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Buy tickets for concert Tame Impala - 29.04.2026., Uber Arena, Berlin, Germany Buy tickets for concert Tame Impala - 29.04.2026., Uber Arena, Berlin, Germany

CONCERT

Tame Impala

Uber Arena, Berlin, DE
29. April 2026. 20:00h
2026
29
April
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar - illustration/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tame Impala tickets for Berlin - Uber Arena concert with "Deadbeat", major hits and the current tour

Looking for tickets for Tame Impala in Berlin? Book your place for the Uber Arena concert and expect a mix of psych rock, synth-pop and key songs like "The Less I Know the Better" and "Let It Happen", with the current live run shaped by the album "Deadbeat"

Tame Impala in Berlin ushers in a new phase of Kevin Parker’s project

Tame Impala arrives at Berlin’s Uber Arena on 29 April at a moment when Kevin Parker’s project once again feels like a band that is both a festival magnet and a studio laboratory at the same time. For the audience, that means a concert where psychedelic rock, synth-pop, and dance pulse do not alternate according to genre rules, but merge into a sound that works equally well in headphones and in a large arena. If you are drawn to songs that build tension layer by layer and only then burst into a chorus or rhythm, this is one of those evenings for which a trip to Berlin easily turns into a true concert weekend.

Tame Impala’s most recognizable signature remains songs such as "The Less I Know the Better" and "Let It Happen", titles that long ago took the project beyond the narrow frame of psychedelic rock and brought it closer to a wider audience. Kevin Parker remains the central authorial figure behind everything Tame Impala is - a singer, multi-instrumentalist, and producer whose work appeals equally to long-time fans from the days of the albums "Lonerism" and "Currents", as well as to listeners who entered that world through more accessible, dance-oriented, and more openly pop songs. Tickets for this event are in demand.

An important context for this concert is the album "Deadbeat", Tame Impala’s fifth studio album, released in October 2025. The project’s current career phase and the tour now passing through Europe revolve precisely around that release. The album description on the official store emphasizes a shift toward "club-psych" energy, greater spontaneity, and a harder, more minimalist rhythmic strike, and that is also a good clue to what the audience can expect live: less reliance on pure nostalgia, and more space for new material that calls for a large-scale sound system image and a strong lighting framework.Among the songs that have defined this cycle, "End of Summer", "Loser", and "Dracula" stand out in particular, singles that announced before the album the direction Parker is taking - more dance-driven, darker, and more direct than on some earlier releases. That does not mean he has abandoned the hypnotic transitions and hazy melodies by which the audience recognizes him, but rather that he now builds them more often on a club pulse. For a concert in a venue the size of Uber Arena, that is good news: such songs gain extra strength when the audience experiences them in a large space, with bass that you physically feel, not just hear.

What is currently known about the tour and the setlist

The official Uber Arena page for 29 April also confirms the opening act RIP MAGIC. That is an important detail for visitors who like to arrive at the beginning of the evening, rather than just before the main performance. For now, there are no confirmed special guests or additional surprises, so such things are not worth expecting in advance. What is confirmed is that this is a concert within the current tour accompanying the album "Deadbeat", therefore a performance that is not an isolated festival date, but part of an already developed concert cycle.

When it comes to what the audience can expect live, the most reliable clue comes from recent performances on the same tour in European arenas. According to recent setlists from early April, Tame Impala is combining new material with key songs from different stages of the career on this tour. That is not a guarantee that Berlin will get an identical running order, but it gives a very clear picture of the concept of the evening: "Deadbeat" is in the foreground, yet the concert is not conceived as a closed promotion of one album, but as a cross-section of a project that knows how strong its catalogue is.At the tour’s European performances so far, the programme has included songs from several periods, among them "Apocalypse Dreams", "Borderline", "Elephant", "Eventually", "New Person, Same Old Mistakes", and "The Less I Know the Better", together with several new songs from the album "Deadbeat". That means the concert is appealing both to fans who have been with Tame Impala since the earlier psychedelic days, and to the audience primarily coming for the biggest hits. It is worth securing tickets in time.

It is also important that recent setlists show a performance rhythm of about two hours, with a main set and an encore, though the duration in Berlin should still be taken as a framework, not as an official announcement. On the latest dates of the tour, Tame Impala does not seem like a project that improvises from evening to evening without a clear structure. On the contrary, the impression is that Parker and the team are currently delivering a carefully constructed concert that gives enough space to the new material, but does not forget the songs because of which venues of this capacity are possible at all.


  • Tame Impala’s performance at Uber Arena on 29/04/2026 has been confirmed.

