Category: Regions

  • Maverick Concerts in Woodstock Announce 2024 Season Schedule

    Maverick Concerts, a chamber music festival, has announced their 2024 season schedule which entails a long summer of fun-filled events. The festival takes place entirely in their historic campus near Woodstock.

    Maverick Concerts, a chamber music festival

    Maverick Concerts is thrilled to unveil its 2024 season featuring a summer of exceptional music at its historic concert hall. The hall is nestled in the woods just outside Woodstock. June 29 to September 14, Maverick will present a diverse musical lineup that will delight enthusiasts of all ages and tastes. Maverick Family Saturdays, Maverick Saturday Nights and the Maverick Chamber Music Festival will showcase world-class performances. These performances range in genre across classical, jazz, folk, world, and contemporary.

    The Maverick Chamber Music Festival for 2024 gets off to an exciting start on Sunday afternoon June 30. The following 2 and a half months see the performances of the world’s most renowned individuals and groups for the community to adore closely. Performers like Viet Cuong, Escher String Quartet, Angela Hewitt, Miro Quartet, Fred Hersch and more prepare to wow the community.

    Maverick Concerts, a chamber music festival

    Maverick Concerts 2024 Full Schedule

    SATURDAY, JUNE 29

    Maverick Saturday Nights â€“ Jazz at the Maverick

    Fred Hersch Trio

    SUNDAY, JUNE 30

    Maverick Chamber Music Festival

    Manhattan Chamber Players

    w/David Fung, piano

    SATURDAY, JULY 6

    Maverick Family Saturdays

    Frederick Chiu

    David Gonzalez

    SATURDAY, JULY 6

    Maverick Saturday Nights         

    Tracy Bonham

    SUNDAY, JULY 7    

    Maverick Chamber Music Festival

    Escher String Quartet

    SATURDAY, JULY 13

    Maverick Family Saturdays

    WyndSync

    Viet Cuong

    SATURDAY, JULY 13

    Maverick Saturday Nights/Maverick Chamber Music Festival

    The Four Nations Ensemble

    SUNDAY, JULY 14

    Pre-Concert talk Viet Cuong

    WindSync

    SATURDAY, JULY 20

    Maverick Family Saturdays       

    Tracy Bonham and Melodeon

    SUNDAY, JULY 21

    Maverick Chamber Music Festival

    Miro String Quartet

    SATURDAY, JULY 27

    Maverick Family Saturdays

    Nothing: John Cage and 4’33”

