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

CONCERT

Reverend and the Makers

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

Reverend and the Makers tickets for their intimate album launch concert at Jacaranda Baltic in Liverpool

Looking to buy tickets for Reverend and the Makers in Liverpool? The Sheffield band brings its "Is This How Happiness Feels?" album launch to Jacaranda Baltic on 13 May 2026, with indie rock drive, danceable hooks and a close-up club concert feel in the Baltic Triangle

Reverend and the Makers in Liverpool: an album launch in a venue that loves closeness

Reverend and the Makers are coming to Liverpool for a concert connected to their new discographic phase: the performance has been announced as an album launch show for the release "Is This How Happiness Feels?". The event takes place on May 13, 2026, at Jacaranda Baltic, a venue from The Jacaranda family that combines a record store and a concert room in the Baltic Triangle. The start of the event is announced for 19:00, and the performance for 20:00, which makes the evening compact enough for an audience that wants a concert night out without the dispersion of a festival.

The Sheffield band has carried, for almost two decades, a recognizable blend of indie rock, British guitar energy, dance rhythm and lyrics that often sound like a conversation from a late-night bus after going out. Reverend and the Makers are not a band that relies only on nostalgia for the 2000s. Their current phase shows that Jon McClure and the crew are still building songs with clear choruses, urban nerve and a sense for an audience that likes a concert to have both sweat and melody. Tickets for this event are in demand.

Why this concert is interesting to the band's fans

For many, the first point of reference will still be "Heavyweight Champion of the World", the 2007 single that opened the doors to a wider British audience for the band and remained their most recognizable song. But Reverend and the Makers did not stop at that point. The album "Heatwave In The Cold North" from 2023 brought them back into focus after a five-year studio break, and the new release "Is This How Happiness Feels?" brings fresh context for performances in 2026.The new album is especially important because the Liverpool concert has not been announced merely as another stop on the tour, but as an album launch show. That changes the audience's expectation. Instead of a standard career overview, it is logical to expect an evening in which newer songs will receive a more prominent place, alongside older favorites that have kept the band on festival and club stages. That does not mean the set list is known in advance, but that the emphasis of the evening is clearly placed on the band's current phase.

The current phase: "Is This How Happiness Feels?" and the single with Robbie Williams

Reverend and the Makers enter 2026 with the album "Is This How Happiness Feels?", the band's eighth studio release. Particular attention was drawn by the single "Fucked Up", recorded with Robbie Williams, which was announced as the final introduction to the album. The song fits into what the band does well: it talks about the consequences of the scene, aging, excess and the attempt to draw a clearer view of oneself out of chaos.

For the audience at Jacaranda Baltic, this means the concert has additional weight. It is not only about the return of a familiar indie name to Liverpool, but about the band meeting the audience at a moment when the new material still carries the freshness of release. Such performances often have a special concentration: they are less distant from the audience than large festival sets, and close enough to the moment of the album's release for the songs to sound like something that is only just beginning to happen in front of people.

A sound that combines indie rock, a dance pulse and northern sharpness

Reverend and the Makers are easiest to place in British indie rock, but that is only the beginning of the description. In their songs you can hear guitars, synthetic layers, choruses for communal singing and rhythms that often have a dance momentum. The band grew out of the Sheffield scene, so there is urban directness in their sound: the songs are not overly polished, and Jon McClure's vocal often sounds like someone speaking straight to the audience's face.

In a concert venue like Jacaranda Baltic, such an approach comes to the fore. A band that has songs for larger halls gains a different kind of strength in a smaller venue: the choruses are closer, the rhythm is felt more directly, and communication between the stage and the audience can be faster than in large arenas. Places are disappearing quickly.

