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Red Butte reveals 2025 concert lineup featuring Alison Krauss and Train

Red Butte reveals 2025 concert lineup featuring Alison Krauss and Train

Axios08-04-2025
Over 50 musical acts are set to perform at the annual Red Butte Concert Series in Salt Lake City, organizers announced Tuesday.
The intrigue: Big names include Alison Krauss, Rick Springfield, ZZ Top and Train.
State of play: The series runs from May 19 to Sept. 16, featuring genres like rock, bluegrass folk, and alternative.
Rock band Cheap Trick is slated to kick things off, with pop act Hermanos Gutiérrez closing it.
Admission: The first set of tickets — for concerts between May 19-July 27 — go on sale for members on April 21 and to the public on April 25.
The second set of tickets — for shows after July 27 — go on sale for members on April 28 and to the public on May 2.
The lineup includes:
May
19: Cheap Trick
29: Trampled by Turtles (with Clay Street Unit)
June
5: James Arthur
8: Ryan Bingham and The Texas Gentlemen
12: St. Paul & The Broken Bones + The Wood Brothers (with Cece Coakley)
17: Drive-By Truckers + Deer Tick (with Thelma and the Sleaze)
18: Barenaked Ladies (with Guster and Fastball)
22: Tash Sultana (with Lime Cordiale)
26: Little Feat + Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
13: Watchhouse
14: Houndmouth + Shane Smith & The Saints
16: Rhiannon Giddens & The Old-Time Revue
20: X + Los Lobos
25: Alison Krauss & Union Station featuring Jerry Douglas (with Willie Watson)
27: Christone "Kingfish" Ingram + Samantha Fish
28: Toad the Wet Sprocket (with Semisonic, Sixpence None the Richer)
30: Elephant Revival (with Two Runner)
August
5: Dispatch and John Butler (with G. Love & Special Sauce, Donavon Frankenreiter)
6: Rick Springfield "I Want My '80s Tour" (with John Waite, Wang Chung, Paul Young)
10: Michael Franti & Spearhead (with Bombargo)
11: My Morning Jacket
13: ZZ Top
17: Tower of Power + War
24: Ray LaMontagne (with The Weather Station)
25: Keb' Mo' + Shawn Colvin
September
4: Gregory Alan Isakov (with Dean Johnson)
9: Train (with Edwin McCain)
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Rod Stewart, Cheap Trick Sizzle As ‘One Last Time' Tour Hits Indy
Rod Stewart, Cheap Trick Sizzle As ‘One Last Time' Tour Hits Indy

Forbes

time3 days ago

  • Forbes

Rod Stewart, Cheap Trick Sizzle As ‘One Last Time' Tour Hits Indy

'It's Saturday night!' shouted Rod Stewart on stage just outside Indianapolis, early in the set as his 'One Last Time' tour arrived at Ruoff Music Center. 'We had a wonderful crowd last night - but tonight you're gonna beat them!' Stewart, 80, proved to be an engaging host and energetic frontman on stage in Noblesville, Indiana, remaining in fine voice Saturday night for just shy of two hours alongside fellow classic rock stalwarts Cheap Trick. While known for his work as part of both the Jeff Beck Group and Faces, it's the solo material that sold best, with Stewart moving more than 120 million records globally as one of the best selling artists of all time. Releasing It Had to be You: The Great American Songbook in 2002, the first in what would become an uber-successful five album series of pop standards, Stewart would settle on a successful formula, continuing a pivot toward covers which has largely guided his career over the last 25 years. Covers made up the majority of Saturday's set on stage in the Circle City, with Stewart and company wasting no time getting to them. 'Here's a song from Bonnie Tyler!' asserted the singer early, with two violinists soon driving 'It's A Heartache.' Opening with 'Infatuation,' Steward headed to his right, carrying the mic stand overhead as he strutted and pranced. A 12 piece backing group featured a trio of backing singers and three more multi-instrumentalists in addition to live guitar, keys, bass, saxophone and dueling percussion. 'Last week, we were in Mississippi - the birthplace of one of my heroes growing up,' Rod began to explain, noting a tour that runs into mid-September ahead of a six night Las Vegas residency (Caesars Palace starting September 24) and international dates taking him into mid-December. 'So, I'd like to pay tribute to Muddy Waters.' Stewart headed left to explore the stage's furthest reaches as cowbell and violin rang out early, offering up a bit of air guitar late as the ensemble worked up the Hambone Willie Newbern-penned cut 'Rollin' and Tumblin,'' which Waters himself covered 75 years ago. A slight miscommunication found Stewart readying 'Forever Young' as the band began Kim Weston's 'It Takes Two.' Stopping on a dime to start again proved this show was taking place live and in the moment, a welcome deviation in an era of live performance often defined by the use of pre-recorded backing tracks at the expense of actual, authentic on stage moments. Stewart sent 'Forever Young' out to recently deceased rocker Ozzy Osbourne, soon shouting out Tina Turner, with whom he collaborated on a cover of 'It Takes Two' in 1990. Violin and live mandolin drove a lovely take on 'Maggie May' that more closely resembled Stewart's sort of stripped down MTV Unplugged take on his original 1971 recording. 'Next stop, 1976!' yelled Stewart excitedly, with live harp resplendent on a warm night in Indy. Synths rang out moments later as Stewart more talked than sang his way through 'Young Turks.' 'A little sweaty,' said Stewart, understating the evening's high temps. 'Sweating my ears off!' he continued. 'Carry on, Rod,' mused the singer with a smile. 'Here's a song I love doing. Did this with my dear old buddy Ronnie Wood,' Stewart continued, looking back upon the 1972 sessions for his fourth solo album Never a Dull Moment, one which found Wood backing him as he put his spin upon Etta James' 'I'd Rather go Blind,' ultimately dedicating the track to Fleetwood Mac's Christine McVie. A long sax solo cooked with the band stretching out late on the James cover. 'How about these guys?' said Stewart midway through, glancing left at his terrific band while guitar and saxophone rang out. 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Indianapolis weekend events: Croquet, Jason Aldean, Rod Stewart, Fever and more
Indianapolis weekend events: Croquet, Jason Aldean, Rod Stewart, Fever and more

