Alison Moyet adds York Barbican to Songs Of Yazoo, the minutes and Other tour on November 18. When do tickets go on sale?

Alison Moyet: Returning to York Barbican this autumn. Picture: Naomi Davison

ALISON Moyet will play York Barbican on November 18 in one of ten new additions to her Songs Of Yazoo, the minutes and Other tour.

After 20 UK and Irish shows, including Sheffield City Hall on October 6, sold out within days, the Basildon-born soul, blues and pop singer-songwriter has announced further autumn dates, with another Yorkshire gig among them at Bradford Live on November 13.

The 2026 tour will focus exclusively on songs from Yazoo’s 1982-1983 catalogue and a selection from her solo electronica albums, 2013’s the minutes and 2017’s Other.

In her days as Alf, Moyet answered a Melody Maker advert to join fellow Essex musician Vince Clarke in Yazoo after his split from Depeche Mode. A handful ofYazoo hits have become staples of Alison’s live sets, but much of the electronic duo’s material has been performed only rarely outside of their two brief tours: 1982’s breakthrough travels and 2008’s  Reconnected reunion.

Songs Of Yazoo, the minutes and Other is billed as a “unique opportunity to experience songs live that propelled their phenomenal yet short-lived run”, comprising 1982’s UK and USA platinum-selling debut Upstairs At Eric’s and 1983’s parting shot, the UK chart-topping You And Me Both.

Alison Moyet’s poster for the ten new shows on her Songs Of Yazoo, the minutes and Other tour

For the first time, Moyet will team multiple Yazoo numbers with songs from her creative return to electronica for the minutes and Other, both produced by principal co-writer Guy Sigsworth.

“Many years touring the same pool of songs and I am keen for a palate refresher,” says Moyet, 64. “Specifying which years I will be fishing from too, I think, is a grand way to serve pot luck for specific tastes. No bones…”

Moyet last visited York Barbican on February 20 2025 on her first headline tour since 2017, when she had been joined by keyboard players John Garden and Shaun McGhee  on November 19 that year to promote Other.

Last year’s show followed Moyet’s graduation from Brighton University in 2023 with a first-class degree in fine art printmaking, whereupon she combined art and music on her 18-track October 4 album, Key, creating the artwork as well as reworking singles, fan favourites and deep cuts, complemented by two new songs.

Tickets for November 18 will go on general sale from 10am on Thursday from https://www.yorkbarbican.co.uk/whats-on/alison-moyet-2026, preceded by pre-sale bookings from 10am tomorrow. For Bradford, https://trafalgartickets.com/bradford-live-bradford/en-GB/event/music/alison-moyet-tickets.

In addition, Moyet will embark on a 21-date tour of North America this summer as a special guest on The Human League’s Generations tour, alongside Marc Almond’s Soft Cell.

York gig of the week: Andy Bell, Ten Crowns Tour, York Barbican, tonight, 7.30pm

Andy Bell: Showcasing new album Ten Crowns at York Barbican tonight. Picture: Sean Black

ERASURE singer Andy Bell opens his tour at York Barbican tonight on the eve of Friday’s release of his third solo album.

Comprising ten tracks of dazzling, joyous pop, produced and polished in Nashville, inspired by the dancefloor and gospel, Ten Crowns will be available on vinyl (white, oxblood, and picture disc), CD (standard and 2CD versions), gold cassette and digitally via Crown Recordings.

The track listing is: Breaking Thru The Interstellar; Lies So Deep featuring Sarah Potenza; Heart’s A Liar featuring Debbie Harry; For Today; Dance For Mercy; Don’t Cha Know; Dawn Of Heavens Gate; Godspell; Put Your Empathy On Ice and Thank You.

Bell unites with his ultimate pop heroine, Debbie Harry, for the wistful Heart’s A Liar, having first sang about the Blondie icon in DHDQ – short for “Debbie Harry Drag Queen” on his June 2010 album Non-Stop. “To have Debbie Harry singing with me – you know, I still cant quite believe it,” he says.

The song is Bell’s re-write of a track by English-Italian singer-songwriter and regular Dave Audé collaborator Luciana that Bell imagines being about two lovers who are no good for each other.

“Debbie gives it this gravitas and this coquettishness, but shes still very in command. And she recorded her vocals in the studio on Gay Pride, which I thought when I heard it, ‘oh, trust her’!”

The latest single, Lies So Deep, brings together Bell and The Voice finalist Sarah Potenza for an ode to Whitney Houston. “It’s a futuristic love song about a time where everybody is allowed the freedom to love whoever they want without interference,” he says. “Sarah adds the stunning diva counterpart which tips the song into soul overdrive!”

Bell will be on the road from tonight to May 19, performing a set that will combine new compositions with favourites from his solo catalogue and Erasure hits aplenty. His band features his principal Ten Crowns collaborator and co-writer, Grammy-winning American producer, re-mixer and DJ Dave Audé, who opens tonight’s show with a DJ set. 

The album cover artwork for Andy Bell’s Ten Crowns

Bell and close friend Audé collaborated previously on two American dance chart number ones, 2014’s Aftermath (Here We Go) and 2016’s True Original. “We just  kind of carried on writing as an exercise, and after that, Dave moved his family to Nashville because LA [Los Angeles] was so expensive, and so our writing took this kind of gospel-tinged Nashville twist,” says Andy.

Nashville struck him for having a church on every corner. “It reminded me of singing in choirs and cathedral school as a child, where the spirit of the church is imbued in the music,” he says.

Not that Ten Crowns is a sombre, spiritual set, instead being propulsive, electronic, passionate and driven by the need to encounter new emotions and experiences as life races on. 

“I mean, I’ve got everything I could possibly wish for, you know, I really have, but thats not to say Im always fulfilled,” says Andy. “This albums about picking yourself up, dusting yourself off, embracing life – and about taking that feeling on even when youre fighting demons in the world, like homophobia, and fighting demons in yourself. Its about being celebratory and uplifting.”

Travelling into new dimensions and possibilities with gospel in the heart and dancing in the soul, Ten Crowns’ release excites Bell. “It’s my third (sort of) solo record [following 2005s Electric Blue and 2010s Non-Stop] and in Erasure, our third album [1988’s The Innocents] was our most successful out of all that we’ve done, so Im taking that spirit with me!”

Next year will mark the 40th anniversary of Bell teaming up with Vince Clarke in Erasure. Good news, the duo has begun work on a new album.

Tickets are still available for tonight’s gig at yorkbarbican.co.uk. Look out for Paul Rhodes’s review for charleshutchpress.co.uk.