Home Blog

Dear Concert Venues: Short People Sections Need to Happen. Like, Yesterday.

0

Let me paint you a picture. You’ve been waiting six months for this concert. You bought the tickets the second they dropped, spent way too long picking the perfect outfit, arrived early enough to actually get a good spot, and then right as the lights go down and the opening notes hit, a 6’2″ guy in a bucket hat materializes directly in front of you like he was summoned from the underworld specifically to ruin your night.

You can see his shoulder. Maybe his ear. If you stand on your toes for the entire set, you can catch a blurry glimpse of the artist you paid $180 to see. Congratulations. You have successfully attended a concert.

This is the lived reality of every person under 5’4″, and we are tired.

Here’s what nobody talks about: tall people don’t need to be in the front. They can see from literally anywhere. A 6-foot person standing at the back of a venue has a cleaner sightline than a 5’2″ person pressed against the barrier. The front is wasted on them. It’s like giving the best seat at a restaurant to someone who already ate.

Short people, on the other hand, have done the physics. We know exactly how many rows back we can stand before we lose all visual contact with the stage. That number is approximately two. Two rows. After that, we are essentially listening to a very expensive audio experience while staring at the back of a stranger’s jacket.

There is an unspoken physical surcharge that short people pay at every single concert. While everyone else is standing comfortably, we are conducting a full lower-body workout. Calves burning, knees slightly bent, core engaged, neck craned at an angle that will require physiotherapy by morning. We are not watching a concert. We are doing a Pilates class set to live music.

And the second you find a gap between two people and shuffle into it for a better view, someone fills in behind you and the wall reforms like it was never broken. The crowd is sentient. It knows. It always closes.

Yes, we get there early. We get there so early we watch the venue staff do their pre-show walkie-talkie routines. We stake out our spot with the focus and territorial intensity of a nature documentary animal. And then, forty-five minutes into the opening act, a group of tall people decides that our carefully selected location is exactly where they’d like to stand, and they simply stand there. In front of us. Without a single moment of self-reflection. They didn’t earn that view. We did. But height doesn’t care about effort.

Nobody is demanding a revolution. We’re not asking for a raised platform, a special entrance, or a dedicated concierge. We are asking for one modest, clearly marked section, maybe ten feet wide, right in the middle, with a simple sign that reads: 5’6″ and under. You’ve been through enough.

That’s it. That’s the whole ask. A small patch of floor where short people can see the artist they love without performing an involuntary athletic event. A place where nobody is blocking your view because everyone in the section is working with the same vertical limitations and there is a sacred, unspoken understanding between all of you.

Is it segregation? Technically yes. Is it the good kind? Absolutely.

Tall people, we don’t hate you. Some of our best friends are tall. We just need you to understand that your natural physical advantages extend into every other area of life, reaching things on high shelves, being taken seriously in meetings, existing in airplane seats, and maybe just maybe the front row of a Chappell Roan concert is one place you could afford to cede some ground.

We just want to see the show. We bought the same ticket. We felt the same feelings when the album dropped. We deserve to witness the moment with our own eyes and not through a gap in someone’s armpit.

Short people sections. Make it happen. We’ll be easy to spot. We’re the ones you can’t see.

Monsta X Bring Their World Tour to North America This Fall With 10 Arena Dates

0

Monsta X are coming back to North America, and they’re doing it at scale. The 2026 Monsta X World Tour, The X: Nexus, hits 10 cities across the continent this fall, promoted by Live Nation, kicking off October 3 at EagleBank Arena in Fairfax, VA and closing October 24 at WAMU Theater in Seattle. Stops include Madison Square Garden, The Kia Forum in Los Angeles, MGM Music Hall at Fenway in Boston, and Toronto’s Great Canadian. Tickets go on sale April 14 at 3 PM local time.

The tour marks Monsta X’s first large-scale North American outing in four years, following their 2022 No Limit Tour, and arrives in support of ‘Unfold’, their third full-length English album, released April 3. The ten-track project features focus track “Heal” alongside singles “Growing Pains” and “Baby Blue,” exploring themes of healing and growth across a dynamic blend of pop and ballads. As the first K-pop group to release three full English albums, Monsta X have consistently pushed the boundaries of global crossover, and ‘Unfold’ marks their first U.S. release in over four years.

