Punters can expect nothing but a barrage of hits when Killing Heidi perform at next year's Red Hot Summer Tour.
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"We don't really have any new stuff, and we just play the golden oldies," lead singer Ella Hooper said.
"We are doing this extended reunion, because it'll be 20 years since (debut album) Reflector came out, and we just want to focus on that.
"We feel so lucky to be back at it, celebrating that amazing time. We definitely are saying 'never say never' to the prospect of new music, but it's not really what we're focusing on right now. We're just delivering the hits."
The Australian rockers will be part of the Red Hot Summer Tour as it celebrates ten years in 2020.
ARIA Hall of Fame inductees Hunters & Collectors are reuniting to headline the tour, also bringing with them special guests James Reyne, The Living End, The Angels, Baby Animals and Boom Crash Opera.
The tour will visit Kiama Showground on Saturday, March 14.
Between them, the featured acts boast a plethora of hit songs and fan favourites.
"You can't try and compete with the other acts; you just have to bring your authentic game, and highlight what you do that no one else does," Hooper said
"It's not really a competition, because everyone loves a variety of flavours.
"I aim to bring a lot of colour, theatricality, that '90s pop/rock thing, which is different to the other acts... It's just a huge variety."
Killing Heidi won triple j's Unearthed competition in 1996 when Hooper was just 13, and as previously mentioned, the band will celebrate a milestone in 2020; two decades since the release of Reflector.
The hit singles - including Weir and Mascara - ensured the album took out four ARIA awards and attained four times platinum status.
It also catapulted Killing Heidi and its teen musicians - Ella and Jesse Hooper - into superstar status.
The band later took a decade-long hiatus, during which time Ella, now 36, enjoyed a career as a solo performer, radio presenter and TV personality.
"It's funny, because distance definitely makes the heart grow fonder," the vocalist laughed of the band's return in recent years.
"It's just fun. I get to dress up, sing my old songs, jump around with my brother and entertain thousands of people."
Looking back, how does Ella view her time as a teen star? "It's just my weird childhood, my weird life experience," she chuckled.
"It's interesting because I have got the perspective of having had commercial success. Which is rare, which is why people make a fuss about it, because not everybody gets to have those experiences.
"But I also have the experience now of being an independent musician, making my own albums and supporting myself.
"So I've got the contrast, and I think that's really lucky. I'm definitely more appreciative now than ever of the ride that we've had."
Tickets are on-sale on Thursday, August 8 from Ticketmaster.