    Nicholas Day, author

    Chris Raschka, illustrator

    SATURDAY, JULY 27

    Maverick Saturday Nights/Maverick Chamber Music Festival

    Angela Hewitt

    SUNDAY, JULY 28

    Maverick Chamber Music Festival

    Pacifica String Quartet

    SATURDAY, AUGUST 3

    Maverick Saturday Nights

    Simon Shaheen Trio

    SUNDAY, AUGUST 4

    Maverick Chamber Music Festival

    Chelsea Guo

    SATURDAY, AUGUST 10

    Maverick Family Saturdays

    Elizabeth Mitchell plays the songs of Peter Schickele,

    SATURDAY, AUGUST 10

    Maverick Saturday Nights

    After Spring Sunset: A Tribute to Peter Schickele

    SUNDAY, AUGUST 11

    Maverick Chamber Music Festival

    Ariel String Quartet

    Anthony de Mare – postlude

    SATURDAY, AUGUST 17

    Maverick Family Saturdays

    Ravensbeard Wildlife Center                  

    SATURDAY, AUGUST 17

    Maverick Saturday Nights

    Steve Gorn & Friends

    SUNDAY, AUGUST 18

    Maverick Chamber Music Festival      

    Isidore String Quartet

    SATURDAY, AUGUST 24

    Maverick Chamber Music Festival      

    Margaret Leng Tan

    SUNDAY, AUGUST 25

    Maverick Chamber Music Festival      

    Reed Tetzloff

    FRIDAY, AUGUST 30   

    Maverick Chamber Music Festival 

    Jenny Lin

    SATURDAY, AUGUST 31

    Maverick Family Saturdays

    Jenny Lin Melody’s Mostly Musical Day

    SATURDAY, AUGUST 31

    Maverick Saturday Nights – Jazz at the Maverick

    Bill Charlap Trio

    SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 

    Maverick Chamber Music Festival

    Borromeo String Quartet

    Henry Kramer, piano

    SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7

    Maverick Saturday Nights – Jazz at the Maverick     

    The Miguel Zenon Quartet

    SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 

    Maverick Chamber Music Festival

    Music from Copland House

    SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14

    Maverick Saturday Nights         

    Happy Traum

    Cindy Cashdollar

    For more information on Maverick Concerts’ events and to purchase tickets to select shows, click here.

  • The Marley Brothers Unite for ‘The Legacy Tour’ Coming this September to Queens

    The Marley brothers – Ziggy, Stephen, Julian, Ky-Mani, and Damian – have announced “The Legacy Tour” in honor of their father Bob Marley. The tour sees 22 dates, including a stop at Forest Hills Stadium in Queens on September 22.

    Bob Marley’s music endures as a beacon of strength, hope, and unity, attracting a growing global fanbase. For over three decades, his sons have each established themselves as renowned solo artists and have carried on their father’s legacy through their music. Now reunited on The Marley Brothers: The Legacy Tour, they’ll honor their father’s worldwide impact by performing both individual hits and classic Bob Marley songs during a momentous year for the genre.

    The world nears what would have been Bob Marley’s 80th birthday in 2025. There’s no greater homage than experiencing his music live through his sons, who carry on his enduring influence across popular culture. The tour begins September 5 in Vancouver, Canada and comes to a close on October 5 in Miami Florida. The Marley Brothers make a single stop in New York on September 22 in Forest Hills, Queens.

    THE 2024 LEGACY TOUR DATES: 

    9.05 | Vancouver, BC | Festival Lawn at Deer Lake Park

    9.06 | Ridgefield, WA | RV Inn Style Resorts Amphitheater

    9.08 | Auburn, WA | White River Amphitheatre

    9.10 | Concord, CA | Toyota Pavilion at Concord

    9.11 | Chula Vista, CA | North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre

    9.12 |  Phoenix, AZ | Talking Stick Resort Amphitheatre

    9.13 | Albuquerque, NM | Isleta Amphitheater

    9.15 | Austin, TX | Germania Insurance Amphitheater

    9.16 | Dallas, TX | Dos Equis Pavilion

    9.18 | Cincinnati, OH | PNC Pavilion at Riverbend Music Center

    9.19 | Clarkston, MI | Pine Knob Music Theatre

    9.22 | Queens, NY | Forest Hills Stadium

    9.23 | Holmdel, NJ | PNC Bank Arts Center

    9.25 | Bridgeport, CT | Hartford HealthCare

    9.26 | Mansfield, MA | Xfinity Center

    9.27 | Bristow, VA | Jiffy Lube Live

    9.29 | Toronto, ON | Budweiser Stage

    9.30 | Laval, QC | Place Bell

    10.02 | Wilmington, NC | Live Oak Bank Pavilion 

    10.03 | Atlanta, GA | Lakewood Amphitheatre

    10.04 | Tampa, FL | MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amp

    10.05 | Miami, FL | FPL Solar Amphitheatre

    Tickets will be available beginning with artist pre-sales on Tuesday, April 16. Additional presales including a Citi presale will run throughout the week. The general on-sale starts on Friday, April 19 at 10 AM. For more information on The Marley Brothers’ Legacy Tour and to purchase tickets, click here.

  • Juice Brings their Unique Sound to the Rec Room

    Juice is on the final leg of their first North American tour and performed at the Rec Room in Buffalo on Saturday, April 13.

