The band shares “Good Time” in celebration

Cage The Elephant, the Grammy Award-winning rock band has announced an intimate show at LA’s Echoplex on May 7th. Fans can now request up to two tickets for the Cage The Elephant show in LA. Requests must be submitted by Tuesday, April 30th at 10 pm PT and do not guarantee tickets. Ticket confirmations will be sent out by the evening of Friday, May 3rd.

Recently the band shared their new single “Good Time,” off their forthcoming album Neon Pill on May 17th via RCA Records. “Good Time” follows recent singles from the new album including “Out Loud” and “Neon Pill,” which scored the band their 11th No. 1 song on Billboard’s Alternative Chart.

Neon Pill finds the Kentucky-bred six-piece forging new musical ground while maintaining their uncompromising creativity and wildly cathartic performances. “To me, Neon Pill is the first record where we were consistently uninfluenced, and I mean that in a positive way,” observes Matthew. “Everything is undoubtedly expressed through having settled into finding our own voice. We’ve always drawn inspiration from artists we love, and at times we’ve even emulated some of them to a certain degree. With this album, having gone through so much, life had almost forced us into becoming more and more comfortable with ourselves. We weren’t reaching for much outside of the pure experience of self-expression, and simultaneously not necessarily settling either. We just found a uniqueness in simply existing.”

Cage The Elephant’s 45-date North American US tour, produced by Live Nation, will kick off on June 20th in Salt Lake City with shows in cities including Seattle, Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York City with support from Young The Giant & Bakar on most dates.

Neon Pill, produced by John Hill, materialized during sessions at Sonic Ranch in El Paso, Electric Lady in New York, Sound Emporium in Nashville, Echo Mountain in North Carolina, and at Hill’s studio in Los Angeles, and alchemized a season of tragedy and turbulence into the twelve tracks on their sixth full-length album. Nine months into the pandemic, Matthew and Brad lost their father. The band weathered the back-to-back deaths of friends, while Matthew experienced depression and a mental breakdown, culminating in hospitalization. Coming out on the other side, he learned quite a bit about himself and gained a whole lot of strength and wisdom. Neon Pill came to life in the eye of the storm.