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Olivia Rodrigo is returning to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame stage on Friday (Nov. 3), as it was announced this week that she’ll be performing for the second year in a row. Explore Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news “@oliviarodrigo will perform with one of her […]

The Huey Lewis & the News musical, The Heart of Rock and Roll, is headed to Broadway in the spring of 2024. According to The New York Times, the comedic show that had its debut at the Old Globe Theater in San Diego in 2018, tells the story of a couple whose romance has to “navigate their rock band and corporate life aspirations.”

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The “feel-great” musical is slated to begin previews at the James Earl Jones Theater on March 29 and open on April 22, with no cast announced yet. The show borrows its title from the song of the same name released by the 1980s pop-rock band that peaked at No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the spring of 1984, spending 20 weeks on the chart.

The $16 million show will be directed by Gordon Greenberg (Holiday Inn), with choreography by Lorin Latarro (The Who’s Tommy) and a book by Jonathan A. Abrams based on a story by Abrams and Tyler Mitchell.

Lewis and the News’ fourth album, 1986’s Fore!, scored the group their last No. 1 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 chart with “Stuck With You” spending three weeks at the top, along with another chart-topper, “Jacob’s Ladder,” which spent one week at the pinnacle. The album also featured the No. 3 hit “Hip to Be Square,” the No. 6 hit “Doing It All For My Baby” and the No. 9 charter “I Know What I Like”; the band landed their first No. 1 hit, 1985’s “The Power of Love” from the Back to the Future soundtrack.

Lewis posted an announcement about the show on Wednesday (Nov. 1) morning, in which he said he first fell in love with “all that is Broadway when I appeared as Billy Flynn in the musical Chicago in 2009. And I continue to believe that musical theater — because it’s so demanding — is also the most rewarding form of artistic expression.”

Lewis said his team has been working on the “funny and smart… lot of heart” show for a long time and that they’re very proud of the results. He also clarified that he won’t be appearing in it and that it’s not the story of his life, but that it does feature all the band’s biggest hits, including: “The Power of Love,” “Hip to Be Square,” “If This Is It,” “Doing It All For My Baby,” “I Want a New Drug,” “Jacob’s Ladder,” “Back in Time” and more.

Watch the Broadway announcement below.

In 1991, Prince was at an unusual point in his career. With four Billboard Hot 100 No. 1s under his belt (of an eventual five) and a string of critically acclaimed blockbuster LPs to his name, he was one of the most successful and celebrated names in pop music. Big enough that just two years prior, he could dash off some goofy jams for a superhero flick and top both the Hot 100 and Billboard 200.
But 1990 wasn’t a kind year to the artist soon to be known as the Artist Formerly Known as Prince. The idiosyncratic trailblazer put a lot of effort into directing, starring in and composing music for Graffiti Bridge — a movie sold as a sequel to the smash film Purple Rain — only to see it collapse at the box office. And while his directorial debut, 1986’s Under the Cherry Moon, was a similar flop, he could at least save face thanks to its hit soundtrack, Parade, which produced the all-time pop jam “Kiss.”

No such luck with the Graffiti Bridge soundtrack, however: other than “Thieves in the Temple” – which went top 10 and topped Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs – audiences and critics responded to the movie’s songs with polite enthusiasm. What may have really stung, however, was the fact that Graffiti Bridge, as a film and album, seemed out of step with a new decade. In 1991, Prince wasn’t passé – but he certainly didn’t seem to be steering the direction of pop or R&B radio any longer.

“It’s no secret that toward the end of the ‘80s, things were getting really sort of mysterious — it was hard to tell where Prince was going,” says drummer Michael Bland, who worked with Prince from 1989-1996, with a laugh. “I know that a lot of people counted him out and said, ‘you know, well, that’s it for the hits.’”