    Juice

    Opener Kevin Spears, a member of the local band Free Music Party, started the night. Kevin performed songs from his latest EP, Me and Marge. This was Kevin’s first time being an opener and performing as a solo artist, performing “Meant to Be,” “Left Alone,” “Little Lies,” and “And I Saw It Happen,” among others. Kevin’s music is a fusion of Indie/Alternative R&B, setting the vibe perfectly for Juice.

    Kevin Spears

    Juice formed in 2013 in Boston and draws influences from Rock, Pop, Hip-Hop, and R&B, which gives them such a unique sound. Juice performed from their latest EP called Nothing Like a Dream. Songs performed by Juice at Rec Room included “Cruelest Thing,” “Becoming a Stranger,” “Come Alive,” “Temporary Love,” “Playa Delfino,” and “Hard to Feel.”

    To finish out their tour, Juice will perform two more shows on April 26 in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and on April 27 in Amherst, Massachusetts.

  • Infinity Song Gets Blue Note Jazz Club Out of Their Seats on First Night of Four-Day Residency

    Infinity Song filled the Blue Note Jazz Club with joyous soft rock on Monday, April 15, to open their four-day residency. John Boyd, the father of Abraham, Angel, Momo, and Israel Boyd, the four siblings who make up Infinity Song, gave a speech to commemorate the occasion.

    The show was the culmination of 27 years of raising children for the Boyd parents, who are both lifelong musicians themselves, going from busking in Central Park to making music under the Roc Nation banner and seeing mainstream success in the city where they grew up. He ended the speech playing on a classic proverb, saying, “It takes ten villages to raise an artist.”

    The night was a joyous celebration of music, of family, of history. The band immediately set a mood and established their distinct personalities onstage. The eldest brother, Abraham, spent the first three songs belting while striking poses and running in place on the stage, pumping his arms like he was competing in a marathon to cheers from the audience.

    His younger brother and the band’s electric guitarist, Israel, reacted to the cheers by jokingly scolding Abraham for misleading the audience into thinking he was the dancer of the family. This banter culminated in the only way a sibling rivalry can, a dance-off. Each of the four siblings took turns improvising their own dance to on-the-fly beats from the supporting band. For those with siblings, it’s not hard to imagine some similar antics arising if given a stage together.

    Coming out of the dance battle, they went into a revolutionary cover of Stevie Nicks’ “Dreams,” which can be found on their newest album, Metamorphosis. No other artist has done the song so much justice. Being raised by musicians and being interdisciplinary themselves, you would be hard-pressed to find four people with that much raw talent on any stage besides the Blue Note last night.

    “Slow Burn” and “Hater’s Anthem” were their two most popular songs of the night. “Slow Burn” is a personal favorite that makes use of the sisters’ differing vocal textures to great effect. “Hater’s Anthem” harkens back to the 90s with upbeat choral vocals from the whole group and an underlying message about the pitfalls of being a hater while convincing yourself that you are inherently better than others who are putting in the work towards their goals.

    Not only did Infinity Song pack Blue Note on a Monday, but they got the audience dancing, too, as the small club rose from their dinner tables to dance out the end of the show with the band. You can experience Infinity Song in residency at the Blue Note through Thursday, April 18, with shows at 8 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. This was an otherworldly experience: bring your friends, bring your family, because Infinity Song is up next.

  • Country Boy TVBOO Stops in Buffalo for Comedic EDM Show 

    Mississippi phenomenon that is TVBOO had a special show at Buffalo’s Town Ballroom on April 13. His unique bass lines are what make every dubstep lover go crazy, but it’s his comedic flair that takes his performance up several notches. 

    Photo Credit: Maddie McCafferty

    Local support RainMan made his Town Ballroom debut that night. He was joined by the intrepid duo sfam. Their performance was followed by AHEE who is known for his high-energy dubstep and mesmerizing sonic exploration. 

