Simple Plan Are Bringing Their Pop-Punk Legacy to Niagara Falls This December
Simple Plan are coming to the OLG Stage at Fallsview Casino on Saturday, December 19, 2026, and it’s the kind of booking that makes a lot of sense. One of Canada’s most enduring rock exports, playing one of the country’s top-ranked venues, right before the holidays. Tickets go on sale Friday, May 1 at 10:00 a.m. through ticketmaster.ca.
The Montreal-formed quartet have accumulated over 10 billion streams worldwide and built a catalog that’s held up across two decades of pop-punk. Their 2002 multi-platinum debut ‘No Pads, No Helmets…Just Balls’ launched with “I’d Do Anything,” “I’m Just A Kid,” “Addicted,” and “Perfect,” and the hits kept coming from there. “Welcome To My Life,” “Summer Paradise,” and “Untitled (How Could This Happen To Me?)” are the kind of tracks that still move rooms full of people.
“Simple Plan has been a defining force in Canadian rock, and we’re thrilled to welcome them to the OLG Stage at Fallsview Casino this December,” said Cathy Price, Vice President of Marketing and Resort Operations for Niagara Casinos.
The OLG Stage at Fallsview Casino holds 5,000 and is ranked the number one venue in Canada based on size. For a band that’s headlined main stages around the world, it’s a fitting room. December 19 is going to be a good night.
Show Details:
Simple Plan Saturday, December 19, 2026 Showtime: 8:00 PM OLG Stage at Fallsview Casino, Niagara Falls, ON Tickets on sale Friday, May 1 at 10:00 AM via ticketmaster.ca
Bring Me The Horizon Bring “POST HUMAN: NeX GEn – The Third Ascension Program” to North America This Fall
Bring Me The Horizon are heading back to North America, and this run is a long time coming. The BRIT and GRAMMY-nominated Sheffield outfit have announced “POST HUMAN: NeX GEn – The Third Ascension Program,” a nine-date headline tour spanning Canada and the U.S. this fall. Support comes from Motionless in White and The Plot in You.
The dates matter beyond the scale. This marks the band’s first performances in nearly 15 years in select Western Canadian cities, a gap that makes stops in Vancouver, Edmonton, Calgary, and Winnipeg feel genuinely significant. The Canadian run kicks off September 20 in Vancouver and works its way east before crossing into the U.S. for dates in Grand Rapids and beyond.
The tour expands on the fully immersive live universe the band has been building throughout the POST HUMAN era, a high-impact, multi-sensory experience blending cutting-edge visuals, cyberpunk aesthetics, and relentless energy. If you’ve seen what they’ve been doing on the current global run, you already know what’s at stake.
Tickets go on sale Friday, May 1 at 10 AM local time at BMTHofficial.com/live. An artist presale runs Wednesday, April 28 at 10 AM local for 36 hours, followed by a Spotify presale Thursday, April 30 at 10 AM local for 12 hours. VIP packages are also available, including premium tickets, early entry, exclusive merch, and access to a curated display of rare and archival band items.
The Third Ascension Program tour announcement comes alongside news that the band’s seminal 2006 debut ‘Count Your Blessings’ is getting a full re-recording for its 20th anniversary. ‘Count Your Blessings | Repented’ arrives July 10 on vinyl, CD, and streaming, with Sykes and guitarist Lee Malia joined by Buster Odeholm on mixing. The album will also be celebrated live at Outbreak Festival in Manchester on July 10.
Bring Me The Horizon have sold over 7.2 million albums worldwide and hold multiple UK No. 1 records. The Third Ascension Program is the next chapter in a live show that keeps raising the bar.
