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Lil Wayne Turned Madison Square Garden Into a Time Machine on His ‘Tha Carter VI' Tour

Lil Wayne Turned Madison Square Garden Into a Time Machine on His ‘Tha Carter VI' Tour

Yahoo19 hours ago

In 1994, my parents finally went to see The Rolling Stones. The group released Voodoo Lounge, their twentieth album, in July that year, and immediately began touring it. In August, they came to East Rutherford, New Jersey, to play at a football stadium, and my mom and dad decided it was the right time to check a major show off their bucket list. The moment represented an inflection point for the group. It was the first album the Stones had released in five years and was met with a degree of skepticism. They were firmly in middle age, three decades into their career, and had seemingly come to the realization many sixties era Boomer artists were waking up to: Their largely middle class, middlebrow audience had grown up along with them, and were liquid enough financially to pay exorbitant prices for shitty seats to see the band that had eluded them for so long, even if there was rampant speculation the group was washed, and on the downside of their primes.
The Stones were on my mind last night at Lil Wayne's Madison Square Garden concert, because it's been 28 years since the Hot Boys released their debut album, Get It How U Live It! on an independent New Orleans based rap label that called itself Cash Money Records, nearly the same span of time between the Rolling Stones' debut in 1964, and the Voodoo Lounge Tour.
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Wayne's show last night, and the venue itself, was a hard booking to figure out, and made complete sense. Wayne has circled New York, a city with a sacred and tortured place in his heart, the entirety of his career. It's where he found his muses in Jay-Z and the Diplomats in the 2000s, as well as where he served an eight-month prison sentence at the peak of his fame and his artistic powers, in Rikers Island over a possession of a loaded weapon charge in 2007. And yet, here he was holding a glorified album release party in the world's most famous arena, ostensibly the first leg of a North American Carter VI tour that opens here the first week in June, but won't resume until the very end of July.
The album we had all gathered to celebrate, two hours past the advertised start time for the show, is quite simply a fucking disaster. Tha Carter VI is the work of an artist who either doesn't have a creative team around him capable of pushing back on his worst and most indulgent impulses, or one unwilling to listen to dissenting voices. And in lieu of that lack of editorial process, its author has clearly misplaced, if not permanently lost, his once unimpeachable grip on his true north. Since Carter VI was released on Friday at midnight, my timeline's been ablaze with fans, former fans, and haters chiming in on what exactly had gone so terribly wrong.
And yet the electrified Garden crowd was stuffed to the bleeds by the time Wayne hit the stage just after 10, strutting to the stage with a white electric rockstar axe, sporting blonde dreads, pink sweats tucked into heeled knee high boots, an oversized heavyweight Britney Spears T-shirt with her name in neon pink script, a chunky scarf, a bejeweled grill, white framed sunglasses—which would be subsequently swapped out for glasses so big each lens threatened to blot out Wayne's face—and a frozen wrist and neck, rocking doubled iced out crucifix chains and an iced out crucifix pinky ring to go with an iced out wallet chain and a slowly burning late-90s-sized blunt hanging out of a corner of his mouth.
There was a minimal stage show behind him: A steeply pitched platform behind the rapper with the Roman Numerals 'I' and 'V' glowing, garden variety pyrotechnics and smoke cannons, a live drummer and a DJ, but the real special effect was the music. The polished old pro bent time and space, keeping the unfortunate new work to a minimum and running through his hits, reliving, nearly chronologically, the thrill of experiencing his catalog all over again at a speed run.
The show is special, as it is for any artist with the generational staying power of Wayne, or say, the Stones, because it can represent entire eras in music, in life, in the career of the artist, a chameleonic constant shifting that is a necessity when you've been around for decades. It's why the live experience in this age of streaming is so vital for younger fans trying to navigate this massive back catalog.