  • The venue page lists the programme start at 19:30 and door opening at 18:00.

  • The opening act RIP MAGIC has been confirmed.

  • The current tour is tied to the 2025 album "Deadbeat".

  • Recent European performances show a blend of new material and the biggest songs from the catalogue.

What kind of audience this concert attracts the most

This is not a concert reserved only for a narrow circle of fans who know every B-side. For years now, Tame Impala has belonged to the rare group of artists who can satisfy several different types of audience in the same arena. There are long-time fans who seek layered arrangements, old favourites, and Parker’s ability to turn a simple melody into something obsessive. There is also the wider audience that got to know the project through the biggest singles, streaming, and festival performances. And there are lovers of contemporary indie, psych-pop, and more dance-oriented electronics to whom Tame Impala is interesting precisely because it does not stay in one box.

For a visitor wondering whether it is worth travelling to this concert, it is important to know the following as well: Tame Impala live is not just a series of songs you know, but an experience in which arrangements, transitions, and crowd dynamics often carry as much weight as the choruses themselves. This is especially true of songs that build slowly and explode only after several minutes. In an arena, that often means that even those who do not know every new song quickly catch the rhythm of the evening.

If you are more attached to the older albums, the good news is that recent concerts show Parker is not cutting ties with earlier periods. If, however, you are coming above all for the newer, more dance-oriented, and softer pop phase of Tame Impala, there is plenty of reason for that as well. This concert may therefore be most attractive precisely to those who like artists whose catalogue has breadth: so that in one evening you get dreamy psychedelia, solid bass, and several songs that the entire arena sings almost without pause.

Uber Arena as a concert venue

Uber Arena is among Berlin’s major indoor venues and accommodates up to 17,000 visitors for concert setups. That is large enough for the evening to gain full arena momentum, but also compact enough that the sound and visual production do not feel stretched out. The venue is located between Ostbahnhof and Warschauer Straße, in other words in a part of the city that is very convenient in terms of transport both for the local audience and for those arriving by train or plane and getting around Berlin by public transport.

For Tame Impala, such a venue is almost ideal. Its songs work best when there is enough room for deep bass, synth layers, and lighting transitions, but also when the audience is not too far from the stage in terms of the feeling of a shared rhythm. Uber Arena can offer exactly that: a big picture without a complete loss of closeness. It is not a club, of course, but neither is it a stadium where detail easily disappears. For a band balancing between introspective melody and a dance surge, that is an important difference.

Around the arena itself is Uber Platz, and directly opposite is the East Side Gallery, one of the more recognizable Berlin spots for visitors who want to combine a concert with a short city stroll. That part of the city has a very clear urban character - the Spree, bridges, industrial traces, tourists, local crowds, restaurants, and a bar scene - so arriving for the concert can easily be turned into a full evening out without wandering through unfamiliar neighbourhoods.For the audience arriving earlier, that means one practical thing: you can come sufficiently in advance, walk along the East Side Gallery or around the OberbaumbrĂĽcke, eat something nearby, and then head to the entrance without major logistical stress. Tickets are disappearing quickly.

Arrival, entrances, and what is worth knowing before departure

The official Uber Arena page for this event lists door opening at 18:00 and start at 19:30. As different timings are often also in circulation in the basic event data, it is smart to check the ticket once again and the information shown by the venue itself before setting off. For a visitor, in practice, that means a simple rule: do not plan to arrive at the last moment, especially if you want to catch the opening act RIP MAGIC as well and avoid the biggest wave of entry immediately before the main performance.

Uber Arena recommends arriving by public transport. The two most practical hubs are S+U Warschauer Straße and Ostbahnhof, both practically next to the venue. That is useful both for tourists staying in the centre and for those coming from other parts of Berlin. According to the venue’s information, on weekdays the last U-Bahn leaves around 0:30, and the last S-Bahn around 1:30, after which night buses operate. Since the concert is on a Wednesday, that detail is worth keeping in mind if you plan to return without a taxi or a car.For arriving by car, one must take the limitations into account. The arena itself explicitly warns that parking spaces are very limited and that traffic jams on arrival and departure are frequent. Nearby are arena parking and Plaza parking, and the venue also lists East Side Mall as an additional option, but with the same warning that congestion occurs on days of major events. In other words, a car only makes sense if you are arriving from outside Berlin and have no better option, and even then you should set off earlier than the mileage itself would require.

It is also practical to know that Uber Arena is cashless, which means food and drink inside the venue are paid for by card. That is a small thing which can become important on site, especially for travellers who in a hurry are counting on cash. Ticket sales for this event are underway.