2026 Tour Dates:
POST HUMAN: NeX GEn – Ascension Program 2
Tues Apr 28 — Toronto, ON @ Scotiabank Arena
Weds Apr 29 — Montreal, QC @ Bell Centre
Fri May 1 — Worcester, MA @ DCU Center
Sat May 2 — New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden
Mon May 4 — Baltimore, MD @ CFG Bank Arena
Tues May 5 — Pittsburgh, PA @ PPG Paints Arena
Thurs May 7 — Nashville, TN @ Bridgestone Arena
Sat May 9 — Daytona, FL @ Welcome to Rockville
Mon May 11 — St Louis, MO @ Enterprise Center
Tues May 12 — Kansas City, MO @ T Mobile Center
Weds May 13 — St Paul, MN @ Grand Casino Arena
Fri May 15 — Rosemont, IL @ Allstate Arena
Sat May 16 — Columbus, OH @ Sonic Temple Festival
Festival & International Dates
Jun 3–6 — Solvesborg, SE @ Sweden Rock Festival
Tues Jun 9 — Kraków, PL @ Tauron Arena
Fri Jun 12 — Hradec Králové, CZ @ Rock for People
Sun Jun 14 — Nickelsdorf, AT @ Nova Rock
Thurs Jun 18 — Clisson, FR @ Hellfest
Sat Jun 20 — Dessel, BE @ Graspop
Jun 24–27 — Oslo, NO @ Tons of Rock
Thurs Jun 25 — Copenhagen, DK @ Copenhell
Jun 25–27 — Seinäjoki, FI @ Provinssi
Jun 26–28 — Helsinki, FI @ Tuska
Thurs Jul 2 — Ferrara, IT @ Ferrara Summer Festival
Fri Jul 10 — Manchester, UK @ B.E.C. Arena (Outbreak Presents: Count Your Blessings | Repented)
Fri Aug 14 — Budapest, HU @ Sziget Festival
Sat Sep 5 — Rio de Janeiro, BR @ Rock in Rio
POST HUMAN: NeX GEn – The Third Ascension Program
Sun Sep 20 — Vancouver, BC @ Rogers Arena
Weds Sep 23 — Edmonton, AB @ Rogers Place
Thurs Sep 24 — Calgary, AB @ Scotiabank Saddledome
Sat Sep 26 — Winnipeg, MB @ Canada Life Centre
Weds Sep 30 — Quebec City, QC @ Videotron Centre
Fri Oct 2 — Ottawa, ON @ Canadian Tire Centre
Sat Oct 3 — Hamilton, ON @ TD Coliseum
Tues Oct 6 — London, ON @ Canada Life Place
Thurs Oct 8 — Grand Rapids, MI @ Van Andel Arena
Bella Kay Drops Guitar-Driven New Single “Promise?” and She’s Just Getting Started
Bella Kay has a new single out, and it hits exactly the way you’d want it to. “Promise?” is a guitar-driven anthem that builds into a soaring, cathartic bridge, raw and emotionally precise in the way that’s become her calling card. The Texas-born singer-songwriter is 20 years old and already operating at a level most artists spend years trying to reach. Listen here.
The new track follows her February 2026 EP ‘a couple minutes out,’ which produced the breakout hit “iloveitiloveitiloveit.” That song earned an American Music Awards nomination for Song of the Summer, landed on the Billboard Hot 100, and has racked up over 250 million streams and 2.2 billion TikTok views across 1.2 million creates. It’s also climbing at pop radio right now.
Before that, there was “The Sick,” the viral ballad that surpassed 175 million streams and generated over 2 billion TikTok views. Kay’s catalog is young and already stacked with moments that connect. Her writing pulls from heartbreak, alienation, and survival, delivered with a vulnerability that doesn’t feel performed.
She recently wrapped a U.S. run supporting Maisie Peters, and the live show is clearly catching up to the streaming numbers. This May, she launches sold-out European and UK headline dates, followed by her first U.S. headline tour this summer, with multiple dates already sold out before she even arrives stateside.
Later this fall, she joins Noah Kahan as support on his UK and Ireland arena tour, her largest performances to date. She’ll also make festival debuts at The Great Escape, All Things Go, and Lollapalooza. “Promise?” is out now and worth your full attention.
2026 Tour Dates:
EU / UK Headline & Festival
May 6 — Amsterdam, NL @ Tolhuistuin [SOLD OUT]
May 8 — Paris, FR @ Les Etoiles [SOLD OUT]
May 10 — Dublin, IE @ Academy Main Room [SOLD OUT]
May 12 — London, UK @ O2 Academy Islington [SOLD OUT]
May 15 — Brighton, UK @ The Great Escape (Festival)
May 17 — Manchester, UK @ Manchester Academy 3 [SOLD OUT]
May 19 — Berlin, DE @ Prachtwerk [SOLD OUT]
May 20 — Cologne, DE @ Club Bahnhof Ehrenfeld [SOLD OUT]
North America Headline & Festival
June 4 — Boston, MA @ Brighton Music Hall [SOLD OUT]
June 6 — Toronto, ON @ All Things Go (Festival)
June 10 — New York, NY @ Music Hall of Williamsburg [SOLD OUT]
June 13 — Austin, TX @ Brushy Street Commons [SOLD OUT]
June 16 — Los Angeles, CA @ The Roxy [SOLD OUT]
July 30 — Chicago, IL @ Lollapalooza (Festival)
UK & IE Supporting Noah Kahan (Arena Tour)
Nov 5 — Glasgow, UK @ OVO Hydro
Nov 6 — Glasgow, UK @ OVO Hydro
Nov 9 — Manchester, UK @ AO Arena
Nov 10 — Manchester, UK @ AO Arena
Nov 13 — London, UK @ The O2 Arena
Nov 14 — London, UK @ The O2 Arena
Nov 17 — London, UK @ The O2 Arena
Nov 19 — Dublin, IE @ 3Arena
Nov 21 — Dublin, IE @ 3Arena
Nov 22 — Dublin, IE @ 3Arena
Kenny Beecham Launches New Postseason Show on SiriusXM NBA Radio
SiriusXM announced today that popular basketball media personality Kenny Beecham, founder of the media and lifestyle brand, Enjoy Basketball, is joining SiriusXM to host a series of exclusive shows airing throughout the 2026 NBA postseason.
