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Buy tickets for concert Florence + The Machine - 07.05.2026., Dickies Arena, Fort Worth, United States of America Buy tickets for concert Florence + The Machine - 07.05.2026., Dickies Arena, Fort Worth, United States of America

CONCERT

Florence + The Machine

Dickies Arena, Fort Worth, US
07. May 2026. 19:30h
2026
07
May
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar - illustration/ arhiva (vlastita)

Florence + The Machine tickets for Dickies Arena Fort Worth and the Everybody Scream Tour

Looking for tickets to Florence + The Machine in Fort Worth? The Dickies Arena concert brings Florence Welch's dramatic voice, fan favorites like "Dog Days Are Over" and "Shake It Out", plus the Everybody Scream Tour on May 7, 2026 at 7:30 PM

Florence + The Machine in Fort Worth: an arena for a voice that seeks space

Florence + The Machine are coming to Dickies Arena in Fort Worth with a concert as part of the "Everybody Scream Tour". The performance is announced for 05/07/2026 at 19:30, and the doors open at 18:30. For audiences who have followed Florence Welch since the first dramatic anthems from the album "Lungs", this is an opportunity to hear the band in a new phase, after the album "Dance Fever" and in the context of the announced sixth studio album "Everybody Scream". Tickets for this event are in demand.

Florence + The Machine have had a recognizable sound from the beginning: indie rock, art pop, soul and baroque pop splendor are combined with a voice that does not sound like an addition to the songs, but like their main force. In the best-known songs such as "Dog Days Are Over", "Shake It Out", "Ship to Wreck", "Cosmic Love" and "Spectrum", the band builds tension from a quiet, almost prayer-like beginning to a chorus that the audience sings like a shared sigh. In an arena, such a repertoire gains another dimension because Florence Welch does not rely only on large production, but on movement, rhythm and direct contact with the audience.

A new phase of the career and the album "Everybody Scream"

The tour bears the name of the album "Everybody Scream", announced for 10/31/2025. According to published information, Florence Welch wrote and produced the album with a close circle of collaborators including Mark Bowen from IDLES, Aaron Dessner and Mitski. The songs "Everybody Scream" and "One of the Greats" have already been presented, which gives a framework for this concert: the audience can expect a meeting of familiar anthems and newer, darker material that relies on mysticism, folk-horror imagery and themes of the body, healing, aging, partnership and female experience.

It is important to emphasize that no confirmed setlist has been published for the concert in Fort Worth. Therefore, it is more reasonable to speak about the band's concert language than about the exact order of songs. Florence + The Machine on large stages often combine powerful drums, broad choruses and moments in which the song is almost stripped down to the voice and the audience. Precisely that alternation of ecstasy and fragility makes their performances attractive both to those who know the entire discography and to those who recognize the band by several big singles.Fort Worth is part of the North American leg of the tour, after the announced concerts in Europe and the United Kingdom. In the schedule, it comes after performances in Austin and Houston, and before the continuation toward the western United States. For the Texas audience, this means that the city is right in the center of the May stage of the tour, in a period when the new material is already part of the concert identity and the band is entering the continuity of major indoor-arena performances.

Music that is not listened to only while sitting

Florence Welch is one of those singers whose performance changes the impression of the songs. Studio recordings are often rich with harps, choirs, percussion and layers of vocals, but the concert moment carries a different energy. The voice spreads through the space, the choruses become communal, and songs that are carefully arranged on the albums can sound rougher, faster and more immediate live. This is especially important for an arena such as Dickies Arena, where the space is large enough for full production, but is not a faceless stadium in which the performer easily gets lost.For longtime fans, the strongest lure will be the possibility of hearing how the older material fits into the new chapter. "Lungs" from 2009 brought an explosion of songs that sounded old-fashioned and contemporary at the same time. "Ceremonials" expanded that feeling into almost cathedral-like pop. "How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful" added more rock and dramatic breadth, while "High As Hope" and "Dance Fever" opened more intimate, confessional tones. "Everybody Scream" continues that trajectory toward songs that connect the body, ritual and voice.

