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State Champs bring ‘Around the World and Back’ full circle with Brooklyn Paramount show

state champs band
State Champs celebrate 10 years of ‘Around the World and Back’ on their anniversary tour, coming to Brooklyn Paramount in January.
Drew Portalatin/Josiah Van Dien

When pop-punk band State Champs first wrote the song “Losing Myself” for their 2015 album “Around the World and Back,” lead singer Derek DiScanio had no idea just how deeply he’d connect with its lyrics ten years later.

“It was my favorite song back then, but I didn’t really know what it meant,” he told Brooklyn Paper. “And now going back to and listening to ‘Losing Myself,’ I’m like, I knew that was my favorite song on the album, but I wasn’t really sure why. It’s about not really knowing what you’re going to get into, but you’re going to lose yourself in the moment.”

One line in particular — “We attract what we’re ready for” — has stayed with DiScanio since the song’s release. Fans often ask him to write it out so they can turn it into a tattoo, carrying the lyric with them wherever they go.

“I almost want to get one, too,” he laughed. “I think I have to.”

Since the release of “Around the World and Back,” State Champs have done exactly that.

From the band’s basement beginnings to sold-out shows across the globe — and now, their first time headlining Brooklyn Paramount, a personal favorite of DiScanio’s — the band is bringing the album full circle with a special, limited-run anniversary tour.

brooklyn paramount
The Brooklyn Paramount. File photo by Paul Frangipane

For DiScanio, the eight-show run isn’t about reliving the past so much as sharing the present with fans who have grown alongside the band. Revisiting the album’s 11 songs, he said they feel more personal now than they did a decade ago.

“It’s so funny,” he said. “I wrote a lot of those lyrics with no real intention, and without knowing what it was going to mean to me. Ten years later, some of them mean more to me than they did when I wrote them in the first place. It was a prequel to life. It was like foreshadowing.”

The band — led by DiScanio alongside guitarist Tyler Szalkowski, bassist Ryan Scott Graham and drummer Evan Ambrosio — handpicked the cities for the anniversary tour, choosing the places that mean the most to them personally. Other stops include their hometown, Albany, as well as Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Philadelphia and Los Angeles. 

“We only picked our favorite markets and our favorite cities and our favorite venues to do them all at. So New York City had to be one. Brooklyn had to be one,” DiScanio said. “In Brooklyn, Paramount has become one of my favorite venues, but we’ve never played it yet. I’ve DJ’ed there for Emo Night, I’ve attended shows, and I was like, I wonder if the Champs are big enough to blow this place out. Sure enough, it’s going fast.”

The anniversary shows promise to be a full celebration of the album, performed in its entirety.

“There are a few songs on it that we’ve never played, ever, ever, ever … ‘Back and Forth’ is one, ‘Breaking Ground’ is a song we haven’t played in years, ‘Tooth and Nail’ is a song we haven’t played in years,” DiScanio said.

Fans will experience the album played front to back, just as they first fell in love with it — though the band briefly flirted with a reshuffle — before State Champs launch into hits from their other albums.

“We want to throw in fan favorites and not leave any stone unturned or let people be like, ‘Well, you didn’t play my favorite song,’” DiScanio said.

Fan experience is key to the tour, he added, because the show is just as much a tribute to “Around the World and Back” as it is to them.

“Some of our fans came to our shows 10, 12 years ago. Now some of them even have kids, and they’re the ones crowd surfing,” DiScanio said. “It’s a really cool Circle of Life moment for us. The goal is still the same: to grow our brand and to build this community and build the engagement that we’ve had with the people that let us do this in the first place.”

Of course, with all that nostalgia comes a little wear and tear.

“Everyone’s got to stretch out a little more,” DiScanio laughed. “Some people might not be able to crowd surf like they once used to… Myself included, I used to stage dive into the crowd. I don’t know if that’s for me anymore.”

Offstage, the band’s journey has been just as transformative as the one onstage

“All of us were living with our moms and dads, and now some of us have kids of our own, are married, and bought houses,” DiScanio said. “We’ve been through the high highs, the low lows, partied a little too hard, and been screwed over in ways.”

“I thought I was invincible,” he added of the old him. “I’d tell my younger self to take care of my voice a little more, live in the moment, enjoy every second, and always give back to the fans.”

state champs singer
State Champs frontman Derek DiScanio.Photo courtesy of Loreal Reyes

The shows are being supported by a mix of longtime friends and up-and-coming bands, creating a community-driven experience that mirrors the band’s journey. New York crowds will see Broadside, Real Friends, and Cartel — a particularly meaningful addition to the lineup.

“Cartel was the first band me and Tyler covered in his basement when we were 16,” he said. “Now they’re supporting us at the Brooklyn Paramount, like what the heck happened? It’s really cool to call those guys friends now and have them say, ‘We want to be part of it.’ It’s kind of like a bucket-list moment.”

The shows will also feature State Champs’ most ambitious production yet.

“We’ve amped up the stage and production every time we headline, but this is going to be the biggest and best production stage-wise that Stage Amps has ever put on,” DiScanio said.

It’s been a year now since their fifth, self-titled album, which DiScanio said the band is still “riding the wave” of. But as they look back to their start in smaller venues, they’re also looking ahead.

“We’re excited now to kind of dive into the next year, which is 2026, where we’re going to get back into the studio and work on album number six,” he told Brooklyn Paper. “We’re going to put down a lot of new singles we’ve already been demoing and writing for that. The engine keeps going. It doesn’t stop, it doesn’t take a breath. We’re always excited for new material, and we’re never not going to be on the road.”

As the band gears up to hit the road again, the frontman says he’s looking forward to Brooklyn, where he’ll have “the best seat in the house.”

“This is for the fans. We can’t do this without people giving a single f—am I able to swear?” DiScanio asked (we said yes). “The fact that they still give a f-ck is the reason we’re able to put on a show like this. Honestly, I’m more excited to watch them than they are to watch me.”

The show takes place at Brooklyn’s Paramount, 385 Flatbush Ave Ext. in Downtown Brooklyn, on Thursday, Jan. 16, 2026. Tickets are available now through Ticketmaster or the venue’s box office.