The X: Nexus launched earlier this year with three nights at KSPO Dome in Seoul and celebrates more than a decade of material alongside the new record. The tour’s title reflects the bond between Monsta X and their fanbase Monbebe, signaling a new chapter built on eleven years of shared growth. For a group with their live reputation, elevated vocals and onstage chemistry that’s been building since their debut, these arena dates are going to deliver.

2026 Monsta X World Tour, The X: Nexus North American Dates:

October 3 — Fairfax, VA — EagleBank Arena

October 6 — New York, NY — Infosys Theater at Madison Square Garden

October 8 — Boston, MA — MGM Music Hall at Fenway

October 10 — Toronto, ON — Great Canadian Toronto

October 13 — Rosemont, IL — Rosemont Theatre

October 15 — Irving, TX — The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory

October 17 — Phoenix, AZ — Arizona Financial Theatre

October 20 — Los Angeles, CA — The Kia Forum

October 22 — San Francisco, CA — The Theater at Bill Graham Civic Auditorium

October 24 — Seattle, WA — WAMU Theater

DaBaby Drops the Video for Chart-Climbing “Don Julio Lemonade”

0

DaBaby’s “Don Julio Lemonade” already has the chart positions to back up the attention, and now it has the visual to match. Directed by Nick Mays, the video places DaBaby inside a lemon-stacked house with a clean, stylized concept that lets the track’s laid-back confidence do the heavy lifting. The song currently sits at No. 45 on the Billboard Hot 100, No. 5 on Hot Rap Songs, No. 9 on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, and No. 8 on Rap Airplay, while racking up over half a million user-generated TikTok creates and landing on both the TikTok Top 50 and Viral charts. It’s the second-highest-performing track on ‘Be More Grateful’, which debuted at No. 6 on Billboard’s Top Rap Albums and No. 25 on the Billboard 200 earlier this year. The Be More Grateful Tour is currently running, with high demand driving expanded dates, and a DaBaby-hosted festival in his hometown of Charlotte still to come.

Bluegrass Innovator Sierra Hull Releases Her Long-Awaited Three-Part Concerto ‘The Movements’ on April 10

0

Sierra Hull has always operated at the intersection of technical mastery and genuine musical curiosity, and ‘The Movements’ is where those instincts converge most completely. Commissioned by the FreshGrass Institute ahead of their 2023 event, Hull’s three-part bluegrass concerto combines through-composed ideas, arranged parts, and room for improvisation in a way that places her alongside Béla Fleck, Rhiannon Giddens, Sarah Jarosz, and Kronos Quartet in the FreshGrass commissions canon. The studio recording arrives April 10, and it’s been worth the wait.

Hull and her band, Avery Merritt, Erik Coveney, Mark Raudabaugh, and Shaun Richardson, recorded ‘The Movements’ right after their FreshGrass debut, but a busy tour schedule and the completion of her album ‘A Tip Toe High Wire’ pushed the release back. “Movement 3 has been a staple in our live shows over the last few years,” Hull says. “Folks have been asking for a while now when we would finally release a recording of them, so we are pumped to finally share it with everyone.” The recording captures the earliest days of this particular group of musicians finding their footing together, and that energy is audible throughout.

The rest of Hull’s 2026 calendar reflects her standing in the roots music world. She’s currently on a spring headlining tour before joining Brad Paisley in Europe in June. Later in the year she’ll return to the Outlaw Music Festival Tour with Willie Nelson and The Avett Brothers, support Dave Matthews Band at the Gorge Amphitheatre, appear at Billy Strings’s inaugural Ionia Freak Fair, and perform at Eric Clapton’s Crossroads Guitar Festival.

