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Buy tickets for concert Biffy Clyro - 02.05.2026., Danforth Music Hall, Toronto, Canada Buy tickets for concert Biffy Clyro - 02.05.2026., Danforth Music Hall, Toronto, Canada

CONCERT

Biffy Clyro

Danforth Music Hall, Toronto, CA
02. May 2026. 19:00h
2026
02
May
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Biffy Clyro tickets for Danforth Music Hall Toronto concert on The Futique Tour live rock night in Canada

Looking for tickets to Biffy Clyro in Toronto? The Scottish rock band brings The Futique Tour to Danforth Music Hall on 02.05.2026, with a live set shaped by heavy guitars, big choruses, fan favorites and the current album Futique in a close concert setting

Biffy Clyro brings "The Futique Tour" to a more intimate Toronto venue

Biffy Clyro arrives at Danforth Music Hall in Toronto on Saturday, 02.05.2026, as part of "The Futique Tour". Doors open at 19:00, the start of the performance is listed for 20:00, and the concert has been announced as an all-ages event. For a band used to large halls and festival stages, the Toronto performance in a venue with a net capacity of 1480 visitors carries a different weight: the audience is closer, the guitars are more immediate, and the choruses do not get lost in the distance but return from the balcony and the floor of the hall.

Biffy Clyro is not a band that is easily reduced to one label. The Scottish group from Kilmarnock has built its reputation on the collision of alternative rock, progressive transitions, massive choruses and lyrics that often avoid simple patterns. In the same evening they can sound sharp, almost mathematically precise, and then open up a wide, emotional chorus that the audience sings at the top of its lungs. It is precisely this combination of nervous energy and melodic breadth that has made longtime fans follow them from the early albums to large arenas.Tickets for this event are in demand.

Why this tour matters for the band

The context of the Toronto concert is tied to the album "Futique", released on 19.09.2025 by Warner Records. It is the band’s current chapter and the material around which the tour has been built. The album title combines a sense of the future and the past, and in the sound one hears what makes Biffy Clyro recognizable: tempo changes, powerful riffs, melodies that grow out of tension and songs that can turn on stage into a shared moment between the audience and the band.In more recent concert reviews of the tour, it was especially emphasized how Biffy Clyro combines new songs with familiar favorites. That does not mean that the repertoire for Toronto is known in advance, nor should it be presented as guaranteed. But previous performances from the same phase of the career provide a good framework: the audience can expect a cross-section of the current album and the wider discography, with songs that carry both raw guitar strength and the emotional peaks through which the band gained a broader audience.

For those who have followed the band for years, the moments in which older material meets new songs are especially important. Biffy Clyro has a catalog in which titles such as "Many of Horror", "Mountains", "Bubbles", "The Captain", "Black Chandelier", "Biblical" and "Machines" stand out. Not all of those songs are a promise for Toronto, but they are part of the broader picture of the band: a group that grew out of alternative rock into one of the most recognizable British rock acts of its generation.

A sound that works best live

On stage, Biffy Clyro most often functions as a high-pressure band. The guitars are not just accompaniment, but carry the dramaturgy of the songs: short cuts, sudden quieting, drum strikes and choruses that open after tense introductions. Simon Neil is at the center of the sound as vocalist and guitarist, while the rhythm section gives the band the physical strength because of which the songs often feel rougher and more direct live than on studio recordings.

The current phase brings an additional layer. "Futique" is an album that relies on the band’s maturity, but does not flee from the impulses that made them exciting in earlier years. In concert, such material comes especially to the fore because Biffy Clyro does not build a performance only on pure nostalgia. New singles and songs from the recent period serve as a bridge toward an audience that may not have followed them from the beginning, while older favorites give weight to the evening.

It is possible that the strongest moments will be precisely in the contrasts: between loud, compact parts and songs that leave more space for the vocal; between a precise rock strike and a chorus that is sung without much explanation. This is a concert for listeners who like it when rock is not just a straight line, but a path with sudden turns.It is worth securing tickets in time.

Who the concert is especially attractive for

This performance will most attract longtime Biffy Clyro fans, especially those who followed the band through the albums "Puzzle", "Only Revolutions", "Opposites", "Ellipsis", "A Celebration of Endings" and the newer "Futique". For them, the Toronto date is an opportunity to hear how the newer material fits into a catalog that already has clear concert highlights.But the concert is not closed only to an audience that knows every rare song. Biffy Clyro has a sufficiently wide entry point also for listeners who like alternative rock, post-hardcore energy, the British guitar scene or bands that can connect arena melody and an unpredictable song structure. If someone comes for the big choruses, they will get them. If they come for guitar tension, there is plenty of that too.