  • Door opening according to the venue page: 18:00.

  • Programme start according to the venue page: 19:30.

  • Nearest stations: S+U Warschauer StraĂźe and Ostbahnhof.

  • The venue recommends public transport because of limited parking.

  • Inside the arena, food and drink are paid for by card.

Why Berlin carries weight on this leg of the tour

For an artist like Tame Impala, Berlin is more than just another point on the map. It is a city whose audience has a long habit of embracing concerts at the intersection of rock, electronics, art-pop, and psychedelia, which is precisely the terrain on which Parker has been moving for years. In such a city, a new album is not listened to only as a set of new singles, but also as a shift in aesthetic focus. That is why the Berlin date on the European leg of the tour carries weight for fans who follow how the project changes from album to album.

The performance comes at the end of April, at a time when the European part of the tour is already fully developed and the band is in full concert rhythm. That is often a favourable position for the audience: the programme is already tightened up, the transitions between songs worked through, and the new material sufficiently tested in front of large crowds. Berlin therefore does not get the beginning of a cycle that is still searching for its form, but a concert in which the form is already visible.

For visitors from the region, an additional advantage is the accessibility of the city itself. Berlin is well connected, and the area around Uber Arena is one of the easier ones to navigate even when you are coming to the city for the first time. When you add to that the fact that Tame Impala does not play in this part of Europe every week and that the arena format offers a different experience from a festival set, it is easy to understand why this date has added appeal.

The atmosphere worth expecting

The fairest way to put it is this: one should not expect a classic rock concert in which everything is subordinated to the frontman’s direct communication and to an audience jumping from the first minute to the last. Tame Impala works differently. Its strength lies in drawing the audience into the sound - through groove, pulse, repetitive motifs, lighting changes, and songs that do not spend themselves immediately. In a large arena, that often looks like the crowd first synchronizes gently, and only then explodes together on the familiar choruses.

Recent performances show that the current concert concept gives plenty of space both to anthemic moments and to quieter transitions. That is why this is a good evening both for those who like dancing in the crowd and for those who above all want to immerse themselves in the production, the sound, and the details at a concert. If you prefer an experience in which the audience sings every second without pause, there are more direct pop concerts. If, however, you are looking for an evening in which the sound has depth and the hits arrive at the right moments, Tame Impala gives you far more nuance there.

It is also worth counting on a generationally diverse audience. At a concert like this, listeners who grew up with Tame Impala back in the era of "Elephant" and "Feels Like We Only Go Backwards", the audience that came in through "Currents", and those now coming because of the new album and a broader dance momentum usually mix together. It is precisely that combination that often creates a strong concert charge: the arena is not monolithic, but it knows where the common points are and when they should be sung loudly.

What a visitor from outside Berlin can make use of around the venue

If you arrive earlier or stay until the following morning, the district around Uber Arena is practical because it does not require major transfers between the "concert" and the "tourist" part of the day. The East Side Gallery is literally in the immediate vicinity, the Spree and the OberbaumbrĂĽcke are a short walk away, and Ostbahnhof and Warschauer StraĂźe keep you connected to the rest of the city. It is one of those locations where both a concert and a basic city tour can fit into the same schedule without too much logistics.

That is especially true for visitors who want to arrive early enough to avoid the entry crowd. Instead of shortening the time by waiting in front of the arena, they can turn it into a short walk through one of the visually most recognizable parts of Berlin. Such a schedule also works well because the venue itself is straightforward in transport terms for the return after the concert, especially if you use the S-Bahn or U-Bahn.

Sources:
- Uber Arena - confirmation of the date, schedule, door opening, opening act RIP MAGIC, and basic event information.
- Uber Arena - information on arrival, public transport, the Warschauer StraĂźe and Ostbahnhof stations, and the recommendation to use public transport.
- Uber Arena / Parking - information on limited parking, parking locations, and congestion on arrival and departure.
- Uber Arena / FAQ - information that the venue is cashless for food and drink.
- Uber Arena / Facts and Berlin.de - arena capacity and location between Ostbahnhof and Warschauer StraĂźe.
- Tame Impala official store - context of the album "Deadbeat", release date, and description of the project’s current phase.
- Pitchfork - confirmation of the album "Deadbeat", the singles "End of Summer", "Loser", and "Dracula", and the outline of the current tour.
- setlist.fm - recent European tour performances as a framework for the type of repertoire and the balance between new material and older songs.
- visitBerlin - context of the East Side Gallery and the area around Uber Arena for visitors coming to the city.

Everything you need to know about tickets for concert Tame Impala

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4 hours ago, Author: Culture & events desk

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