Timmy Trumpet previews new tour, single and baseball anthem roots
Timmy Trumpet is pairing a new single and 2026 tour with the baseball anthem that made him a Queens favorite. His live trumpet has become part of dance music’s crossover playbook.

Timmy Trumpet is leaning into the same formula that turned him from a club act into a sports-venue favorite: live brass, high-energy dance music and a clear grip on American pop culture. In a conversation with Stephanie Ramos, the Australian DJ and musician discussed his new tour and his single “All My Life,” while the broader story around his rise still points back to a sound built on trumpet lines that travel well beyond the festival stage.
The new release, “All My Life (feat. John Martin),” is a Timmy Trumpet x Frank Walker collaboration issued on Spinnin’ Records in 2026. It fits neatly into Trumpet’s signature lane, where instrumentals are not decoration but the hook itself. Trumpet has described himself as a trained jazz musician and composer, a background that helps explain why his work bridges electronic dance floors and live performance settings in a way many DJs cannot.
That crossover appeal has been most visible in baseball. “Narco,” the brass-heavy track by Blasterjaxx and Timmy Trumpet, became the entrance music for New York Mets closer Edwin Díaz and evolved into a fan anthem in Queens. MLB later described it as one of the game’s most recognizable closer songs, and noted that Trumpet even performed the melody live at Citi Field in August 2022. The pairing gave the song a second life beyond streaming, tying it to the roar of a ballpark and the ritual of a late-inning entrance.

Trumpet’s 2026 touring calendar shows the same international reach. His official website lists dates across the United States, Canada and Europe, including stops in Dallas, Las Vegas and Toronto, followed by festival appearances in France, Spain, Poland, Italy, Germany, Portugal, Belgium and other markets. That routing underscores how dance artists increasingly build American audiences not just through radio or playlists, but by folding themselves into stadium culture, tour circuits and personality-driven media moments that make a club act feel like a larger public brand.
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