    AHEE, Photo Credit: Maddie McCafferty

    TVBOO then took over the stage with his knee high socks and iconic mullet. This man is a performer through and through knowing exactly when to add his comedic tidbits for laughter and sound bites. 

    Photo Credit: Maddie McCafferty

    This producer’s infamous voice samples and funky beats make his songs so memorable whether or not you have heard of TVBOO. He played countless tunes off of his hit 2022 album Blue Collar Bass including his collaboration with GRiZ, “Bass Music.” 

    Photo Credit: Maddie McCafferty

    The Meme Master

    TVBOO’s funky beats are what everyone loves to groove to but his visuals are some of which people can’t stop talking about. They’ll either leave you confused on what is going on or dying from laughter. He makes memes of himself that are stuck in everyone’s head by the end of the night. Some of which include him riding on a bald eagle or licking his eyebrows to name a few. 

    Photo Credit: Maddie McCafferty

    TVBOO mixes into his sets both new and old tunes. He throws it back with his single, “Skrawberries” where he dedicates it to a girl that came into his life that tasted like strawberries. The artist even replays this song over so the crowd can match the energy needed for a tune that goes this hard. He also played his latest single, “Cha Cha Step” which fans got to hear for the first time live. 

    Photo Credit: Maddie McCafferty

    This was a memorable night for both TVBOO and his fans. It ended with the artist announcing he will be back for a stop on his fall 2024 tour. So if you missed TVBOO this time around make sure not to miss him for his return.  

    If you’re looking for more EDM events in Western NY then you’re in luck! Liquid Stranger performs on April 19 and The Glitch Mob will be playing a 360 show on April 26. Get your tickets here.   

  • Artist Rights Alliance Calls For Tech and AI Developers Not To Devalue Music

    The Artist Rights Alliance (ARA), has issued an open letter supported by more than 200 artists calling on AI Developers, Tech Platforms not to devalue music and undermine artists’ rights. 

    The Artist Rights Alliance (ARA), a non-profit artist-led education and advocacy organization, has issued an open letter that was supported by more than 200 artists calling calling on all AI developers, technology companies, platforms, and digital music services to “cease the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to infringe upon and devalue the rights of human artists”.

    As AI-related threats such as voice cloning, and deep fakes continue to rightfully attract significant scrutiny, the open letter has also shed some light on two related trends that are among the most serious and irresponsible uses of AI, including the use of musical works by AI developers without permission to train and produce AI “copycats”, and also the use of AI “sound” to dilute royalty obligations. 

    “Working musicians are already struggling to make ends meet in the streaming world, and now they have the added burden of trying to compete with a deluge of AI-generated noise,” explains Jen Jacobsen, Executive Director of the ARA. “The unethical use of generative AI to replace human artists will devalue the entire music ecosystem — for artists and fans alike.”

    Read more about the rise of AI in Music and the drawbacks and benefits, as viewed by musicians.

    Part of the open letter published this month by the Artist Rights Alliance, states that, “Make no mistake: we believe that, when used responsibly, AI has enormous potential to advance human creativity and in a manner that enables the development and growth of new and exciting experiences for music fans everywhere…. Unfortunately, some platforms and developers are employing AI to sabotage creativity and undermine artists, songwriters, musicians and rights holders”.

    The letter signed by more than 200 artists including Pearl Jam, Nicki Minaj, Billie Eilish, Stevie Wonder, Elvis Costello, and the estate of Frank Sinatra. “We must protect against the predatory use of AI to steal professional artists’ voices and likenesses, violate creators’ rights, and destroy the music ecosystem. We call on all digital music platforms and music-based services to pledge that they will not develop or deploy AI music-generation technology, content, or tools that undermine or replace the human artistry of songwriters and artists or deny us fair compensation for our work.” the letter stated.

