Our band has gone through a lot of chaos. I think thereâs something beautiful about the idea of not just abandoning everything when things get weird. Whether it be your faith, or your band, or your marriage, or your relationships. The idea that there is a place after this one, even if itâs with the same people or itâs with the same God, or itâs with the same town. Things compound when itâs good, and you just cut out the things that are bad.â
Following a string of new singles beginning last year â including âGeneration No Surrender,â âSurvivorâs Guilt,â and âTeethâ â the band return with a punishing new song taken from their upcoming album, âAll The Love Is Gone,â alongside its accompanying music video.
Speaking on the song, vocalist Spencer Chamberlain calls it â…one of the most out-there songs we’ve ever written. We really wanted to create a track that was drum-and-bass-driven, kind of in the vein of The Prodigy, The Chemical Brothers, Noisia, etc. We also pulled elements from Justice and The Streets. Thereâs a darkness to those artists thatâs so heavy and interesting to me, and we really wanted to embrace that on this song. To me, this is kind of our version of that â sharing a lot of those elements and vibes, but still keeping the heaviness of Underoath at its core.â
He continues, âLyrically, I wrote it from the place I used to go whenever something went wrong in my life, which I think we can all relate to. It’s a place I now consciously avoid when things fall apart. But itâs that moment when everything in your life has fallen apart, youâre at the bar, and you just donât care anymore. Maybe itâs the end of a relationship, the loss of a friend or family member, or you just got fired â whatever it may be, we’ve all had a night like this. Itâs a scary feeling, and itâs a place I never want to go back to, but thatâs the song in a nutshell. Itâs pretty on the nose, so to speak, but I felt like I needed to write it down to remind myself to never go there again.â
The Place After This One Track Listing:
1. Generation No Surrender
2. Devil
3. Loss
4. Survivorâs Guilt
5. All The Love Is Gone
6. And Then There Was Nothing
7. Teeth
8. Shame
9. Spinning in Place
10. Vultures (feat. Troy Sanders of Mastadon)
11. Cannibal
12. Outsider
In 2025, Underoath will be visiting Australia for the first time since 2019, performing Theyâre Only Chasing Safety in its entirety along with an encore set, as direct support for Alexisonfire. Soon after their jaunt in Australia, the band will return to North America for a run of shows supporting Rise Against and Papa Roach as part of their Rise of the Roach tour. The band will also be performing at Sonic Temple Art & Music Festival on May 10, 2025 in Columbus, OH and at Welcome to Rockville in Daytona Beach, FL on May 16, 2025. Tickets available for purchase here.
Underoath 2025 North American Tour Dates w/Papa Roach and Rise Against:
3/20/25 – Houston, TX @ Toyota Center – $
3/22/25 – San Antonio, TX @ Frost Bank Center – $
3/23/25 – Dallas, TX @ American Airlines Center – $
3/25/25 – Phoenix, AZ @ Talking Stick Resort Amphitheatre – $
3/26/25 – San Diego, CA @ Park at the Park – Petco Park – $
3/28/25 – Los Angeles, CA @ Kia Forum – $
3/29/25 – Sacramento, CA @ Golden 1 Center – $
3/31/25 – Portland, OR @ Veterans Memorial Coliseum – $
4/1/25 – Seattle, WA @ Climate Pledge Arena – $
4/2/25 – Boise, ID @ The Knitting Factory – *
4/3/25 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Maverik Center – $
4/4/25 – Reno, NV @ Virginia Street Brewhouse – *
4/5/25 – Las Vegas, NV @ MGM Grand Garden Arena $
4/7/25 – Denver, CO @ Ball Arena – $
4/8/25 – Wichita, KS @ Wave – *
4/9/25 – Kansas City, MO @ T-Mobile Center – $
4/10/25 – Omaha, NE @ CHI Health Center – $
4/12/25 – Green Bay, WI @ Resch Center – $
4/13/25 – St. Paul, MN @ Xcel Energy Center – $
4/14/25 – Bloomington, IL @ The Castle Theatre – *
4/15/25 – Knoxville, TN @ The Mill & Mine – *
4/16/25 – Pensacola, FL @ Vinyl Music Hall – *
5/10/24 – Columbus, OH @ Sonic Temple
5/16/25 – Daytona Beach, FL @ Welcome to Rockville
9/10/25 – Bridgeport, CT @ Hartford Healthcare Amphitheatre – $
9/11/25 – Syracuse, NY @ Empower FCU Amphitheater at Lakeview – $
9/13/25 – Wantagh, NY @ Northwell at Jones Beach Theater – $
9/14/25 – Mansfield, MA @ Xfinity Center – $
9/16/25 – Washington, DC @ The Anthem – $
9/17/25 – Virginia Beach, VA @ Virginia Beach Dome – $
9/19/25 – Allentown, PA @ PPL Center – $
9/20/25 – Bangor, ME @ Maine Savings Amphitheatre – $
9/23/25 – Cincinnati, OH @ PNC Pavilion at Riverbend – $
9/24/25 – Maryland Heights, MO @ Saint Louis Music Park – $
9/26/25 – Indianapolis, IN @ Everwise Amphitheater at White River State Park – $
9/27/25 – Tinley Park, IL @ Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre – $
9/28/25 – Clarkston, MI @ Pine Knob Music Theatre – $
9/30/25 – Rogers, AR @ Walmart AMP – $
10/1/25 – Franklin, TN @ FirstBank Amphitheater – $
10/3/25 – Charlotte, NC @ Skyla Credit Union Amphitheatre – $
10/4/25 – Tampa, FL @ MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre – $
10/5/25 – West Palm Beach, FL @ iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre – $
* = headlining
$ = supporting Papa Roach and Rise Against
About Underoath:
Underoath transforms noise, aggression, and atmosphere into weapons of survival, with spirited singalong-inducing hooks to spare. Their two gold albums and three Grammy Award nominations arrived without commercial compromise. Renowned for their unrelenting integrity and authenticity, whenever they have a chance to play it safe, this band chooses to challenge themselves instead. Since its inception, the Florida group has redefined the balance between chaos and harmony with each release. Compositions born from creative tension transform into iconoclastic anthems. Even when they nearly implode, the crackling energy coalesces into something deeply resonant to millions.
