The Toasters - Glasgow

Nice n' Sleazy, Glasgow.

The Toasters - Glasgow

Please contact the venue for accessibility information. The venue is located downstairs with no available access for wheelchair users.

This event is for 18 and over - No refunds will be issued for under 18s

Ticket type Cost (face value)? Quantity
GENERAL ADMISSION £19.80 (£18.00)
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More information about The Toasters - Glasgow tickets

New York City's pioneering SKA band The Toasters are going strong 45 years later, with a series of tours spanning North America to Europe in 2026. They are set to bring their sound to various cities as part of their 45 Years in SKA Tour, delivering the high-energy, brass-driven sound that has made them legends of the genre. 

"When the world gets turned upside down, when loyalties realign, when everyone expects conformity: Don't let the bastards grind you down. The Toasters, New York City's seminal ska band, have lived by this maxim since their founding in 1981 by sole constant Robert "Bucket" Hingley - even if those words waited until 1997 to appear (in the classic bastardized Latin) on a Toasters album of the same name.

Formed in an older, grittier NYC, The Toasters lit the fuse on the American ska explosion - the U.S. crest of ska's second, U.K.-bred wave, following the genre's birth a generation earlier in Jamaica. At the center of it all was Bucket, a British expatriate working at the Forbidden Planet comic bookstore who simply missed the 2 Tone ska sounds of his homeland. With little scene to speak of, he did what any self-respecting rude boy would do - he started his own band and he hasn't stopped, wave or no wave.

"Whether or not the mainstream media is paying attention to the genre is no real barometer about how well it's doing," Bucket tells Pure Honey. "And this 'wave' theory of ska is just a nuisance because it's just one wave that started in 1955, depending on who you listen to, right?"

The Toasters' early days were pure DIY hustle. Unable to find a label interested in their supercollider of ska, punk, reggae and New Wave, Bucket founded Moon Ska Records in 1983. Moon Ska would go on to become the Toasters' home and the epicenter of ska in the U.S., launching dozens of bands. The label folded in 2000 but The Toasters have racked up over 6,000 live shows as new recordings became distant images in the rearview.

Bucket sees more value in touring, the part he considers the most fun. "You have to be a little bit crazy, I suppose, but that works because I'm crazy as shit. I prefer to buy air tickets and go around the world and play shows," he says. "That's a much better delivery of the product right now."