The Alarm, who have been on a marathon 44-date tour of North America, will return to the UK for a winter tour of select city venues, including an opening night at the University of London Union ULU on November 28.

The band - led by Dyserth musician Mike Peters, are also putting together a Midsummer Gathering at Cardiff University for June 29, 2019 that will celebrate 30 years since the recording of their landmark 1989/90 single A New South Wales.

Morriston Orpheus Male Voice Choir, who also sang on the original recording, will reunite with The Alarm for this special event.

Tickets go on sale at the same time as the UK winter tour, with the full event bill to be announced at a later date.

“It’s always an immense honour for The Alarm to perform with the Morriston Orpheus”, said Peters.

“The times we have sung together in the past have been at some of the most profound moments in Alarm history, and the Midsummer Gathering in Cardiff on June 29th 2019 promises to be another one of those occasions.”

Since the June 26 release of new, acclaimed album Equals put the band back in the charts on both sides of the Atlantic, The Alarm have been performing non-stop, including an impromptu Beatles-style rooftop concert from Live Nation's New York City HQ on August 6 that was broadcast live on Facebook and attracted over 100,000 views.

The Alarm have also announced plans for their third annual US Gathering which will take place at New York's Gramercy Theatre and Irving Plaza over the weekend of April 12-13, 2019.

To coincide with all this activity, The Alarm's record label The Twenty First Century Recording Company/InGrooves, released Equals' stand-out track, Beautiful, to UK radio stations.

"The American Tour has been really exciting with lots of the shows sold-out in advance", said Peters.

"Performing tracks from Equals has brought a new energy to our concert performances and we can't wait to bring it all home to the UK this winter."

The Alarm was made in Wales and by the time of 1981's debut single Unsafe Building, featured a daring mix of amped-up acoustic guitars, harmonica and passionate vocals that invited the enduring description “Bob Dylan meets The Clash”.

This is the sound of The Alarm that has been heard around the world ever since, with 17 Top 50 UK singles, a host of successful albums and over 6 million album sales worldwide.

Following an initial breakthrough in the USA with 1983's The Stand, that recently triggered over 1.5 million Spotify hits after featuring in the Netflix’ TV series 13 Reasons Why, alongside the evergreen Sixty Eight Guns that entered into the UK chart soon after, The Alarm headlined their own 'Spirit of '86 Concert' before 26,000 fans in Los Angeles, that was beamed around the world via MTV's first ever live global satellite broadcast.

In the summer of 1991, the demands of the road were at the heart of a very public swan song for the original members at London's Brixton Academy, before the current line up emerged causing worldwide controversy in 2004 through The Poppy Fields fake band escapade.

The Alarm's return was halted almost immediately when, in late 2005, their frontman Mike Peters was diagnosed with a rare B-cell form of Leukemia, forcing the band into playing select shows, dictated by the chemotherapy / treatment regime that has kept Peters alive ever since.

A year later, Peters founded Love Hope Strength - which is dedicated to 'Saving Lives One Concert At A Time’ and can now lay claim to having registered over 170,000 individuals to the International Bone Marrow Donor Registry through its 'Get On The List' program in the UK / USA.

Despite travelling from relapse to remission and back (as documented by 2017’s award winning US Movie release - ‘Man In the Camo Jacket’), The Alarm family suffered another cruel blow, when Peters' wife Jules, was diagnosed with breast cancer during filming of a BBC Documentary about the band.

Broadcast nationally as ‘Mike and Jules – While We Still Have Time’, the raw footage touched many people’s lives and featured a moving tribute from Bono of U2.