A pop animal like Wayne must be experienced outside. Pay attention to the ironclad, near chronological setlist built through generations of trial and error response on the road, and watch how tens of thousands of people who were there for each step of Wayne's career reacts to it. To experience the power of these highlights in the room, with a crowd. He has a roster of endless hits—some that touched the Billboard charts and some that never did because the samples can't be cleared and they're still not streaming but were ubiquitous in the aughts nevertheless—from decades of classic, iconic album and mixtape work, which matters when you're trying to understand the impact of an artist of this magnitude.
It's a reminder that Lil Wayne is one of the most unique and context-rich rappers of the modern era, thanks to his inventive and influential approach. No GOAT-level rapper less resembles the artist he was when he began, compared to the artist he became, than Wayne does.
Like LL Cool J (Who made a brief but memorable cameo on the Garden stage), he was a survivor who never stopped evolving. Whose appeal to his longtime followers was in charting his evolution: From yapping adolescent with the good fortune of being in proximity to one of hip hop's great groups, powered by one of its greatest beat architects, to a young solo rapper experimenting with his style on his underground mixtapes while at the same time aping the influences he wore on his sleeve on his safe and pat major label releases, be it an imitation of Jeezy and T.I.'s early aughts southern crack rap, or Jay-Z's traditional, rockist east coast LPs, to finally combining all those years of experimentation, and metabolizing those influences and producing a sound and a style that was entirely personal and unique, that at last blended his strange instinctive mixtape shit and pragmatic one-for-them proper album releases to produce a run that changed rap to such a degree it has clearly become difficult to look back and understand how subversive and groundbreaking it was at the time.
Old Wayne fans such as myself are a funny breed. We're washed people who haven't quite accepted we're washed, in overlaundered Polos with fucked up collars, wearing sunglasses inside in the dark at night and extremely expensive fendi buckets that look stupid as hell. But the music at MSG made us all children again. And this is why you can more or less skip Tha Carter VI, but can't afford to miss Wayne live this summer if you have the opportunity to go see him. His show recreates the joy of his journey, the sense of wonder, the three-decade progression in style and substance that made Wayne one of the greatest rappers of the modern era.
On the 30-year anniversary of the Voodoo Lounge Tour, my parents went back to the Meadowlands to see The Rolling Stones again last year, with a pair of tickets that were still wildly expensive and in demand, this time at a football stadium named after an insurance company rather than a football team. The hand-wringing over Voodoo Lounge and the Voodoo Lounge Tour was both warranted and empty, depending on your perspective and what matters to you as a fan. The album was characterized as a bloated, 15-track, one-hour-long product of the insufferable 'CD era', a glorified excuse to tour that has largely been forgotten, and you could argue that, in terms of new music, it was the official death knell of the Rolling Stones' relevance. It also was the richest tour ever to that point, a record the Stones themselves would break multiple times in the ensuing years, the birth of the band as conveyors of 'adult contemporary' bullshit, a nostalgia factory/national mint, that thanks to their longevity made them one of the first groups to capitalize on their boomer fanbase aging into elder feeling-chasers and exploring the limits of what you could charge for a concert ticket, ushering us into this current, deeply fucked era of crazed fans willing to go into significant debt to see Taylor or Beyoncé.
Mick and Keith are in their 80s; they are multi-millionaires and have spent the last three decades releasing music occasionally, strictly for their hardcore fan base, but largely living off the incredible creative output of their first three decades. I thought about that as Wayne poignantly ended his show with 'A Milli', one of the strangest Grammy-winning, Billboard Top 10 hits in rap history.
I sat next to a middle aged mother and her teenage son freaking out to Wayne and particularly 'A Milli' in the Garden last night, and considered these institutions in pop, the generations of fans who grew up on the Stones' music and Wayne's music, who exposed their kids and grandkids to that incredible initial run and come together whenever these acts go back on the road to appreciate one of the great catalogs in the American songbook again and celebrate their shared love for it. To run back the hits, and remember the glory days, when our favorite artists were young, and so were we.
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time12 hours ago