“[Graffiti Bridge] was a pretty good, solid record,” says Michael Koppelman, who engineered that album and would go on to engineer, mix and master Prince’s following album, Diamonds and Pearls. “The movie was pretty bad and skipped over in a lot of people’s heads, so I think he wanted to prove something after Graffiti Bridge was not Purple Rain. Diamonds and Pearls was a departure into a more social thing with his band, which I think was a very positive thing for him.”

Diamonds and Pearls — which was recently given a lush re-release in several different iterations, with the Super Deluxe Edition boasting 11 never-before-released tracks – originally came out on Oct. 1, 1991, and marked the full-album debut of New Power Generation, Prince’s first backing band since the Revolution. NPG was primarily made up of players from 1990’s Nude Tour, including fresh faces from the Minneapolis music scene as well as friends Prince had known for years. “I was the youngest there – I joined Prince’s band when I was 19,” Bland informs Billboard. On the flip side, bassist Sonny T. grew up with Prince. “He played guitar and sang background on one of my first demos,” Sonny T. tells Billboard. “When we were kids, he brought [his 1978 debut For You] to my house.”

While Prince was inarguably in command of the Diamonds and Pearls sessions (“Imagine going into the military” Bland quips), the mood was noticeably lighter in the studio, according to Koppelman. “They were joking around, it was a lot more social [than Graffiti Bridge],” he says. “He really liked the musicians in New Power Generation. Like any musician, it’s fun to play with musicians you respect and like.”

“He was around people that he knew and grew up around – it’s kind of like having family around,” Sonny T. says. “It’s like Old Home Week. It was cool.”

Photo credit: © Paisley Park Enterprises | Photographer: Randee St. Nicholas

The mixture of younger talent and familiar faces seemed to have an invigorating effect on the Purple One. While Diamonds and Pearls isn’t a masterpiece in the vein of Dirty Mind or Sign ‘O the Times, it’s an essential second-tier title in his oeuvre with an urgency and focus absent from his previous three LPs. In terms of re-establishing his commercial bona fides at the top of a new decade, the album sold 2.5 million copies in the U.S., according to Luminate — making it his best-selling album released in the 1990s. Plus, it gave him four top 40 singles on the Hot 100: the chart topper “Cream,” which came (so to speak) with a scandalous video; the lush, No. 3-peaking title track; the cool, effortless “Money Don’t Matter 2 Night”; and the hard, horny funk of “Gett Off.”

The lattermost single boasts a spotlight-stealing vocal (and scream) from NPG member Rosie Gaines, whose impact on the album extended well past what’s on wax.

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“I’m one of the few people that point out that Prince could be a dick,” Koppelman says, smiling. “I don’t think it was necessarily trying to be a dick… but I think he made people nervous purposely to keep people on edge. Rosie broke all of that up. She and Prince had a very friendly relationship that was just infectious. She was so f—king good. When he brought her in to do something, he was just blown away. She was just absolutely lovable and this ray of sunshine.”

Their chemistry is abundantly clear from watching Live at Glam Slam, a concert filmed at Prince’s Minneapolis club Glam Slam on Jan. 11, 1992, which is newly available on the Diamonds and Pearls box set. The concert documentary finds Prince and Gaines trading vocals on an incendiary version of “Nothing Compares 2 U”; not only does Gaines push him vocally, but she teases out his impish sense of humor, particularly during a hilarious moment that finds him batting his eyelashes at her with a Chaplin-esque charm.

Live at Glam Slam also reveals how ridiculously well-rehearsed NPG was – six minutes into a 14-minute “Gett Off,” Prince cries out “double time!” and the outfit shifts gears into maximum overdrive without missing a beat.

Of course, Prince was just as demanding of his band off stage. Koppelman, Bland and Sonny T. all talk about the long hours spent recording Diamonds and Pearls over the course of a year. “He was he was a disciplinarian. He knew what he wanted to hear,” Sonny T. says, sharing that rehearsal might run from lunchtime to 9 at night, followed by hours of studio time until “three or four” in the morning. “Sometimes I just didn’t go home – I’d sleep at Paisley Park, go upstairs, take a shower and then start rehearsal again.”