KISS Heirs Evan Stanley and Nick Simmons Bring Stanley Simmons to Southern California Stages This May

0

Stanley Simmons, the new outfit formed by Evan Stanley and Nick Simmons, sons of KISS co-founders Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons respectively, have announced their first-ever live dates, a four-show run across southern California in May. The debut takes place May 4 at the House of Blues Voodoo Room in San Diego, with stops in Santa Ana and Morro Bay before wrapping May 13 at the Ventura Music Hall. The shows follow the strong early reception for their sophomore single “Dancing While The World Is Ending,” which pulled over 145,000 YouTube views in its first ten days.

Tour Dates:

May 4 — San Diego, CA — House of Blues Voodoo Room

May 6 — Santa Ana, CA — Constellation Room

May 10 — Morro Bay, CA — The Siren

May 13 — Ventura, CA — Ventura Music Hall

Narnia Mark 30 Years With Soaring New Single “Oceanwide” From Upcoming Album ‘X’

0

Narnia have released “Oceanwide,” the first single from their upcoming tenth studio album ‘X’, arriving May 29 via Sound Pollution, and it arrives exactly as advertised: melodic, uplifting, and built around the kind of chorus that justifies the word “arena-ready.” The Swedish melodic metal veterans have been road-testing the track since last summer’s Brazil tour with Stryper, and the live seasoning shows. Produced and mixed by CJ Grimmark and mastered by Thomas “Plec” Johansson at Studio Bohus, the single is available now on all major platforms.

‘X’ marks Narnia’s 30th anniversary and their most ambitious record in years. The album moves between soaring melodic hooks and more progressive, intricate arrangements without losing the band’s identity, with tracks like “Every Breath” and “Heaven’s Calling” sitting alongside the high-tempo “Remedy (SOS)” and the more texturally complex “God Under Fire” and “Jerusalem.” Multiple vocalists share the spotlight throughout, with Grimmark and bassist Jonatan “Jono” Samuelsson stepping forward on select tracks alongside Christian Liljegren’s anchoring presence. The record also reconnects with the band’s legacy through “The Man from Nazareth Pt. II,” a continuation of a fan-favorite from 2006’s ‘Enter the Gate’. “‘Oceanwide’ has the melodies, the energy, and the sense of scale that felt right as the first single to introduce ‘X,'” says Liljegren. Grimmark puts it plainly: “It’s heavier, broader, and more dynamic, but still unmistakably NARNIA.”

Killarney Singer-Songwriter Ciaran Quigley Captures the Ache of Growing Up on New Single “Long Way Home”

0

Ciaran Quigley’s new single “Long Way Home” does what the best indie folk does: it makes something deeply personal feel immediately universal. The Killarney, County Kerry singer-songwriter leans into rich acoustic textures and a gentle rhythmic momentum to explore the uncertainty of youth, the difficulty of admitting fault, and the slow, sometimes uncomfortable process of growing into yourself. His vocal performance is understated and instinctive, letting subtle phrasing carry the emotional weight without overreaching, and the result is quietly powerful in exactly the way that sticks with you after the song ends.

“Long Way Home” is the second single from Quigley’s forthcoming four-track debut EP ‘Is This a Problem Darling?’, due this summer via Cast Over Records, with a full-length album planned for next year. Produced by Patrick O’Donnell and built from extensive live experience across Ireland, including support slots for Jamie McIntyre and Simple Things, the track establishes Quigley as a genuine emerging voice in Ireland’s thriving indie folk scene, one worth paying attention to well before the EP arrives.

GRAMMY-Nominated Global Star Young Miko Announces Her Most Ambitious Tour Yet With the 31-Date “Late Checkout Tour”

0

GRAMMY-nominated global artist Young Miko announces her “Late Checkout Tour.” The 31-date tour will span 11 countries, marking her most ambitious tour to date, the first time Young Miko will embark on an arena tour, and aligning with the defining moment she is experiencing in her career. Promoted by Live Nation, the tour kicks off July 3 at Roskilde Festival in Denmark, launching a European festival run before she heads to Mexico for a major stretch in September. From there, she will close out the year across key U.S. markets including Miami, Atlanta, Houston, Orlando, New York, and Los Angeles, marking her most expansive international routing to date. See full routing and ticketing information below.