    This open letter comes in the wake of a growing worldwide debate about the ethical application of AI in music. The state of Tennessee has already strengthened its rights to “right of publicity” by passing the “ELVIS Act.” The state’s Governor Bill Lee announced the Ensuring Likeness Voice and Image Security (ELVIS) Act, a bill updating Tennessee’s Protection of Personal Rights law to include protections for songwriters, performers, and music industry professionals’ voice from the misuse of artificial intelligence (AI) in January. Currently, several US states and the US Congress are debating similar measures.

    Associated with the open letter, the ARA also added that AI poses an “existential threat” to their art in a tweet. Fans can find the full letter signed by singers and songwriters here.

  • Wave Farm Open Catskill Studio

    Wave Farm has announced their WGXC 90.7-FM Hudson Studio is moving to a storefront at 393 Main Street in Catskill, NY. This light-filled space will be home to two studios.

    Wave Farms

    Wave Farm is an international transmission arts organization driven by experimentation with the electromagnetic spectrum. They are creative and supportive of artists and nonprofits in their cultural endeavors. Wave Farm’s WGXC-FM is a full-power, non-commercial, listener-supported station in New York’s Upper Hudson Valley operating out of dedicated studios in Acra and Catskill and pop-up temporary studio locations throughout the listening area and beyond.

    Their move to Catskill also launches an exciting new partnership with Nonchalant. The space between the broadcast studios will be activated by the artist-run studio and gallery, whose inaugural exhibition will feature paintings by Sonia Corina Ruscoe and open on May 25.

    Wave Farms

    Wave Farm’s WGXC began operating in Hudson when the station was in its formative days in 2010. In 2018 they moved from Columbia Street to the basement of the First Presbyterian Church on Warren Street. They are not completely leaving Hudson, with more information to come.

    The two new studios at Catskill include Studio A in full view from Main Street, where the public is welcomed in and on the air. Studio B, located in the back room, will accommodate larger group interviews and more extensive technical setups.

  • Canadian Roots Artist Dave Gunning Welcomes Latest Album with Show at 8th Step at Proctors in Schenectady

    Canadian roots player Dave Gunning has announced a show at 8th Step at Proctors in Schenectady on April 19 to introduce his newest album, The Same Storm.

    Dave Gunning captivates audiences by painting pictures through his heartfelt stories and compelling songwriting, humorous lyrics and stunning musical arrangements. Gunning rapidly amasses fans across Canada and abroad by blending sensitive folk and innovative arrangements to his original songs.

    The Same Storm continues along a similar path similar to its predecessors. The album celebrates moments big and small, lending a voice to the folks that need it most. Dave Gunning uses his musical gift to indulge in a bit of nostalgia, but always with an eye toward the future and the stories it will bring. Gunner never shies away from tougher topics, staying true to the folk music tradition. This includes social and environmental outcries through powerful tunes.

    Gunning’s knack for connecting with audiences is lifelong, preceding the skills and experience he’s earned on the road. Gunning is often referred to as a voice of Nova Scotia. He combines a finely-tuned balance of sincerity and impeccable performance that makes him one of the country’s most engaging entertainers.

    Dave Gunning heads to Addy Theatre at 8th Step at Proctors in Schenectady for a show introducing and celebrating his latest album. The Same Storm is to be showcased with a night of fun, captivating talent. Gunning sets to bring the audience together in a state of love while proudly divulging into the tracks’ wonder.

    The Same Storm marks another career milestone for one of Canada’s most inspiring and accomplished singer-songwriters, a captivating performer currently nominated for two Canadian Folk Music Awards including Best Solo Artist. Self-effacing and very, very funny, he is a master of his craft: his knack for perfectly timed on-stage banter and gracious storytelling has endeared him to audiences and fellow performers alike.”

    – The 8th Step

    Doors for the show open at 7pm, and tickets range from $27-40. For more information on Dave Gunning’s upcoming show in Schenectady on April 19 and to purchase tickets, click here.

