Dominic Fike has set the North American leg of his “Comedy Tragedy Parody” Tour, lining up a run of intimate headline shows that begins Aug. 15 in Asheville, North Carolina, and ends Sept. 30 in Los Angeles. The dates will run alongside Tame Impala’s arena tour.
The rollout gives fans a clear window to buy in. An artist presale opens Monday, April 20 at 10 a.m. local time, followed by the general onsale on Friday, April 24 at 10 a.m. local time.
The schedule stretches across the country and includes stops in Atlanta, Detroit, Chicago, Austin and Las Vegas, among others. Confirmed dates include Aug. 18 at The Dome by Rutter Mills in Virginia Beach, Virginia; Aug. 19 at Ting Pavilion in Charlottesville, Virginia; Aug. 21 at The Fillmore Detroit in Detroit, Michigan; Sept. 1 at Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle; Sept. 3 at Hayden Homes Amphitheater in Bend, Oregon; Sept. 14 at Mortgage Matchup Center in Phoenix; Sept. 17 at American Airlines Center in Dallas; Sept. 24 at Revel Entertainment Center in Albuquerque, New Mexico; and Sept. 26 at The Theater at Virgin Hotels Las Vegas in Las Vegas.
The tour lands while Fike already has two songs charting at the same time across the Billboard Hot 100 and Spotify’s U.S. and global charts, a reminder that his profile has moved well beyond the home-recorded Soundcloud demos that first got him noticed while he was on house arrest. “Babydoll,” first released in 2018, is spending multiple consecutive weeks at No. 1 on Spotify’s global and U.S. charts, adding another marker to a career that later produced a No. 1 on Billboard’s Alternative Songs chart and collaborations with Paul McCartney, Justin Bieber and Kenny Beats.
Fike’s reach has also widened on screen. He appeared as Elliot in season 2 of HBO’s “Euphoria,” played Miles in Savanah Leaf’s 2023 film “Earth Mama,” and is set to appear in Jack Begert’s forthcoming feature-length directorial debut “Little Death,” which is produced by Darren Aronofsky. For now, though, the focus is on the road: a fall run that starts in Asheville, hits major markets from Seattle to Dallas, and closes in Los Angeles before the month is out.