Georgia Nevada’s Backfire UK Tour
There’s a difference between documenting a show and documenting a moment.
When Georgia Nevada announced her Backfire UK Tour, it was clear this wasn’t just another run of dates. This was a step forward. A shift. The kind of moment that quietly marks the beginning of something bigger.
We had first worked with Georgia properly on the final date of her support run with When Rivers Meet, and even then there was a sense of momentum building. The kind you notice if you’re paying attention. So when the opportunity came to be part of her own tour, we didn’t hesitate. We reached out, secured the final two dates, and set out to capture what felt like an important chapter.
Manchester first. Then Bath the following night.
Back-to-back shows that would close out her first full UK band tour for the album. A milestone that deserved more than surface-level coverage.
From the moment we arrived, the intention was clear. This wasn’t about turning up, getting a few strong shots and moving on. It was about capturing the full picture. The scale of the shows, the energy of the rooms, the connection between Georgia and her band, and the quieter moments in between that often go unseen but say just as much.
On stage, everything felt established. Not tentative, not experimental, confident. The kind of performance that comes from knowing exactly what you’re building. The band moved as one, the sound filled the room properly, and the audience responded in a way that told you this wasn’t just a crowd watching a set. They were invested.
But it’s never just about what happens under the lights.
Some of the most important moments happen just off to the side. The conversations. The focus before walking on stage. The reset between songs. The small interactions that don’t make it into the setlist but shape the experience of being there. We made sure those were captured too. Because that’s where the story lives.
Over the two nights, we shot extensively. Intentionally. Not for the sake of volume, but for what that volume represents later. This wasn’t content just for the week of the tour. It was material that Georgia can use as she continues to grow. For promotion, for press, for future releases, and for the simple fact that one day, these shows will be looked back on as part of where it all started to scale.
Manchester brought a raw, driving energy. Bath felt more atmospheric, more reflective, the kind of final show where everything settles into place. Two different rooms, two different crowds, but one consistent feeling throughout. Progress.
That’s what this tour represented.
Artists don’t get many moments like this. First full band tours don’t come around twice. They mark a point in time where everything steps up, even if it’s only obvious in hindsight. Being there to capture it properly means that moment doesn’t get lost.
Because years from now, when people look back at Georgia Nevada’s journey, this tour will be part of that story.
And now, it’s been documented the way it should be.