Plenty of the songs took shape over the course of months, with NPG band members learning what songs made the album – and in what shape — along with the wider public. “Unless he felt the desire to show you what he’d been working on, you were just in the dark until he turned the light on,” Bland notes, which he says was the case with “Push,” “Strollin’” and “Willing and Able” to varying degrees. Other tracks – like “Money Don’t Matter 2 Night” (which Bland worked on in Tokyo while fighting a stomach bug) and “Cream” were faster. “[‘Cream’] just came out, just kaboom,” says Koppelman. “I told Prince immediately, ‘Prince, you need to release this song, it’s gong to be a hit,” Sonny T. recalls of “Cream.” “First, he gave me that look – you know, the Prince look? Then he’s like, ‘okay.’ Then it was a hit – he couldn’t say nothing after that.”

Sonny T. remembers Tony M.’s rapped verses on Diamonds and Pearls coming out with similar alacrity. Tony M., who began working with Prince as a breakdancer on the Purple Rain film, eventually graduated to on-mic talent, with his verses factoring heavily into Diamonds and Pearls. “He’s just such a great lyricist. He would just write lyrics, right on the spot, just boom, boom, boom, boom,” says Sonny T.

“There was a whole other idea for how Diamonds and Pearls might’ve been, but I think it leaned a little too hard on the hip-hop of the day,” Bland opines. Thanks to the expanded reissue, we can sample some of the hip-hop-influenced tracks Prince left on the cutting room floor, such as “Something Funky (This House Comes)” and “Glam Slam ’91.” “I’m not sure what made him change gears or what informed his creative process to turn to a more commercial direction,” Bland says. “Diamonds and Pearls is a very positive, bright record. It’s friendly. But there’s some serious playing on that record.”

“I tend to think of, you know, Controversy and Purple Rain as the best of his career,” says Koppeman. “But it’s super gratifying [to have worked on songs that are] an important part of Prince’s career.”

“When we got on stage together, that was one of my favorite things that’s ever happened to me in my life,” says Sonny T. “We really moved as a unit – it’s just clean, cool. And that’s a fun thing.”

“I like that I was one of the tools he used to get back on top. We all take pride in that – he chose mostly young, local musicians to reinvigorate his creative process,” Bland says. “Creatively, he kind of had been dwindling in a dark place. And I feel like we helped chase the clouds away a bit.”

Photo credit: © Paisley Park Enterprises | Photographer: Randee St. Nicholas

Travis Barker and Kourtney Kardashian could be parents by the time you read this. The Blink-182 drummer and the reality TV star are expecting their first child together any minute now and in a new podcast interview on One Life One Chance with Toby Morse, Barker seemed to accidentally reveal the name of their soon-to-bounce baby.
In fact, according to Barker, Kardashian’s due date was yesterday (Oct. 31). “When Rocky’s born I’ll be the father of seven,” Barker said proudly on the show about his father duties in his blended family with Kardashian. The child’s until-now kind-of secret name was first revealed when host Morse asked Barker if he’d ever reunite with his all-star punk-hip-hop group, The Transplants.

The group fronted by Rancid singer/guitarist Tim Armstrong and Rob Aston has been on an unofficial hiatus since 2017, but Barker said they were signed up to play a benefit show this year before life got in the way. “There’s one that’s a benefit for Hawaii that we were going to do, but it’s the week that Rocky’s due,” Barker said, appearing to confirm rumors that the baby’s name is Rocky. Barker then revealed the baby’s full handle: Rocky Thirteen Barker, which Morse dubbed “such a hard name.”

“I was like, ‘he’s going to come out of my wife’s vagina doing front kicks and push-ups,’” Barker laughed, before saying that Kardashian’s due date was Halloween. Morse joked that the dress-up loving couple could not have planned it better. “I know. It’s either Halloween or like, the first week of November,” Barker said.