What the audience can expect from the evening

This performance has been announced as a live performance as part of the album presentation, with an age restriction of 14+ when accompanied by an adult. The organizational framework lists the event duration from 19:00 to 22:00 and the start of the performance at 20:00. These are useful details for planning arrival, especially for visitors who arrive in Liverpool on the same day or rely on public transport after the concert.There is no need to invent details that have not been confirmed: there is no confirmed support act, no published set list and no reason to list special guests as part of the evening. What is clear is that the audience will get a more intimate performance by a band returning with a new album, in a venue shaped for close album launch performances and concerts with limited capacity.

  • Event date: May 13, 2026.
  • Event start: 19:00.
  • Announced performance start: 20:00.
  • Venue: Jacaranda Baltic, Liverpool.
  • Age restriction: 14+ when accompanied by an adult.
  • Occasion: album launch show for "Is This How Happiness Feels?".


Jacaranda Baltic: 400 places, a record store and a concert room in the Baltic Triangle

Jacaranda Baltic is located in Liverpool's Baltic Triangle, within the Cains Brewery environment, and was opened as a newer sister to the cult The Jacaranda story from Slater Street. The venue has a record store identity and a concert room with a capacity of 400 people, which is a very interesting scale for a band such as Reverend and the Makers: large enough for the evening to have the pressure of a sold-out club concert, but small enough for the audience to feel every transition, every chorus and every reaction from the stage.Jacaranda Baltic has already been profiled as a place for album launch performances and more intimate concerts by bigger names. The venue description mentions performances by artists such as Kaiser Chiefs, The Kooks, The Libertines, Jess Glynne and Blossoms, which clearly speaks to the type of program: this is not just a bar with a stage, but a location that wants to capture the moment between record store culture and concert energy. For visitors, that means an evening in which buying records, encountering a new release and a live performance are not separate worlds.

Who the concert is especially attractive for

This concert has several layers of audience. Longtime fans will get the chance to hear the band in a space smaller than typical hall dates, which is always valuable when it comes to songs the audience knows how to sing. The wider indie audience gets an evening with a band that survived the first wave of the British indie boom period and continued recording new albums. Visitors who follow current releases will have an additional reason to come because the concert is directly tied to the new album.

It will especially suit those who like British indie with clear choruses, lyrics about everyday life, the scene and growing up, and concerts that do not seek distance between performers and the audience. Reverend and the Makers work best live when the audience enters the rhythm with the band, and Jacaranda Baltic, precisely because of its capacity and basement concert room, can intensify that feeling of a shared space.

Liverpool as a city for this kind of concert

Liverpool is a city in which the musical context does not need additional explanation. From the history of Merseybeat to today's smaller clubs, record stores and festival spaces, the city has a habit of taking concerts in rooms that are not sterile seriously. In recent years, the Baltic Triangle has developed especially as a district for nightlife, cultural programs, food, drink and smaller concert locations, so Jacaranda Baltic is a natural part of that picture.

For visitors who travel, the advantage is that the concert takes place in a city district that is not separated from the rest of Liverpool. The Baltic Triangle is close enough to the center to be combined with an earlier arrival, dinner or a tour of record stores and bars, but it has a different character from classic tourist routes. That is exactly why this kind of concert can be a good choice also for those who are not coming only for the band, but want to catch a part of the contemporary Liverpool music scene.

Practical guide for arrival

Jacaranda Baltic is located in the Cains Brewery area, in the Baltic Triangle. For those arriving by train, the most practical plan is to arrive via the center of Liverpool and then continue on foot, by taxi or by local transport toward the Baltic Triangle. Since this is an evening concert in a popular city zone, it is good to set off earlier, especially if ticket collection, cloakroom use or arrival in a group is planned.Parking in the Baltic Triangle depends on the availability of public and private car parks in the area, and because of evening events and hospitality venues, spaces can fill up quickly. For visitors who are not from Liverpool, the simplest plan is often a combination of train, walking from the center and checking the last departures before entering the venue. It is worth securing tickets in time.

  • Arrive earlier if you want to enter calmly before the announced start of the performance at 20:00.
  • Check the age rule if you are coming with a younger visitor, because the event is listed as 14+ when accompanied by an adult.
  • For the return after 22:00, check public transport in advance or book transport.
  • If you are arriving by car, count on limited parking availability in a popular evening time slot.


