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Buy tickets for concert Tame Impala - 05.05.2026., AFAS Dome, Antwerpen, Belgium Buy tickets for concert Tame Impala - 05.05.2026., AFAS Dome, Antwerpen, Belgium

CONCERT

Tame Impala

AFAS Dome, Antwerpen, BE
05. May 2026. 18:30h
2026
05
May
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar - illustration/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tame Impala tickets for AFAS Dome Antwerp concert with psychedelic pop and the Deadbeat Tour 2026 night

Looking for tickets for Tame Impala in Antwerp? The AFAS Dome concert on 5 May 2026 brings psychedelic pop, the dance-driven mood of "Deadbeat" and the songs that made Kevin Parker's project a favorite far beyond indie circles, from long-time fans to wider live audiences

Tame Impala in Antwerp: dance psychedelia in a large arena

Tame Impala is coming to AFAS Dome in Antwerp on Tuesday, May 5, 2026 at 18:30, as part of the "Deadbeat Tour" period led by Kevin Parker after the album "Deadbeat". For an audience that knows Tame Impala for broad, psychedelic choruses, pulsating bass lines and songs that easily spill from headphones into a large concert space, this is a performance with a clear context: a new phase of the career, new material and a catalogue that has for years held itself between indie rock, synth-pop, psychedelia and dance electronica.

Tame Impala is not a classic band in the studio sense. Behind the project stands the Australian songwriter, producer and multi-instrumentalist Kevin Parker, who from the early albums built a sound recognizable for layered guitars, hazy vocals, hypnotic rhythms and the feeling that a rock song can open itself toward the dance floor. Songs such as "The Less I Know the Better", "Let It Happen", "Feels Like We Only Go Backwards" and "Eventually" have long since moved beyond the frame of a genre audience, so at the concert one can expect a mixture of long-time fans, festival audiences and listeners who discovered Tame Impala through streaming hits.Tickets for this event are in demand.

Why the "Deadbeat Tour" matters for this concert

The concert in Antwerp is part of the tour connected with the album "Deadbeat", Tame Impala's fifth studio album. The album was released on October 17, 2025 through Columbia Records and marked the project's first new long-playing release after the album "The Slow Rush" from 2020. In announcements and reviews, the influence of Western Australian rave and "bush doof" culture is especially highlighted, which means that the current material has a more pronounced dance pulse, electronic texture and feeling of nocturnal movement than some of the earlier, guitar-softer songs.In that sense, the Antwerp concert is interesting because it does not arrive only as a career overview, but as a meeting of the old and new Tame Impala audience. Those who have followed the project since the "Innerspeaker" and "Lonerism" phase will recognize Parker's inclination toward circular melodies and psychedelic transitions. The audience that came through "Currents" will probably look for stronger pop moments, bass lines and choruses sung in unison. The new "Deadbeat" phase adds a harder dance momentum and a somewhat darker emotional tone to that catalogue.

Among the songs that marked the new era, "End of Summer", "Loser" and "Dracula" stand out. "Dracula" was released as one of the singles before the album, with a music video directed by Julian Klincewicz, and critics recognized in the album Parker's turn toward rhythms inspired by the rave scene and Western Australian club culture. That does not mean the concert should be imagined as a DJ set, but as a large live performance in which Tame Impala songs increasingly work on the boundary between psychedelic rock and electronic drive.

What the audience can expect from the repertoire

The exact repertoire for Antwerp has not been confirmed in advance and should not be invented. Still, the concert context of the tour so far clearly shows that the "Deadbeat Tour" places the new album in the foreground, with room for the familiar songs that made Tame Impala a globally recognizable name. With this kind of performer, it is not only the song list that matters, but the way they are connected: long introductions, rhythmic circling, transitions that keep the audience moving and choruses that gain additional weight in a large arena.

For visitors, this means that the concert is not only an opportunity to hear hits, but also to feel how Parker's studio perfectionism translates into an arena space. Tame Impala gains the most live when bass, light, vocal echo and an audience that does not stand still come together. Even songs that sound introspective on the album can become rhythmically powerful in the arena, especially when they lean on drums and synthesizer layers.