“The Kenny Beecham Hour,” Beecham’s first live radio show, debuts today, April 27, and will air live every Monday at noon ET/9 am PT on SiriusXM NBA Radio (channel 86) through the 2026 NBA Draft. Beecham, a rising star in basketball media, will share his unique take on postseason matchups and results, interview players, and take live calls from fans across the country.
“I’m thrilled to partner with SiriusXM to bring ‘The Kenny Beecham Hour’ to the airwaves during the NBA Playoffs,” said Beecham. “This is an incredible opportunity to connect with fans at the most exciting time of the season.”
Beecham has built a following of millions of basketball fans through his media and lifestyle brand, Enjoy Basketball, his social media posts, newsletter, and the shows and podcasts he hosts and produces on YouTube, NBC, Peacock and ESPN. He began his career in 2011, streaming NBA 2K on Twitch and posting recordings on YouTube, and this year was featured by Forbes in its prestigious 30-under-30 list of standout leaders in business, culture and entrepreneurship.
SiriusXM gives NBA fans access to every NBA game broadcast live throughout the regular season, playoffs and Finals. For a schedule of games go to www.siriusxm.com/sports.
SiriusXM also offers the only 24/7 radio channel dedicated to the NBA – SiriusXM NBA Radio – to listeners across North America in their cars and streaming on the SiriusXM app. The channel’s roster of analysts features several former players, coaches and executives including Brian Scalabrine, Antonio Daniels, Eddie Johnson, Ryan McDonough, Sam Mitchell, Amin Elhassan, Greg Anthony and Sarah Kustok as well as insiders Frank Isola, Justin Termine, Rob Perez, Gerald Brown, Zach Harper, Chris Haynes, Marc Stein, Jason Jackson, Vince Goodwill and Brian Geltzeiler.
7 Times Album Artwork Told a Story Before You Even Pressed Play
There is a reason people still talk about album covers decades after the music inside them has already become part of the furniture of their lives. A great album cover is not decoration. It is argument, confession, provocation, and poetry compressed into a single image. Here are seven times artists used that square of real estate to say something that the music alone could not quite say on its own.
Pink Floyd, Wish You Were Here (1975)
Storm Thorgerson and Hipgnosis created one of the most quietly devastating images in rock history: two businessmen shaking hands in a parking lot, one of them silently on fire. The story it tells is about emotional armour, about the professional smiles people wear while something inside them is burning, and about the music industry’s particular talent for turning genuine feeling into a transaction. It is also, of course, about Syd Barrett, the man who wasn’t there anymore, and the grief of watching someone disappear while the world just keeps doing business.
The Beatles, Yesterday and Today (1966)
The so-called butcher cover is still one of the most genuinely shocking images any major pop act has ever attached to their name. The band surrounded by raw meat and dismembered doll parts was partly a sardonic commentary on the American practice of chopping up their UK albums into different configurations for the US market, and partly something darker and harder to pin down. Capitol Records recalled it almost immediately, pasting a bland replacement cover over the top, which means that underneath many surviving copies of the record, the original image is still there. Hidden, papered over, but not gone.
Neil Young, On the Beach (1974)
This one hurts to look at for too long. A Cadillac buried hood-first in the sand. Empty lawn chairs. A solitary figure facing the ocean with his back to everything. Young staged the entire scene deliberately on a Santa Monica beach as a portrait of complete psychic exhaustion, the feeling of having arrived somewhere and found nothing waiting. It came out during what Young himself called the ditch trilogy, a run of albums that documented a deliberate retreat from the spotlight into something more honest and considerably more painful. The cover does not promise you a good time. It warns you.