The album launch format and the feeling of closeness

An album launch show has a different dynamic from a standard concert date. The audience does not come only to hear what it already knows, but also to check how the new material lives live. With Reverend and the Makers, that is especially interesting because the band has enough recognizable songs that the concert does not have to depend exclusively on the new album, but also enough fresh material that the evening will not be a nostalgic return to 2007.In a 400-capacity venue, every detail becomes more visible: the way McClure leads a song, the audience's reaction to older choruses, the moment when a new song first catches a collective pulse. If the band reaches for the stronger, more danceable part of the repertoire, Jacaranda Baltic can feel like a small, dense concert room where the energy does not scatter. If the emphasis is on the newer songs, the venue will give them the concentration they need.

No guessing: what is confirmed and what is not

It has been confirmed that Reverend and the Makers appear at Jacaranda Baltic on May 13, 2026, that the event is connected to the album "Is This How Happiness Feels?", that the start of the event is announced for 19:00 and that the performance begins at 20:00. It has also been confirmed that Jacaranda Baltic is a 400-capacity venue and that it is located in the Baltic Triangle, within the Cains Brewery environment.

A special set list for this performance has not been confirmed, nor has a support act or guests on stage. Robbie Williams is mentioned in the context of the single "Fucked Up", but that is not confirmation of his appearance in Liverpool and he should not be expected without a clear announcement. Such a distinction is important: the concert can be announced with the context of the album and the collaboration on the single, but without turning a studio collaboration into a promise of a live guest appearance.

How this date fits into the wider tour

According to published concert calendars, Liverpool is among the first listed dates for 2026 in a run of Reverend and the Makers performances, with the next date in Manchester the following day. That gives the Liverpool evening additional freshness: the audience is not coming to the end of an exhausted touring stage, but to an early performance in a phase when the new album is only just being presented to the public live.

For fans who have followed the band through the years, that is a good opportunity to encounter the material before the set settles through the tour. For those who know the band by their biggest songs, the evening can serve as an entry into the wider discography: from the debut "The State of Things", through later albums, to new songs that continue to speak from the perspective of a band that has gone through changes in the scene, the industry and its own growing up.

What to take away from the evening

The best way to approach this concert is to expect a band that combines familiar indie energy with new material, rather than an evening made up only of old hits. Reverend and the Makers have enough concert experience to know how to hold an audience, but the album launch format gives them space to show where they are now. At Jacaranda Baltic, that balance will probably be felt best in immediacy: less distance, more looks toward the stage and a sound that stays close to the body.Ticket sales for this event are underway. For visitors who want to combine a concert, Liverpool and a more intimate album launch experience, this is a date worth writing down without waiting for the last moment, especially because the venue does not have the capacity of large halls and because performances like this depend precisely on a limited number of people in the room.

Sources:

- Skiddle - data was used about the Reverend and the Makers: Album Launch Show event, the date, the venue Jacaranda Baltic, the start at 19:00, the performance from 20:00 and the age restriction of 14+ when accompanied by an adult.- Reverend and the Makers - the current context of the band, the new phase connected to the album "Is This How Happiness Feels?" and the basic musical profile were used.

- NME - the information about the single "Fucked Up" with Robbie Williams and its role in announcing the album "Is This How Happiness Feels?" was used.

- Apple Music - data was used about the albums "The State of Things", "Heatwave In The Cold North" and "Is This How Happiness Feels?", including discographic context and the number of songs on the releases.- Jacaranda Records - data was used about Jacaranda Baltic as a record store and concert venue in the Baltic Triangle and its capacity of 400 places.

- Liverpool Theatres and VisitLiverpool - context was used about Jacaranda Baltic, the Cains Brewery location, the opening in 2024 and the venue's role in Liverpool's concert life.

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1 hours ago, Author: Culture & events desk

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