
Alternative and Indie
SLIFT Tickets
Concerts in Ireland
- 8 December 2026Tuesday 19:00DublinThe AcademySLIFT
Venue
International Concerts
- 8 October 2026Thursday 18:30Washington, DC, United StatesThe AtlantisSLIFT
Venue
- 10 October 2026Saturday 21:00Toronto, ON, CanadaLee's PalaceSLIFTOn partner site
Venue
- 13 October 2026Tuesday 18:30Chicago, IL, United StatesOutsetSLIFT
Venue
- 23 October 2026Friday 20:00San Francisco, CA, United StatesAugust HallSLIFT
Venue
- 24 October 2026Saturday 20:00Los Angeles, CA, United StatesPacific ElectricSLIFT
Venue
- 27 November 2026Friday 19:00Praha 5, Czech RepublicSUBZEROSLIFT
Venue
- 10 December 2026Thursday 18:30Manchester, United KingdomManchester GorillaSLIFT
Venue
- 11 December 2026Until 11/12/2026Nottingham, United KingdomNottingham Rescue RoomsSLIFTOn partner site
- 12 December 2026Until 12/12/2026Bristol, United KingdomTheklaSLIFTOn partner site
Venue
- 13 December 2026Until 13/12/2026London, United KingdomIslington Assembly HallSLIFTOn partner site
About
Every previous album by the radiant and heavy French trio SLIFT—brothers Jean and Rémi Fossat and drummer Canek Flores, a friend since high school - has been a fantasia—a composite of genres and forms that allowed the band to improvise, to jam on themes until they seemed to spiral together into space. But, in a bit of intentional irony, SLIFT’s fourth album is called Fantasia without actually being one. It is, instead, their leanest and most direct record, a pointed saga about overcoming international upheaval delivered by a band bearing down without wasting a second. SLIFT didn’t want to lose the message by playing too much. They’re preparing for a battle they think we can still win.
As Jean Fossat wrote the core of Fantasia, he thought a lot about Jorge Luis Borges, the Argentinian author whose fiction deftly wove elements of magic and surreality into places and plots that almost felt real. (SLIFT even borrowed the song title “Orbis Tertius” from Borges.) Fantasia, then, is an imagined town plagued by a sense of unknowing and xenophobia, of trying to eliminate anything that disrupts the accepted order. The town comes into focus on “Corrupted Sky,” where Fossat’s narrator tries to dodge doom upon arriving there. Hope starts to emerge during the record’s back half, as people start to remember that they are more than their society’s oppressive uniformity. These eight songs, then, are about trusting in the power to fight back, however hidden it may seem.