POISON May Tour in 2027 — Rikki Rockett Reveals Ba...

POISON May Tour in 2027 — Rikki Rockett Reveals Band Has Received a Tour Offer

Poison drummer Rikki Rockett has delivered an encouraging update for fans who have been waiting patiently for news of the band’s return to the road. Speaking to Josh Klinger of Rock 95.5 Chicago, Rockett revealed that Poison has received a concrete tour offer for 2027 — and that a band meeting with management to discuss it was scheduled for the very next day. Furthermore, he confirmed his plans to perform Poison‘s debut album Look What the Cat Dragged In in its entirety with his new project The Rockett Mafia, marking the record’s 40th anniversary in a way that Poison itself would likely never do.

A 2027 Tour Offer Is on the Table

Rockett was candid and clearly excited about the developments surrounding a potential Poison return to touring. His words had the energy of someone who could sense that something significant was about to happen.

Transcribed by Blabbermouth.net from Rock 95.5 Chicago:

“I don’t wanna throw anybody under the bus — I’m not gonna do that — but I will say this: literally tomorrow we are having a conversation with management. We have been made an offer for 2027, and we’re going to talk as a band and with management. And I will know more tomorrow. It’s a shame we’re not doing the interview tomorrow. So hopefully everything will work out and we’ll be able to get on track and do something.”

The Rikki Rockett Poison 2027 tour Look What the Cat Dragged In anniversary story therefore begins with a concrete and time-sensitive development. A real offer exists. A real conversation is happening. And Rockett‘s optimism — carefully balanced with appropriate caution — suggests that the momentum is genuine.

His refusal to “throw anybody under the bus” regarding why the 40th anniversary tour did not happen in 2026 speaks to a deliberate desire to keep things positive. Whatever internal complications prevented the band from marking the milestone year, Rockett is not interested in relitigating them publicly.

Everything Happens for a Reason

Rockett also offered a philosophical perspective on the 2026 situation — one that reframes the missed anniversary in a surprisingly amusing light.

“Maybe everything happens for a reason. I mean, it’s just so funny that if POISON would do a 41st anniversary. I mean, we almost got killed by a disco ball. We almost got killed by pressing hands on a tour bus and falling out of the bus. I mean, we can be a comedy of errors at times, but usually those errors work out some way, somehow and turn into something cool. So I’m hoping this does.”

This is vintage Rikki Rockett — self-deprecating, warm, and entirely without ego. The disco ball and the tour bus references hint at a band whose history has never been short of chaos and drama. Nevertheless, Rockett‘s point is genuine. Poison has always found a way to turn its complications into something worthwhile. Consequently, a 41st anniversary tour — however unconventional the number — might just end up being the perfect Poison move.

The Rockett Mafia and the Full Album Show

While fans wait for news on the Poison front, Rockett has his own exciting plans underway. The Rikki Rockett Poison 2027 tour Look What the Cat Dragged In anniversary story runs alongside a separate but equally compelling project — his new band The Rockett Mafia, which will perform Look What the Cat Dragged In in its entirety as a 40th anniversary tribute.

POISON would probably never have done the whole record in its entirety. And we’re doing it from first note to last note — last scream, I said. So we’re doing the whole record, and then some other things we’re gonna throw in, too. A couple of B-sides that POISON never does, and couple of DEVIL CITY ANGELS songs, because Brandon and I were in DEVIL CITY ANGELS. So it’ll be a really, really cool night.”

This is a genuinely exciting prospect for longtime Poison fans. Look What the Cat Dragged In — released in 1986 — launched one of glam metal’s most beloved bands and contained hit after hit, including Talk Dirty to MeI Want ActionCry Tough, and the title track. Hearing those songs performed from first note to last, in sequence, is something Poison itself has never offered its fanbase.

Furthermore, the addition of rare B-sides and Devil City Angels material gives the show a depth and variety that makes it genuinely worth attending — not just as a nostalgia exercise, but as a complete musical event.

The Rockett Mafia Lineup

The Rockett Mafia brings together an impressive collection of rock talent for this project. Rockett handles drums. Brandon Gibbs of Devil City Angels takes on vocal and guitar duties. Stacey Blades of L.A. Guns contributes guitar and backing vocals. And Tyson Leslie rounds out the lineup on bass and backing vocals.

Each member brings serious rock credentials to the project. Blades in particular — with his L.A. Guns pedigree — adds an authentic Sunset Strip DNA that fits the spirit of Look What the Cat Dragged In perfectly. Consequently, The Rockett Mafia is not simply a covers band assembled for one night. It is a proper rock outfit built around a specific and meaningful creative purpose.

Doing Something Poison Wouldn’t Do

Rockett was refreshingly direct about his motivation for putting The Rockett Mafia together — and why it felt distinct from anything Poison or Bret Michaels would do.

“I just thought, again, it’s something POISON wouldn’t do. I don’t wanna do something Bret [MichaelsPOISON frontman] would do [with his solo band]. I don’t wanna do something POISON would do at this point in time. I mean, back in the day, of course, we did the whole record, because those were the songs that we had.”

This is an honest and creatively motivated statement. Rockett is not trying to compete with Poison or replicate what Michaels does on his own. He is carving out a distinct space — one that honors Poison‘s debut album in a way that only he, as one of its original architects, is uniquely positioned to do.

Furthermore, his acknowledgment that Poison performed the full album back in the day — simply because those were the songs they had — adds a lovely historical context to the current project. What was once necessity has become, forty years later, a genuine artistic choice.

What Fans Can Look Forward To

The Rikki Rockett Poison 2027 tour Look What the Cat Dragged In anniversary story offers two distinct and exciting prospects for fans. On one front, a Poison reunion tour in 2027 appears more likely than it has in some time — with a real offer on the table and a band meeting already scheduled. On the other, The Rockett Mafia‘s full album show offers an intimate and rare opportunity to hear Look What the Cat Dragged In performed completely and in order.

Both possibilities reflect Rockett‘s genuine enthusiasm for the music and the legacy of Poison — as well as his desire to keep pushing forward creatively rather than simply waiting for the band machine to turn back on.

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