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Watch These BET Performances

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Lil Wayne 經典系列《Tha Carter》第六張專輯正式發行
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Lil Wayne 經典系列《Tha Carter》第六張專輯正式發行

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Lil Wayne is officially heading back out on the road, this time to celebrate the release of his forthcoming album, Tha Carter VI. The freshly announced trek will double as a victory lap shining the spotlight on 20+ years of his iconic Tha Carter album series. Tha Carter VI will arrive on June 6, 2025, and is available for pre-order here. The 34-city tour kicks off on Friday (June 6) at Madison Square Garden with his first-ever headlining show at the legendary venue. The previously announced event is designed to offer fans the exclusive first live performance of the project before the New Orleans native embarks across the continent in July. He'll be performing his hits in cities like Virginia Beach, Atlantic City, Cincinnati, Toronto, Los Angeles, and more before closing out the run in West Palm Beach on Oct. 2. Joining the No Ceilings spitter are special guests Tyga and Belly Gang Kushington across all dates and NoCap on select dates. Tickets will be available starting with artist presale beginning Wednesday (June 4). Additional presales will run throughout the week ahead of the general onsale beginning Friday (June 6) at 10am local time at and Various VIP packages are available for dedicated fans as well that aim to enhance their concert experience. Select bundles include premium tickets, limited edition poster, specially designed gift, early entry into the venue, and more. For more information, visit Wayne's most recent installation of his Tha Carter series made landfall in 2018, with a deluxe version releasing in 2020. The highly anticipated project included guest appearances from Nicki Minaj, Kendrick Lamar, Snoop Dogg, Travis Scott, Ashanti, his daughter Reginae Carter, and others. Since then, he has fed fans with Trust Fund Babies, a joint project with Rich The Kid, in 2021. He also dropped off an official appetizer for VI in 2023 titled Tha Fix Before Tha VI. Check out the official dates for Lil Wayne's Tha Carter VI Tour below and grab tickets using the link above. Fri Jun 06 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden^ Wed Jul 30 – Bristow, VA – Jiffy Lube Live Fri Aug 01 – Virginia Beach, VA – Veterans United Home Loans Amphitheater at Virginia Beach# Sat Aug 02 – Atlantic City, NJ – Boardwalk Hall Sun Aug 03 – Holmdel, NJ – PNC Bank Arts Center Tue Aug 05 – Hartford, CT – Xfinity Theatre Wed Aug 06 – Mansfield, MA – Xfinity Center Fri Aug 08 – Syracuse, NY – Empower Federal Credit Union Amphitheater at Lakeview Sat Aug 09 – Buffalo, NY – Darien Lake Amphitheater Mon Aug 11 – Toronto, ON – Budweiser Stage Thu Aug 14 – Cuyahoga Falls, OH – Blossom Music Center Sat Aug 16 – Cincinnati, OH – Riverbend Music Center Sun Aug 17 – Noblesville, IN – Ruoff Music Center Wed Aug 20 – Minneapolis, MN – Target Center Fri Aug 22 – Milwaukee, WI – American Family Insurance Amphitheater Sat Aug 23 – Detroit, MI – Little Caesars Arena Sun Aug 24 – Tinley Park, IL – Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre Tue Aug 26 – Kansas City, MO – T-Mobile Center Fri Aug 29 – Phoenix, AZ – Talking Stick Resort Amphitheatre Mon Sep 01 – Ridgefield, WA – Cascades Amphitheater Wed Sep 03 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena Fri Sep 05 – Mountain View, CA – Shoreline Amphitheatre Sat Sep 06 – Sacramento, CA – Golden 1 Center Wed Sep 10 – Chula Vista, CA – North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre Fri Sep 12 – Los Angeles, CA – Arena Sun Sep 14 – Albuquerque, NM – Isleta Amphitheater Tue Sep 16 – Austin, TX – Germania Insurance Amphitheater Wed Sep 17 – Dallas, TX – Dos Equis Pavilion Thu Sep 18 – The Woodlands, TX – The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion Presented by Huntsman# Mon Sep 22 – Oklahoma City, OK – Paycom Center^% Wed Sep 24 – Huntsville, AL – The Orion Amphitheater Thu Sep 25 – Charlotte, NC – PNC Music Pavilion Mon Sep 29 – Atlanta, GA – State Farm Arena# Wed Oct 01 – Orlando, FL – Kia Center# Thu Oct 02 – West Palm Beach, FL – iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre# ^ Already On-Sale # with NoCap % Lil Wayne with Special Guests Hot Boys More from Lil Wayne To Perform At 2025 BET Awards Lil Wayne Facing Abuse Allegations From Ex-Girlfriend Denise Bidot Kendrick Lamar Named Top Nominee Among 2025 BET Awards Nominations: Full List

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