The audience that likes concerts where movement in the space can be felt will do especially well: singing from the floor, reactions from the balcony, compressed energy in front of the stage and a constant exchange between quieter and more explosive parts. Danforth Music Hall is not a huge arena where details get lost. It is a hall in which one sees the band’s work, hears the drum hit and feels how the audience reacts already after the first bars.

Danforth Music Hall: proximity to the stage as an advantage

Danforth Music Hall is located at 147 Danforth Ave, Toronto, ON M4K 1N2. It is one of Toronto’s well-known concert halls, a space that suits rock bands well because it combines theatrical organization and club immediacy. For Biffy Clyro this is an important circumstance: their sound has enough strength for large stages, but in a smaller hall finer details, transitions and communication with the audience come to the fore.

The net capacity for this event is listed as 1480. That number explains why the concert could have the feeling of a more exclusive performance compared with large festival sets. One should not expect the distance of a stadium format. Here, contact is more important: proximity to the stage, audience reaction in real time and sound that remains in the room.

Basic information for visitors:

  • Hall address: 147 Danforth Ave, Toronto, ON M4K 1N2

  • Doors for this event: 19:00

  • Announced start of the performance: 20:00

  • Net capacity for the event: 1480 visitors

  • The event has been announced as "all ages"

  • Nearest public transport station: Broadview Station



The hall recommends arriving by public transport or rideshare options. That is practical advice, not just a formality. Danforth Avenue can be busy, and for a concert evening it is simplest to plan arrival with enough time for security screening and entry. Broadview Station is the nearest station, so the TTC is the most logical option for most visitors moving within Toronto.

Places are disappearing quickly.

Arrival, parking and entering the hall

Danforth Music Hall does not have its own parking. In the surrounding area there are paid public parking spaces on Danforth Avenue and nearby streets, and a Green P parking lot behind the Shoppers Drug Mart location across from the hall is also mentioned. Anyone arriving by car should count on extra time to find a spot, especially because the concert takes place on a Saturday evening.

For visitors coming from outside Toronto, the best approach is to combine accommodation or arrival with public transport. Toronto is a large city and does not forgive last-minute planning: the distance on a map often looks shorter than the actual arrival time. If you are coming from another part of Ontario or from outside Canada, check traffic, return time and night transport options before setting off toward the hall.It is important to distinguish between door time and performance time. The hall states that the time shown on its event listings indicates door opening, while the performance start time is checked on the page of the event itself. For this concert it is stated that doors open at 19:00, and the performance begins at 20:00. That leaves room for entry, security checks, finding a place and buying drinks or artist merchandise if available.

The hall box office, according to the venue rules, operates only on event days and opens 1.5 hours before the advertised door opening time. This is useful for picking up tickets under a name if such a pickup method is provided, but it is not a substitute for timely planning. If the event is sold out, the hall states that it does not hold additional tickets for sale at the box office.

Venue rules to know before setting out

Danforth Music Hall has clear rules on bags, payment and entry. Visitors may bring small clutch bags, waist bags or clear bags, with a maximum size of 12" x 6" x 12", or 30 cm x 15 cm x 30 cm. Backpacks are not allowed. All visitors and items may be inspected upon entry.

The hall is a fully cashless venue. This means that major credit cards, debit cards and mobile forms of payment are accepted for payment. Individual merchandise points for artist goods may have different rules, but for basic evening planning it is safer to count on card or mobile payment.

Practical notes for arrival:

  • Arrive early enough because of lines and security screening.

  • Do not bring a backpack because it is not allowed for entry.

  • Check the size of your bag before leaving home or the hotel.

  • Plan card or mobile payment.

  • If you are arriving by public transport, check the current TTC schedule before setting off.

  • If you are arriving by car, include time in advance for paid parking in the area.



These rules are not a detail to leave until the last moment. The Biffy Clyro concert will probably attract an audience that wants to enter earlier, take a good position and catch the full beginning of the evening. One oversized bag or wrongly assumed payment method can unnecessarily slow down entry.

Toronto as a stop between Detroit and Montreal

The Toronto concert has an interesting place in the schedule of the North American part of the tour. Biffy Clyro has been announced on the published list of dates in Detroit on 01.05.2026, then in Toronto on 02.05.2026, and then in Montreal on 03.05.2026. That places Toronto in a dense run of performances, which usually means that the band arrives in the full rhythm of the tour, without a major break between cities.