Two decades after genre classics Define the Great Line and Theyâre Only Chasing Safety, the Underoath audience is more diverse, passionate, and devoted than ever. That reverence is a testament to the bandâs resilience and unwavering commitment to their creative vision. In 2025, Spencer Chamberlain, Tim McTague, Aaron Gillespie, Chris Dudley, and Grant Brandell deliver a powerful new missive filled with emotional courage and unrivaled bombast called The Place After This One (MNRK Heavy).
âIâm proud of every record weâve created and wholeheartedly stand behind all of them, but I havenât felt this way about an album since Define the Great Line,â says Chamberlain, the bandâs charismatic frontman since 2003. âIâll never forget the feeling I had the first time we listened to that album together. Listening back to The Place After This One, every hair on my body stood on end again.â
Gillespie, who co-founded the group’s earliest incarnation as a teen, sees The Place After This One as the start of the next 20-year chapter. âThe Underoath story is one of longevity,â notes the bandâs drummer and co-vocalist. âWeâve had to tear it down to the ground to bring it back. We are in a place where we genuinely love and enjoy each otherâs presence and making music together again.â
From âWriting On The Wallsâ to âGeneration No Surrender,â the bandâs songs and performances demonstrate undeniable power, whether on tour with contemporaries like Bring Me The Horizon, Papa Roach, Rise Against, and Alice In Chains, headlining (with supporting acts like Bad Omens and Spiritbox), or at international rock festivals. Collaborations with Bring Me The Horizon, Sleeping With Sirens, Ghostemane, Mitchell Tenpenny, and Charlotte Sands further illustrate each memberâs artistic diversity.
âI feel very fortunate about what weâve built,â marvels McTague, the bandâs guitarist since 2001. (Dudley joined in 2000; Brandell in 2002.) âWe are more comfortable recognizing and a little bit awestruck by how our music has connected with people over the years, without getting complacent.â
Theyâre Only Chasing Safety (2004) was a watershed moment, influencing a generation of bands. Define the Great Line (2006) pushed the boundaries further, sharpening the dual vocal approach, heavy breakdowns, and atmospheric edge. It moved close to 100,000 copies in its first week alone.
The ambitiously experimental Lost in the Sound of Separation (2008) was another creative milestone. Alternative Press called it a âperfect record,â proclaiming the band âelevated themselves to a level of their own.â Ă (Disambiguation) (2008) delved deeper into emotional darkness without sacrificing memorable hooks. At times broody and menacing, it was the bandâs last record before a long hiatus.
Erase Me (2018) reintroduced UnderĂžath to the world with straightforward riffs and melodies. Itâs an almost uplifting album, though not devoid of the confessional desperation powering their songs. The band described Voyeurist (2022) as âhigh-def violence.â Calling it âbrilliantly unhinged,â Revolver placed it among the Top 25 Albums of 2022 alongside records by Slipknot, Ghost, and Meshuggah.
âSome bands will burn the candle at both ends chasing the past,â Aaron observes. âBut what matters most to ours is that we can look at each other and know we made something awesome together.â
The group took multiple trips to a mountain cabin while writing what became their 2025 opus, enlisting Aaronâs friend, producer Danen Rector (Boys Like Girls, Charlotte Sands) during the process. âItâs perhaps a blessing and a curse that no matter what kind of song we try to make together, itâs going to sound like Underoath,â laughs McTague. âOnce we start playing off each other, something happens. No matter how far we go off the beaten path, we always find Underoath at the center of it.â
Walking a creative tightrope between immersive access and isolationist otherness, UnderĂžath owns the space between huge choruses and raw but innovative heaviness, both on record and onstage. The heart of their sound (confessional vulnerability delivered with thrilling force and cinematic grandiosity) can be heard in generations of bands that followed in their wake. And they refuse to stagnate. 2025âs The Place After This One is a provocative and inspiring work of outsider art.
âWhether other people get it or not ultimately doesnât matter,â Spencer says confidently. âBecause when I look at my band and see all of us moving around while listening to it, that feeling is priceless.â