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Buy tickets for concert Reverend and the Makers - 13.05.2026., Jacaranda Baltic, Liverpool, United Kingdom Buy tickets for concert Reverend and the Makers - 13.05.2026., Jacaranda Baltic, Liverpool, United Kingdom

CONCERT

Reverend and the Makers

Jacaranda Baltic, Liverpool, UK
13. May 2026. 19:00h
2026
13
May
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar - illustration/ arhiva (vlastita)

Reverend and the Makers tickets for intimate new album launch concert at Jacaranda Baltic Liverpool UK

Looking for tickets for Reverend and the Makers in Liverpool? Catch the band at an album launch concert at Jacaranda Baltic, an intimate Baltic Triangle venue where British indie rock hooks, new songs, recent singles and familiar choruses feel close to the crowd

Reverend and the Makers in the intimate space of Jacaranda Baltic

Reverend and the Makers are coming to Liverpool with an album launch performance at Jacaranda Baltic, a venue small enough for every chorus to be felt up close, but musically profiled enough for this kind of concert not to feel like a passing stop. The performance is announced for 13 May 2026 at 19:00, and according to the organizer's announcement the show begins at 20:00. This is a concert as part of the promotion of the album "Is This How Happiness Feels?", a new chapter in the career of a band that grew out of Sheffield into one of the more recognizable names of British indie rock. Tickets for this event are in demand.

This concert is not conceived as a cold presentation of new songs, but as a club meeting between the band and an audience that knows why Reverend and the Makers have remained relevant even after their first major breakthrough. Their sound combines British indie rock, a more dance-oriented rhythm, electronic layers and choruses that are easy to remember, but beneath them there are often lyrics about everyday life, frustrations, the city, class and the generational feeling that a little more is always expected from life. That is why they are most accurately experienced live: as a band that feeds on the audience's reaction, the speed of the room and voices from the front rows.

From "Heavyweight Champion of the World" to the band's new phase

For a wider audience, Reverend and the Makers are still most recognizable for the song "Heavyweight Champion of the World", the single from their debut album "The State of Things". That 2007 album established their reputation: British guitar attitude, urban energy and frontman Jon McClure, known as "The Reverend", who does not perform songs from a distance, but as a conversation with the audience. In a concert context that combination is especially important because the band is not just nostalgia for the mid-2000s, but an act that is still trying to open a new chapter.The 2023 album "Heatwave In The Cold North" showed a brighter, more direct side of the band, with songs such as "Heatwave In The Cold North", "Problems", "A Letter To My 21 Year Old Self" and "High". The new album "Is This How Happiness Feels?" has been announced as the eighth studio album by Reverend and the Makers, and according to available announcements it is connected with the singles "Late Night Phone Call" and "Haircut". For visitors to the Liverpool concert, this means the evening will most likely not rely only on early favorites, but also on newer material that the band presents in a more immediate, album launch setting.

It is important not to expect a set list that has been decided in advance. The organizer announces a performance in support of the new album, but the complete list of songs that will be performed has not been published. The only certain thing is that the concert is connected with "Is This How Happiness Feels?", so the audience can expect emphasis on the band's current phase. Everything beyond that remains a matter of the evening, the audience's reaction and the band's decision on stage.

What the audience can expect from the performance

Reverend and the Makers work best when indie rock turns into the shared pulse of the room. Their concerts have the energy of a band that understands clubs, festivals and larger stages, but in smaller spaces the most important things come to the fore: rhythm, contact with the audience and the feeling that the songs are not separate from the people singing them. Jacaranda Baltic, with its basement concert space, is exactly such a place. There is no great distance between performer and audience, so songs that rely on chorus, bass and rhythm gain extra strength.For long-time fans this is an opportunity to hear the band at a moment when it is returning with a new album, and not just to a retrospective. For an audience that knows only a few songs, the concert offers a very accessible entry into their catalogue: recognizable guitar charge, a rhythm that pulls toward dancing and a frontman style that does not ask for detached listening. Places are disappearing quickly.

