Graham Nash to play York Barbican on More Evenings Of Songs & Stories tour next October. When do tickets go on sale?

Graham Nash: Set spanning 60 years of songwriting. Picture: Ralf Louis

GRAHAM Nash will play York Barbican on October 5 2025 on the second night of his 11-date More Evenings Of Songs & Stories tour.

The Blackpool-born two-time Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee and Grammy award winner will perform songs spanning his 60-year career, from The Hollies to Crosby, Stills and Nash, CSNY and his solo career.

Nash, 82, will be joined on stage by Todd Caldwell, keyboards and vocals, Adam Minkoff, bass, drums, guitars and vocals, and Zach Djanikian, guitars, mandolin, drums and vocals.

Nash’s set will be preceded by a performance from special guest and long-time friend Peter Asher.

The poster for Graham Nash’s October 2025 tour

York Barbican will be his only Yorkshire date. Tickets go on sale on Friday at 10am at http://myticket.co.uk/artists/graham-nash.  

Nash’s body of songwriting began with his contributions to The Hollies from 1964 to 1968, such as Stop Stop Stop and On A Carousel. The union of Crosby, Stills & Nash (and later & Young) yielded Marrakesh Express, Pre-Road Downs  and Lady Of  The Island, from the first Crosby, Stills & Nash album and Teach Your Children and Our House from CSNY’s Déjà Vu. His further contributions to CSN included Just A Song Before I Go and Wasted On The Way.

Nash’s career as a solo artist took flight in 1971, beginning with two landmark albums, Songs For Beginners and Wild Tales, featuring such favourites as Chicago/We Can Change The World and Military Madness. His latest album, Now, was released in May 2023.

Peter Asher’s 1964 debut single with Peter & Gordon was a cover of Lennon & McCartney’s A World Without Love. He moved in to record production in the late-1960s as head of A & R at The Beatles’ Apple Records and then at his own company, working for decades with James Taylor, Linda Ronstadt and others. His performance will share music and stories from those heady days to the present era.