  • Grateful Dead Play Their Lone Cortland Show: April 18, 1971

    1971 was an incredibly busy touring year for the Grateful Dead and on this day in April they found themselves in Cortland, NY for the first and only time. The band toured the East Coast extensively all throughout this month, playing a slew of auditoriums, music halls and college campuses as they continued to build their brand.

    With plenty of gigs scheduled in New York City, this show at SUNY-Cortland’s Lusk Field House would be their only one in Central New York and the entire region was clearly on board. Tickets could be purchased in Ithaca, Binghamton and even the Syracuse University bookstore. Those that went were treated to a good one as the Dead would continue to hone their new originals, play an extremely rare cover song and take another one around the block and back.

    The Dead jump off the starting block with a guitar-driven and passionate “Cold Rain and Snow.” The triumvirate of Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir and Phil Lesh are turned up high in the mix and don’t disappoint. After “Snow” comes to end with a flurry of heavy vamping from all involved, and a quick PSA from Garcia harkening someone to come up to the side of the stage, “Me and My Uncle” starts up and gets played in pristine fashion with Weir leading the charge on vocals. The “Bertha” that follows gets the same treatment and shows the band clearly getting nice and familiar with this newer song that only debuted a few months ago.

    Another song fairly new to the live Dead catalog at the time was their cover of “Me and Bobby McGee.” This too gets played with a noticeable comfort and ease with Garcia adding some extra tasteful guitar licks between early verses and Bill Kreutzmann serving as a one-man wrecking crew on drums. A clearly relaxed and engaged Grateful Dead then attempt to honor the Cortland audience’s request to get some spotlights turned off. Lesh comments that this “isn’t the spacecraft assembly building or anything” with Garcia sarcastically intimating that it just might be.

    Pigpen then gets his lone spotlight of the first set and leads the band through a no-frills “Next Time You See Me.” At this point, the band reengages their war with the lighting crew who get caught trying to turn some lights back up. Things get so (comically) animated that Pigpen even gets involved! That’s right, rare Pigpen banter. And this one is a gem.

    Like nothing ever happened, the Dead then close out the first set in Cortland with their now traditional one-two pairing of “China Cat Sunflower” and “I Know You Rider.” The “Rider” starts off at a slightly slower pace but the crystal clear segue is right there and Garcia delivers a hellacious guitar solo before the set ends with a fairly standard run through of “Casey Jones.”

    The second set begins with some heavy wah-wah effects on guitar as “Sugar Magnolia” begins with Weir leading the way on vocals. The psychedelic guitar interplay makes for a brief rousing jam before Weir reels it back in. The next selection is a true Grateful Dead rarity with Garcia taking over on vocals for a cover of Smokey Robinson’s “I Second That Emotion.” It was played by the Dead only seven times ever, with all of them in April of 1971. Although it would later reappear on Jerry Garcia Band setlists in the future. His stirring guitar solo on this one adds just the right amount of soul and shows why.

    The Dead then delve back into their song book of originals and roll through “Truckin’” with the “Up to Buffalo” lyric getting a noticeable hand from the Cortland crowd. This sets the table for the true exploratory jam of the night with a short but joyous romp that features some cohesive interplay between Garcia and Lesh on bass serving as the musical engine.

    The second one comes with the “Hard to Handle” that follows, with Pigpen once again on the mic, delivering one of his signature cover songs. He flies through the verses with ease and typical swagger and then immediately launches into a semi-coherent, bluesy scat-rap hybrid over a bed of steady groove supplied by the band. It’s essentially the Dead backing up Pigpen as he improvises before he exits stage right and the band takes their turn with a veritable funk jam that slowly gets more and more aggressive before coming to a peak.

    The Dead then continue to trot out more of their newer originals that debuted earlier this year at Capitol Theatre in Port Chester. “Loser” features a pair of Garcia guitar solos rich in emotion with the second one played in a perfect tone. “Playing In The Band” follows and while it’s clear the band has the compositional part of this song down pat by now, there’s yet to be any sort of supplemental jam added to it.

