Bullet For My Valentine & Trivium: The Poisoned Ascendancy Tour 2025

Bullet For My Valentine & Trivium: The Poisoned Ascendancy Tour 2025

Bullet For My Valentine & Trivium: The Poisoned Ascendancy Tour 2025

Friday |  May 9, 2025

Lobby Doors: 4:30 pm   |   Showtime: 6:30 pm

Pricing Information:

Standing General Admission – $59.50 + Fees
For Luxury Seating options, click HERE

WITH SPECIAL GUESTS AUGUST BURNS RED AND BLEED FROM WITHIN

Artist Info

About Bullet For My Valentine:
Bullet For My Valentine has been a mainstay, not just in the metal community, but within British music as a whole since their inception. From experiencing early success with Fever & Scream Aim Fire to continuing to encapsulate audiences with Gravity & 2021’s self-titled album, the band has consistently gone from strength to strength, amassing over 3.5 million album sales to date whilst playing sold-out shows across the globe.

It’s the band’s first album, however; 2005’s The Poison, that propelled them to unimaginable heights. That year saw the Welsh metallers graduate from supporting Funeral For A Friend on their UK run in the summer, to ending the year headlining the very same venues just months later. Dropping in October 2005, “The Poison” hit number 21 in the UK album charts, becoming a late contender in end of year polls, placing at number seven on KERRANG!’s “Albums Of The Year” list, and since achieving gold status.

Therefore in 2025, Bullet will be celebrating 20 years of The Poison by partnering with fellow heavy metal contemporaries Trivium and bringing The Poisoned Ascendancy Tour to life, where both acts will perform their iconic debut albums, playing them in full for the last time to audiences worldwide.

“The Poison is such an important part of our lives musically and personally and we know the massive impact it had on the metal world on a global level”. Says Matt Tuck. Bullet For My Valentine and Trivium ‘The Poisoned Ascendancy World Tour will be the metal tour of 2025’. Celebrating the 20th anniversary of both albums and playing them in their entirety. Get excited people, it’s going to be special and we can’t wait to celebrate with you all

 

About Trivium:
Various belief systems throughout history exalt the number 10 as divine. 10 years comprise a decade, we
traditionally possess 10 fingers and 10 toes, our very decimal system remains based on 10, and so on and so
forth. Trivium grasp for collective perfection on their 10th full-length offering, In The Court of the Dragon
[Roadrunner Records]. Following 22 years, over 1 million units moved, hundreds of sold-out shows, and halfa-
billion streams, the GRAMMY® Award-nominated Florida quartet—Matt Heavy [vocals, guitar], Corey
Beaulieu [guitar], Paolo Gregoletto [bass], and Alex Bent [drums]—deliver a definitive statement cast in
ironclad guitar fireworks, pummeling rhythms, lyrical provocations, and stadium-shaking choruses. It springs
from the past, seizes the present, and hints at the future of Trivium—and metal—all at once.
“Getting to album 10 felt momentous,” says Paolo. “Not many bands get this far, so it had to live up to being
the 10th record. We didn’t know if we were going to be able to tour, so it had to still be impressive enough to
keep everyone’s attention. It was the sole focus for the last ten months. We had to make sure we met the bar
we’ve set for our fans and ourselves.”

“To be 10 records in is an accomplishment in and of itself,” agrees Corey. “To us, this music felt special. We’re
the strongest we’ve ever been as friends and as a band. I hope it shows in the songs.”
“I feel like we’re four people who just started a new band with all of the aspirations and dreams in the
world,” exclaims Matt. “I’m excited to go to practice. I’m excited to play our music. I’m very happy to be in
the band with these three guys. 22 years into this thing, that’s incredible.”

Those 22 years have set the stage for this era. Trivium crafted a classic in the form of Ascendancy. It
concluded 2005 as KERRANG!’s “Album of the Year,” went gold in the UK, and has since surpassed global
sales of 500,000 copies. Retrospectively, Metal Hammer cited it in the Top 15 of the “The Greatest Metal
Albums of the Century.” They’ve earned six straight Top 25 debuts on the Billboard Top 200 and six Top 3
debuts on the Top Rock Albums Chart. One of many standouts from 2017’s The Sin and The Sentence, the
single “Betrayer” garnered a GRAMMY® Award nod in the category of “Best Metal Performance.” The quartet
reached new heights on 2020’s What The Dead Men Say, appearing everywhere from The New York Times,
NPR, Forbes, Billboard, Tech Crunch, and Kotaku to Revolver and Alternative Press. They are the rare band
who can incinerate a stage alongside Metallica and Iron Maiden and hold a captive audience of tens of
thousands on a Twitch stream.

In the midst of the Global Pandemic, the members safely congregated in order to practice and volley ideas
back and forth. During the summer, Alex and his wife moved across the country from California to Florida as
Paolo also relocated back home. Once conditions permitted, they returned to the studio in Full Sail University
with producer Josh Wilbur [Lamb of God, A Day To Remember] in 2021.

