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The LSXX Tour was a series of sixty concerts by the Breeders in 2013 to commemorate the twentieth anniversary of the release of their 1993 album Last Splash.

Background
In the early 1990s, Kim Deal was a member of both the Breeders and the Pixies; the latter broke up in 1993. When the Breeders released their second album Last Splash that same year—on 4AD Records—the group consisted of Kim and her twin sister Kelley Deal on guitar and vocals, Jim Macpherson on drums, and Josephine Wiggs on bass and vocals. The album sold well, reaching platinum status in the USA, and gold or silver in France, Australia, Canada, and the UK.

Between 1992 and September 1994, the Breeders had an intense schedule including touring and recording, and by autumn 1994 most of the band members were very tired. During the Lollapalooza tour in summer 1994, Deal mentioned to those around her that she wanted her next project to be solo, "something quick and dirty, under the radar ... without the pressure of following up [Last Splash's hit single] "Cannonball". In November 1994, Kelley Deal was arrested on drug-related charges, and for the next while needed to attend rehabilitation sessions.

Trying to distract her sister from her drug problems, Deal recruited Kelley to play on three songs at an early recording session. Kelley's involvement changed Deal's mind about the project being solo, and she began to conceptualize the album as a band project. She formed a group named the Amps, with fellow Daytonians Macpherson, Luis Lerma, and Nate Farley, and limited involvement by Kelley.

Wiggs chose not to work with Deal in the mid-90s—she was instead involved with multiple projects with members of Luscious Jackson —and there have been different accounts for why. In 2013, Wiggs said to interviewers including Spin's Amanda Petrusich that in 1995 she had offered to rejoin if the next album would be a Breeders' release, but that she was convinced Deal wanted to do a side project. Deal told Petrusich that she had wanted to record as the Breeders in 1995, but that Wiggs declined to be involved, wishing to take some time off. In 1996, Deal reformed the Breeders using the Amps' lineup of herself, Macpherson, Farley, and Lerma, as well as Carrie Bradley and Michelle Bodine. In several interviews in 1997, Deal complained that she had formed the Amps out of respect for Kelley and Wiggs, who needed time off, but that even in May 1996, around the end of the Amps' touring, Kelley and Wiggs still told her that they were not yet ready to rejoin the Breeders;  Deal wished then that she had instead recruited Farley and Lerma for the Breeders in 1994 after Lollapalooza, instead of forming the Amps.

During Deal's attempted recording sessions in 1997, different musicians including Macpherson found that her behavior and demanding musical standards created a difficult working environment. Deal has recalled of Macpherson's departure that he "took his drums and I never saw him again. E-ver. And it hurt my heart, cos he’s such a great guy and I felt dumb and I’m sure he did too, whatever, we don’t even know"; Macpherson has said that for 15 years "Kim thought I hated her, and I thought she hated me". By the time of the Breeders' next album, 2002's Title TK, Mando Lopez, Jose Medeles, and Richard Presley had replaced Wiggs and Macpherson; this same lineup, without Presley, performed on 2008's Mountain Battles and the Fate to Fatal EP (2009). Kim Deal has recalled that in the spring of 2012: "Kelley was on the couch ... and she said in a year it will be the 20th anniversary for Last Splash, and she wondered if [Wiggs and Macpherson] would do shows with us." When Kim contacted Wiggs, and Kelley phoned Macpherson, they found both enthusiastic about the prospect of reuniting for a 2013 tour.