Nothing More Brings the Carnal Nature Tour to Toronto
February 24, 2026 - Toronto, Canada
In the middle of their Carnal Nature tour, Nothing More fans packed into Toronto’s History, the venue filled wall to wall with excited anticipation. Supported by Catch Your Breath, Archers, and Doobie, the energy in the building was electric as crowd surfers and moshing started from the beginning of the very first set. Getting louder and louder throughout the night, energy buzzed through the crowd, everyone eagerly waiting for Nothing More to hit the stage.
Reminiscent of a title fight, drummer Ben Anderson, bassist Daniel Oliver, guitarist Mark Vollelunga, and lead singer Jonny Hawkins walked out one by one, each met by an overwhelming roar of cheers from the audience. Kicking right off into the first couple songs of the set list, including “House of Sand”, “Angel Song”, and “Let Em Burn”, the audience erupted, jumping and singing along as an unrelenting wave of crowd surfers fell toward the stage.
Nothing More dominated the room with a seemingly effortless confidence, holding the audience in their palms as they moved across the stage. Proving their control over the room, Nothing More slowed the crowd down for the second half of “Go to War”, asking the audience to help sing the song back to them, the repeated “Do we feel safe?” echoing in chorus across the venue.
Driving the energy in the room right back up, Archers lead singer Nathanael Pulley joined Nothing More on stage for “FREEFALL”, taking over the role of Chris Daughtry’s feature on the original recorded track. As Pulley left the stage, the band took a break from the setlist, dividing into dueling drums as Ben Anderson and Jonny Hawkins traded drum solos back and forth on two kits, bouncing off of each other, before Vollelunga stepped up to centre stage and ripped into a guitar solo. As Vollelunga stepped down from the platform at centre stage, he was replaced by bassist Daniel Oliver who played his own solo, before being joined by Vollelunga and Hawkins as they shared the bass, each simultaneously playing their own melody on the shared instrument.
When they stepped back to their original positions on stage, with their original instruments, Hawkins laughed as he shared that the band frequently argues amongst themselves on what track should come next on the setlist, letting the audience choose by listing a number of tracks, each met with a chorus of cheers. Sneaking a Nine Inch Nails cover as an option at the end of the list, the band happily indulged the crowd as a resounding scream of agreement swept through the audience, ripping into a cover of “We’re In This Together”.
Balancing the intensity of their heavy discography with a sense of soul and humour that feels like the band is having just as much fun as the audience, Nothing More offers a show you don’t want to miss. Catch them on tour now across North America until the middle of March before they head to Europe for a series of summer festivals.