Disclosure Just Wrapped the Largest North American Live Run of Their Career.
14 dates. Coachella twice. Denver three nights. Chicago three nights. Sun Comes Up Tremendous dropped in March. A new label launched. A new club series running. Brothers Guy and Howard Lawrence are moving in multiple directions at once and all of them are sick.
Fourteen cities. Two Coachella weekends. Three nights in Denver. Three nights in Chicago. Disclosure just finished the biggest North American live run of their career and walked off the stage at The Salt Shed Outfoors on May 9 leaving behind a trail of sold-out rooms and a scene that is very much asking the same question right now. What are Guy and Howard Lawrence building toward? Cause based on everything happening around them in 2026, the answer is something big and it feels close.

What the tour was all about
Over the past few Disclosure's live performances have evolved into something truly special, blending live instrumentation with layered visuals and a club-forward energy that bridges electronic music and live concert experience. The Spring 2026 run was the second chapter of that live concept, following the fall 2025 North American tour that first introduced the new show format. The difference between what Disclosure does live and what most electronic acts do live is totally different. There's a full live band element, real drums, real instrumentation, layered over the electronic production in a way that makes the whole thing feel more like a concert and less like a DJ set with a light show.
With support from JADALAREIGN, Todd Edwards, Chloé Robinson, Malugi, Laurence Guy and Mike Dunn across the tour dates, the supporting lineup reflected the duo's deep rooted connection to club culture and underground dance music. Todd Edwards specifically, one of the founding figures of UK garage and a producer who influenced the Lawrence brothers before they were even teenagers, opening for Disclosure in 2026 is one of those full circle moments that makes you appreciate how far this traveled.
The new music that is already arriving
The tour didn't happen in a creative vacuum. Disclosure have been releasing music steadily across 2025 and into 2026 and the trajectory of those releases is interesting to track.
Sun Comes Up Tremendous dropped in March 2026 as their most recent single, marking a new chapter in their sound. Before that came Deeper with Grammy-winning R&B star Leon Thomas, NO CAP with Anderson .Paak which earned a Grammy nomination for Best Dance/Electronic Recording, their tenth nomination overall, King Steps with Pa Salieu, and one2three with Chris Lake featuring Leven Kali. That is a run of collaborators that moves between underground house, Grammy-nominated R&B, and grime in the space of a few releases. The range is deliberate. Disclosure has never been on a band that stayed in one lane and 2026 is no different.
She's Gone Dance On, the track that has been making noise in clubs and shows all over the world, has received DJ support from Todd Edwards, Joy Anonymous, salute, DJ Seinfeld, Peggy Gou, Sammy Virji, John Summit and Dom Dolla. That list of supporters covers underground house, tech house, and every room size from intimate clubs to festival mainstages. A track that works across all of those contexts simultaneously is the kind of track that defines a moment and She's Gone Dance On has been doing exactly that.

The Friends and Family club series that nobody is talking about enough
While the live show has been taking the headline attention, something quieter and arguably more interesting has been happening in parallel. Disclosure launched a new club series called Friends and Family, curated by Guy, designed as a joyful space where Guy visits the world's most intimate venues to throw a party with friends who are DJs and family who are fans. Each unexpected lineup has included B2B sets from Cajmere, HAAI, Chloé Caillet, salute, Sammy Virji, DJ Tennis, TSHA, Duskus and many more. The series has given Disclosure fans old and new the chance to fully immerse themselves in their world, a very different but equally rewarding experience from their epic live shows.
This matters because it shows where Guy Lawrence's head is at when he isn't building a stadium-scale production. He's in small rooms with DJs he respects playing music for people who love it. That instinct, the one that sent two teenagers from Surrey down into the basements of UK club culture and never really left, is still fully operational.
Guy from Disclosure launched a new Friends and Family record label in March 2026, focused on showcasing up-and-coming talent and currently oriented around hard bassline UKG inspired sounds with demos open. A new label. A new club series. A new live show format. New singles dropping steadily. And a North American tour that just wrapped to consistently strong reviews fourteen cities.

What comes next
Disclosure have not announced their fifth studio album yet. But the volume and variety of what they have been releasing sinc 2024, the collaborators they are choosing, the label they just launched, and the club series they are running, all of it points toward a creative period.
The brothers from Surrey who were teenagers when Settle changed everything are now in their early to mid-thirties with ten Grammy nominations, 11 billion global streams, and a live show that fills rooms from Salt Shed Chicago to Coachella's main stages. They have earned the right to move at their own pace and in their own direction.
Whatever Disclosure does next, the foundation they built on the Spring 2026 North American tour makes the case that the next chapter is going to be worth paying attention to.