The announcement arrives at a time when Young Miko has firmly established herself at the forefront of global music. Her sophomore album “Do Not Disturb” debuted at No. 3 on Spotify’s Top Albums Debut USA and No. 4 globally, while also landing on Billboard’s Top Latin Albums chart. Standout track “WASSUP” achieved global viral success and earned a spot on prestigious year-end lists, including Rolling Stone’s 100 Best Songs of 2025, while “Likey Likey” continues to resonate with audiences worldwide. That growing cultural impact was further recognized at the 37th Annual GLAAD Media Awards, where she was honored with Outstanding Music Artist.

Fans first got a taste of Young Miko’s arena presence last year when she joined Billie Eilish’s HIT ME HARD AND SOFT TOUR as an opening act for eight select dates in key markets including Orlando, Philadelphia, and New York. Shortly after, she made her arena headlining debut in her native Puerto Rico, announcing her first-ever headline show at the iconic Coliseo de Puerto Rico. The show sold out in just 90 minutes, leading to a second date being added, with both nights selling out. Beyond music, she has expanded her cultural impact in meaningful ways, most recently partnering with GAP for the brand’s “Sweats Like This” campaign. As the face of its first-ever Spanish-language campaign and the first openly queer Latina to star in a GAP campaign. With each milestone, Young Miko continues to shape the sound, style, and direction of a new generation, solidifying her role as one of the most influential voices in global music today.

TICKETS: Tickets will be available starting with presales beginning on Tuesday, April 7 at 10 AM local time. Additional presales will run throughout ahead of the general onsale beginning on Friday, April 10 at 10 AM local time at LiveNation.com.

CITI PRESALE: Citi is the official card of the Late Checkout Tour. Citi cardmembers will have access to presale tickets beginning Tuesday, April 7 at 10AM local time until Thurs., April 9 at 11:59PM local time through the Citi Entertainment program. For complete presale details visit www.citientertainment.com.

VERIZON PRESALE:Verizon will offer customers an exclusive presale for the Late Checkout Tour in the U.S – no strings attached, simply for being a Verizon customer. The presale for select shows runs from Tuesday, April 7 at 10AM local time until Thurs., April 9 at 11:59PM local time. Visit myAccess in the My Verizon app for more details. Learn more about Verizon Access here.

The tour will also offer a variety of different VIP packages and experiences for fans to take their concert experience to the next level. Packages vary but include premium tickets, Meet & Greet and individual photo with Young Miko, invitation to the pre-show Young Miko soundcheck, exclusive access to the pre-show VIP lounge La Casa Miko & more. VIP package contents vary based on the offer selected. For more information, visit vipnation.com!

TOUR DATES FOR THE LATE CHECKOUT TOUR:

*Not a Live Nation Date

^ General on sale for London on Mon, April 13

Jul 3 – Roskilde, DK – Roskilde Festival*

Jul 4 – Nuremberg, DE – Latin Airport Festival*

Jul 5 – Cologne, DE – Carlswerk Victoria*

Jul 8 – Amsterdam, NL – Melkweg Max*

Jul 10 – London, UK – Here at Outernet*^

Jul 11 – Málaga, ES – TBA*

Jul 12 – Paris, FR – Bataclan*

Jul 15 – Montreux, CH – Montreux Jazz Festival*

Jul 16 – Bern, CH – Gurtenfestival*

Jul 18 – Berlin, DE – Lollapalooza*

Jul 19 – Dour, DE – Dour Festival*

Jul 23 – Milan, IT – Magnolia Club*

Jul 25 – Coruña, ES – Morriña Festival*

Jul 27 – València, ES – Far València*

Aug 2 – St Charles, IA – Hinterland Music Festival*

Sep 17 – Guadalajara, MX – Arena VFG

Sep 19 – Monterrey, MX – Arena Monterrey

Sep 22 – Mexico City, MX – Palacio de los Deportes

Sep 25 – Merida, MX – Foro GNP

Oct 13 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena

Oct 15 – San Francisco, CA – Chase Center

Oct 17 – Inglewood, CA – Intuit Dome

Oct 18 – Phoenix, AZ – Mortgage Matchup Center

Oct 22 – San Antonio, TX – Freeman Coliseum

Oct 24 – Houston, TX – Toyota Center

Oct 28 – Miami, FL – Kaseya Center

Oct 29 – Orlando, FL – Kia Center

Oct 31 – Atlanta, GA – State Farm Arena

Nov 1 – Charlotte, NC – Spectrum Center

Nov 4 – Philadelphia, PA – Xfinity Mobile Arena Nov 5 – Brooklyn, NY – Barclays Center

