Track is from third album due July 30th

Bleachers release their new track “How Dare You Want More” along with a live performance video of the song. Already a fan favorite, Bleachers debuted this track last month during their much celebrated performance on NBC’s The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon where they were the first full band to perform in studio in over a year.

“Over the past few years i found out things about my family that challenged some of the myths of our structure,” shares frontman Jack Antonoff in a statement. “ive felt rage, fear, darkness etc around it, but at the end of the day what i am left with is that everybody wants a little more and going out there and trying to get it is something that can produce a lot of shame in people. so … how dare you want more? how dare you go out and get what you want? how do you ask for it when you’re not sure if you even deserve it? its an easy song to write about the people in my life and the hardest thing to do to oneself.

This one is the band on fire. testing the boundaries of how close we can get to the edge without falling off. this recording could not have happened with any other group of people and its the direct sound of all the time we’ve spent on the road and how we’ve learned to know what each other is going to do. the band is carrying me through.”

In May Bleachers’ released their new single “Stop Making This Hurt” along with the music video, directed by Carlotta Kohl.

Bleachers third LP Take the Sadness Out of Saturday Night will be released July 30th via RCA Records.

Additionally it was announced that, Bleachers will be hitting the road this fall on their Take the Sadness Out of Saturday Night headline tour. Tickets are on sale now via Ticketmaster.

The tour kicks off on September 11th at Antonoff’s Shadow of the City festival in New Jersey.

“How Dare You Want More” is the fourth offering from Bleachers’ forthcoming album and follows previously released tracks “Stop Making This Hurt,” “Chinatown” feat. Bruce Springsteen and “45” which were met with mass critical praise.