The Clash, London Calling (1979)
Pennie Smith almost did not submit this photograph. She thought it was too blurry, too chaotic, not good enough technically. Paul Simonon smashing his bass into the stage at the Palladium in New York, caught in a moment of pure physical fury, was apparently not what she considered her best work. The band disagreed, and they were right. That blur is the whole point. Clarity was never what punk was after. The image became one of the most reproduced rock photographs in history, and it captures something no sharp, well-lit photo ever could: the precise sound of something breaking on purpose.
Black Sabbath, Sabbath Bloody Sabbath (1973)
Drew Struzan, who would go on to paint some of the most iconic movie posters of the twentieth century, designed a cover that functions as a complete moral and philosophical argument about mortality. The front depicts a man in the grip of a demonic nightmare, a bad death, violent and terrifying. Flip the record over and the same man exists in a state of peaceful transcendence, a good death, surrendered and at ease. Sabbath were always more interested in the big questions than they were given credit for, and this cover makes the case better than any press release could.
Green Day, Dookie (1994)
Richie Bucher’s cartoon artwork for Dookie looks like chaos at first glance and reveals itself as biography the longer you look. The Berkeley streets, the Gilman Street scene, the band’s own faces buried in the crowd, the specific texture of being young and broke and restless and furious and finding your people in a sweaty punk club. It is a document of a time and a place that no longer exists in the form it once did, and the fact that it looks like a mess is entirely the point. Teenage life is a mess. The cover knows that.
Pink Floyd, Animals (1977)
The photograph almost didn’t happen at all. The forty-foot inflatable pig that was supposed to float above Battersea Power Station for the shoot broke free of its moorings, drifted into controlled airspace, forced the temporary grounding of flights at Heathrow, and was eventually found in a field in Kent. The image that made it onto the cover is from the day before, when the pig was still tethered. But the story of what happened the next day is so perfectly in keeping with the cover’s whole Orwellian argument about power, control, and the inevitable moment when things refuse to stay where they are put, that it feels less like an accident and more like the album making its own point.
Dylan Carter, ‘The Voice’ Season 24 Contestant and Lowcountry Soul, Dies at 24
Dylan Carter had already lived more lives than most people twice his age. A singer-songwriter, a realtor, a campground co-owner, a community fundraiser, and a young man who carried his mother’s memory with him everywhere he went, Carter died on Saturday night in Colleton County, South Carolina, the result of a car accident. He was 24 years old. The Lowcountry community he had spent his life entertaining is in mourning, and the silence where his voice used to be is going to take a long time to fill.
Carter grew up in St. George, South Carolina, a small town in the Lowcountry about an hour outside Charleston, and discovered his passion for music at the age of ten. He started writing songs and performing at local farmers markets, churches, weddings, and special events, building a following one room at a time in the way that only artists who truly love what they do actually build one. He auditioned for NBC’s The Voice twice before earning his four-chair turn on Season 24, and when he chose to join Team Reba, he became part of country music legend Reba McEntire’s first-ever team on the show. The song he sang for that blind audition was Whitney Houston’s “I Look to You,” a tribute to his mother, who had passed away the year before. He had tried to sing it at her funeral and couldn’t finish it. On that stage, he did.
After The Voice, Carter came home and kept working. He performed throughout the Lowcountry, booked weddings, fundraisers, restaurants, and backyard parties, and described himself with characteristic warmth as a one-man band who promised every audience laughter, smiles, singing, and perhaps a little boot scootin’ boogie. He worked as a realtor by day to support his music career and was a co-owner of Sunny Days Campground near Lake Marion in the Santee community. He was also co-founder of The Local Voice, a nonprofit based in Santee that provides care to women fighting breast cancer, and threw himself into that work with the same generosity he brought to everything else.
The Local Voice shared the news of his passing with words that said everything about who he was. “Dylan was the heart of what we do,” the organization wrote. “He believed every voice matters and lived that every day. Through his music, his kindness, and his smile, he brought people together and made everyone feel seen.” Moncks Corner Mayor Thomas Hamilton Jr., who had to cancel a Music on Main event that Carter was scheduled to headline on Monday, wrote that Carter was far more than an entertainer to his community. “He was our friend,” Hamilton wrote, “and we are deeply saddened.”
Reba McEntire told Carter to use his voice to touch people’s hearts. By every account from everyone who knew him, that is exactly what he did, every single time he walked onto a stage. He was 24 years old and just getting started.