Key elements that make this concert attractive:
  • the new "Deadbeat" phase, with more pronounced dance and electronic influences
  • a catalogue that connects psychedelic rock, synth-pop and an indie audience
  • hits that have long since crossed the boundaries of the alternative scene
  • a large arena suitable for massive sound, wide lighting and collective singing
  • a performance in Antwerp as one of the European stops of the spring part of the 2026 tour


RIP Magic as the confirmed support of the evening

RIP Magic has been announced as support for the Antwerp date. This is an important piece of information for visitors planning their arrival, because the programme should not be viewed only through the main performance. The audience that wants to catch the entire evening should count on arriving at the arena earlier, security checks, finding their sector and the time needed to settle in before the main part of the concert without rushing.There is no need to speculate about guests, additional performers or special production elements if they have not been confirmed for this date. What is strong enough is the combination itself: Tame Impala in an arena space, with a current album fresh enough to change the energy of the performance, but also connected enough with earlier work that the audience is not coming into unknown territory.

AFAS Dome: a large arena with a concert character

AFAS Dome in Antwerp is located at Schijnpoortweg 119, 2170 Antwerp. The arena was long known as Sportpaleis, and since 2025 it has carried the name AFAS Dome. It is one of the most recognizable large concert spaces in Belgium, a venue used for major pop and rock performances, sports events, festivals and various large-format productions.The capacity of the arena depends on the configuration of the event. For concerts, the space can be arranged with stands and a floor section, so the feeling of the performance changes depending on the audience's position. In the stands, the emphasis is on viewing the whole production, while the floor brings a stronger physical impression of bass, rhythm and mass. For Tame Impala, whose sound often works in waves, such a space can be especially rewarding: the songs have enough breadth to fill an arena, and the rhythm has enough room not to be lost in a small club format.

Places are disappearing quickly.

AFAS Dome is not an intimate venue, but precisely because of that it can amplify what Tame Impala does best on a large stage: slow building of tension, expansion of synthesizer layers and moments in which the audience takes over the chorus. For visitors who want a feeling of closeness to the performer, the choice of position is important, but so is a realistic expectation: this is a concert for an arena experience, not for a small club encounter.

Getting to the arena and moving around AFAS Dome

AFAS Dome is in the urban part of Antwerp, so planning the arrival is an important part of the concert experience. The venue organizers and local transport especially direct visitors toward public transport in order to avoid traffic and parking stress. For travelers coming from other cities, this means it is worth checking in advance the connection to Antwerp, then the local tram, bus or a combination of transport to the arena area.

Practical points for planning the arrival:
  • the arena address is Schijnpoortweg 119, 2170 Antwerp
  • the venue is also known by its earlier name Sportpaleis, which may still appear in navigation and older maps
  • public transport reduces the risk of congestion and searching for a parking space
  • when arriving by car, one should count on crowds around large events
  • visitors with accessibility needs should check available places and the entry method in advance


With concerts like this, the most common mistake is not the drive itself, but setting off toward the arena too late. The start of the event is listed as 18:30, and a large arena also means a larger number of people at the entrances. It is better to leave time for entrance control, cloakroom if you use it, getting a drink and finding your place than to enter the arena at the moment when the programme has already started.

Antwerp as a concert city

Antwerp is one of the most important Belgian cities for large concerts, but also a city that offers the visitor more than just the arena. Travelers arriving earlier can combine the concert with a short walk through the centre, Antwerpen-Centraal railway station, museum districts, the port or restaurants before heading toward AFAS Dome. For audiences from Croatia and the region, it is practical to think of Antwerp and Brussels as connected travel points, because international arrivals are often organized through a larger transport network.

For the Tame Impala concert, the contrast between the city and the arena is especially interesting. Antwerp has a strong urban rhythm, but AFAS Dome is a space in which that rhythm is concentrated into one evening. The audience will not come only to a performance, but also to a gathering of people connected by a similar feeling for psychedelic pop melody, dance bass and songs that are at once melancholic and mobile.