For the Canadian audience, that is an especially practical date. Toronto is one of two Canadian stops in that immediate sequence, along with Montreal one day later. For fans from southern Ontario, the Toronto area, and even from parts of the USA near the border, Danforth Music Hall may be the most accessible opportunity to see the band in a smaller-capacity venue.

The city also offers more than just the concert evening itself. Danforth is a neighborhood that fits well into arrival before the performance: it has restaurants, bars and enough urban rhythm so that visitors do not have to reduce the evening only to entering the hall and leaving it. Still, because of the venue rules, it is not good to count on bringing food or drink into the hall. Dinner and a drink before the concert are better planned before entry.

What to expect from the atmosphere

Biffy Clyro has an audience that reacts strongly, but not only to the loudest parts. With this band, transitions are also important: the moment when a song breaks from a quieter introduction into an explosion, when the audience grabs onto the chorus or when a guitar motif changes direction. In a smaller space like Danforth Music Hall, such details often feel more intense than at an outdoor festival.

There is no need to invent special effects in advance or promise a particular set list. It is enough to say what can be grounded in the band’s reputation so far and more recent reviews from the tour: Biffy Clyro remains a concert group that builds an evening on physical energy, emotional songs and the dynamics between the new album and familiar points of the career. In Toronto, that combination will be placed in a hall that demands directness, not distance.For an audience that likes to be close to the stage, this is a format in which it pays to arrive on time. The floor will probably attract the most active fans, while the balcony may be a better choice for those who want a wider view of the stage and less pressure in the crowd. In both cases, the capacity of 1480 means that the concert will not feel scattered.

Ticket sales for this event are underway.

How to prepare for the evening

The best preparation for this concert is not memorizing a possible set list, but listening through several different phases of the band. "Futique" gives the current framework. "Only Revolutions" shows why Biffy Clyro became more widely recognizable. "Puzzle" and "Opposites" reveal the emotional and ambitious side of the catalog, while the newer albums show how the band continues to search for tension between a big sound and personal lyrics.

If you are coming to the concert for the first time, pay attention to the dynamics of the audience. This is not the type of evening in which everything comes down to one hit near the end. Biffy Clyro often feels strongest when the audience follows the changes in the songs, not only the choruses. That is why it is worth standing where you can really listen, not only record.

For visitors who are traveling, the recommendation is simple: plan to arrive in Toronto earlier during the day, check the route to Broadview Station, decide whether you will eat before entry and bring only what passes the hall rules. The concert evening will be much more pleasant if the logistics are solved before a line forms in front of the hall.

Details that make the difference

Danforth Music Hall is not a neutral backdrop. Its size changes the way a band like Biffy Clyro is experienced. In a large arena, the audience often watches the production as a whole; in a hall like this it is easier to follow facial expressions, communication between band members and small moments that take a song in a different direction. For a group with so many sudden transitions, that is an advantage.

This concert therefore has value also for those who have already seen Biffy Clyro on a larger stage. In Toronto, the focus will not be only on the size of the sound, but on its proximity. When the band moves from a fragile verse into a big chorus, the audience in a hall of that capacity does not remain a passive mass. It becomes part of the performance.For longtime fans, this is an opportunity to check how "Futique" lives alongside older songs. For a new audience, it is a good entry into a band that has never been just a radio-rock group, but a group with its own handwriting, stubborn energy and enough melody to break through genre boundaries.

Sources:

- Event page - data on the date, door opening time, performance start time, age status of the event and net capacity of the venue were used.- Biffy Clyro - the published list of dates for "The Futique Tour" was used, including Toronto, Detroit and Montreal, as well as the information that "Futique" is the current album.

- The Danforth Music Hall - data on the address, arrival by public transport, Broadview Station, parking, box office, bag rules, cashless payment and entry rules were used.

- Official Charts - data on the album "Futique", the release date 19.09.2025 and the release through Warner Records were used.- The Guardian - the context of more recent concert reviews of the tour was used, including the relationship between new material and better-known songs in the performance.

- Setlist.fm - used exclusively as a guide for previous performances on the tour, without claiming that the same repertoire will be performed in Toronto.

Everything you need to know about tickets for concert Biffy Clyro

+ Where to find tickets for concert Biffy Clyro?

+ How to choose the best seat to enjoy the Biffy Clyro concert?

+ When is the best time to buy tickets for the Biffy Clyro concert?

+ Can tickets for concert Biffy Clyro be delivered electronically?

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+ What to do if tickets for concert Biffy Clyro are sold out?

+ Can I buy tickets for concert Biffy Clyro at the last minute?

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+ How to find tickets for specific sections at the Biffy Clyro concert?

2 hours ago, Author: Culture & events desk

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