Back in July, Barker and his 17-year-old daughter from his previous marriage, Alabama, joked about some potential baby names, with ‘Bama tossing out high-end ones including, “Audemars, Milan f–kin’ Patek.” At the time, Travis said he had something more punk rock in mind, first floating the “Rocky Thirteen” moniker. Barker explained that the name was not inspired by Sylvester Stallone’s fictional Philly pugilist, but rather by Suicidal Tendencies guitarist Rocky George and the drummer’s favorite number.

Barker and Kardashian — who has three children with her ex Scott Disick: Mason, 13, Penelope, 11 and Reign, 8 — announced they were expecting their first child together in June. The baby news reveal came in early June when Kardashian held up a “Travis I’m Pregnant” poster in the crowd at Blink-182’s concert in Los Angeles. Last month, Kardashian revealed that she had an ultrasound that “saved my baby’s life,” following urgent fetal surgery in September that had Barker flying home from Blink’s overseas tour.

Listen to Barker on One Life One Chance with Toby Morse below (baby talk comes at 1:16:09 mark).

Apple TV+ announced a new three-part documentary series delving into the 1980 murder of late Beatle John Lennon. With narration from 24 star Kiefer Sutherland, John Lennon: Murder Without a Trial promises to present exclusive eyewitness interviews and previously unseen crime scene photos that will shed “new light on the life and murder” of the […]

As Bruce Springsteen continues his recovery from a bout of peptic ulcer disease, the rock icon and the E Street Band announced the dates for a 22-dates European stadium run in spring/summer 2024 on Tuesday morning (Oct. 31).
The new dates will kick off on May 5 in Cardiff, UK, and keep the band on the road through a July 25 date at Wembley Stadium in London, with stops along the way in Belfast, Dublin, Prague, Milan, Madrid, Barcelona, Helsinki and Stockholm. Tickets for the trek will go on sale starting with the Odense, Denmark show (July 9) on Nov. 2; click here for more information on tickets and dates.

Earlier this month, Springsteen and the E Street Band announced the new dates for their postponed 2023 tour, pushing the shows to early 2024 to give the 74-year-old Rock and Roll Hall of Famer to recover from the stomach issue that has kept him off the road. The U.S. dates of the tour will now pick up again on March 19 at the Footprint Center in Phoenix and keep them on the road through a Sept. 13 show at Oriole Park at Camden Yards in Baltimore.

Check out the dates for the E Street Band’s 2024 European tour below.

May 5 – Cardiff, Wales @ Principality Stadium (On-sale: Nov. 3 at 10am*)

May 9 – Belfast, Northern Ireland @ Boucher Road (On-sale: Nov. 6 at 8am*) 

May 12 – Kilkenny, Ireland @ Nowlan Park (On-sale: Nov. 6 at 8am*) 

May 16 – Cork, Ireland @ Páirc Uí Chaoimh (On-sale: Nov. 6 at 8am*) 

May 19 – Dublin, Ireland @ Croke Park (On-sale: Nov. 6 at 8am*) 

May 22 – Sunderland, England @ Stadium of Light (On-sale Nov. 3 at 10am*)

May 25 – Marseille, France @ Orange Vélodrome (On-sale Nov. 7 at 10am*) 

May 28 – Prague, Czech Republic @ Airport Letnany (On-sale Nov. 3 at 10am*)

June 1 – Milan, Italy @ San Siro Stadium (On-sale Nov. 6 at 12pm*) 

June 3 – Milan, Italy @ San Siro Stadium (On-sale Nov. 6 at 12pm*) 

June 12 – Madrid, Spain @ Cívitas Metropolitano (On-sale Nov. 7 at 10am*)

June 14 – Madrid, Spain @ Cívitas Metropolitano (On-sale Nov. 7 at 10am*)

June 20 – Barcelona, Spain @ Estadi Olímpic (On-sale Nov. 14 at 10am*)

June 27 – Nijmegen, Netherlands @ Goffertpark (On-sale Nov. 3 at 9am*)