Who this concert is an especially good choice for

This concert will most attract three groups of visitors. The first are long-time fans who have followed Parker's development from psychedelic beginnings to global pop status. The second are listeners who may not know the entire albums, but recognize the big songs and want to hear them in a full concert format. The third are lovers of contemporary concert production, electronic pulse and performances that are not strictly rock, but are not an ordinary dance evening either.

Tame Impala is an especially interesting performer for an audience that likes when a song has multiple layers. On the surface are the melody and chorus, but beneath them details are working: drum changes, bass that pushes the song forward, a vocal that sounds close and far at the same time, and synthesizers that create a feeling of movement. In a large arena, those details do not have to be small - they can become part of a collective, almost physical experience.

It is worth securing tickets in time.

How to prepare for the evening

For the best experience, it is good to listen before the concert to several layers of the Tame Impala catalogue. "Currents" gives the clearest entry into the pop and synth side of the project, "Lonerism" reveals the earlier psychedelic core, "The Slow Rush" brings a more mature, time-stretched sound, and "Deadbeat" explains why the current tour has more dance nerve. There is no need to learn the set list by heart, especially because it can change, but knowing the new songs can change the way the audience experiences the central part of the performance.

It is good to bring only what is really necessary and before departure check the arena rules on bringing in bags, food, drinks and photo equipment. Large venues usually have security checks and rules that can differ depending on the event. Visitors coming from outside Belgium should additionally check return transport times, especially if after the concert they plan a train or night transfer.If you want a calmer experience, choose an earlier arrival and a position with a better overview of the stage. If you want a stronger feeling of rhythm and audience, the floor will more naturally carry the dance part of the evening. For Tame Impala, both options make sense: one emphasizes the visual and sound whole, the other the bodily feeling of the songs.

What this date means in the European part of the tour

Antwerp fits into the spring European sequence of "Deadbeat Tour" dates in 2026, after announced concerts in major European arenas and cities. This gives the concert a feeling of continuity: the audience in Belgium is not getting an isolated performance, but one of the stops of a tour that carries the new phase of Tame Impala from the North American and festival context into European arenas.For the Belgian audience and travelers from neighboring countries, this is an opportunity to see the project in a phase when the new album is still shaping the concert identity. Such performances are often the most interesting because the old hits have certainty, and the new songs still carry the energy of discovery. Precisely that tension between the familiar and the new could be the strongest side of the evening at AFAS Dome.

Short guide for visitors

The most important information for planning:
  • event: Tame Impala - "Deadbeat Tour"
  • date and time: May 5, 2026 at 18:30
  • venue: AFAS Dome, Antwerp, Belgium
  • address: Schijnpoortweg 119, 2170 Antwerp
  • confirmed support: RIP Magic
  • the ticket is valid for one day


Ticket sales for this event are ongoing.

The best plan for the evening is simple: arrive earlier, check transport, do not count on the last moment and enter the arena relaxed enough to catch the entire programme. Tame Impala is not a performer where one should wait for only one song. The strength of the performance is in the flow - in how psychedelic pop, electronica and arena sound merge into a concert that is listened to, watched and physically felt.Sources:

- Event page for Tame Impala in Antwerp - the date, time, venue and confirmed support RIP Magic were used.

- AFAS Dome - information about the arena, address, earlier name Sportpaleis, mobility, accessibility and practical information for visitors was used.- De Lijn - the recommendation of public transport for getting to AFAS Dome and Lotto Arena was used.

- Pitchfork - information about the album "Deadbeat", the singles "End of Summer", "Loser" and "Dracula", the album release date and the context of the new Tame Impala phase was used.

- The Guardian - critical context of the sound of the album "Deadbeat" was used, including the influence of Western Australian rave and "bush doof" culture.- Deadbeat Tour - the overview of the European part of the tour and the placement of the Antwerp performance within the wider 2026 tour schedule was used.

Everything you need to know about tickets for concert Tame Impala

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3 hours ago, Author: Culture & events desk

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