This performance will especially suit visitors who like British indie rock with clear choruses and a slightly rougher edge. Reverend and the Makers are not a band for a static, sterile evening. Their songs breathe better when the audience responds, when old singles collide with new material and when the space does not allow anyone to hide too far from the stage.


  • For fans of British indie rock: the concert offers a direct combination of guitars, rhythm and singable choruses.

  • For long-time audiences: the new album phase gives a fresh context to the songs the band is known for.

  • For visitors who like smaller spaces: Jacaranda Baltic brings closeness to the performer and the club feeling of a performance.

  • For travelers to Liverpool: the location in the Baltic Triangle makes it easy to combine the concert with an evening out in one of the liveliest parts of the city.

Jacaranda Baltic - a space made for closeness

Jacaranda Baltic is located in Cains Brewery Village, in Liverpool's Baltic Triangle, at Unit 2, Cains Brewery, Liverpool L8 5XJ. The space is part of the wider Jacaranda story, but in a newer form: it is a combination of a record shop and a concert venue, with a basement hall with a capacity of 400 visitors. Such capacity significantly changes the concert experience. A band that has festival experience and big choruses does not get lost here in large production, but comes before the audience in a concentrated, loud and immediate format.

The organizer and the venue itself emphasize that Jacaranda Baltic is known for intimate album launch performances and performances by bigger names in a smaller environment. In that sense, Reverend and the Makers have a good context here: a new album, a well-known British indie name and a space accustomed to performances where the audience comes to listen to a specific release, and not just to spend an evening with background music.

For the sound of a band like this, the fact that it is a basement space is important. That usually means a denser, more physical feeling of sound: the drums are closer, the bass is felt more strongly, and Jon McClure's vocal has less space to escape into the distance. In practice, such concerts better suit an audience that wants to be part of the performance, and not just an observer. It is worth securing tickets in time.

Practical information for arrival

Doors are announced for 19:00, and the start of the performance for 20:00. The event is marked as 14+, with the condition that people under the age of 18 must be accompanied by a responsible adult at a 1:1 ratio. The announced duration of the event is until 22:00. This should not be understood as the confirmed duration of the performance itself, but as the framework of the evening that was published with the event.

The venue is located in Cains Brewery Village, in a part of Liverpool already accustomed to evening audience traffic toward bars, food spaces, galleries and concerts. For visitors who do not know the city, the Baltic Triangle is practical because it is not an isolated location on the edge of the city, but part of an urban zone where the concert can fit into a wider night out.

If you are coming by public transport, it is easiest to check the connection toward the Baltic Triangle and Cains Brewery Village in advance, especially if after the concert you are returning outside the centre of Liverpool. If you are coming by car, it is worth counting on evening congestion around popular locations in the Baltic Triangle. The venue announcement mentions a large car park immediately next to the venue, but the availability of spaces depends on the evening, traffic and other events in the area.In the event information, Jacaranda Baltic states that the venue is currently not accessible for wheelchair users, with a note that work is being done to improve accessibility. Visitors who need accessible tickets or special entry conditions should check this before arrival, because such capacities are limited and depend on the organization of each individual event.

Liverpool as a music city and the context of the evening

Liverpool does not need special explanation for lovers of British music, but this concert does not rely only on the city's historical glow. In recent years, the Baltic Triangle has grown into a district that combines industrial spaces, clubs, smaller concert halls, independent shops and nightlife. That is why Jacaranda Baltic suits a band like Reverend and the Makers well: it is musically rooted enough, but it does not feel museum-like. The audience does not come to watch a relic of the British indie wave, but a band that, in a new album cycle, is testing songs before people who understand a club concert.

For visitors traveling from other cities, the date in Liverpool has additional appeal precisely because of the format. This is not a large arena where the experience often comes down to a screen and distance, but a performance in a 400-capacity space, connected with a new album. Such evenings can be more interesting than a standard tour stop because the focus shifts to the songs, immediacy and the feeling that the audience is attending an early phase in the life of a new release.The city also offers enough content before and after the concert, especially around the Baltic Triangle. Visitors who arrive earlier can plan the evening without rushing: arrival in the district, checking the entrance, a short stay in the surroundings and entry before the start of the performance. With smaller venues, it pays to arrive earlier, not because there is any need to create panic, but because the position in the hall can significantly change the concert experience.

