Sienna Spiro has announced the My House Tour, adding her first headline dates in Australia and New Zealand to a run that will stretch across North America, Asia, the UK and Europe. The tour begins Oct. 13 at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium and closes Jan. 27 at Auckland Town Hall.
The timing gives fans a short window to move. Ticket presales begin Tuesday, June 16 at 10 a.m. local time, and public on-sale starts Thursday, June 18 at 10 a.m. local time, with the antipodean leg opening at Fremantle Arts Centre on Saturday, Jan. 16 before stops in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. By the time Spiro reaches Auckland, the tour will have carried her from Tennessee to the Pacific after a rollout that now spans multiple continents.
The announcement lands as demand around Spiro keeps building. Her debut album, Visitor, arrives July 3 on Capitol Records and is available now for pre-order, even though her music has already amassed more than 1.2 billion global streams. In late March, she had three singles climbing the Hot 100 at once, a rare burst of momentum for an artist still being introduced to many listeners through a first full-length project.
That contrast helps explain why this tour matters beyond the dates themselves. Visitor was previewed last week with the official video for The Visitor, a song written and produced by Spiro with Omer Fedi and Michael Pollack and backed by a 20-piece string orchestra led and arranged by Peter Rotter. The album arrives after a spring U.S. leg that used plush curtains, carpeted floors, vintage audio equipment, lamps and vinyl records to frame the show, a setup that drew strong notices and sharpened the sense that the live presentation is becoming part of the appeal.
For Spiro, the new route is less a victory lap than a widening lane. She has already been cast by some critics as one of the strongest voices of her generation, and her first headline shows in Australia and New Zealand turn that attention into a test of scale. The immediate question now is not whether the demand exists, but which cities beyond the announced stops will fill out the North American, Asian, UK and European legs before the tour finally reaches Auckland.