    One of the final musical statements from the Dead on this night in Cortland is a massive cover of The Rascals” “Good Lovin’” with Pigpen once again belting out the vocals. Once the lyrics come to an end, almost immediately a one-man “Drums” section begins with Kreutzmann using every inch of the drum kit for several minutes. Instead of moving on to something else, the band jumps right back into the “Good Lovin’” jam and Pigpen reemerges for another stream of conscious-like, bluesy rap with this one exploring various employment opportunities and the “nookie business.” This eventually fades out and the band takes over once more with a brief jam before reshaping it back into the conclusion of the song, serving as one of the true highlights of the show.

    A tame, in comparison, “Uncle John’s Band” then closes out the one and only Grateful Dead show in Cortland, NY. The band would get a few days off after this show and then continue their assault on the Northeast with shows in Providence, RI and Bangor, ME scheduled after that before a legendary run of shows at New York City’s Fillmore East the following week.

    Vist archive.org for a track by track listing of the show.

    View this and more Grateful Dead shows from across the years in New York State with our interactive map below

    Grateful Dead – Lusk Field House, Cortland, NY – April 18, 1971

    Set 1: Cold Rain and Snow, Me and My Uncle, Bertha, Me and Bobby McGee, Next Time You See Me, China Ca Sunflower > I Know You Rider, Casey Jones

    Set 2: Sugar Magnolia, I Second That Emotion, Truckin’, Hard to Handle, Loser, Playing In The Band, Around and Around, Good Lovin’, Uncle John’s Band

  • Bad Bunny’s ‘Most Wanted’ Tour Lights Up New York City

    Under the cover of night on April 12, performing a total of 37 songs, not including the orchestra that introduced him at the top of the night before morphing musically into “Nadie Sabe,” Bad Bunny showed fans at the Barclays Center in attendance for his ‘Most Wanted’ Tour that he isn’t going anywhere.

    From opening the show with a full-string orchestra who performed for about 15 minutes of stage time the dynamic backup dancers, Bad Bunny really put on one western and trap inspired show. At one, he exited the stage only to re-enter again on horseback. And yes, it was a real horse.

    The first act consisted of songs mostly from his latest LP ‘Nadie sabe lo sue va a passer manana.’ Bad Bunny changed it up by going back to his trap roots with “Tu No Metes Cabra,” which was released in 2017, followed by “Pa Ti” and “No Te Hagas.” He made sure to greet just about every section of the Barclays Center and accomplished that with a floating catwalk in the center of the arena that slowly spun around the venue. In the final act, Bad Bunny transported fans to the songs that have taken the world by storm, such as his 2023 single with Grupo Frontera, “Un x100to” as well as megahits from 2020’s YHLQMDLG (“Safaera” and “Yo Perreo Sola”) and 2022’s Un Verano Sin Ti (“Efecto” and “Me Porto Bonito”).

    While some fans may have been disappointed to not hear their favourite song, the show ended on a strong note with “Efecto” and “Me Porto Bonito” — both songs whipped fans into a frenzy that felt worth the wait. Bunny closed the show with “WHERE SHE GOES” — and confetti. 

    And the crowd left with the sense they had just seen a true international superstar.

    Bad Bunny Setlist: NADIE SABE, MONACO, FINA, HIBIKI, MR. OCTOBER, MERCEDES CAROTA, CYBERTRUCK, VOU 787, SEDA, BATICANO, Pa Ti, No Te Hagas, Vuelve, Me Mata, Soy peor, Tú no vive así, Chambea, Diles, 25/8, VUELVE CANDY B, THUNDER Y LIGHTNING, GRACIAS POR NADA, UNX100TO, BABY NUEVA, PERRO NEGRO, Safaera, Yo perreo sola, La Santa, La Jumpa, DÁKITI, Efecto, Me Porto Bonito, UN PREVIEW, NO ME QUIERO CASAR, and WHERE SHE GOES.