Axios

time08-08-2025

  • Axios

Indianapolis weekend events: Croquet, Jason Aldean, Rod Stewart, Fever and more

If you're looking to have a wicket good time in Indy this weekend, head to the Benjamin Harrison Presidential Site. Driving the news: The 31st annual Wicket World of Croquet event is inviting players from around the state to Marion County for a day of fun and fundraising on the lawn. A croquet tournament featuring more than 100 players is the main event. There will also be local food and drink vendors, pop-up shops, interactive experiences, a live art auction and more. Proceeds from the event benefit educational and civic programming at the site. Zoom in: If you attend, be sure to dress to impress in your best all-white outfit. It doesn't have to be fancy. Everything from streetwear to three-piece suits are welcome. Just make sure you nail the color scheme. If you go: 10am-4:30pm General admission tickets, which don't include food and drink, are $10 in advance and $15 the day of. All access passes that cover lunch, drinks, snacks and activities start at $75. Here are the rest of our picks for the weekend: 🐸 Catch the next summer concert at Broad Ripple Park when alt rock band Toad the Wet Sprocket headlines a show 7pm Friday. Tickets start at $70. ⚾ Take in a game or three at Victory Field as the Indianapolis Indians host the Omaha Storm Chasers. Games start at 7:05pm Friday, 6:35pm Saturday and 1:35pm Sunday. Tickets start at $15. 🎵 Bop to a little Blues in the Alley when Queen Delphine and The Crown Jewels and Rebekah Meldrum play a free show at The Cabaret, 7pm Friday. Reserved seats are spoken for, so bring your own chair. 👪 Have some family fun at Gainbridge Fieldhouse during Disney's Descendants and Zombies concert, 7pm Friday. Tickets start at $61. 🎻 Kick back at Conner Prairie for a pair of Symphony on the Prairie performances. Dark Star Orchestra will present a Grateful Dead live concert experience at 7pm Friday. Tickets start at $13. A Billy Joel and Elton John combo tribute starts at 8pm Saturday. Tickets start at $13. 🤠 Go full throttle with country star Jason Aldean when his tour stops at Ruoff Music Center, 7:30pm Friday. 🤘 Rock out with Rod Stewart at Ruoff during his "One Last Time" tour, 8pm Saturday.

Legendary Rock Star, 76, Says He ‘Loathed' One of His Band's Most Iconic Songs
Legendary Rock Star, 76, Says He ‘Loathed' One of His Band's Most Iconic Songs

Yahoo

time07-08-2025

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Legendary Rock Star, 76, Says He ‘Loathed' One of His Band's Most Iconic Songs

Legendary Rock Star, 76, Says He 'Loathed' One of His Band's Most Iconic Songs originally appeared on Parade. While 'Stairway to Heaven' might be one of the most iconic rock songs of all time, at least one member of Led Zeppelin dreaded playing it – Robert Plant. 'I truly loathed it,' Plant told Far Out Magazine. 'When we used to rehearse, we'd perform 'Stairway' as a reggae tune because [Jimmy] Page could never get me to sing it otherwise.' This wasn't the first time the legendary rock vocalist had expressed his disdain for the song. It's been one of his least favorites for decades. 'I'd break out in hives if I had to sing it every show,' Plant told The Los Angeles Times in 1988. 'I wrote those lyrics and found that song to be of some importance and consequence in 1971, but 17 years later, I don't know. It's just not for me. No more 'Stairway to Heaven' for me." Plant avoided performing the song for years, but in 2023, while promoting his tour with Alison Krauss, he revisited it and later called the experience 'cathartic.' "People go, 'Oh, that's good. He never was going to do that,'' the veteran rocker said during an interview with Rolling Stone in 2024. "But I didn't really do it! I just blurted it out. 'Cause it's such an important song to me for where I was at the time and where I was with Jimmy and with John [Paul Jones] and Bonzo [John Bonham]. So on that night, it was what it was. It was a trial by fire, but I felt better at the end than at the beginning." Not everyone hated the tune, however. Jones said that he 'actually liked Stairway,' in an interview published in Classic Rock Stories. 'I know that's really corny, but it encompasses a lot of the elements of the band,' Jones explained. 'From the acoustic start to the slightly jazzier section, even, and then to the heavier stuff towards the end.' 🎬 SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox 🎬 Legendary Rock Star, 76, Says He 'Loathed' One of His Band's Most Iconic Songs first appeared on Parade on Jul 15, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 15, 2025, where it first appeared. Solve the daily Crossword

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