July 2 – Werchter, Belgium @ Werchter Park (On-sale Nov. 3 at 10am*)

July 5 – Hannover, Germany @ Heinz von Heiden Arena (On-sale Nov. 8 at 10am*)

July 9 – Odense, Denmark @ Dyrskuepladsen (On-sale Nov. 2 at 10am*)

July 12 – Helsinki, Finland @ Olympic Stadium (On-sale Nov. 6 at 11am*)

July 15 – Stockholm, Sweden @ Friends Arena (On-sale Nov. 3 at 10am*)

July 18 – Stockholm, Sweden @ Friends Arena (On-sale Nov. 3 at 10am*)

July 21 – Bergen, Norway @ Dokken (On-sale Nov. 6 at 10am*)

July 25 – London, England @ Wembley Stadium connected by EE (On-sale Nov. 3 at 10am*)

*All on-sale times are local time

One of Jimmy Buffett’s last messages to his family and friends before his Sept. 1 death from skin cancer was “keep the party going,” and his longtime backing musicians in the Coral Reefer Band now say they plan to do just that. 
“The Coral Reefer Band is second family to all of us. We are a family. And Jimmy wants us to continue and we want to continue,” Mac McAnally, longtime Coral Reefer Band singer/guitarist tells Billboard.  How that will look is still being determined, but McAnally says, “there’s ongoing discussions about the best way to do that, the most practical way to do that and how to do it in a way that is worthy of the legacy that we’re part of.” 

The Coral Reefer Band, which has had a rotating cast of musicians — some of whom had played with Buffett for nearly 50 years — began backing the singer-songwriter in concert and in the studio in the ‘70s.

Deciding the best way forward is taking some time. “We’re going to figure it out and we’re going to do something,” McAnally says. “Whatever the best equation arrives from those discussions is what we’re going to do,” he says. “I can’t wait until we [figure it out] because we miss being out there, playing his songs to people and feeling that alternating current go back and forth from the stage to the crowd. I don’t know who’s got more energy, them or us.”

The current members, in addition to McAnally include keyboardist Michael Utley (who has played with Buffett since the ‘70s), steel drummer Robert Greenidge, guitarist/vocalist Peter Mayer, bassist Jim Mayer, drummer Roger Guth, steel pedal guitarist Doyle Grisham, trumpeter John Lovell, percussionist Eric Darken and vocalists Tina Gullickson and Nadirah Shakoor.

The Coral Reefer Band played its last full concert with Buffett on May 6 at San Diego’s Snapdragon Stadium. Buffett’s last time on stage was McAnally’s July 2 show  in Portsmouth, Rhode Island, when Buffett joined him for eight songs, including signature tunes “Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes” and “Margaritaville.”

Though Buffett was undergoing treatment, he still craved being on stage. “He had been calling through the summertime when the treatments were going,” McAnally says. “I didn’t know how far up or down he was. I hadn’t seen him [in person], though he never called without Facetiming me and I could tell he was losing weight. He couldn’t do a full show, but he kept calling saying, ‘Where are you playing? I’m gonna come sit in.’”

McAnally’s Rhode Island date was a quick flight from Buffett’s house in Sag Harbor, N.Y. and easy for him to fly in for. “We played ‘5 O’Clock Somewhere’ and when it got to [the line], ‘What would Jimmy Buffett do?,’ nobody knew that he was there. Nobody knew and he walked out from behind the stage. It was maybe 400 people there and they all came up out of their seat. It was like somebody hit them with 220 volts,” McAnally remembers. 

But no one was more pleased than Buffett. “I looked back around at him because he was coming up behind me and he was 100% the happiest person on earth because I don’t think he knew if he was going to feel it again and I don’t think he knew that he was never gonna feel it again after that,” McAnally says. “Buffett called McAnally two days later asking if he had other shows that weren’t on his website yet so he could join him again. “He was ready to tour as a guest singer on these little singer-songwriter shows,” McAnally says, but unfortunately, his time ran out.