The wider audience can expect a concert in which it is easy to enter the atmosphere even without detailed knowledge of the albums. Florence + The Machine have enough recognizable songs that the concert does not feel closed off to a circle of the most devoted fans. At the same time, their style is not typical radio pop: it is more theatrical, physical and emotionally direct. This is a concert for an audience that loves big choruses, but also moments when the hall becomes quiet because the singer leads the song almost like a story.

Places are disappearing quickly.

CMAT as the confirmed guest of the evening

For the performance at Dickies Arena, CMAT has been announced as a special guest. In recent years, the Irish singer-songwriter has built a name on a combination of country-pop sensibility, witty storytelling and indie energy. Her performance fits well into an evening with Florence + The Machine because both artists use theatricality, but not in the same way: Florence moves toward a ritual, almost mythical gesture, while CMAT often starts from an ironic, conversational and very personal tone.

This does not mean that a joint performance or a guest appearance in Florence + The Machine songs should be expected, because nothing like that has been confirmed for this date. But the very fact that CMAT is part of the program gives the concert a clearer profile: the evening is not conceived only as a series of hits by the main artist, but as a broader meeting of contemporary pop, indie rock and authorial storytelling.

Dickies Arena: a large hall with a sense of focus

Dickies Arena is located at 1911 Montgomery St. in Fort Worth, next to the Will Rogers Memorial Complex. It is a multipurpose arena opened in 2019, designed for concerts, sporting events, family programs and rodeo. For concerts, it can accommodate up to around 14,000 visitors, which is large enough for full arena production, but still compact enough that the audience does not lose the feeling of the performer's presence.

For Florence + The Machine, such a space makes sense. The band functions best when the voice, drums and movement on stage can spread without congestion. An arena with modern infrastructure provides space for powerful sound and clear sightlines, and the audience in Fort Worth will get a concert that can be experienced both as a large communal ritual and as a precisely performed rock-pop show.

  • Address: 1911 Montgomery St., Fort Worth, Texas.

  • Location: next to the Will Rogers Memorial Complex, near Fort Worth's cultural district.

  • Concert capacity: up to around 14,000 visitors, depending on the room configuration.

  • Parking: Yellow Lots are open for arena events, and Chevrolet Parking Garage has 2,200 spaces.

  • Parking lot opening: for events at Dickies Arena, parking lots open 3 and a half hours before the start of the program.



Arriving by car is the simplest option for visitors coming from the wider Dallas-Fort Worth area. From the direction of eastern Fort Worth and Dallas, I-30 West is recommended, with the exit toward Chisholm Trail Parkway and University Street, then access toward Trail Drive and Yellow Lots. From western Fort Worth, use I-30 East and the exit toward University Street. For Chevrolet Garage, access via Montgomery St. is recommended.

For those who do not want to drive, a combination of rail and local transport is practical. Trinity Railway Express leads to Fort Worth Central Station, from where it is possible to transfer to The Dash, a red electric bus line that connects downtown Fort Worth with the cultural district and the area around Dickies Arena. Rideshare vehicles have a drop-off zone by the west entrance, in the lane along Dickies Way, while passenger pickup is organized on Harley Avenue on the north side of the building.

Fort Worth as a concert weekend, not just one evening

Fort Worth is a city often described through a combination of Texas western tradition, museums, music and the large Dallas-Fort Worth urban area. For visitors traveling to the concert, the location of Dickies Arena is especially practical because it is close to the cultural district, Trinity Park and parts of the city where it is easy to spend a few hours before the start of the program. This is useful if you arrive earlier because of parking, dinner or avoiding crowds at the entrances.

The city is also interesting because the Florence + The Machine concert comes to a space that is not isolated from the rest of the city. Museums, restaurants and walkways are nearby, and downtown Fort Worth is not far for those who want to combine the concert with a shorter stay. For audiences arriving from Dallas, Austin, Houston or outside Texas, the smartest choice is to plan an earlier arrival, especially because the doors open at 18:30 and the start of the program is announced for 19:30.It is worth securing tickets in time.