Jacob Tolliver Sets Bobby Bare’s “Tequila Sheila” Ablaze With a Mariachi-Infused Birthday Tribute

0

Jacob Tolliver has released his cover of Bobby Bare’s “Tequila Sheila,” and it’s exactly as wild as it sounds. The Portsmouth, Ohio-born pianist and singer goes full throttle on the Shel Silverstein-penned classic, adding mariachi trumpets to a piano-driven arrangement that tips its hat to the original while staking out its own celebratory territory. The timing is deliberate: the release lands on Bare’s birthday, April 7, connecting two Southern Ohio artists across generations in the most fitting way possible. Listen here.

Tolliver first performed the song at Bare’s 90th birthday celebration at the Basement East in Nashville, a performance that earned praise from the Bare family and immediate buzz in the room. He went straight into the studio afterward, working with legendary producer Kyle Lehning, whose credits include Randy Travis, Bobby Bare, and Waylon Jennings, to capture what he’d found in that live moment. “Bobby Bare and I both grew up in Southern Ohio, so covering ‘Tequila Sheila’ feels like honoring a shared hometown legacy,” Tolliver says. “Getting to put my own spin on it, while tipping my hat to a legend who’s become a friend, made it an absolute blast.”

Tolliver’s backstory is worth knowing. He cut his teeth in the Las Vegas production of ‘Million Dollar Quartet’ before opening on the road for Jerry Lee Lewis, and his viral “Boogie Woogie Country Man” has surpassed 1.5 million views. His original single “If The Phone Ain’t Ringing It’s Me” has been building real momentum, and both Dirt Road Country and Country Evolution named him a country artist to watch for 2026. The cover of “Tequila Sheila” arrives in the middle of an already busy year on the road, and it showcases exactly why the attention is warranted.

Kurt Vile Announces New Album ‘Philadelphia’s Been Good to Me’ and a Massive World Tour

0

Kurt Vile has a new album coming and a world tour to match. ‘Philadelphia’s been good to me’ arrives May 29 on Verve Records, led by the single “Chance To Bleed,” and the tour kicks off June 16 at History in Toronto before running through North America, the UK, and Europe well into September, with a second North American run picking back up in November. The hometown headline show at The Dell Music Center in Philadelphia on July 25 features co-headliners Pavement, making it one of the summer’s most anticipated shows on paper.

Vile describes the record as his most personal and most organic to date, largely self-produced across home studio settings in Los Angeles, Memphis, Athens, and his basement in Mt. Airy, Philadelphia. “This is my ‘bringing it all back home to Philly’ record,” he says. “I’m treating it like my last record. I put everything into it. It’s my best vocal record. It’s my best electric guitar record.” That’s a significant claim from someone who’s been building one of the most consistent catalogs in indie rock for nearly two decades, and the lead single backs it up.

The gear traveled with him, the analog warmth stayed consistent, and the result is what Vile calls a return to home-recording roots at higher fidelity. “I’ve been waiting for that kinda natural element to show up again in my recordings, like the old home recording days,” he says. “I think I finally caught that again, but in a higher fidelity; it’s never overly polished, but it’s still pretty damn shimmery.” For a songwriter whose strengths have always lived in texture and feel, that’s exactly the right instinct.

The tour runs with multiple support acts across different legs, including The Sadies, Ryan Davis and The Roadhouse Band, Being Dead, and Twisted Teens, among others.

‘Philadelphia’s been good to me’ is out May 29 on Verve Records.