Thirteen past Grammy winners, ranging from Amy Grant to Kim Petras, will help announce the 66th Annual Grammy Award nominees in a livestream event on Nov. 10. The announcement will be accessible on live.Grammy.com and YouTube.
Other Grammy winners on board for the event include: Arooj Aftab, Vince Gill, Jimmy Jam, Jon Bon Jovi, Samara Joy, Muni Long, Cheryl Pawelski, Judith Sherman, St. Vincent, Jeff Tweedy and “Weird Al” Yankovic. They will be joined by CBS Mornings co-hosts Gayle King, Nate Burleson and Tony Dokoupil and Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason jr.

Joy was the surprise winner for best new artist last year. Jon Bon Jovi will be the 2024 MusiCares Person of the Year honoree.

The nominations event will kick off with a special presentation announcing the nominees in the general field and select other categories. There will be two changes in general field categories this year. There will be just eight nominations, down from 10 the last two years, for album, record and song of the year, plus best new artist, which have always comprised the general field. Also, two additional categories are being bumped up to the general field for the first time – producer of the year, non-classical and songwriter of the year, non-classical.

Video announcements of the nominees in the remaining categories will also be published on live.Grammy.com and YouTube while the event is underway. The full list of nominees will be published on Grammy.com immediately following the presentation.

Here’s the timeline for when these events will occur on Nov. 10. All times are approximate and subject to change.

10:45 a.m. ET / 7:45 a.m. PT: Grammy nominations pre-show

11 a.m. ET / 8 a.m. PT: Nominations livestream event

11:25 a.m. ET / 8:25 a.m. PT: Nominations livestream event ends: Full nominations list posted on Grammy.com

11:25 a.m. ET / 8:25 a.m. PT: Grammy nominations wrap-up show

After plotting a 2024 reunion with their Summer of ’99 cruise, Creed has announced a 40-city North American tour, which will mark their first time hitting the road together in over a decade.

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The 2024 Summer of ’99 tour, produced by Live Nation, kicks off on July 17, 2024, and will run through Sept. 28. While 3 Doors Down will open the majority of the tour, Daughtry, Switchfoot, Tonic and Big Wreck will join Creed on select dates, and Finger Eleven will open all dates on the reunion run.

“I feel like I’m as strong as I’ve ever been vocally, and looking forward to sharing the stage with the guys again,” says frontman Scott Stapp in a statement. “The fans have clearly let us know they feel it’s long overdue. I want to give them what they deserve. I’m ready to bring it.”

In the middle of the tour, Creed will head to San Bernardino, Calif. to top the bill of the inaugural Summer of ’99 and Beyond Festival, which will corral the openers on various legs of the tour and welcome a few other special guests. 3 Doors Down, Daughtry, Finger Eleven, Fuel, Vertical Horizon, The Verve Pipe will join Creed on Aug. 31 at San Bernadino’s Glen Helen Amphitheatre.

“Summer of ‘99 and Beyond Festival in San Bernardino is going to be so special for all of us,” says guitarist Mark Tremonti. “It is giving us a chance to bring performances from the cruises and tour together in one location. That show is going to be a highlight for us next year.”

In July, Creed announced their first shows together in 12 years as headliners of the Summer of ’99 cruise, setting sail from April 18-22, 2024. The band added a second cruise the following weekend, and both trips are sold out.

Stapp, Tremonti, Brian Marshall and Scott Phillips stopped touring together in 2012, after scoring smashes like “One,” “Higher,” “With Arms Wide Open” and “My Sacrifice”; their 1999 sophomore album, Human Clay, has sold 11.7 million copies to date, according to Luminate. In addition to the Creed reunion, Tremonti recently released a holiday album, Christmas Classics New & Old, and Stapp’s fourth solo album, Higher Power, will be released in March 2024.