Who will find this concert especially appealing

This is not a concert for only one generation of audience. Florence + The Machine have songs that marked the late 2000s and early 2010s, but also a career that did not stop at nostalgia. Fans who grew up with "Dog Days Are Over" and "Shake It Out" now come to hear how those songs sound alongside the more mature, darker and more bodily themes of the new album. Younger audiences, meanwhile, often discover the band through festival recordings, viral moments and the intensity of Florence Welch as a performer.The concert will be especially appealing to lovers of art pop, indie rock, big vocals and performances that have an almost theatrical nature. If you like artists whose songs are built around voice, movement and emotional tension, Florence + The Machine have a very clear concert identity. This is not a performance in which the singer is a static figure in front of the band; Florence Welch often uses the entire stage space, hand gestures, running, silence and a sudden leap into the chorus.

For audiences going for the first time, the most important thing is to arrive prepared for a concert that has a strong communal element. A large part of the experience arises from the reaction of the hall: applause that turns into rhythm, singing the choruses, moments when the arena space seems smaller for a few minutes. This is the reason why Florence + The Machine still have a reputation as one of the most striking live bands of their generation, without the need for exaggerated promises or invented effects.

Practical notes for the concert evening

Since the doors open at 18:30 and the start is at 19:30, arriving at least earlier than the actual beginning makes it easier to get through traffic, parking and entry. Parking lots for events at Dickies Arena open 3 and a half hours before the start of the program, and the cost of parking depends on the event. Chevrolet Garage is listed as having 2,200 spaces, while Yellow Lots are intended for arena events. Visitors using rideshare should count on specially marked zones for arrival and departure.

No confirmed duration of Florence + The Machine's performance has been published for this date, so it should not be planned according to guesses. It is more reasonable to organize the evening with enough space after the concert, especially if you are returning toward Dallas, using local transport or waiting for rideshare. At large arena concerts, crowds most often form precisely after the end, when a large number of visitors leave the space at the same time.


  • Check the route to the arena before departure, especially if you are coming from the direction of Dallas or western Fort Worth.

  • For parking, count on Yellow Lots or Chevrolet Parking Garage, depending on availability and your arrival plan.

  • If you use public transport, check the current schedule for Trinity Metro, The Dash and rail connections toward Fort Worth Central Station.

  • Arrive early enough for entry, security screening and finding your seat before the start of the program.

  • Do not rely on an unconfirmed setlist, guest appearances or performance duration; the focus is on the confirmed program and tour.

Ticket sales for this event are ongoing.

What to expect from the evening in the arena

The best way to understand this concert is as a meeting of two energies: an arena concert and an almost ritual performance. Florence + The Machine have a large enough catalogue that the program can move from euphoric songs to slower, darker moments, and "Everybody Scream" adds a new theme to the tour. The title itself announces a concert that deals with the voice, the body and collective release, but without the need to invent effects or the dramaturgy of the evening in advance.At Dickies Arena, the feeling of togetherness will have a special role. When the audience recognizes the first bars of songs such as "Dog Days Are Over" or "Shake It Out", the hall easily turns into a choir. On the other hand, newer songs can open space for a different kind of attention: less nostalgia, more listening. Precisely this combination makes the concert worthwhile for different types of visitors. Some come for songs that already carry personal memories, others for the live performance of an artist who built her career on complete surrender to the stage.

Fort Worth in this schedule is not a stopover point without meaning. It comes in a series of Texas performances and brings Florence + The Machine into a hall that is modern enough for the current tour, but situated enough within the city context that the evening does not begin only upon entering the arena. For visitors planning to arrive from outside the city, it is a concert that can turn into a short musical journey: arrival in the cultural district, time before the performance, then an evening in which a great voice meets a large space.

Sources:- Dickies Arena - information about the Florence + The Machine concert, date, door opening time, start of the program, the "Everybody Scream Tour", the announced guest CMAT and album information.

- Dickies Arena Directions and Parking - information about the address, arrival by car, Yellow Lots, Chevrolet Parking Garage, parking lot opening and rideshare zones.

- Pitchfork - overview of the North American leg of the tour, list of cities, confirmation of the Fort Worth date and schedule of opening acts by parts of the tour.- Rolling Stone UK - context of the album "Everybody Scream", the European leg of the tour and collaborators on the album.

- Trinity Railway Express and Trinity Metro - information about connecting Fort Worth Central Station, The Dash line and the cultural district around Dickies Arena.

- David M. Schwarz Architects - information about the design of Dickies Arena and capacity of up to 14,000 visitors for concerts.

Everything you need to know about tickets for concert Florence + The Machine

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2 hours ago, Author: Culture & events desk

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