Kurt Vile 2026 Tour Dates:

June 16 — Toronto, ON — History

June 17 — Montreal, QC — Beanfield Theatre

June 19 — Burlington, VT — Higher Ground

June 20 — Greenfield, MA — Green River Festival

June 21 — Asbury Park, NJ — Stone Pony (North to Shore Fest)

June 22 — Pittsburgh, PA — Mr. Smalls Theatre

June 23 — Cleveland, OH — The Roxy

June 25 — Detroit, MI — Saint Andrew’s Hall

June 26 — Chicago, IL — Salt Shed

June 27 — Eau Claire, WI — Blue Ox Music Festival

June 28 — St Paul, MN — Palace Theatre

July 1 — Vancouver, BC — Commodore Ballroom

July 2 — Portland, OR — Revolution Hall

July 3 — Seattle, WA — 5th Avenue Theatre

July 5 — South Lake Tahoe, CA — The Hangar

July 7 — San Francisco, CA — The Castro Theater

July 8 — Los Angeles, CA — The Novo

July 9 — San Diego, CA — The Observatory North Park

July 10 — Phoenix, AZ — Van Buren

July 11 — Santa Fe, NM — The Bridge at Santa Fe Brewing Co.

July 13 — Austin, TX — ACL Live at The Moody Theatre

July 14 — Houston, TX — Heights Theater

July 15 — Dallas, TX — Longhorn Ballroom

July 17 — Atlanta, GA — The Eastern

July 18 — Nashville, TN — Ryman Auditorium

July 19 — Asheville, NC — Orange Peel

July 20 — Saxapahaw, NC — Haw River Ballroom

July 22 — Washington, DC — Howard Theatre

July 23 — Brooklyn, NY — Brooklyn Paramount

July 24 — Boston, MA — Royale

July 25 — Philadelphia, PA — The Dell Music Center (w/ Pavement)

August 13 — Paredes de Coura, PT — Paredes de Coura Festival

August 15 — Saint-Malo, FR — La Route du Rock

August 17 — Hamburg, DE — Mojo

August 18 — Copenhagen, DK — Vega

August 21 — Trondheim, NO — Pstereo

August 23 — Hasselt, BE — Pukkelpop

August 24 — Amsterdam, NL — Paradiso

August 25 — Nijmegen, NL — Doornroosje

August 27 — La Tour-de-Peilz, CH — Nox Orae

August 28 — Paris, FR — Rock en Seine

August 29 — Luxembourg, LU — Den Atelier

August 30 — Köln, DE — Gloria

September 1 — Munich, DE — Muffathalle

September 2 — Prague, CZ — Archa+

September 3 — Berlin, DE — Huxleys Neue Welt

September 4 — Maastricht, NL — Zero for Three

September 6 — Dorset, UK — End of the Road

September 7 — Bristol, UK — The Crane

September 8 — Brighton, UK — Chalk

September 9 — London, UK — Troxy

September 11 — Manchester, UK — The Ritz

September 12 — Birmingham, UK — XOYO

September 13 — Glasgow, UK — SWG3 TV Studio

September 14 — Dublin, IE — Vicar Street

September 15 — Leeds, UK — Project

November 4 — Buffalo, NY — Asbury Hall

November 5 — Columbus, OH — Newport Music Hall

November 6 — Louisville, KY — Headliners Music Hall

November 7 — St. Louis, MO — The Sovereign

November 8 — Milwaukee, WI — Turner Hall

November 10 — Des Moines, IA — Wooly’s

November 11 — Lawrence, KS — Liberty Hall

November 12 — Omaha, NE — The Waiting Room

November 13 — Fort Collins, CO — Washington’s

November 14 — Denver, CO — Summit

November 16 — Fayetteville, AR — George’s Majestic Lounge

November 17 — Memphis, TN — Minglewood Hall

November 18 — New Orleans, LA — Joy Theatre

November 20 — Athens, GA — 40 Watt Club

November 21 — Charleston, SC — The Music Farm

November 22 — Charlotte, NC — Neighborhood Theatre

November 23 — Richmond, VA — The National

November 24 — Baltimore, MD — Ottobar