The Mouse Parade Tour
OF MONSTERS AND MEN
ĂrnĂœ Margret
WED, 29 OCT 2025 at 08:00PM EDT
Ages: All Ages
Doors Open: 07:00PM
OnSale: Fri, 15 Aug 2025 at 10:00AM EDT
Announcement: Thu, 7 Aug 2025 at 10:00AM EDT
âAll Is Love and Pain in the Mouse Paradeâ, That may sound a little strange, but the title and beating heart of Icelandic indie-folk collective Of Monsters and Menâs fourth album hits a lot closer to home than youâd expect.
A tapestry of stories, moments, and conversations, the album explores how love and pain intertwine. Feelings that might seem at odds with each other, but co-exist simultaneously and need one another.
Tales both big and small â from the loneliness and longing of living in a block surrounded by strangers, to missed connections in a grocery store, to the lives and losses of a community of mice in a vacant house during winter.
Co-singers and lyricists Nanna HilmarsdĂłttir and Ragnar ĂĂłrhallsson often found themselves telling stories from two different points of view. The album deals with âthe duality of things â where thereâs love, thereâs bound to be pain. You really canât have one without the other,â explains Nanna. âItâs inspired by our lives, our family, our community, and the generations that came before us. Our lives, along with theirs, make up the Mouse Parade.â
âIn some ways itâs an album about growing up, but in other ways itâs also about returning home by making peace with the past,â Ragnar adds.
In the six years since the bandâs last LP, Fever Dream, the Icelandic indie sensation has had time to take stock. Touring until the pandemic put things on ice, the quintet released an EP and a documentary before embarking on some solo projects â including having a few kids. It made for a much-needed breather from the treadmill theyâd been on since the massive âLittle Talksâ blew up back in 2011.
âAfter 10 years of constantly being on the album-and-tour cycle, it was a re-evaluation of things,â admits Nanna. âIt was about having a moment to step back and go, âOh, weâre adults now.â We were settling into a life that wasnât just life as a band. It was definitely time for a rethink.â
Iceland is famously a small and tight-knit community, so the best friends were never far from one another. When the time came to start making their next record, they decided to shift their surroundings and go without a label for a while to ârediscover the connection we felt when we were starting out.â The sound and energy of the record followed suit in a bid to âhave a lot of fun and get that core feeling back,â explains Ragnar.
âWeâd usually meet up in their studio around 10 each morning, brew a bad pot of coffee and have a conversation about everything and nothing before diving into the music.ââIt took us, on and off, around two years to record the album,â shares Ragnar. âWeâre usually slow pokes in the studio because we love revisiting songs, making new versions, and adding layers and little moments here and there. Itâs important to us to really hear the sense of time passing in the music.â
Nanna agrees: âWe wanted this album to feel like a band coming together to play â to lean into the bandâs chemistry and embrace the chaos that comes along with that. It felt important for us to be on the floor, playing together.â
That pure and primal band chemistry laid the foundation for All Is Love and Pain in the Mouse Parade, under a spirit of openness and allowing the songs to find their own way once theyâd captured the essence. As Ragnar reveals, that meant âembracing imperfections and not overthinking it.â
âWe set out to make something that felt hopeful while the world seems to continually spiral into more chaosâ Nanna continues. âIceland plays a huge role in this album and has always been an anchor for us. Making this album allowed us to completely get lost in our own world and get back to the core feeling of being a band and making music together. Creatively it reminded us of the times when we had just started the band but of course circumstances being a bit different now with growing families and life pulling us in different directionsâ
The back-to-basics vibe, the organic approach: it all got the band to thinking about how we coexist and connect. Running throughout the record are a series of âconversations stretched across timeâ that mull over loneliness, relationships and tracing a line between the past and the present. Self-produced by the band with help on a couple of tracks from Josh Kaufman [The National, Bob Weird, Bonny Light Horseman] and Bjarni ĂĂłr Jensson, long time friend, engineer and collaborator, the album drips with that hygge warm hug feeling. Take the ever-skyward emotion of wide-screen lead single âTelevision Loveâ . âWhen we wrote this song, weâd work on it for a while then weâd leave it alone to return to it in different stages of our lives,â says Nanna.
Ragnar agrees: âIt reminds me of how people sent letters back in the day. You would try to say and ask as much in the letter as possible, then a year later a reply comes and you get all the answers. Itâs romantic in a way.â
Elsewhere the band tackle isolation and not living up to your potential on âTuna In The Canâ, struggle to make sense of oneâs own thoughts on âKamikazeâ, bask in the the summer yearning of âOrdinary Creatureâ and try to find a place called home of âStyrofoam Cathedralâ, all wrestling with the sense and community in a bid to bring us all together.
âThe world actually is ending and we just carry on living anyway,â they say of closing track âThe Endâ. Amen. Itâs another epic yet intimate affair from a band entering a new chapter while celebrating where they came from â still at heart those same friends that penned the colossal âLittle Talksâ that would go on to score hundreds of millions of streams.
âWeâve had all the emotions when it comes to that period. Sometimes you want to fight against it, but now weâre just really appreciative that we had that moment,â says Nanna of their early whirlwind - one theyâve maintained with critical acclaim and new generations of fans across their soon to be four albums.
âThereâs a core of people who grew up on us and have a deep connection to our music,â ends Ragnar. âWeâve been following each other, throughout life. Itâs beautiful to see people who feel like theyâve been missing an old friend. Thatâs also how I feel when I havenât released a song for a while.âAll Is Love and Pain in the Mouse Parade is released October 17th, 2025
$.25 from each ticket purchased will go to The Shout Syndicate, a Boston-based, volunteer-run fundraising effort who raises money to help fund youth-led arts programs at proven non-profit creative youth development organizations in Greater Boston. Housed at The Boston Foundation, The Shout Syndicate works in partnership with the Mayor's Office of Arts & Culture's creative plan, Boston Creates.
https://www.theshoutsyndicate.com/
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