“When I moved, everything changed,” says Alex. “We could easily get on a group text to practice or write
virtually anytime. It isn’t like I had to hop on a plane anymore. Everything was so much simpler and
smoother. We weren’t working with any time limitations, and everything paid off.”
It most certainly did…Trivium sent shockwaves through heavy metal with the surprise release of the first
single and title track “In The Court of The Dragon.” Within a month, the song piled up millions of streams as
Guitar World hailed it as “one of the standout metal tracks of the year.” With its striking renaissance-inspired
artwork, enigmatically unnerving fantasy visual, and conflagration of guttural screams, hammering
percussion, orchestral intro courtesy of Ihsahn [Emperor], and sweeping hooks, it unlocked a gateway into
another realm.

“As far as the meaning goes, there is no right or wrong answer,” grins Matt. “I want people to come up with
their own interpretations of everything they hear, see, and experience on In The Court of the Dragon. Of
course, I’m obsessed with Scandinavian stories, Vikings, Japanese history, and the tales of Odin, Thor,
Ragnarok, and the end of the world, Paolo was like, ‘Why don’t we create our own mythology?’ We’ve
definitely used pre-existing myths for inspiration in the past. We created our own myth now.”
Meanwhile, “Feast Of Fire” burns bright with a massive chant hyper-charged by nimble melodic thrash and a
smart-bomb precise solo. “To us, ‘Feast Of Fire’ is in the direct lineage of ‘Dying In Your Arms’, ‘Unti The
World Goes Cold’, and ‘Black’,” Matt observes. “We really fleshed it out perfectly with the chorus, and it was
meant to feel big.”

Then, there’s “Like A Sword Over Damocles.” A hulking groove gives way to a skyscraping refrain uplifted by
thick distortion.

“I had the initial backbone of the song, and I really wanted to do a barnburner,” Corey reveals. “I had
researched the concept. It was a cool story about the struggles of being someone in power and always having
people question you. What happens when the person who’s questioning you has your job and responsibility?
They don’t want it. Paolo built on that idea, and we made our own story. I’m really stoked for everyone to
hear it.”

The near eight-minute “Fall Into Your Hands” originated on Matt’s uber popular daily Twitch stream and
organically progressed into one of the most epic compositions in the band’s catalog. However, everything
culminates on “The Phalanx.” It twists and turns through incendiary leads, heart-wrenching screams, an
entrancing melody, and final symphonic comedown.

“Thematically and musically, the song has three acts,” Matt states. “For as conceptual as it is, it also reflects
our chemistry in the room. Since we’re so technically proficient at our instruments and I spend hours singing
every day on stream, we’re over prepared. For In The Court of the Dragon and What the Dead Men Say, we
went in and played without thinking. We default to technical, elaborate, and long ideas, because that’s what
we grew up on. It all felt natural.”

In the end, Trivium have inched towards this moment for ten albums and finally arrived like never
before as they triumphantly rise In The Court of the Dragon.

“This album has everything,” Matt leaves off. “It has the singing, the screaming, the death metal, the
black metal, and the catchy metal. When we have all of those elements together, we’re the happiest. It’s
the key to Trivium.”

“This is a new chapter,” Paolo concludes. “We’re crossing into something else. I don’t know what it is,
but I’m excited for it. We have a lot left in us, and I want to prove that.” – Rick Florino, August 2021
BOILER

For over two decades, Trivium have quietly raised the bar for heavy music by conjuring a near-magic balance
between towering melodic metal infectiousness, extreme metal unpredictability, black metal scope, and a
kick of rock ‘n’ roll spirit. After forming in 1999, Trivium crafted a classic in the form of Ascendancy. It
concluded 2005 as KERRANG!’s “Album of the Year,” went gold in the UK, and has since surpassed global
sales of 500,000 copies. Retrospectively, Metal Hammer cited it in the Top 15 of the “The Greatest Metal
Albums of the Century.” They’ve earned six straight Top 25 debuts on the Billboard Top 200 and six Top 3
debuts on the Top Rock Albums Chart. One of many standouts from 2017’s The Sin and The Sentence, the
single “Betrayer” garnered a GRAMMY® Award nod in the category of “Best Metal Performance.” The quartet
reached new heights on 2020’s What The Dead Men Say, appearing everywhere from The New York Times,
NPR, Forbes, Billboard, Tech Crunch, and Kotaku to Revolver and Alternative Press. They are the rare band
who can incinerate a stage alongside Metallica and Iron Maiden and hold a captive audience of tens of
thousands on a Twitch stream. Following 22 years, over 1 million units moved, hundreds of sold-out shows,
and half-a-billion streams, the GRAMMY® Award-nominated Florida quartet—Matt Heavy [vocals, guitar],
Corey Beaulieu [guitar], Paolo Gregoletto [bass], and Alex Bent [drums]—deliver a definitive statement cast
in ironclad guitar fireworks, pummeling rhythms, lyrical provocations, and stadium-shaking choruses on their
10th full-length offering, In The Court of the Dragon [Roadrunner Records]. It springs from the past, seizes the
present, and hints at the future of Trivium—and metal—all at once.

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