Japan's experimental extreme metal pioneers Sigh are returning to the U.S.
for a week-long tour, starting with the Fire in the Mountains festival (July 23-26, 2026) and extending to stops in Seattle, Portland, Sacramento, Berkeley, and Los Angeles.
The tour marks their first US performance in nearly two decades since their last visit in 2008.
Sigh will share the stage with progressive metal outfit Dreadnought from Denver, CO.
Frontman Mirai Kawashima expressed his excitement about the tour: "I am really excited that Sigh are finally touring the US again.
We played at some US festivals, but the last 'tour' was in 2008, so this is going to be the first US tour in nearly 2 decades!" He added, "I am 100% sure that now we have the strongest line-up ever during our 36-year career.
Definitely you have never seen a stage like ours before." For Dreadnought, the opportunity is equally momentous.
Kelly Schilling shared: "We are honored to join the legends Sigh on tour following our Fire in the Mountains appearance! We will be performing new music in anticipation of something new to come…" The tour dates include: 7/23 Blackfeet Nation MT Fire in the Mountains, 7/26 Seattle WA El Corazon, 7/28 Portland OR Star Theater, 7/29 Sacramento CA Cafe Colonial, 7/30 Berkeley CA Cornerstone, and 7/31 Los Angeles CA 1720.
The tour is part of Sigh's larger itinerary that includes Fire in the Mountains festival.
Fire in the Mountains continues to establish itself as North America's most immersive heavy music experience.
Combining music, art, education, food, and social responsibility, the festival is designed to reconnect attendees with nature while delivering unforgettable performances under open skies.
Other festival highlights include 16 Horsepower, Enslaved, Baroness, Borknagar, Yob, The Ruins of Beverast, SubRosa, Full of Hell, Gallowbraid, Wayfarer, Old Man Gloom, Raven Chacon & Iggor Cavalera, Midwife, Phobophilic, Tarantella, Yaotl Mictlan, Savage Oath, Galvanist, Nocturne, and El Welk.
From atmospheric black metal to doom, folk, and experimental soundscapes, the bill once again reflects the festival's commitment to music that feels elemental — best experienced beneath open skies and mountain horizons.