The new album as a reason to come

"Is This How Happiness Feels?" has been announced as the eighth studio album by Reverend and the Makers and a follow-up after the album "Heatwave In The Cold North". In its announcement, Stereoboard stated that the album is being released through Distiller Records and that it includes the earlier single "Late Night Phone Call" and the song "Haircut", featuring Vicky McClure. That collaboration gives the album additional attention outside the usual indie rock circle, but for the concert what matters more is that it points to a band that is still working with new ideas, and not just maintaining its catalogue.

Album launch concerts have a special rhythm. The audience comes expecting to hear the new release, often even before the songs have fully settled into the live repertoire. That means more concentration, more curiosity and a different kind of energy than at a concert where every song is received as an already confirmed favorite. With Reverend and the Makers, whose identity has always relied on contact with the audience, such a format can be especially interesting.It should not, however, be expected that the evening will be intended only for those who have listened to every new song in advance. A band with a catalogue like this usually attracts a mixed audience: fans who remember the early breakthrough, listeners who discovered them later and visitors interested in British indie in a space where the energy does not get diluted. Ticket sales for this event are under way.

Who this concert is the best choice for

This concert makes the most sense for an audience that wants to hear the band at a turning point of a new release. If "Heavyweight Champion of the World" is your entry point into their world, you can experience the Liverpool evening as an opportunity to see how far the band has moved from the initial wave of British indie rock. If you followed them through the albums after the debut, the album launch format gives an additional reason to come because it emphasizes the current material and the band's present state.

Jacaranda Baltic further narrows the focus. In a larger hall, a concert can become a broad gesture, but here every reaction is heard. Choruses have a stronger rebound, and songs that sound tidy on record can gain a rougher, livelier edge live. This is especially important for a band that rests not only on studio production, but on the dynamics of the frontman, rhythm section and an audience that knows how to catch the moment.It is best to come with open expectations: familiar singles can be part of the picture, but the centre of the evening is the new album and the closeness of the performance. For those who like concerts where the work of the band can be felt, and not just a production package watched, Reverend and the Makers at Jacaranda Baltic offer exactly that kind of format.

A short guide for the evening

Before departure, check the arrival time, entry conditions and venue rules. The event is announced for visitors aged 14 and over, with adult accompaniment for those under 18. Since the space has a smaller capacity, it is good to plan arrival without the last minute, especially if you are traveling from outside Liverpool or counting on parking nearby.

There is no confirmed information about a support act, guests or special production for this performance, so they should not be taken for granted. What has been confirmed is clear enough: Reverend and the Makers are performing at Jacaranda Baltic as part of an album launch event connected with "Is This How Happiness Feels?". It is precisely that simple setup - a new album, a recognizable band and a 400-capacity space - that makes the evening interesting.If the concert experience without a great distance from the stage matters to you, this is the type of event where the advantage is not measured by the size of the production. It is measured by how close you can hear the band, how quickly the audience accepts the new songs and how naturally the old choruses fit into the new phase. Tickets for this event are in demand.

Sources:
- Skiddle - data were used about the date, venue, entry time, start of the performance, age restriction, description of the album launch performance, address and accessibility notes.
- Jacaranda Records - data were used about Jacaranda Baltic, the address, the concept of the space, the record shop and the 400-capacity concert hall.
- Stereoboard - data were used about the album "Is This How Happiness Feels?", its status as the eighth studio album, the label context and the singles "Late Night Phone Call" and "Haircut".
- Apple Music - data were used about the 2023 album "Heatwave In The Cold North" and the track list as context for the band's previous phase.
- VisitLiverpool and local Liverpool guides - context was used about Jacaranda Baltic as a new venue in the Baltic Triangle and Cains Brewery Village.

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1 hours ago, Author: Culture & events desk

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