Check out Creed’s North American tour dates below:

Supporting Acts: + 3 Doors Down | ^ Daughtry | * Switchfoot | x Tonic | # Big Wreck | = Finger Eleven

Wednesday, July 17 | Green Bay, WI | Resch Center * =Friday, July 19 | Monticello, IA | Great Jones County Fair * = (Not A Live Nation Date)Saturday, July 20 | Walker, MN | Moondance Jam * = (Not A Live Nation Date)Tuesday, July 23 | Simpsonville, SC | CCNB Amphitheatre at Heritage Park * =Wednesday, July 24 | Charlotte, NC | PNC Music Pavilion + =Friday, July 26 | Bristow, VA | Jiffy Lube Live + =Saturday, July 27 | Virginia Beach, VA | Veterans United Home Loans Amphitheater at Virginia Beach + =Tuesday, July 30 | Toronto, ON | Budweiser Stage # =Wednesday, July 31 | Clarkston, MI | Pine Knob Music Theatre + =Friday, August 2 | Cincinnati, OH | Riverbend Music Center + =Saturday, August 3 | Burgettstown, PA | The Pavilion at Star Lake + =Tuesday, August 6 | Bridgeport, CT | Hartford HealthCare Amphitheater x =Wednesday, August 7| Holmdel, NJ | PNC Bank Arts Center + =Friday, August 9 | St. Louis, MO | Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre – St. Louis, MO + =Saturday, August 10 | Indianapolis, IN | Ruoff Music Center + =Tuesday, August 13 | Nashville, TN | Ascend Amphitheater x =Wednesday, August 14 | Pelham, AL | Oak Mountain Amphitheatre + =Saturday, August 16 | Tinley Park, IL | Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre + =Saturday, August 17 | Welch, MN | Treasure Island Amphitheater + = (Not A Live Nation Date)Tuesday, August 20 | Gilford, NH | BankNH Pavilion x =Wednesday, August 21 | Boston, MA | Xfinity Center + =Friday, August 23 | Hershey, PA | Hersheypark Stadium + =Saturday, August 24 | Saratoga Springs, NY | Broadview Stage at SPAC + =Saturday, August 31 | San Bernardino, CA | Glen Helen Amphitheatre (Summer of ’99 And Beyond Festival with 3 Doors Down, Daughtry, Finger Eleven, Fuel, Vertical Horizon, The Verve Pipe)Sunday, September 1 | Wheatland, CA | Toyota Amphitheatre + =Wednesday, September 4 | Phoenix, AZ | Talking Stick Resort Amphitheatre + =Friday, September 6 | Salt Lake City, UT | USANA Amphitheatre + =Saturday, September 7 | Denver, CO | Fiddler’s Green Amphitheatre + = (Not A Live Nation Date)Tuesday, September 10 | Rogers, AR | Walmart AMP ^ =Wednesday, September 11 | Dallas, TX | Dos Equis Pavilion + =Friday, September 13 | San Antonio, TX | Frost Bank Center + =Saturday, September 14 | Houston, TX | The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion presented by Huntsman + =Monday, September 16 | Brandon, MS | Brandon Amphitheater ^ =Wednesday, September 18| Raleigh, NC | Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek + =Friday, September 20 | Tampa, FL | MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre at the FL State Fairgrounds + =Saturday, September 21 | West Palm Beach, FL | iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre + =Tuesday, September 24 | Jacksonville, FL | Daily’s Place x =Wednesday, September 25 | Alpharetta, GA | Ameris Bank Amphitheatre + =Friday, September 27 | Darien Lake, NY | Darien Lake Amphitheater + =Saturday, September 28 | Atlantic City, NJ | Hard Rock Live at Etess Arena + =

The crowd at Las Vegas’ Allegiant Stadium was in for a surprise Saturday night (Oct. 28). They paid to see Ed Sheeran‘s Mathematics Tour and got a bonus: an unannounced appearance by The Killers‘ Brandon Flowers. Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news Sheeran and Flowers performed a Killers […]