Multi-Platinum, two-time JUNO award-winning rock icons Alexisonfire will celebrate the 20th Anniversary of their Platinum-selling, #1 album ‘Crisis’ with a special performance at RBC Amphitheatre in Toronto on August 14, 2026. The evening will be a unique celebration, beginning with a front-to-back performance of ‘Crisis’ in its entirety, followed by a career-spanning set honoring the band’s legacy and enduring impact on fans around the world.
Joining AOF as support is Underoath, a three-time Grammy-nominated, U.S. Gold certified five-piece, and one of the most influential post-hardcore bands in modern heavy music. Rounding out the bill is Vancouver’s Computer, an experimental rock band recently signed to Dine Alone Records.
An artist presale begins Wednesday, February 4 at 10:00am ET via Ticketmaster. Fans will receive a password to access the presale via Alexisonfire’s mailing list and social media. General Public on sale commences Friday, February 6 at 10:00am ET with tickets available via Ticketmaster. Fans are encouraged to stay tuned to Alexisonfire’s social media platforms for announcements of exclusive ‘Crisis’ 20th Anniversary related merchandise and initiatives. Alexisonfire has partnered with PLUS1 so that $1 per ticket goes to supporting organizations working for equity, access, and dignity for all.
‘Crisis’, released on August 22, 2006, debuted at #1 on the Top 200 SoundScan – one of only four Canadian artists to have a #1 debut that year including Nelly Furtado and Billy Talent – and is one of the band’s most successful albums. The LP hit #5 on Billboard’s Top Heatseekers chart, #18 on the U.S. Nielsen SoundScan Independent Album chart, and made waves worldwide charting in the UK and Australia’s ARIA charts. The music video for ‘This Could Be Anywhere in the World’ also won Best Cinematography at the 2007 MuchMusic Video Awards.
The album which Billboard lauded as, ‘the band’s best album yet’, took Alexisonfire across the globe, launching them on a massive two‑year world tour where they headlined across Canada (twice), the US, Europe, the UK, and Australia. It literally put the band on the map, and its impact was further solidified when the record made Kerrang’s Top 50 Albums of the 21st Century, a huge honour considering the list featured seminal releases by Green Day, Muse, Nine Inch Nails, Metallica, My Chemical Romance, and more.
With songs ranging in subject matter from the Blizzard of ’77 (‘Crisis’) to disenfranchised workers (‘Boiled Frogs’), the album embodied a much darker theme than previous Alexisonfire recordings, which the popular quintet attributed to returning home from traveling around the world with a fresh perspective. The gravity of ‘Crisis’ is underscored by its cover art, which features Erno Rossi’s haunting photographs of the Niagara region during the Blizzard of ’77, including an image of a victim with frostbitten hands. The title track itself contains multiple lyrical references to the storm, including the repeated refrain, “one nine seven seven”. The album also marked a much more “rhythmically liberal” process in the studio, with AOF stripping everything down to write and record an album that captured the essence of the band’s live sound, without looping, overdubs, or layered production.
“It feels like you blink and all of a sudden your album is almost old enough to drink in the United States,” jokes AOF frontman George Pettit. “So many incredible memories of making this record. It felt like we were really coming into our own as a band. We discovered another level of potential that we didn’t have at the start. I’m happy we get to relive it this summer with all of you.”

